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Created for the Starmen.net’s SummerBound event, June 2015 All photography/photo editing by Matt Frey, June 2015 Edited by Sarah Shepherd Frey Special thanks: Shigesato Itoi

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Page 1: Created for the Starmen.net’s SummerBound event, June 2015I bolted upright, the sheet fluttering off my chest. The fleeting memory of being a soul in ... sweltering snowman in that

Created for the Starmen.net’s SummerBound event, June 2015 All photography/photo editing by Matt Frey, June 2015 Edited by Sarah Shepherd Frey Special thanks: Shigesato Itoi

Page 2: Created for the Starmen.net’s SummerBound event, June 2015I bolted upright, the sheet fluttering off my chest. The fleeting memory of being a soul in ... sweltering snowman in that

Chapter 1

I could still hear the drill boring into my skull.

I bolted upright, the sheet fluttering off my chest. The fleeting memory of being a soul in

a robotic shell dissolved in the rays of fresh sunlight.

For 20 years, that day had been the furthest thing from my mind. Great friends, gourmet

food, the glimmer of the sun on Paula’s hair – all I remembered was a summer vacation that

seemed like it would never end.

That was, up until about a month ago when the nightmares began. Memories of love took

a backseat to the foul odor of the sewers, the sting of combat, and the whirr of Dr. Andonuts’

drill.

Six in the morning. I never understood waking up early to have fun, but a vacation would

do me good, said my wife. As I slid out of bed, the door creaked open and blue eyes peered at

me, filled with adolescent joy and wonder.

“I’m so excited I think I’m going to pop, like a balloon! Boom!”

“Yeah, honey, me too,” I said. “Summers is the happiest place in Eagleland.”

I felt the wind off the door as it flew open, and in a flash, Skye was doing an array of

jumps and flips on the mattress.

“Honey,” I reminded sternly. The bouncing stopped.

“Mommy wouldn’t like that, huh.”

“No, she wouldn’t,” I replied, pulling on a T-shirt. “And it’s way too hot for that

anyway.”

Forgetting about the bed, my daughter soon engrossed herself in her Gameboy. Over the

peppy, tinny music of some fantasy world, she muttered, “I wish Mommy was here.”

I did too. But at that very moment, Serrah was probably suffering through some

hackneyed presentation about appealing to today’s youth though pop-up ads or achieving

marketing nirvana through tracking customer spending habits. We’d had our trip booked forever,

but she couldn’t skip that conference. Thankfully, she was only missing the first night.

“Mommy will meet us there tomorrow,” I said. That seemed to comfort her, but I could

never quite tell when she had her nose stuck in a video game like that.

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At the kitchen table, Skye hurriedly shoveled Cheerios into her face, as if eating quickly

would make the plane show up faster. I smiled. In my youth, I had spiraled hundreds of years

back in time and saved the world. But my greatest accomplishment was sitting across from me,

slurping milk out of a bowl that was just a bit too big for her hands.

In the old days, I would have just teleported to Summers. But since we took down Pokey

and Giygas all those years ago, my PSI power faded. Teleportation was one of the first skills to

go. And about a month ago, I could barely heal a scrape Skye got after riding her bike too fast

down the driveway and wiping out at the bottom. Then again, I guess I don’t need PSI if I’m

living this normal life.

Well, as normal a life as you can have trying to explain to neighbors why you receive

enthusiastic birthday cards each year from the King of Dalaam.

Sweat drenched my forehead. The air conditioner was cranked up as far as it could go,

but the heat wave that had gripped Eagleland for the last two weeks had other ideas. Early

morning had been the coolest, but today, it already felt like high noon. With school over, Skye

didn’t seem to mind. Just give her a Gameboy and watch her go. I, however, felt like the

sweltering snowman in that old Campbell’s soup commercial. In the last few days, I been caught

in my skivvies with my head in the freezer more times than I’d care to admit. Good thing Serrah

takes “in sickness and in health” seriously, because the amount of cash we’ve been putting into

our cooling costs lately has made us both feel a bit queasy.

We didn’t have to leave for another 15 minutes, so I switched on the tube and flopped on

the couch. Skye sat next to me, Gameboy in hand.

It was some sort of news segment about the excessive heat. The network was having a

field day.

“…what’s most alarming, say experts, is that Winters is beginning to thaw. Physicist and

climate expert Dr. Jeffery Andonuts says he’s beginning worry.”

There was Jeff, wearing the white lab coat he probably hasn’t taken off since college.

Though I hadn’t seen him since graduation – and he’d been much too busy for personal visits

since at least sophomore year – it always felt great to see him making such a name for himself.

Some people even say he’ll surpass his father’s genius. The rest think he already has.

“This is most unusual,” Jeff explained. “The Winters permafrost hasn’t thawed since the

advent of recorded history. This heat wave could have worldwide repercussions.”

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There was a twang of fear in Jeff’s voice that I had only heard once before when our lives

were in danger. My stomach clenched up.

Skye tugged on my arm.

“Daddy, it’s almost time to go!” she yelled. “We don’t wanna miss our plane, right?”

The TV screen went black as I slipped my sneakers on.

“We certainly don’t,” I replied.

The oppressive heat hit us like a haymaker as we made our way to the car.

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Chapter 2

Skye looked like some kind of sun shy ghost. I slathered even more SPF 2,000 sunblock

on her shoulders.

“Daddy, I want to build a sand castle and go in the water already!”

She shot free of my grip, fell to her knees, and started making “sand angels.” Then, with

sand sticking to her like Shake N’ Bake, she trotted to the water and, with her hands at her sides,

jumped into the shallow waves and wiggled around like a beached fish.

I wondered if I had been that energetic, or weird, when I was six.

The beach at Summers has always been a spectacular vacation destination and it was

especially popular in this heat. Temperatures creeping past 100 degrees couldn’t keep the beach

bums away. Thousands of beachgoers were sunbathing, swimming in the ocean, and paying way

too much for Gelato de Resort sold from a small refrigerated cart by some sweat-soaked

entrepreneur.

I patted myself on the back for setting up our hotel reservations so early in advance.

Lying on the beach towel and closing my eyes, I must have dozed off. I was started

awake by a woman’s voice.

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“Skye?” I asked, my eyes adjusting to the light. I put my hand out and found her playing

in the sand next to me.

“Oh, I’m sorry to startle you, sir,” said the voice. “I was wondering if you or your

daughter wanted a Magic Tart.”

“Hey, I know you!” I exclaimed. “You’re the Magic Cake lady!”

“You must be mistaken, sir, I only make Magic Tarts,” she replied.

“Ma’am, about 20 years ago, you used to go to the Stoic Club, right?” I asked. “I was the

one of the boys who helped rekindle your love of baking, remember?”

She slowly nodded.

“I thought it was you,” she said. “I just felt compelled to walk over to you and your

daughter out of all the people on the beach.”

She reached into her cart. I was getting ready to tell her that we didn’t want any Magic

Tarts when she whipped out a fully decorated cake.

“Every so often, I’ll still make a Magic Cake,”

she explained. “I don’t advertise it, but there’s some

people who’ll pay a pretty penny for some. Here, it’s

on the house for an old friend.”

She waved goodbye and headed off. I waved

back, put the cake in some Tupperware, and stashed it

in our beach bag.

After a few hours of fun in the sun, Skye and I washed up at L’hotel De Summers and

grabbed a bite to eat at the Summers Restaurant. Jeff’s old friend Tony has run the restaurant

with his partner, Steve, for the last seven or eight years and has refused to let me pay since

Serrah and I ate there during our honeymoon.

I knew Tony was happy to see us, but we noticed something about his demeanor was off.

When I shook his hand on the way out, I asked what was bothering him.

“Honestly, Ness, I’ve had this really bad feeling lately,” he said. “There’s something not

right about this heat. Have you seen Jeff on the news talking about it? This isn’t normal.”

I suggested that it was probably going to be over soon. “I don’t think there’s anything to

worry about.”

To tell the truth, I wasn’t so sure about that.

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Skye was already outside. It was barely 5 p.m., but the beach that had been jam-packed

only two hours before was nearly deserted. Maybe it was because the sun was beginning to set.

Or maybe everyone had headed off to the theater down the street for one of those free concerts

they sometimes have?

“I don’t want to go to the hotel yet,” she said. “Let’s take a walk on the beach and maybe

we can go in the pool later.”

The idea of going anywhere near that beach made me uneasy. But there was nothing to be

afraid of, right? There was still some daylight left and it wasn’t like everyone had disappeared.

There were just fewer people than I would have expected.

“After you,” I said, waving my hand towards the beach.

We walked for a while towards the Toto port, with Skye occasionally throwing sand in

the air like confetti or stopping to examine the odd seashell. We were a little ways off from

where beachgoers normally trek.

The setting sun streaked the skies amber and red, tinting the surf the same colors.

The excited clamor of Summers after dark had faded. The chatter of the seagulls looking

for handouts might as well have been coming from Fourside. Even the waves seemed to have

stopped. All I could hear was Skye carrying on about how she wished Mommy were here to see

her newest find, “The smoothest, biggest rock ever.”

Swirling around us was the clean scent of the ocean, but also a hint of something else –

rot. Things wash up on the beach all the time and it wasn’t unreasonable to assume an

unfortunate fish had found its way ashore. We kept walking, but the smell only got stronger.

I looked around. My daughter and I were the only people on the beach.

“Ok, honey, I think it’s time to go back,” I said. “I don’t see anyone else around so I

think we might have gone farther than we’re allowed.”

“But what about them, Daddy?” She pointed out into the distance.

Two silhouettes were headed in our direction. Not sure how I missed them. I breathed a

sigh of relief – I’d let those decades old bad memories get the best of me.

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Skye was already jogging towards them.

I waved. “Nice night for a walk, right?” I yelled.

No response. They shambled ever closer.

“Honey, wait for Daddy,” I said sternly. She just kept running.

Suddenly Skye screeched to a halt, like she had reached the end of a map in one of her

video games.

I was close enough now to see them. Deep, black pools for eyes. Grey, tattered flesh

hanging from their arms like rags. No lips to hide their teeth, which were dripping with a dark,

viscous fluid.

A boney hand lashed out.

“Skye!”

She flailed in the monster’s grasp!

Out of nowhere, a massive chill surrounded us. Then, a low, guttural wail of pain.

Skye slid out of her attacker’s hands before they cracked off and fell in the sand like a

discarded towel. The grotesque body froze and shattered like crystal.

PSI! Skye could use PSI!

I eyed a piece of driftwood about a foot away and dove for it. It wasn’t a baseball bat, but

it would have to do.

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“Leave us alone! Leave us both the hell alone!”

The crunch of wood on bone echoed across the sea. Decaying, green blood seeped into

the sand.

I don’t remember grabbing my daughter and sprinting back to the hotel room. What I do

recall is the chaos. It looked like most people had hightailed it out of Summers while we had

been eating dinner, leaving only hordes of the undead roaming the streets. Moans shot through

alleyways. The putrid air was inescapable. And although the moon had just began to peek over

the skyline, the heat got worse and worse.

Bloody fingers brushed my sleeve as hurled my daughter into our room and slammed

shut the door. Thank God the hotel used a swipe card system instead of keys.

I overturned the mattress, threw it against the door, and pushed the dresser in front.

Tears streamed down Skye’s face. “What’s going on?”

“I don’t know, honey.” Sitting on the floor, I hugged her tight and tried to comfort her.

“You did a really good job,” I blurted out.

“I did what the lady in my dreams told me,” she said.

“Lady? What lady?”

“The nice blonde lady in a pink dress who visits when I sleep,” she replied. “She told me

I’d need to use what she taught me one day, but I thought it was just dreams. She said she

couldn’t talk to my Daddy. She said something was wrong and you couldn’t hear her anymore.”

Paula! But what was stopping her from contacting me like when we were kids?

A few minutes passed. My mind raced. What were we up against? How were we going to

get out? What were we going to eat?

Eat… Yes! That was it!

“Daddy’s going to get some help, but that means you have to be brave for a while without

him, okay?”

Skye nodded solemnly.

I fished through our beach bag, pulling out the Magic Cake from earlier. The entire slice

was gone in two or three mouthfuls.

“Daddy? Daddy?”

My daughter’s voice got farther and farther away as a familiar land materialized

peacefully in front of me.

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Chapter 3

The king’s eyes opened slowly. He was only halfway through his morning meditation,

but a feeling of unease had come over him that was too strong to ignore. The Mu master stood up

and surveyed his kingdom from atop his mountain perch.

A merchant scurried to the market, shirtless children played games of warriors battling

evil, and mothers and fathers fried up garlic for their morning meals. The heat that so bothered

the rest of Eagleland wasn’t a problem for the good people of Dalaam, who saw it as sign of

good luck to come.

As he climbed down the rickety rope ladder, a breeze cooled his sweat-dripping face. He

nodded happily. Even in a time of unease, the king had learned to appreciate the simplicity of

life. He could see, hear, move, and think. His Mu training had taught him that those were all

things for which to be eternally thankful.

He walked down the dirt path to the castle, stopping briefly to greet his people. He was

met with smiles and pleasantries, and genuine good will for their leader. But they also knew the

King was moving with purpose. They let their ruler pass without the small talk that normally

filled his joyful mornings.

The wind rustled through the vibrant vegetation just outside of the castle walls, and with

the wind at his back, the King strode past his servants, through the throne room, and into his

personal quarters. He opened the glass display on the wall for the first time in nearly two

decades, carefully removing the jewel encrusted sheath.

In a single, smooth motion, he withdrew the sword, gently parting the air around him. He

carefully affixed the fearsome weapon into his back.

From the chest on the floor, he obtained his cloak and bracer. Time had been kind to the

old equipment and it still fit quite well.

He was ready.

Outside, the king closed his eyes, focusing on the weak psychic beacon of his friend.

Summers. That was where he was needed.

The king shot up the dirt path in front of him, past the castle, toward the cliff’s edge. He

leapt off the side, barreling down like a bullet.

And in a flash, he was gone.

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Chapter 4

From our hotel window on the fifth floor, my daughter and I could see about 100 of those

monsters crowded around the hotel, waiting for us. Palm trees swayed in the summer breeze and

the waves crashed lazily on the beach. From a helicopter, it must have looked like paradise.

From where we were sitting, it was Hell on Earth.

A constant scratching on the door had kept us awake most of the night, and after the

effects of the Magic Cake wore off, I stood guard over Skye until daybreak.

She saw it before I did.

“Daddy, look!”

Way off in the distance, the undead started… disappearing. It looked like a path was

being cleared, like a lawnmower making a b-line through overgrown weeds, and it was quickly

approaching. Somehow the undead didn’t notice the bodies falling around them. Whatever it

was, it embodied stealth.

“What is that thing?” Skye asked fearfully.

I smiled. “That’s not a thing, honey. It’s a king.”

The scratching on our door stopped. A few muffled moans outside the room prompted me

to start tearing down the makeshift blockade that had kept us safe throughout the night. I waited

for unbroken silence. That was my cue.

I found myself face to face with King Poo, as I peered out into the hallway. It was

littered with rotting corpses. I could tell that he had done his best to dispatch the monsters as

efficiently and painlessly as possible, on the off chance they might still be human enough to

know suffering.

“Kept you waiting, huh?” he asked.

“You’re pretty good,” I replied.

The King sheathed his sword. Skye ran over and hugged him around the neck.

“Uncle Poo!”

“It’s not just me, little one,” the King revealed.

Tony burst through the open door, out of breath and terrified out of his mind. He put his

hands on his knees and sucked as much air into his lungs as he could.

“Tony, you’re alive!” I exclaimed.

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“Ness! Ness!” he stammered in-between gasps. He held something out to me. It was a

small receiver phone, like the one Apple Kid had made all those years ago. I vaguely

remembered Jeff giving a similar phone to Tony the summer they graduated from Snow Wood

Boarding School. The words “best friends” were emblazoned on the back in Tony’s handwriting.

I grabbed it. “Hello?”

“Ness,” said a voice, calmly and firmly, “It’s Jeff. I’d love to catch up but we don’t have

time for small talk. I’ve figured out the cause of this unnatural heat. It’s connected to your

current situation, and unchecked, it could spell doom for Eagleland.”

Jeff explained that he was taking readings near Stonehenge in Winters while researching

the heat wave, and he discovered something unusual. He noticed that some of the years-old snow

had melted, revealing what looked like the hatch to a World War II-style bomb shelter. Intrigued,

he pried it open and climbed down. But what he found wasn’t a ham radio and a few copies

Eagleland Digest from the ‘40s. Sprawling out before him, he said, was a secret laboratory that

had been operating right under his nose for decades.

The rows of monitors were dim. Absent was the typical whirr of alien machinery we had

come to know as kids. At the edge of the complex was a room with a single computer chair,

facing towards an old computer. The monitor flickered.

There was someone in the chair.

The scientist didn’t wait for answers. He tore a small laser from his pocket and blasted

over and over again. The room danced with explosive greens and purples. Whoever had been

sitting there slumped to the floor with a sickening metallic clang.

A Starman. A single, standard model Starman. Jeff guessed that it hadn’t been functional

for a long time.

That is, until it started talking: “DEAD-HEAT initiated June 5, 201X.”

“Define DEAD-HEAT,” Jeff commanded.

“DEAD-HEAT protocol: A failsafe in the event that Master Giygas is destroyed. Protocol

calls for annihilation of the Chosen Four. Protocol failed to trigger upon Giygas’ defeat on June

5, 199X due to the event occurring in the past, before creation of DEAD-HEAT. Recent

environmental scan initiated by Starman serial number SNS-006 revealed that Master Giygas no

longer exists. Starman SNS-006 manually initiated DEAD-HEAT protocol as per programming.”

“What is the nature of DEAD-HEAT?” Jeff asked.

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“A thermal signal to reanimate deceased organic life, emitted from a chosen ground zero

throughout Eagleland. Dead tissue functions again and subjects begin their attack after an

incubation period of 17.54 days. Subjects within 15 mile radius of ground zero will revive

several hours earlier. The remains of Master Giygas, located in the Lost Underworld, will revive

after an incubation period of 18.722 days.”

I suppressed my panic for Skye’s sake, but my eyes betrayed me as I sat down on the

floor. She hugged me from behind. Would my daughter know the horror of another alien

invasion?

Jeff’s urgency snapped me out of it.

“If we can’t take care of this, Giygas will be reborn with an undead army at his

command. There haven’t been reports of zombies anywhere else but Summers yet, so that area is

likely the point of origin. Ness, you and your daughter are at ground zero. Whatever is causing

this must not be far away from your current location.”

The meteor. The sanctuary guardians. Heading back in time, I was scared then, too. But

I’d done all of that with nothing but a baseball bat, my buddies, and my wits. King Poo was here,

ready to help. And from the looks of things, my daughter controlled more powerful offensive PSI

than I ever had.

I yanked my red baseball cap out of my suitcase and slipped it on my head.

“Okay, Jeff,” I replied. “Where do we start?”

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Chapter 5

King Poo sliced though the undead menace effortlessly, Skye roasted ‘em, and with a

baseball bat we borrowed from a memorabilia store in the hotel lobby, I was getting zombie guts

all over Sammy Sosa’s signature. But in the short time since formulating our plan, the streets ran

thick with rot.

According to Jeff, there was only one place in Summers that could transmit the DEAD-

HEAT signal across Eagleland: the radio station, WSMR. I wondered: How could a small station

known for Beach Boys-style surf rock be the source of an apocalyptic plot to raise the dead?

Then we tuned in. At first it was just some generic tune about hot cars, cute girls, and

hitting the beach. But then: “…and that was ‘Super Smash Summer’ by the Melee Bros.!”

exclaimed the overexcited disc jockey. “I hope everyone out there in Listener Land is having a

sizzlin’ summer, including Ness and his daughter, the beautiful Skye. Come on down here,

Spankey, and the hits’ll just keep coming, if ya know that I mean! And don’t forget to pick up

that phone because the next 10 callers get to hail Master Giygas! Yowza!”

They were leading us into a trap. But with we didn’t have many options.

“This one goes out to all those gorgeous zombie girls out there!” blared the radio. “You

can sink your teeth into me anytime! Hubba hubba!”

Skye frowned. “Can someone turn that off?”

I could have sworn I knew that D.J. from somewhere.

* * *

It was getting harder to advance. For every zombie we took down, it seemed like two

more joined the fray. I was glad that these zombies weren’t like the ones in the movies, because

we must have been bitten more than 100 times collectively. The King was doing his best to heal

us, but I could tell his PSI was growing weaker. And the heat was nearly causing me to pass out.

I wished I could have traded places with Tony, who was bunkered down in the hotel

room for his own safety.

It was only a mile. Then half a mile. We were almost there, I told myself. Just a little bit

more.

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The receiver phone rang and I hastily answered, swinging the bat with my other hand.

“Jeff? Anything you can do to help us?”

“Hello, it’s your Dad,” replied the phone. “You’ve been out there a long time now… It

may be none of my business, but don’t you think it would be a good idea if you took a break?”

“NOT NOW, DAD!” I exclaimed.

“I deposited $564 -”

I wailed a nearby zombie with the butt of my bat. It gnashed its teeth and lost

consciousness.

“- $587 into your bank account.”

“Dad, I’m 33! You don’t need to keep giving me money like this.”

“Your dear old dad was also thinking about hitting the hay for the night.”

“It’s 7 a.m., Dad,” I said. “How did you even get this number?”

“Ness, you like to work hard, just like your mother. But, I don’t think it’s good to work

too hard. I love you son.”

I sighed. “Thanks, Dad. I love you too.”

I had hardly stuffed the phone back in my shorts pocket when I heard my daughter

exclaim, “There it is!”

I couldn’t believe that the broken down husk of a building ahead of us was the source of

so much misery. What was once a vibrant paintjob had dulled to a light grey, accentuated with

dirty black streaks and years of unchecked water damage. The windows on all six floors had

been hastily boarded up, whether by station employees trying to avoid the undead or by Giygas’s

followers fortifying the building, I didn’t know. And on the top was the antenna that had been

broadcasting DEAD-HEAT, unrestrained, for more than two weeks.

“I bet Jeff could make one heck of a laser gun outta that,” I muttered.

The undead were packed shoulder to shoulder around the building. There was no way we

were going to get in without casualties. My heart sank.

“Ness!” yelled the King. “You’ve got to destroy that antenna! I’m going to take care of

our enemies here, but you and Skye need to run as soon as you have a chance. Just get in when

you can!”

“Poo, how do you think you’re going to…?”

“Just be ready!”

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I grabbed Skye, put her on my shoulders, and told her to hang on.

The King jumped into the middle of the crowd and put his hands together in meditation.

The undead around him scratched and bit, but he continued unflinching.

“PSI Starstorm Omega!”

The sky opened and the heavens expelled celestial fire. There was a torrent of decaying

limbs and green blood.

A path had emerged to the radio station entrance.

Poo collapsed to one knee. My instinct was to aid my old friend, but I saw the remaining

undead were already filling in the gaps left by their predecessors.

The king said only one word: “Go!”

As I hurried through the charred remains of the building’s front door, Skye and I heard

King Poo unsheathe his sword gracefully.

“Come get some,” he beckoned.

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Chapter 6

My watch stopped calculating the temperature increase at 120 degrees. Sweat stinging

my eyes, I trudged up six flights of steps to the top of the building.

There was no one else at the station, it had seemed, but clearly someone didn’t want us to

succeed: The final set of stairs had been blocked by furniture and old radio equipment.

“Daddy,” whispered Skye. “What now?”

“I’ll have to try to climb onto the roof from one of the windows on the top floor,” I

replied. I turned back and cautiously entered the sixth floor.

With the boarded up windows blocking the sun, I had no idea where to go. But a faint

light shone from the last room on the left.

My stomach churned. Something bad was about to happen.

I crept down the hallway, baseball bat at the ready. Skye was holding her breath.

I ran in swinging. The bat crashed into the window. Boards toppled down and hundreds

of glass shards glimmered in the light that was now flooding the room.

“The years haven’t been kind to you, Spankey,” whispered a voice from behind.

No, there was no way…! Yet Pokey stood before me. He looked exactly how I remember

him from my childhood.

“How are you even…?!”

“You’re about ready to wet your pants, aren’t you?” he laughed through an inhuman, ear

to ear grin. “Let’s get it on, Spankey!”

A flash and a sting in my jaw. How did he hit me so quickly? He hadn’t even moved!

“I was just fooling around before, when we were neighbors,” he hissed. “This time I’m

going to kill you. Then I’m going to enjoy taking your daughter apart piece by piece. Slowly.”

“You monster!”

My bat whizzed through the air violently, again and again. Pokey kept dodging,

countering. And if I stood still, he just pummeled me where I stand. It was like fighting a coked-

up Yoda. I couldn’t land a single hit.

Skye tried desperately to help me though her tears, but the PSI just fizzed out before even

reaching the beast.

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I could taste blood. PSI Life-up was useless. I tried anyway, again and again, in between

his relentless attack. My PSI was gone entirely.

Pokey stared at me with that unnerving, unbroken smile. His twisted eyes danced with

delight.

“Remember when we used to play Mortal Kombat at the arcade down the street, Ness?”

Pokey asked, gleefully. “You remember what would happen when one combatant couldn’t fight

anymore?”

My daughter got on her knees. “Daddy, concentrate!” Skye prayed from the bottom of

her heart. “The woman from my dreams is telling you to concentrate!”

I closed my eyes and in my mind, I saw Pokey standing before me. Near his heart was a

faint gold shimmer, like Paula’s hair in the sun so many years ago.

I raised my bat and dashed forward. I felt a snap in my left wrist, then searing pain.

The bat had splintered into toothpicks. I was still holding the knob and the grip. The

majority of the barrel was lodged in the adjacent sheetrock wall. (Sorry, Sammy.)

Pokey clutched his chest, heaving.

“How do you… keep… winning?” he stammered. “I’m better than you! I’m… better…!”

Something tumbled from Pokey’s chest and rolled out in front of me – a huge chunk of

the Mani Mani statue.

I grinded it beneath my heel.

The illusion broken, Pokey’s figure faded away, revealing a Starman model I’d never

seen before. It was a shiny turquoise and it radiated a dark aura. Judging from how fast and tough

it was, it must have been made of titanium.

With the nightmare rock destroyed, I felt a familiar power welling up in me. I knew

instantly: That thing had been weakening my PSI for years!

All the self-doubt, all the fear, all the bad memories of my childhood battle against the

Universal Destroyer – they were gone in an instant. The power of Giant Step, Milky Well,

Lumine Hall and the rest was mine to wield once more. With a shattered wrist and my only

weapon in pieces, I was going to need it.

The Starman whirred and clicked.

“Assessment: Battle plan compromised. Primary objective remains unchanged: Protect

DEAD-HEAT and destroy Ness. Resuming combat under secondary battle plan.”

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“Ness!” Paula spoke directly to my mind. “With the Mani Mani statue gone, you can use

PSI again. Please, let me lend you my power as well.”

I felt her strength mingling with my own. My senses peaked. My wounds healed. My

emotions flared.

“Skye! PSI Freeze! Now!”

Ice clung to the hapless machine. The Starman’s body solidified!

I ordered Skye to stand close to me where I could keep her safe. I gathered all my power,

all my anger, and all my love.

“PSI Rockin’ Omega!”

King Poo told me how the blast shattered every window on the top floor, as if someone

had triggered an atom bomb. Pieces of the building sailed through the air, slamming into the

streets.

Smoke stung our eyes and seared our lungs. Skye and I coughed and coughed until

finally, the room was clear enough to see. Before us lied the smoldering remains of the strange

Starman.

“Yeah, Pokey,” I said smugly, “just like Mortal Kombat. Toasty!”

We heard a massive creaking and got to the window just in time to see the antenna hit the

ground outside, crumbling into a heap of scrap. The force of battle must have been too much for

it to take.

With the DEAD-HEAT signal cut off, the zombies returned to the dust of the earth. A

cooling breeze caressed my dripping cheeks.

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Epilogue

“Are you sure you won’t stay for lunch?”

The king shook his head.

“My people need me. And besides, you know I’m not too fond of the food around here.”

“Or anywhere,” I said.

He smiled.

I thanked King Poo for his help one more time and he dashed off, disappearing into the

crowd of tourists.

The beaches were packed as usual. Since we had thwarted Gigyas’ plans so early in the

morning and the zombies had disintegrated and blew away, vacationers had no idea anything had

been wrong. Most businesses, lured by the sweet promise of cash, were open. They weren’t

going to let a little thing like a zombie apocalypse stop them from making a buck.

I hadn’t even heard of anyone being injured.

My daughter and I were too wound up to sleep and decided to head to the beach

ourselves. While I was waiting for Skye to change into her bathing suit, Paula’s voice filled my

mind once more.

“You did an excellent job, Ness.”

“Well, you were a real help,” I replied. “But let me ask you something. Why didn’t you

come to us in person?”

Paula chucked.

“Because you didn’t need me. Besides, you have Skye now.”

* * *

The water in Summers is clear, like crystal, so you can see several feet in front of you if

you can get over the shock of having your eyes open underwater.

Skye swam past me again like a little dolphin. We both came up for air at the same time

and laughed.

I never thought I’d consider 85 degrees on the cool side, but man, did it ever feel good to

be out of that heat wave.

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We walked out of the water and flopped down on our beach towel. Skye started packing

sand in a bucket for her castle. I lazily helped her dig a moat.

My wife had been right. No more bad dreams, no more blue moods. This vacation had

done wonders for me.

Serrah emerged from the gaggle of beachgoers lined up by gelato cart. I waved at her and

she hurried over.

“Mommy!”

Serrah smiled at me.

“Sorry I’m late,” she said. “Did I miss anything?”