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Gil's All Fright Diner
Gil's All Fright Diner
Gil's All Fright Diner
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Gil's All Fright Diner

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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Bloodier than Fried Green Tomatoes!
Funnier than The Texas Chainsaw Massacre!

Welcome to Gil's All Night Diner, where zombie attacks are a regular occurrence and you never know what might be lurking in the freezer . . .

Duke and Earl are just passing through Rockwood county in their pick-up truck when they stop at the Diner for a quick bite to eat. They aren't planning to stick around-until Loretta, the eatery's owner, offers them $100 to take care of her zombie problem. Given that Duke is a werewolf and Earl's a vampire, this looks right up their alley.
But the shambling dead are just the tip of a particularly spiky iceberg. Seems someone's out to drive Loretta from the Diner, and more than willing to raise a little Hell on Earth if that's what it takes. Before Duke and Earl get to the bottom of the Diner's troubles, they'll run into such otherworldly complications as undead cattle, an amorous ghost, a jailbait sorceress, and the terrifying occult power of pig-latin.
And maybe--just maybe--the End of the World, too.

Gory, sexy, and flat-out hilarious, Gil's All Fright Diner will tickle your funnybone--before ripping it out of its socket!



At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 27, 2006
ISBN9781429913621
Author

A. Lee Martinez

A. Lee Martinez enjoys juggling, origami, skulking, and time travel.

Read more from A. Lee Martinez

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Reviews for Gil's All Fright Diner

Rating: 3.7959559602941177 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is Martinez's early efforts, it brims with talent and promise. Though not normally a genre I follow, it sucked even me in, so I recommend it to anyone who likes memorable characters.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    If you like Christopher Moore's work you'll like this. Very similar style in my opinion.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    What's better than a vampire - werewolf - zombie book set in the deep South?

    Nothing. Loved the narrator in this audio book. Going to have to look for more by him.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Earl, a somewhat scrawny 90-something-year-old vampire; and Duke, his buddy the beer-bellied werewolf, are just about out of gas and out of cash when they pull their beat-up pick-up into the parking lot of Gil’s All Night Diner. Not long after they sit down and Duke orders grilled cheese and chili, a horde of decaying zombies swarm the place. Between the two of them (and with a little help from the diner’s owner and her shotgun) the walking corpses are easily dispatched…but Loretta, the owner, is sick of the undead infestation and hire the two to help her figure out where the corpses keep coming from and why. It’s a cinch to trace the zombies to the local graveyard and work a little magic to stop them from rising, but it’s a bit more difficult to figure out who’s raising them in the first place and what deeper motivations they might have. Meanwhile, oversexed and overmagicked local teen Tammy…known to her cult of one as Mistress Lilith…and Chad, her loyal but dumb sole cult member and boyfriend…are frustrated by Earl and Duke’s presence in town. Earl and Duke and their various paranormal skills are now all that’s keeping Tammy from getting inside Gil’s All Night Diner and working the spells to raise the Old Gods and unleash hell on earth. Fast-paced, quirky, and just as much fun as it sounds, “Gil’s All Fright Diner” is a delightfully irreverent take on vampires, werewolves, and magic. Urban fantasy at its most rollicking!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Gil's All Fright Diner was not laugh out loud funny, as I was expecting it to be. And that is odd, given that the book is well written, has a good story line, and is ludicrously absurd. A flip flop wearing vampire named Earl (who my mind cast as Steve Buscemi right off the bat) travel's in a beat up pickup truck with a fat overalls wearing werewolf named Duke. They stop at Gil's diner for a bite to eat in the middle of the night, and the diner is immediately attacked by zombies. This begins the story, in which Earl and Duke are the heroes, and a cute 17 year old girl is the purely evil villain. She takes her witchcraft very seriously. Other characters are also largely on the supernatural side, with the diner's owner, the sheriff, and the witch's dumb jock lackey being about the only purely human characters in the book.It is a light, quick, fun book, and it has some humorous episodes (zombie cows being my favorite.) Any fan of horror novels should get a kick out of it.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    All my GR friends really enjoyed this but I just can't get into it. There are some funny things like turning the whole dark and dangerous and mysterious vampire and werewolf tropes on their supernatural ears. But what emerges are caricatures of a b movie action comedy. While I can picture a middle aged potbellied werewolf, a scared, whiny, sniveling, ineffectual little vampire is too much for me to buy and hell he is annoying. Other than him, so far everyone in this books is either fat (and this fact is very explicitly pointed out) or a hot teen. I get that Martinez is making fun of the genre but I just can't do another teenager infested supernatural fest. When the vampire has to control himself when a 17-year-old vamps for him (pun intended) I was done.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A comic fantasy buddy comedy. The buddies, Earl and Duke, are a vampire and werewolf who save the world from a teenage girl who is determined to bring back the old gods and destroy the light. Unlikely characters and situations abound, but ultimately a very good comic fantasy.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I love this book! The town of Rockwood has its problem. Cow mutilation, Every other house is haunted, The moaning tree sometimes will laugh hysterical, no big deal. Rockwood has seen it all. That is, until Earl (a vampire) and Duke (a werewolf), show up. Only planning to stay for a meal, they end up getting more than what they bargained for when Gil's Diner is suddenly attacked by zombies.Even if you don't normally enjoy books like this, quotes like "waiting for the placebo effects of the caffeine to take effect" and "he killed his already dead girlfriend" will make it worth your time. This is a well written book that takes the vampire/werewolf genre into a directions that is a bit less dramatic and more into the real world.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book was entertaining, but had a bit too much language for my liking. The synopsis on the back was funny, though. I’m shocked that this is an American Library Association “best book for young adults” due to the prolific language. Other than that, I most enjoyed the two chapters at the back introducing “In the Company of Ogres”, Martinez’s next book—at least there wasn’t any language in that part. For a writer’s first book, though, it was all right…except for the language. Did I mention all the language?
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Almost as much fun as Too Many Curses, you can tell however that this was his first book. But what an amazing first outing!I love this authors sense of humor and ability to slip in the absurd with the normal and make them seem to fit.My only quibble, if it even counts as such, is that the town and the diner weren't really fleshed out. The characters were for the most part, with only one or two small exceptions, but I wish more time had been given to the places. A small complaint and I think it shows more that I wanted more vs. any real weakness in the book.I would love it if he would revisit Rockwood County and Gil's diner, with or without Duke and Earl.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Fun and quirky, with hilarious characters. In the same vein as a Christopher Moore book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Great for anyone who's a fan of the funny Supernatural or X-Files episodes!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Earl and Duke, a redneck vampire and werewolf duo, pull into a diner on a dusty desert road and find themselves in the middle of strange doings involving zombies, ghosts, and apocalypse-craving elder gods.This is very much a horror-comedy, something I love when it's done right, but which can be difficult to pull off. I'm not sure this one quite hits the sweet spot between the two genres consistently. Certainly not as well as the same author did in blending pulp SF and noir detective genres in The Automatic Detective, which I thoroughly enjoyed. The humor is sometimes funny and clever, and sometimes just kind of silly. The horror isn't necessarily scary, but it does do a nice job of putting its own stamp on some familiar tropes (although I could have done without the evil sexy teenage sexpot who manipulates people with sex), and there are some very well-done cinematic-feeling descriptions of monsters and supernatural happenings.Really, it's mostly just trying to be fun, and while it's not perfect, it succeeds reasonably well. Not a must-read for comedy-horror fans, but not a disappointment, either. If there was a sequel -- and the ending, while it's definitely an ending, is certainly left open for one -- I would probably read it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I loved this book. A great blend between creepy and hilarious.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    One of the most enjoyable books of the year for me! The mixture of weird tradition a la Lovecraft and comedy hit just the right note. The interplay between rednecks Duke (a werewolf) and Earl ( a vampire) hit exactly the right note to make me laugh out loud more than a few times, and the small town characters were dead on some of the people I knew growing up in Louisiana.Highly recommended!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A werewolf and a vampire walk into a diner.... No, it's not the start of a joke, but it is the start to this comic novel. Duke and Earl, werewolf and vampire respectively, are out to save the universe and the diner from Tammy the teenaged-witch, her cult of one and her goal to release the "old Gods" upon the world. Along the way Earl manages to find love and acquire a ghost dog. This story is full of great comic touches, from the magical tongue of the ancients(i.e. Pig Latin) to an extremely rude Magic 8 Ball to the local law enforcement officer-Sherrif Marshall Kopp. :) At the center however, is the friendship between Duke and Earl, best buds through thick and thin. Very enjoyable. I wouldn't object to a sequel.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A.Lee Martnez erschafft immer wieder sehr eigene Figuren, die ihresgleichen suchen. Und immer schafft er es, auch die seltsamsten Typen so zu gestalten, dass man sie einfach ins Herz schließt, wie ungewöhnlich sie auch auf den ersten Blick zu sein scheinen.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Funny, if a bit crude at times.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A real page turner. Characters are really well rounded and lovable. I can see a movie in here! ;)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Book was a hoot! Recommended by a friend and very twisted and dysfunctional yet hilariously weird at the same time. This guy is a genius. Give us more!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Fast paced romp of a comedic thriller. Duke the Werewolf and Earl the Vampire stop at Gil's All Night Diner for gas on their way to parts unkown. Here they meet up with Loretta, the tough as nails waitress/fry cook/ owner of the Diner. She doesn't bat an eye when a zombie horde comes crashing through her front door - just fires off round after round of shotgun blasts, taking care of the problem. Our story takes off as Duke and Earl decided to help Loretta take care of her supernatural pests, not knowing that they are going to be caught in a life and death struggle to save the world from Armageddon. This book was a fun comic romp that was quick and easy to read. The main characters are very likeable and there is a plenty of steamy (if comic) romance and lots of action. Recommend to readers who enjoy the supernatural but aren't looking for anything super heavy.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was a very fun book. It's far from being great literature and isn't intended to be. I don't see how anyone could go through this book and not develop a huge affection for Duke, Earl, Loretta and Cathy.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I read this book because it sounded funny, and it was pretty funny. Anyone who likes corny zombie movies would like this book.Two unlikely characters serve as the heroes of this tale. Earl (as in earl of the Vampires) and Duke (as in Duke of the Werewolves) stumble across a diner with a zombie problem on a road trip they're taking. Loretta, the diner's owner, handles the zombies without batting an eye. Unfortunately soon things take a turn for the worse and even Loretta with her shot gun needs a couple of extra bodies to handle all of the trouble.This is not a beautifully written book, but then I wasn't expecting it to be. It is full of action, gritty, and witty. It was fast-paced, kept me interested, amused me, and (despite the fact that Earl and Duke aren't the most endearing characters I've ever read about) I really became quite fond of them by the end of the book. I knew this was going to be a good book when they got attacked by zombie cows; I mean how can you beat that.So if you're looking for a quick, fun, and darkly humorous read this is the book for you. I will definitely check out what other books this author has out.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    I love Christopher Moore's books, so I thought I'd also love this book because the author's writing style seemed similar. Big mistake! It was close-but-not-close-enough.It felt like the author was trying really hard to be funny but somehow the writing kept falling flat for me. Although, I'm sure some folks would find this book funny. Probably those who have not read the brilliance that is Christopher Moore!
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Okay, it was mostly funny. I did enjoy the characters, Earl the Vampire and Duke the Werewolf. This story is light and breezy, a quick read, probably a good YA book. Vampire turkeys? Funny! But skip this one if you enjoy Christopher Moore.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I discovered this author while checking out another reader's blog. Martinez has a few books out that all look like fun and since this was his first one, I decided to start here. The story is a light-hearted horror tale in which our two heroes are a slovenly, overweight werewolf and a lovelorn vampire in overalls with a comb-over. Low on gas, they pull up to the titular diner and take on a job from the owner to help her with her current zombie problem. Throw in a jailbait sorceress, undead cattle, and the local sheriff (Sheriff Marshall Kopp) and you've got a swift-moving tale that's just fun to read. It could stand a shot of joe to get things going a little quicker but based on this outing, I'm looking forward to this author's other two books, one of which tweaks the fantasy realm and the latest of which has a robot P.I. Good times.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    When Duke, a werewolf, and Earl, a vampire, come across the small Southern town of Rockwood, their biggest problems, or so they think, are the facts that they're out of gas, out of beer, and out of cash.The pull up to Gil's, a 24-hour diner, and before they can figure out what to do next, they find themselves helping the proprietor, Loretta, fend off a wave of zombie attacks, which in part explains why the nearby cemetery is somewhat vacant.Loretta needs help, both around the diner, and help with the zombies, so she hires on Duke and Earl, offering them money, which will get them both beer and gas, and help them on their way.While investigating the source of the zombie attacks, they discover mysterious cult activity in the little town of Rockwood, and must deal with the Rockwood sheriff, a couple of ghosts, a teenage sorceress, and her one-person cult to get to the bottom of things.Gil's All Fright Diner is a delightful first novel by Martinez, blending humor, hurror, and urban fantasy. It's not knock-down, drag-out hilarious, but will definitely make you chuckle from time to time.So, if you're sick of creepy vampires and angsty werewolves, then stop on by Gil's for a story that will satisfy.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book had me laughing out loud. If you don't think vampires and werewolves can be funny, this book may change your mind. Some non-graphic sexual situations, if you care about stuff like that.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I like the sci-fi mixed with humor in his writing. I like the ridiculous story ideas and how things turn out usually I'm too wound up in the story to even try to figure out what is going to happen next. If you like silly yet sci-fi/fantasy novels this is a definite must.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I read his 6th book, "Monster" and decided to try another. I loved this one too!! Its labeled YA but this OA doesn't think it fair to limit it. Also in my sensitive OA mind, some of the sexual situations seemed a bit mature for YA. It has an atypical vampire, overweight werewolf, zombies, ghouls, all sorts of interesting small town characters, a fight to save the world and a romance between a vampire and a ghost. I'm not sure if it was intentional, but in my mind the vampire and werewolf's names seemed opposite and I had to remind myself who was who (a minor detail). This scenario, delivered in comical, flowing style, made it makes it impossible to do anything but devour the book. Fortunately, the author has at least five more meals for me to savor.

Book preview

Gil's All Fright Diner - A. Lee Martinez

ONE

In the middle of nowhere, along a quiet stretch of road, the diner dreamt of the hungry dead. And of two men.

Well, not men exactly.

Earl bounced in his seat as the pickup quaked. His beer slipped and settled in his lap. He grunted curses as he snatched up the can too late to prevent a yellow puddle around his groin.

Hell, Duke, do you gotta hit every goddamn hole in the road?

Duke shrugged and offered a mumbled apology.

Yeah, well just try and watch it.

Earl reached into the pool of empty beers. Damn it, Duke! If that’s the last beer, I’m going to have to kick your ass. Like Arthur with Excalibur, he withdrew a full beer. You got lucky. He popped it open and gulped down half its contents.

Duke grunted.

How we doing on gas? asked Earl.

We got enough.

How much we got?

Enough.

Damn it, Duke, can’t you just answer a goddamn question?

Duke took a moment to lean out his window and spit. We got enough, Earl.

The rusty gray truck bounced down the dusty road, more of a dirt trail really. Worn shocks were helpless against the rocky, hole-ridden roadway, and with each jolt, the engine rattled as if it might rip free. The tape player didn’t work; something the passengers had learned at the cost of a Hank Williams, Jr. cassette. Spools of black tape hung from the radio’s jaws, the inevitable end of an unsuccessful rescue attempt. The passengers rode in silence with only the clatter of seventy-six empty beer cans to fill the quiet. Seventy-six was the exact number of tallboys that could fit in the front seat before space limitations demanded a transfer to the bed.

The vehicle was an unlikely means of transport for the Earl of Vampires and the Duke of Werewolves. But for a vampire who happened to be named Earl and a werewolf who liked to be called Duke, it was perfectly acceptable. Truth be told, they had called on much worse when the occasion demanded it.

We got like thirty more miles to the nearest station, y‘know? Earl glanced at the fuel gauge. It trembled on empty. Shit. Should’a filled up at the last place. I told’ja, didn’t I?

He contented himself by tossing dirty looks Duke’s way the next few minutes.

The vampire was a stringy fellow, pale—as one would expect—with an overbite, a large nose, and a ridiculously unsuccessful comb-over. The werewolf was large and hairy, even in his current man form. His monstrous gut barely managed to squeeze behind the steering wheel. A green baseball cap tried, and failed miserably, to contain the thick mane of dark brown hair atop his head. He had never been able to grow a beard, but a permanent five o’clock shadow covered his face.

Earl wore threadbare overalls that were at least as old as he was. (Which, for the record, was much older than he looked, but still not all that old for a vampire.) Duke wore denim jeans, a leather jacket, and a T-shirt emblazoned with the slogan NO

FAT CHICKS.

Next chance we get, Duke, we should get some new tires, too.

Tires are fine.

This one’s ready to blow.

No it ain’t.

What the fuck to do you know about tires, dipshit?

I know it ain’t going to blow.

Fine, but when it does, you’re changing it.

Fine.

Duke didn’t bother to point out the truck was currently riding on its spare.

Rattling quiet fell on the cab once again. It lasted through the next half-hour. The pickup’s working headlight cut through the darkness of a cloudy night and sliver of a moon. The occasional forlorn mailbox or animal carcass marked the otherwise unremarkable miles. Finally, a beacon of shimmering neon dared pierce the dark. It was a ten-foot sign beside a bunker of concrete. The sign read GIL’S ALL NIGHT DINER.

Duke pulled off. I’m hungry, he explained, before Earl could set about busting his balls.

Earl set about to busting anyway. You could‘a ate earlier. I told’ja to get something earlier.

Wasn’t hungry then. Duke tugged the brim of his cap so that it nearly covered his eyes as he pulled his girth free of the driver’s seat. The pickup’s suspension groaned as the truck rose three inches.

You could’a got a sandwich. That’s your problem. You never think ahead. You’re always living in the now. You’ve got one of them there reactive minds.

Duke cursed the day Earl had gotten his hands on a dogeared copy of Dianetics.

The werewolf stopped to sniff the air.

Now what? Earl asked.

Nuthin’. He tilted his head. Thought I smelt sumthin’ for a minute there.

What? What d’ja think you smell?

Zombies.

Jeezus, Duke, there ain’t nuthin’ for a hundred miles. Where the hell would zombies come from?

Over there.

Duke jerked his thumb over his shoulder as he entered the diner. As if on cue, the dust raised by the pickup’s arrival settled, revealing a small cemetery.

Oh.

Duke went inside.

A big black raven perched atop the diner’s neon sign. The bird tilted its head to stare at Earl with one cruel ebony eye.

What are you looking at?

He flung a pebble at the raven, but missed. The bird didn’t seem to care. It stayed on its perch without ruffling a feather. Sighing, Earl headed inside.

Duke’s worn hiking boots squeaked with each step across the diner’s worn linoleum floor. Earl’s flip-flops mutely thumped. The diner was abnormally large given its desolate location. There were enough booths, tables, and barstools to service a small army. But the room was empty. The overhead lights hummed obnoxiously. Two cheap desert landscapes hung by the bathrooms. A potted fern hung from a support column. A cracked ceramic pot sat in a corner. These efforts failed miserably to add character, and the place was so devoid as to be almost vulgar in its blandness.

The most eye-catching detail was a brownish red stain, about a foot long at its widest, at the base of the column. A normal person wouldn’t give it much thought, mistaking it for rust or mildew. But both Earl and Duke had sensitive noses. It smelled of blood. The stain looked old, but the odor, though subtle, was fresh.

A voice came from the back. Be right with you.

They found seats at the counter. The odor of grease made Duke’s stomach rumble.

Earl continued with his psychoanalysis. Now me, I’ve got goals, and my mind acts upon those goals in an enlightened manner. I’ve achieved myself a state of clear. Whereas you just act on whatever impulse enters that fool head of yours.

Least I got myself a shadow.

The vampire glanced at the floor. His shadow was indeed gone again. It did that quite often. Sometimes disappearing for hours or even days. Earl always hated that. He just knew that wherever it went, it was having a better time than him. And when it was in its rightful place, it had a tendency to move around against his will, taunting him and making a general nuisance of itself. Of all the problems of the undead (too many to list, really) the shadow was perhaps the most trivial, yet the most annoying.

Knowing how much it bothered Earl, Duke cracked a hint of a smile.

Earl scoured his mind for a clever comeback. He finally settled for a snarled, Fuck you.

The kitchen doors swung open, and a tall, plump woman lurched into the front. She wore a T-shirt and jean cutoffs that hugged her jiggling behind, but only barely. Cellulite rolled down her legs in flapping waves with each step. A soiled apron stretched across her immense breasts. Her hair, a frazzled bleached-blonde mess, slung to the left of her face and just past her shoulders. She smiled, revealing teeth the size and color of corn kernels. A stained tag pinned to her collar had the name Loretta in bright green letters next to a beaming happy face.

Morning, boys. What can I get you?

Duke fished deep into his pockets and dropped a handful of crumpled bills and eighty-three cents in change. What’ll that get me?

The waitress pushed the money around with the eraser end of her pencil. Grilled cheese sandwich, some fries, cuppa chili, and a Coke.

He nodded.

Nuthin’ for me, thanks, Earl piped in. I already ate.

Loretta disappeared into the back. Duke, who had seen a man’s fresh innards spilt upon the ground on more than one occasion, averted his eyes from the disagreeable trembling flesh of her exit. Earl was too busy looking for his shadow to notice.

The waitress’s head bobbed about in the rectangular window that allowed a glimpse into the kitchen. Where you boys headed?

Nowhere in particular, Earl replied. Just driving.

Nuthin’ wrong with that. Hell, sometimes I wish I could pull up stakes and just go wherever the Good Lord sees fit to take me. She slapped something on the grill, and sizzling filled the air. You boys didn’t see nuthin’ strange on your way in, did’ja?

Earl snorted. Strange like what?

Nuthin’. You’d know it if you saw it. So where you from?

Around.

She grinned. Sorry, I just get to chatting on these slow nights. Don’t mean to pry into your business.

Ten minutes later, she set a plate before Duke. The cheese dripped a puddle of grease, and the fries were soggy and brown. The chili was steaming hot, though. He dipped his spoon into the thick brown concoction and took a bite.

How is it? Earl asked.

Good. Little heavy on the garlic.

Duke leaned close and let his traveling companion get a strong whiff of his breath. Earl recoiled, tumbling off his stool and hitting the floor. His nostrils flared, and his face contorted into a scowl.

You asshole.

Duke chuckled.

Loretta smiled. Her smile vanished as her eyes fell on the glass diner doors. Aw, damn it. Not tonight.

Earl glanced to the front. Nine shambling corpses in various stages of decay were pressed against the glass. Their yellow eyes (for those that had eyes) stared hungrily. Purple tongues licked peeling lips.

Told’ja I smelt zombies, Duke said without turning from his meal.

The walking dead smashed their way through the glass doors. The lead corpse, in a blue paisley suit, stumped forward on stiff legs.

Don’t you worry none, boys. I’ll handle this.

Loretta pulled a double-barreled shotgun from behind the counter, took aim, and squeezed the trigger. The blue-suited zombie’s head exploded in a rain of dirt, bone, and maggots. The corpse took one more step before falling over. The next zombie suffered the exact same fate.

She removed the spent shells and fumbled around under the counter. Damn. I’m out of ammo. Hold on. I got some more in the back. With a speed that belied her size, she rushed into the kitchen.

The seven remaining zombies shuffled forward, slowly closing the fifteen feet from the door to the customers.

You wanna handle this, Duke?

I’m eating.

You saying I’m afraid?

Duke sighed. For an enlightened vampire, Earl could be damned sensitive.

I didn’t say nuthin’ of the sort.

You implied it.

Damn it, Earl. If I got sumthin’ to say, I just say it. I don’t imply shit. The werewolf swallowed a third of his sandwich in one bite. Anyhow, don’t you got one of them clear minds. I didn’t think you got scared.

I’ll show you who’s scared.

The vampire rolled up his sleeves and walked up to a zombie. He unleashed a clumsy right hook. His target made no effort to get out of the way. The zombie’s jawbone flew across the room with a dry crack. He stumbled back.

I ain’t scared of nuthin’.

He landed another punch on a second opponent. Her head spun around to face her back.

I’m immortal, you dipshit! Earl shouted to Duke. You think a bunch of worm-ridden pricks are gonna bother me?

He summoned all his unnatural strength and thrust his fist into a zombie’s chest. Fragile ribs and desiccated organs gave way, and his forearm thrust through the corpse. He pulled, but the arm was stuck.

Goddamn.

The impaled zombie grabbed him by the throat. Vampires didn’t need to breathe, but even the undead could be inconvenienced by a crushed larynx. Earl kicked one of his attacker’s thin legs. The limb broke off at the knee. The hopping zombie tightened its grip as its brothers and sisters encircled their prey.

Uh, Duke, Earl rasped, A little help here.

The corpses fell upon him in a hog pile.

Shit.

Duke stuffed a handful of soggy fries into his mouth and took off his jacket, followed by his T-shirt. He was in the middle of unlacing his boots when Loretta returned. Where’s your friend?

He nodded toward the mound of moaning dead.

She blasted two of the corpses on top and reloaded hastily. I’m really sorry about your friend there. How about a free slice of apple pie? Just let me take care of these godless abominations first.

Duke pulled off his jeans and stood completely naked. The werewolf found it saved time not to bother wearing underwear. He tossed his clothes in a heap on the counter.

That’s alright. I got it.

The bear of a man transformed into a wolf of a man. His impressive six-foot-five frame expanded and widened into a hairy ape-like shape. Powerful muscles bulged beneath coal black fur. Terrible claws sprouted from his fingertips. Thick yellow teeth grew from his gums. Duke dropped to all fours.

Damnation, Loretta uttered breathlessly.

Your average zombie is not a combat machine. Their fighting prowess springs from a single-minded determination and a certain walking corpse stick-to-itiveness. Your average werewolf is an unrivaled killing machine, vicious teeth and claws coupled with supernatural grace, power, and the ultimate predatory instincts. Duke was not your average werewolf. He cut a swath through the corpses, twisting off their heads with casual effort. Within four seconds, the five remaining corpses were sprawled on the floor in a twitching mass.

Damn it, Duke, Earl growled. I think one of those things took a bite out of me.

Duke chuckled dryly. Zombies ain’t got no stomach for undead flesh. You know that. He walked back to the counter and had a seat. The metal stool bent under his full lycanthrope weight.

Now, how’bout some of that pie?

Loretta eased back the shotgun’s hammers. You boys ain’t planning on any funny business?

That depends on the pie.

Actually, ma’am, we ain’t killed nobody in ages, Earl reassured her.

What about that trucker last Tuesday? Duke asked.

Oh hell, he don’t count. He was asking for it. Look, miss, under all that hair, Duke is just a big ol’ puppy dog, and I already ate. What say you lower that. We won’t hurt you, and unless you got silver buckshot in there, it won’t really do much to either of us.

Loretta, seeing the wisdom of his words, laid her shotgun on the counter. Well, you fellas seem nice enough, and you did save me some ammunition. Guess a free slice of pie ain’t too much to ask in return.

She went to the rotating pastry display, currently empty save for half an apple pie.

This sort of thing happen much around here? Earl asked.

She sighed. Every couple of weeks. It’s usually only three or four of the bastards. I don’t have to tell you, it’s really cut into my business.

You tried anything about it yet?

Got the preacher to bless and exorcise the cemetery after the second time. I guess it didn’t take. After that, I figured I could wait them out. That’s the weird part. Can’t be more than a hundred graves in that place, but I’ve killed more than a hundred and fifty since. Hundred and eighty-one counting that batch. Damned if I can reckon where they’re all coming from. Nobody’s been buried in there for years.

Sounds like a problem, Earl remarked.

She nodded, setting a plate before Duke.

The werewolf wrapped his immense hands around a fork and took an experimental bite.

Well?

She stared at his wolf’s head, looking for any sign of a smile on his muzzle.

He likes it. Earl pointed to the werewolf’s briskly wagging tail.

Glad to hear it. I made it myself.

She clapped her meaty hands together. "Say, you fellas looking for

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