A Grande Iced coffee sweetened with whole milk always supplied Trey, the Zombie, with energy. On a bright yellow morning Trey sat down on a canvass deck chair outside of Starbucks. He puffed on his e-cigarette. Then he took a sip from his plastic cup. And as he tasted the refreshing creamy coffee, he remembered what it was like to be a human being. Before the infection decimated the world’s population of men, women, and children, everybody was killing each other with double barreled shotguns, sleeping with their best friend’s girlfriend to prove that they were not in love with their best friend, forcing girls and women of all ages into cramped basements leaving them with a bowl of white rice and a cup of water, telling them that they had to sleep with strange men who lived in America and other countries polluted with lust and desire, or else they would get sent to the bottom of a swamp where the Alligators roamed the muddy shores in search of flesh. Trey remembered that he had been a college student living at home, working as a tennis instructor part time at the rec center down the street from where he resided at. This little girl Amy bit him on the ankle. It was the first time he had taught her how to hit a topspin serve with such velocity that the tennis ball would bounce off the service box and rise over the chain-linked fence, where the zombies were, crawling over and up onto the hard courts. As Trey drank his iced coffee he realized that life was more pleasant now. People didn’t shoot each other anymore. Closeted gays and lesbians didn’t sleep with their best friend’s boyfriends and girlfriends just to prove that they were heterosexuals. And wicked men with shaggy hair and yellow teeth didn’t buy young girls and women from cramped basements and **** them because they had the money and the motivation to follow their lustful desires. No. None of this happened anymore. Now that the Zombies had taken over. Everybody just went to Starbucks, and drank iced coffees sweetened with milk.