Friday 19 February 2016

Zombies

For audio click here 
It was like the zombie apocalypse had arrived while I was sleeping. The high street which had been a vibrant, sunny, bustling, hub of the community was now the pit of despair. People drifted around aimlessly; there were no cheery good mornings in the green grocers, no alright butts outside the betting shop, no have a nice days in the butchers; people grunted their hellos and mumbled their goodbyes.
The place looked like it had been washed on too high a temperature, colours had run and people shrunk. Faces were drawn and gaunt; smiles had been outlawed, frowns were commonplace.
There was tension in the air, mothers screamed at toddlers. Drivers leaned on their horns. Pedestrians tutted at those living life in the slow lane and cursed those pushing past them. A man jabbed his finger into the chest of a youth on a bike. Everyone was jerky, jumpy, jittery. What was going on?
“Gone,” said one near Zombie.
“You’re jokin’?” said her friend. “I was there yesterday.”
“Me too,” said the first. “But today, ‘sgone.”
“What the fuck are we gonna do?” Zombie two asked. “Where the fuck are we gonna get our …” I didn’t hear what she said but I guessed that some drugs den had been closed down by the police leaving the good people of Canton* desperate for their fix. That might explain one or two long faces but a whole community?
A strange buzzing filled their air. Were we being invaded by killer bees, or doodlebug aliens? I looked around for the cause of the source but there was nothing to be seen against the backdrop of grey. Light rain began to fall adding to the gloom and the droning got louder. I began to realised it was the mumbling of the zombies. Over and over again they chanted the same thing; desperation in their eyes, despair on their lips.
no sausage rolls,
no steak bakes,
no cheesy pasties,
no cream cakes,
no curry lattices,
no flatbread wraps,
no cheap coffees,
no breakfast baps.
It was then I saw it;the void, the black hole, the cause of the pain. A crowd had gathered come to see for themselves and now standing, staring in disbelief. It really was true. One man stood forward and hammered on the door, but no one came to answer his cries for help. A woman threw herself on the floor, inconsolable. Some posted a picture on Facebook and a petition was started on 38 Degrees. The droning started anew, louder, more desperate.
no sausage rolls,
no steak bakes,
no cheesy pasties,
no cream cakes,
no curry lattices,
no flatbread wraps,
no cheap coffees,
no breakfast baps.
Their worse fears had been realised.

Greggs the Baker** was closed for reconstruction.

*Canton is a small suburb of Cardiff known for it's vibrant high street. 
**Greggs the Baker is a cheap and cheerful chain of food outlets that is very popular for its sausage rolls and other savoury goods. There are more Greggs in the UK than there are McDonalds. 

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