Scary Horror Stories by Dr. NoSleep - Airport Lockdown Horror Story
Episode Date: February 6, 2026A routine layover spirals into a military lockdown when every flight is grounded and soldiers open fire on passengers trying to leave, trapping thousands inside an airport cut off from the world. Over... days of hunger, fear, and brutal factions, survival becomes the only currency—and when the last survivors make a desperate run for a grounded plane, escape proves far more terrifying than staying behind. BetterHelp: Sign up now and get 10% off at betterhelp.com/dns. Author: Dave Kavanaugh * * * CONTENT DISCLAIMER: This podcast contains explicit content not limited to intense themes, strong language, and depictions of violence intended for adults. Parental guidance is strongly advised for children under the age of 18. Listener discretion is advised. #creepypasta #horrorstories #drnosleep #scarystories Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Well, then, that is unfortunate, said Duncan coolly, staring up at the terminal's departures board.
The status of the family's connecting flight to Cleveland had just changed, from check-in open to delayed.
But on the bright side, we've got some time to grab a bite to eat before boarding.
To Duncan's left, his 15-year-old son, Jaden, shrugged.
Jaden had in earbuds and his full attention was on his phone.
To Duncan's right, his wife shook her head inside.
Janet Cooley was straining under the weight of their four-year-old daughter, Haley,
who was still feeling sick from their first flight.
I just want to get home, Duncan, Janet whispered, adjusting her grip on the girl.
And then I need a vacation.
Uh, we've just been on vacation, hon.
All around them in the airport terminal, people moved about in tangled blinds, passengers,
hurrying to their gates, to the bathrooms, to grab a cup of coffee and a croissant.
The wheels of rolling suitcases rattled and bumped across the tiled floor.
Gate agents chatted behind their desks or argued with Karens,
while janitors emptied trash cans and airport staff in neon vests
pushed elderly travelers in wheelchairs.
In her mother arms, little Haley began to whine.
My tummy hurts.
I know, baby, but mommy's.
arms are falling asleep.
I'll hold her, Janet.
Here, honey, I got you.
Just as he reached for his daughter,
a short man with a gray ponytail and terrible B.O.
Shubbed his way between the husband and wife
and shook his fist up at the departure screen.
Now that's some bullshit!
The ponytailed man shouted.
Janet scoffed downed at him.
Language, sir.
Please.
Coughing, sir, please.
Coughing a hand over Haley's ear, she looked up at her husband.
But Duncan had turned to look up at the screen again, his expression serious.
Beneath the flight to Cleveland, the flight to Columbus had also changed to delayed.
And the flights to Dallas, to Denver, to Detroit, the whole board, every flight.
What the hell even is this shit? There ain't no storms today.
Huh, could just be a technical problem, maybe.
Duncan mumbled.
He glanced around the terminal, where the paths,
of passengers were shifting, joining together, like iron filings in a magnetic field, to gather
around the mounted screens.
Or it could be an ATC ground stop, or...
Oh man!
...interrupted teenage, Jaden, taking out one earbud and holding up his phone.
The airport Wi-Fi stopped working, and I don't have any service all of a sudden.
Do you guys?
The parents exchanged another heavy look, then moved as one, gathering the family.
grabbing their carry-ons and hurrying off down the terminal.
Some crazy Karen in a fur coat had started screaming uncontrollably at the gate agent.
Whatever's going on, they better figure it out soon.
We are not sleeping in this airport tonight.
I'd rather rent a car.
That'd be a 12-hour drive, hon.
A door banged open on their left,
and an airplane technician in cover-alls and a reflective vest
sprinted suddenly across the hall,
nearly knocking over Jaden in his rush.
Hey, what the hell, man?
Jaden grunted, rubbing out his shoulder where the man bumped him.
This place is going crazy.
Language.
His mother chastised, though without much conviction.
Janet's gaze was now fixed out the gate windows to their right.
Duncan turned, his eyes narrowed.
Just beyond the parked plane outside,
a line of olive green trucks was barreling along the runway.
Well, those aren't.
luggage carts. Others started to notice, and many people broke away from the screens to gather
at the windows to watch, as more and more military vehicles pulled into view. Utility humvees,
personnel carriers transport trucks, some braked to let out soldiers in full gear, who ran to
the planes, to the workers, or toward the airport. Duncan led the family over to a waiting area,
peering out the glass at the strange scene unfolding in real time.
Janet set Haley on her feet.
The girl yawned, then reached up to grab her mother's hand to rub her cheek against it.
Whoa, said Jaden, raising one hand to lean against the window as he looked out.
That's a lot of soldiers.
Dad, you know what's going on?
Duncan lifted his gaze to the empty, cloudless sky.
Hmm, big ground response, but no air support.
Odd.
Another dad, holding a sleeping infant, looked over at Duncan.
Hey dude, you military then?
Duncan nodded.
Uh, retired, yeah.
Army logistics.
So all this gotta be like a response to a terrorist threat, right?
Before Duncan could answer, the short asshole with the ponytail coughed a laugh.
He had come to stand just beside them, arms crossed.
Bullshit!
Ain't no terrorists coming here to camp.
here to Kansas City. This is just the government being goddamn disruptive. Probably a false flag
operation or some shit. Well, I ain't putting up with it, no, sir. Huffing, the man twisted around,
nearly hitting Jaden in the face with his ponytail, and headed off toward baggage claim in the
airport's exit. A lot of other passengers were already rushing that way. Janet and Jaden both looked
at Duncan, who straightened up and smiled back at them reassuringly.
It'll be fine, guys. It's probably just a precaution.
From down the hall, voices rose up in shock and anger.
Duncan's smile wavered.
But I do want to check it out. Come on, stay close together.
Leaning to pick up Haley, he led the family down the hall toward the commotion.
As they got closer, an icy dread settled in Duncan's stomach.
At the sight of soldiers marching into the terminal, their weapons drawn.
Oh, God.
murmured Janet, clutching at Duncan's arm.
As the coolies joined the crowd,
many of those in front were already screaming at the line of the soldiers,
demanding to know what's going on.
This is unconstitutional.
You work for us, you know, and we want answers.
If I have a panic attack right now, I will literally go eat shit.
Duncan didn't mind the crowd's reaction.
Their behavior was to be expected.
But what did worry him was the look in the soldier's eyes.
Something was very, very wrong.
An officer stepped forward from the line.
His hands crossed behind his back, his expression just as alarming as those of the troops.
Janet's hand tightened on her husband's elbow.
Stand! The hell! Back!
The commanding officer screamed at the crowd.
This airport is under federal lockdown until further notice.
You all need to return to the gates and await further instructions.
I am a free citizen!
in, screamed Ponytail, who stood in the front of the crowd, directly ahead of where the coolies were huddled, watching.
And you have no authority over me!
The brave fool marched forward, heading straight toward the exit.
In response, the officer drew his sidearm.
I said stand back!
The Karen, who threatened to go apeshit, did just that, throwing up her arms and screaming like a 30-year-old toddler.
Some people tried to rush away, shoving against...
those around them, while others held up their phones to record videos and shout at the soldiers.
We need to stay calm and listen to them. Duncan called out, even as his wife tugged him by the
sleeve, trying to pull them back into the hall. You have no claim of my soul! declared ponytail to the
soldiers, with the gun aimed at his face. And no claim on my land. And he raised a fist into the air.
Duncan sensed what was about to happen. Clutching Haley,
to his chest, he spun in place. One gunshot rang out! Bang! And as a fine spray of blood
hit the crowd, the place erupted in screams. Duncan grabbed a handful of Jaden's jacket
and yanked his son into a run. Hundreds of feet pounded the tiled floor as people ran in every
direction at once. Shoving their way through the chaos, the coolies raced down the hall, jumping over
fallen carry-ons. Behind them, gunfire sounded again. The pop, pop, pop of a semi-auto.
A window shattered.
This is crazy!
Moaned Jaden, stumbling between his parents.
In her father's arms, little Haley was stunned into silence.
Her balled-up fists dug into the back of Duncan's neck as he sprinted.
Reaching a closed restaurant, Duncan turned and led them all inside the dim room.
Ducking and motioning for the others to do likewise, they crept through the empty tables,
to the windowed wall at the far side, and crouched, panting.
What the hell is happening?
Asked Jaden.
Why did he just shoot that guy?
He just shot him.
Sweat tangled on Duncan's cheeks.
And setting down his daughter, he clutched at a stitch in his side.
They're very shaken up, Duncan thought out loud.
Of course we are!
No.
Duncan looked from his son to his wife and exhaled.
The soldiers, they're terrified.
Jaden choked on a sob.
Janet put an arm around him and swallowed.
We'll be fine, she said, forcing herself to smile.
We just need to listen to your father.
He knows what to do.
He knows.
But Duncan was staring out the window out across the airport grounds
where a small plane, probably a private jet,
was speeding down in adjoining runway with two military vehicles in rapid pursuit.
Janet and Jaden turned to watch him.
as the jet leaned back and began its ascent.
Then a missile whizzed up from below,
hit the plane in a fiery burst,
and the aircraft fell and crashed to the earth with a flash
and a rolling thunderous boom.
Oh, Jesus, said Janet, clutching a hand to her mouth.
Daddy, why are you all wet?
Jaden gasped, and when Janet turned back to her husband
and glanced down, her eyes went wide.
Duncan watched the fireball from the crash rise
and cool into a column of black cloud.
Then he blinked, and looking down, he pulled aside his jacket.
Dark red seeped across his shirt.
Oh, he said, his knees buckling.
Well, that's unfortunate.
Duncan?
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Two teenagers moved through the darkness of the baggage conveyor tunnel.
Jaden coolly led the way, holding out his right hand to feel along the cold concrete wall,
and holding the duffel bag of precious goods in his left.
It was the second time he had made this dangerous journey,
taking medicines and snacks to trade with the people who had settled in Concourse B,
after the Battle of the Food Court.
They had to be careful, of course, but to be honest, Jaden liked making the...
journey. He welcomed any excitement. It got so boring just sitting in baggage claim, hour after
hour, with the luggage stacked up in barriers all around them, and his little sister whining
that she was hungry, and that she wanted Daddy, and that it was so smelly and dark in there.
And his mother, Jaded hated being near her and seeing the empty expression in her eyes.
Besides, volunteering to do this trade meant Jaden could spend time alone with Talia.
She was 17, and admittedly way out of his league.
Smart, pretty, and far more tough than Jaden was, no doubt about that.
Talia wasn't the sort of girl Jaden would have the balls to approach under usual circumstances.
But this was different.
And when this whole lockdown nightmare was over, when the military let the people out,
Then Jaden was determined to keep in touch with Talia.
He had even written down her number, on a piece of paper and everything,
because there hadn't been power to charge his phone since that first day.
I think we're getting close.
In the dark, Talia scoffed.
Nope, only halfway.
Really?
Oh, yeah, I think you're right.
They moved on in silence.
Jaden's sinuses tingled at the smell of burned rubber.
emanating from the motionless conveyor belt beneath them.
And there was another scent in the air today, growing stronger as they walked.
It was like the smoke from a campfire.
That was a good sign.
Maybe Concourse B had managed to catch some rats or pigeons.
Jaden and Talia would be heroes if they returned to baggage claim with real meat.
Hey, uh, Talia? said Jaden, mustering his courage to make conversation while they were alone.
I was thinking about that thing that Miss Lazy-I was saying,
about the airport lockdowns being a sign of biblical end times,
and I think, in the dark, Talia scoffed.
Miss Lazy-Eye's a crazy bitch, Jaden.
She's an idiot.
Well, yeah, yeah, I know, I just, what is she's like, half right?
He waited to see if she'd laugh at him, and when she didn't, he went on.
So, her whole theory is that plane started to do that.
falling from the sky, because Jesus came back and snatched up all the Christians or whatever,
right? And that's why the military freaked out and... Which doesn't make any sense.
Which doesn't make any sense. Yeah, totally. But what if? What if something else was
messing with aircraft? And it scared the government so much they sent in the army.
Jaden's shin banged a pipe and he grunted. Jaden rubbed at his shin, annoyed. But then he felt Talia
lay a hand on his back in the dark, and the pain in his shin vanished, replaced by butterflies in his
stomach. Or was that just his hunger? Keep moving, and give me the bag, I'll lead. Jaden might have been
embarrassed, but as she moved past him in the dark, their bodies pressed together, and as her
fingertips slid down his arm to his hand, his butterflies flew in loop-de-loops. She grabbed the straps
of the duffel bag and pulled it from him, then started forward again.
Uh, yeah, okay, thanks, swallowing, he set off after her.
Anyways, like I was saying, at first I thought maybe there was a crazy solar flare or something,
like a natural EMP, which took out satellites and radar and stuff.
But then I thought, maybe, just maybe, it was actually...
Do not say it, Jaden, don't say aliens.
Jaden's cheeks flushed, and he was glad it was too dark for her to see him clearly.
Well, I mean, what else could have caused all this?
They could hear the muted footsteps from the ceiling above,
and the smell of smoke and cooking meat was definitely getting stronger, he whispered,
when the footsteps had moved away.
That's what's happening. It's war. It's always war.
She turned to face him, her shape at black silhouette in a world of dark grays.
You want my theory?
The enemy pulled something big,
found a way to hack planes and send hundreds crashing to the ground or something like that.
And the army didn't know who was responsible.
So they just locked down every airport, every passenger,
until they could get to the bottom of it.
Jaden crept closer to her.
Okay, but...
Then why are we still here?
Why'd they cut off the power in the water?
Why don't they send in food?
Why don't they tell us anything?
Oh, no.
Maybe the war went new.
Maybe the whole federal government has collapsed, and the army doesn't know what to do now.
So they're just following their last order.
For a frickin' month?
No way!
He snickered, but Talia went very still.
What?
Are you serious?
Jaden.
How long do you think it's been?
He shrugged.
I don't know.
Forever it feels like...
Eight days, she said.
Then she sighed, turned, and moved.
quietly down the final stretch of tunnel. Jaden followed, shaking his head in confusion,
and tried to catalog the insane events since his family walked off their flight and into
this cursed airport. Day one, now that was hard to forget. The army had marched in and opened
fire when people tried to leave, and then the power went out, and the soldiers took the dead
and exited the airport. Jaden's mom couldn't stop screaming when they took Jaden's
dad out, holding his limp body by the feet and shoulders. Where had they taken him? No idea.
That first night, they could hear the military setting up barriers outside, all around the airport
grounds. Day two, people started getting really restless, and dozens tried to sneak out and climb
the barricades. Sniper bullets had taken them out one by one, popping their heads like bloody
balloons and leaving their bodies tangled in the barbed wire. Day three, that's when the food
ran out. Nobody could believe it. All those airport restaurants, the shops, the catering facilities,
it all seemed like a ton of food. But there were thousands of people trapped inside now,
not just passengers, but TSA, airline staff, retail workers, maintenance workers,
flight attendants, a couple dozen pilots, lots of mouths to feed. And when people get hungry,
They got wild.
Day four was the tipping point.
It was the plumbing that did it.
Once the water pressure ran low and sewage started backing up,
the odor of the shit and piss filled the airport and pushed everyone over the edge.
A fight broke out in the food court.
It was brutal, and Jaden had to scoop up his sister Haley and grab his mom by the hand.
He had taken them through security, running along with a couple hundred others,
through check-in and out into the open air.
The day was cold and foggy, and there was a smell outside, acrid and smoky, like burning rubber and metal and chemicals.
Someone said it was the city, the whole of Kansas City, just up the road, burning.
But Jaden didn't know.
Gunfire had sounded from the parking garage across the street.
So loud, so bright even.
All those weapons firing at once.
Bodies fell in waves, whole families just toppling over on the sidewalk,
or slumping onto the abandoned taxis by the curb.
Jaden's mom had frozen again,
and he had managed to get them back inside, barely.
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By the time the sun rose outside,
the smoky windows on day five,
everyone left alive had been forced to join one of the factions.
The coolies were in baggage claim,
which was a good choice.
A lot of good, smart people were in that group.
And all the luggage they controlled
meant they had a lot of extra supplies.
Supplies, which they could trade
with the factions in Concourse A,
the lounges, the food court, or Concourse B.
Plus, Talia and her family were in baggage claim.
But how many days since day five?
Was it really?
Yeah, just three days.
Holy crap.
Jaden mumbled, as a dull gray light from the staircase up ahead, revealed the pipes and walls
and wires around them.
You're right.
Eight freaking days.
Damn.
Who would have guessed people would go crazy that fast?
Anyone who understands human nature, that's who?
Talia slowed as they approached the employee's stairwell, which went up to the ground floor
at Concourse B.
A line of dusty light shone between a pair of double doors above them.
She stopped on the bottom stairs, sniffing the air.
Reaching to her belt, Talia pulled out the steak knife she kept in a sheath made from a leather passport wallet.
Think about New Orleans after Katrina hit, she whispered, examining her weapons edge in the dim light.
For the aftermath of the Haitian earthquake in 2010, Yugoslavia in the 90s, the Russian Revolution, the Holocaust, for God's sake.
Oh, okay, but what's your point?
She turned to him.
The point is, when civilization collapses, it is not measured in years or even days, but in hours.
Jaden nodded.
Oh, yeah, I got you, yeah.
Cool.
So, are we going up?
Whatever their cooking smells crazy good?
Yes, it does.
Here, she handed Jaden back the duffel bag, then crept up the stairs, holding out the knife before her.
Jaden thought she was being a little dramatic.
but followed, trying to move as quietly as she did.
Reaching the top of the stairs, Talia pushed on the doors,
careful not to let them squeak.
Once there was enough room to squeeze through, she slid from view.
Jaden hurried up and out, the duffel bag, scraping against the door.
Sorry, he whispered, but even that whispered apology made Talia's eyes flash with irritation.
They were in a dim hallway, the smell of human waste wafting from the bathroom,
room doors there, and they hurried toward the daylight at the end of the hall.
As he stepped out onto the carpeted floor of Gate B-12, even Jaden could sense the danger lurking
nearby. The hairs on his arms stood up, and his heart began to race. When they had come here yesterday,
trading medication bottles for a tray of sodas liberated from one of Concourse B's vending machines,
the area had been crowded with families and staff members, gathered under makeshift tents,
along the windowed walls. Now, the gate was a mess. The tents torn and loose clothing and carry-ons
and discarded playing cards tossed about. Talia tapped him on the arm, and when he looked at her,
she pointed around the corner at the main hallway and again held a finger to her lips.
Jaden listened and heard a few men chatting and chuckling in the crackling of a fire. A haze of smoke
was in the air, thick with the smell of meat.
Crouching, they moved to the corner.
Jaden popped his head around to look, but after less than a second, Talia yanked him back.
But he had seen enough, though, more than enough.
Dozens of bodies were piled across the hall at Gate 9b, stripped naked, their limbs limp and bloody.
In the center of the hall, standing with their backs to him, some men stood beside a stack of broken wooden pallets, looking down at a fire blazing on the tiles at their feet.
The flames rose up to a large chunk of meat on a makeshift spit.
That meat was in a shape he recognized, a human head and torso, wet and charred and dripping.
Jaden still hadn't processed what it all meant, when Tali had tugged him by the sleeve
and started back the way they had come, creeping swiftly toward the doors.
Jaden turned to follow her, his vision unfocused, his brain all foggy.
Then he tripped on his own shoes, stumbled sideways, and reaching out to find his balance, felt
his grip on the duffel bag slip. The bag hit the carpet with a thud. He winced in frozen place,
then screamed as hands grabbed him from behind. Jaden didn't fight back. He couldn't. His old body
seized up. Sneakers glued to the floor. Arms stiff at his sides and fists tightened around
his elbows. Talia did not freeze up. Jaden watched as she sprinted toward the hall, but a man rushed
by him and grabbed her by one shoulder. She spun. The knife in her hand whistled through the air.
The man grunted and staggered backward, blood dripping from his face.
But two more guys charged, each armed with a golf club,
and after a few seconds of snarling, swinging and slashing, the knife was on the floor,
and Talia was being dragged, kicking and biting into the hall.
Jaden let himself be led after her, coming back around inside of the naked corpses and the roasting torso.
He still couldn't get his body to resist.
Even his eyes were frozen open.
Looky, we found Captain!
grunted the bleeding man whom Talley had slashed. A couple stowaways, and with a bag of goodies too.
The man they addressed as captain stood across the fire, his back to them. His arms raised to clutch
at either end of a golf club resting across his shoulders. The clubhead had nails extending out on
every side, like some medieval weapon. He was short, with greasy, bleach blonde hair
sticking out from beneath a crooked airline captain's hat. He wore a fur coat, and when he turned
to face the teenagers, they saw that under the coat, he had an oil-stained jumpsuit, a heavy gold-chain
necklace, and a pair of balanciaga sneakers. There was a name tag on his chest, Mike Crunch,
aircraft maintenance. Well, well, well, well, he said, looking them up and down.
What's your story then? I've been hiding in a closet.
it somewhere bumping uglies or else?
Nah.
You two are either from the lounges or else baggage claim.
He grinned.
This here is some first-class meal service, ain't it, gents?
The food comes to us.
The other men laughed, and Jaden felt the hands on his arms tighten their grip.
But Talia began to struggle again, and it took two of them to hold her still.
Captain Crunch lowered his spiked club.
Believe me, kids, when I say that our actions here are necessary,
All this fun is just beginning.
He looked from his weapon to Talia, and his grin widened.
You can't!
She screamed.
You can't just kill everyone at once.
Idiot!
The meat will spoil!
Think about it!
A few of the guys laughed again, but their leader's smile vanished, and he cocked his head.
Hmm, good point.
Perhaps we'll just break your legs and tie it to a column.
Jaden blinked.
coming gradually out of his disassociation.
He had bead in his jeans, and there were tears in his eyes.
He wanted to say something, something clever or useful,
something to get them out of this nightmare.
But when he opened his dry mouth,
the only words that came out were,
Eight days.
Their captor swung his gaze to the boy.
Eight days, you say?
He clicked his tongue.
Eight days.
So far.
But I've been sending someone out every hour,
testing the blockaded,
various places. The soldiers are dug in, focused. They won't let anyone through. And no wonder,
see, y'all didn't hear what I heard before the power cut. I know what's happening out there.
Oh yeah, and it's everywhere. It's the whole damn world. Now we're living in the dark ages to
point zero. His eyes flashed with deadly excitement. Jaden swallowed. Why? What, what happened?
How did it start?
The captain shrugged.
What the fuck does that matter?
He turned to a pair of his guys.
Lucky, get the harness straps.
Checks, break their ankles, will you?
Wait!
Talia called out.
You need us!
For a moment, Jaden felt a rush of hope in his stomach at her words.
Talia had a plan.
Of course she did.
She was smart.
She was a survivor.
Baggage claim has barricaded themselves in.
She went on.
They have weapons. Weapons we found in the luggage. Two pistols, ammunition, a machete, a hatchet, and there's more food. You'll need baggage claim.
Jaden gawked at her. Their families. Their families weren't there. Why would she...
You could get them on your own. I know you could. But it would be difficult. A battle. You'd lose guys. But we can get you in. We know the way. And they're expecting us back. They'll let us in. I promise.
Across the sizzling human meat, aircraft maintenance member Mike Crunch wrinkled his nose,
then nodded.
Okay, dokey, but surely I don't need both of you for that.
For a moment, Jaden and Talia were still, staring at each other.
Then the girl moved in a blur, twisting from her captor's grip,
kneeing the man between the legs, then turning and kicking at the blazing fires.
Embers sprang into the air in the torso on its spit fell onto the floor.
Jaden saw the captain raise an arm to shield his eyes from the sparks,
when Tali had jumped at him and tore the golf club from his grip.
She had done it.
She could fight them.
They could get away and...
The spiked clubhead struck Jaden across the face,
knocking him sideways in his captor's grip.
He went stiff, bloody teeth and bits of skin falling to the tiled floor.
Then the hands that held him let go, and he fell onto his side.
Talia moved to stand above him, bringing the club up, then down, then up again and down again,
until his body stopped twitching.
Straightening up, her hair disheveled and sweat on her cheeks.
She exhaled and handed the bloody club back to its owner.
Captain Crunch accepted it, examining the mess of skin and hair stuck on the nails.
Then he laughed.
Ha ha!
That was cold, he said smirking.
You're quite the little frosted furrow.
Flake ate you.
He turned to her and tipped his hat.
Welcome to the crew.
I do hope you're hungry.
Talia inhaled deeply.
Her eyes set.
Starved.
When dawn broke on the 44th day since the lockdown began,
only a faint glow of sunlight
pierced through the haze outside the cracked and filthy windows.
The airport was mostly quiet.
There was the drip, drip, drip of dirty water
from the makeshift reservoirs on the roof,
downed the collection barrels, and the dry cough of someone curled beneath a mound of blankets
in one corner. And then, the wobbly wheels of a luggage cart being pushed around the corner,
followed by soft, shuffling steps. The woman hunched behind the cart was gaunt and sickly pale,
not unlike the skeletons she was collecting. All those bits of bone, no flesh or even marrow left
behind, their edges notched with the marks of human teeth. Slowing her cart, the woman leaned,
to pick up a small skull from in front of Gate A-12.
The skull had once belonged to a girl named Haley Cooley,
though no one was left who remembered her name.
As the woman turned to set the bone upon her cart,
a door squeaked open and footsteps approached.
She gasped and dropped the skull,
which fell with a hollow thud under the tiles at her feet.
Two people approached the woman,
and when she saw who they were and the golf clubs in their hands,
she sank into a bow and said,
Master Sergeant Frosty and Sergeant Bebbles.
A grim morning to you both.
I do hope the captain is well.
The club leaders exchanged a look.
Then Talia set the end of her weapon on the floor,
leaned on it and sighed.
Look around, Helen.
The psychos aren't here.
They're all sleeping at check-in.
They can't hear us.
Even now, after all that had happened,
there was conviction in the teenager's voice,
though it hurt to speak.
Talia's gums had started to bleed the weak.
before. She was so thin now, so tired, so nauseous day and night. Her flesh, feeding only upon the
flesh of others, had wilted, and her mind would go next. She could feel it starting to happen,
as it had happened to so many others. Captain Crunch here's all, responded the woman,
bowing deeper. I am proud to serve, and to gather the bones. Oh, Jesus, give it a break,
said the man with the other golf club rolling his eyes.
this bone-gather shit. You are Helen. I am Jehoun. This is Talia. And Mike Crunch,
Cheon sneered, but even his bold voice lowered as he said the next words about their
mad ruler. Is a goddamn lunatic. Helen began to tremble.
No, no, no, you mustn't say that. He'll cut us up. He'll cut us up and make us eat ourselves
before we fade. I must gather. I must gather the bones. She grabbed her cart and tried to
Hurry away, but Talia seized her by the arm.
Listen, Helen, we have a plan. Do you hear me?
A plan to leave this place.
But we need your help, and we need to go right now.
Helen hung her head.
I am the gatherer of bones.
No, Helen, said Talia.
You're a pilot, remember?
With Delta Airlines.
That's why you were here, and it's why we need you now.
I must gather the bones.
She called out again.
But Chiehoun raised his club and smacked her lightly across the head.
She winced, blinked, and looked back at them with.
Some hint of the woman she once was.
Still afraid, yes, but finally, able to listen.
You are an airline pilot, Talia went on, releasing the woman's arm.
Now listen, the ember storm has burned up almost everything outside,
but there is still one plane left over on runway, one R.
It was taxiing when the world went dark.
It's just sitting there.
It's intact.
It's fueled.
It's ready to go.
Added Jehoun.
There might be some soot and dust in the engines and some smoke damage, but you can get an airborne, right?
Helen swallowed.
Her hollow cheeks twitching.
Her eyes blinking very fast.
I.
That is possible if we get the APU to start.
But the pita will be clogged with ash.
Airspeed readings will be impossible.
and wait, no, we can't leave.
The darkness.
The great darkness is everywhere.
We don't know that for sure.
The U.S. military responded to the initial emergency,
and our power grid went out.
But the rest of the world?
He shrugged.
But where?
Canada, that's where we need to go.
We fly due north to Winnipeg.
Maybe.
Maybe they're doing better than us.
Helen shook her head.
Or maybe they're really.
doing worse. Talia sniffed a laugh, then leaned to pick up the child's meatless skull from the
floor and tossed it onto the cart. How could things be worse? For a moment, Helen's expression
relaxed, and she looked less like a zombie and more like a human again. But then a fresh wave
of fear passed over her face. But the soldiers, if we go out there, they'll shoot us or shoot
down the plane. Jehoun shook his head. We haven't heard a gunshot in days. The army has
all gone, we're all dead. The only thing keeping us marooned in here now is our fear. Well,
that in crunches mad obsession with hunting down any survivors of the loungers. If he has his way,
we'll all be bones by this time next week. As Helen thought this over, rubbing the handle of the
cart in her skeletal hands, Talia turned and looked out through the grimy windows, past the burnt-out
shells of planes and vehicles, to the debris-strewn runways, to the charred grasses and the silent
barricades in the distance.
We are leaving.
Today, we are getting on that plane.
You are flying us out of here.
There's no other choice.
Helen stared into Talia's face, which, like Helen's, now looked 20 years older than her
true age, yet there was still a hint of defiant hope in her eyes.
Helen nodded.
Half an hour later, all eyes turned to Talia, as she reached to pull the chain off the doors
and shoved them open.
Talia held her breath and took the first step outside.
The air was thin and smoky and hard to breathe,
asked Helen's voice from the shadows within.
Talia turned and shrugged.
Like shit!
Come on, everyone!
Before the psychos know we're gone!
Out they came, a dozen of the last survivors.
Each was skin and bones, with sunken eyes and shaking hands.
They moved like ghosts, hunched and quiet,
too afraid to blink or to look back at the airport windows or the rooftop.
Jehoun came out last of all, and shutting the doors behind them,
he slid his golf club through the handles to seal them shut.
Then he turned and hurried south after the others,
moving around the burnt-out shell of a military Humvee before breaking into a run.
From up ahead, Talia turned her head to glance back in him,
and he saw her eyes flick up and behind him.
Then Payne shot through Jehoun's right shoulder blade and into his chest,
And he pitched forward onto his knees.
His right arm went numb, but he clung with his left hand,
to the bloody length of rebar protruding from just below his collarbone.
He tried to take a breath, but his lungs didn't work.
And there was so much blood, and he was so cold.
As Jehoun fell dead upon the asphalt,
Talia watched the spearmen on the roof,
grabbed for another weapon to throw,
screaming over his shoulder as he did so.
Scummer trying to flee!
Talia grunted.
Come on!
She yelled.
gesturing at Helen to speed up.
Run!
The escape east sprinted south, then turned east,
around an abandoned parking structure.
Tali was out in front,
and soon she could see the 737 over on the runway,
but it was still so far away.
Twisting her head as she ran,
Talia watched the others,
trying their best to keep up.
But they all looked so exhausted, so scared, so weak.
But Helen, Helen was the one that mattered.
Doubling back,
Talia rushed to grab the pilot by the,
elbow and help her along. That's when someone in the back of the group started to scream.
He's coming! Tali's ears picked up the rumble of a diesel engine. Then the sound of squeaky
tires and hooting laughter. Fuck! Talia mumbled, pulling Helen into a jog as a baggage tractor
chugged into view, pulling a train of three flatbed dollies, each with a golf club wielding maniac
seated atop it. And in the driver's seat, one bony hand gripping the steering wheel,
the other, holding up his spiked club, was Captain Crunch.
He still wore the captain's hat atop his head,
though his face below its brim was like a yellow skull with dark eyes
and a sneering blood-stained smile.
On his emaciated chest, the golden chain necklace jingled and sparkled.
This is your captain speaking, Crunch declared,
driving the tractor wildly,
so that the dollies behind it swerved and drifted,
and one his guys tipped out with a squeal.
Please return to the gate and await further instructions.
Thank you.
Reaching the first of the runners, he veered left and right,
knocking down the bodies of two scrambling women,
then swung his club at the head of a young man.
Hurry, Helen, we can do this.
Talia urged, cutting across a corner of charred lawn
and guiding them to the plane.
The cabin door was open,
and a set of portable stairs sat idly at an angle next to the aircraft.
Talia ran faster.
Behind them, the luggage tractor bounced and crunched over someone else, and Captain Crunch
led out a shrill whoop of laughter.
Reaching the portable stairs, Talia snatched the cold metal and leaned against it, forcing
the stairs back and over until they bumped against the plane.
Helen was wheezing as she stepped up onto the stairs.
Talia flew up behind her, shoving the woman forward.
As they reached the top and hurtled inside, Crunch's voice rang out behind them.
Where you're running off to?
Up it!
Talia shouted to Helen.
She spun in place in the back of the plane,
blinking as her eyes adjusted to the light.
The windows were sooty in the gray morning sky didn't help.
Then she gasped.
A corpse was sitting up in a flight attendant's jump seat,
with the empty drawers of a storage cart tossed around on the floor around it.
In the body's cold dead hand, there was a pistol.
The corpse had been a soldier, and filthy camp fatigues,
and a chunk of his skull had been blasted off when he shot himself in the face,
leaving a dark stain on the bulkhead behind him.
Talia leaned and grabbed the pistol.
Spinning back to the open door,
she held up the gun in a two-handed grip,
aiming down at the runway,
where the last of her people were being run down one by one.
Talia aimed at the oncoming luggage tractor.
Please be loaded, she prayed through gritted teeth.
Captain Crunch looked up at her, his dark eyes flashing.
Talia fired.
The bullet went wide,
but it pinned off the shaft of his golf club,
and swept off his captain's hat.
The spiked clubhead spun in the air
and landed on the greasy dome of his head.
She saw him flinch,
his left hand, spasming on the steering wheel,
and the tractor lurched, tipped,
and fell onto its side with a screech of metal,
the dollies behind it slamming against each other,
tossing bodies into the hazy air.
Talia lowered the pistol,
then reached out to grab the aircraft door.
Helen! Others!
Called Helen from the cockpit.
Talia winced against the weight of the door
as she pulled it shut,
catching sight of a young couple racing up the portable stairs.
Wait!
It's just us!
Now fly!
The engine spluttered, coughing out clouds of ash as Talia reached the cockpit.
The plane around them rattled,
and the view outside the filthy windshield shifted as the plane rolled forward.
There we go! There we go!
said Talia, dropping into the jump seat behind the pilot's chair.
Winnipeg! We go!
In front of her, Helen's pale hand pushed the thrott.
throttle forward, and the engines howled.
Talia raised her right hand.
She was still holding the pistol and wiped sweat from her forehead.
She said to herself for the millionth time.
Just one minute at a time.
That's the trick.
That's all you've got to do.
Her guts clenched and rolled as the jet's nose tipped up,
and the wheels rumbled for a second more,
then lifted off the runway.
I think, I think we might make it.
Talia looked up as the clouds above glowed silver.
She exhaled feeling dizzy.
They reached the cloud ceiling, slipped into the gray mist, and all at once, the 737 began
to shake and rattle.
Talia winced, bouncing in her seat.
Almost through!
Helen assured her over the turbulence.
And seconds later, they were out, soared above the clouds and light.
A pure bright and blinding whiteness filled the cockpit.
Helen screamed.
Talia clasped, her eyes shut, but it barely helped.
The sky was so bright, so impossibly bright.
What is this?
Helen screamed.
This can't be sunlight!
Talia didn't answer.
She didn't know.
A shadow whipped across her vision as something whooshed by the plane,
just outside the cockpit window.
And another, another.
There's something out there!
Clasping her hands around her eyes,
Talia opened them in a painful squint.
There were shadows.
Dozens of blurry shapes
swooping against the blazing sky.
Then something landed on the roof of the plane,
with the slamming boom,
and footsteps sounded from over their heads,
the many feet of something big.
Wind Helen,
Alia blinked and watched as a shape moved into view from above them,
bending over the windshield and twisting its long neck.
It turned to stare inside.
At them. Talia swallowed.
I think it's a...
Outside.
the Eldridge creature tipped its monstrous head.
Its skin was violet, and three eyes of dazzling gold looked out from its terrible face.
From its gaping mouth, a thousand glassy teeth extended like shards of mirror.
And as it crept further down onto the windshield, one arm extended into view,
its long claws scratching against the glass.
Talia could see one of its great wings of purple shade,
which spread to cloak the cockpit in magenta shadow.
And from the mouth of the winged messenger, there came a great sound, which vibrated the windshield and the airframe and the very bones in Talia's body, as it said.
Pilot seat, Ellen whimpered and curled up, trying to shrink, to make herself small before the horrible shame of the angel's words.
But fingers tightened, and the windshield cracked.
Talia sighed.
Tanya raised the pistol, setting its barrel against her right temple.
The other angel swooped upon the plane, seizing the roof and the wings and tail in their clawed grips to squeeze and smash, to render in ruin, to rip the aircraft apart at the seams.
Well, said Talia, her finger squeezing the trigger, it was worth a shot.
The monsters shrieked as they ripped the plane open like a tin can.
A final burst of freezing wind roared through the cabin.
The muzzle flash flared against her temple as her world collapsed into preempts.
perfect, merciful silence.
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