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There were two sets of them, to the left and right of the elevator, set along the lobby’s outside walls. Gio jerked his head to indicate the nearest of them, and I nodded my assent. Taking Theresa by the hand, he inched along the wall toward it, and I followed close behind.

Turned out, the first stairwell was a bust. A good six feet of construction detritus clogged the stretch from ground floor to first landing —scraps of two-byfours, twisted lengths of copper pipe, jagged hunks of concrete run through with rebar —making any attempt to scale the stairs impossible.

Gio indicated the second set of stairs. But this time, I shook my head. If that’s where Danny wanted us, it was the last place I planned on being. I was through underestimating him.

I scanned the room, spotted what I was looking for: a ladder. Then I braced it against the edge of a goodly patch of darkness on the ceiling —an aperture intended, I suspect, for an air duct —and began to climb, the sawed-off clanking dully against the rungs as I ascended.

When I reached the top, I paused, scanning the second floor for any sign of danger before I climbed off the ladder. Then I whispered for Gio and Theresa to follow. For about the thousandth time today, I questioned the logic of bringing a blind woman into this. And for about the thousandth time today, I decided it didn’t much matter; if we failed, she was as good as dead anyways —washed away with the rest of humanity in the next Great Flood.

It wasn’t a comforting thought.

Whatever her handicap, Theresa was lithe and silent as a cat scaling the ladder. Gio was another story altogether. By the time he reached the top, he was huffing and puffing like he had a bone to pick with some little pigs, and he didn’t so much climb off the ladder as collapse beside it.

“Jesus, dude,” he whispered. “Your buddy couldn’t finish the goddamn elevator? And did you bother to look down when you climbed up here? There’s a hole just like this one right below it, and I’m pretty sure it don’t stop there —if the ladder’d slipped, we woulda wound up in the second subbasement or some shit.”

“I told you, neither of you have to come.”

“And I told you, you ain’t getting rid of us that easy. Now, let’s go kick some bad-guy ass.”

He rolled over and scrabbled to his feet, and then muttered, “The fuck?”

“What’s wrong?”

“Dunno.” He leaned down, groped at his leg a sec. “No big,” he said, waving his hand at me like I could see for a damn by the faint light filtering through the plastic sheeting from outside. “Just got tangled in some wire, is all.”

“Gio, don’t move.”

But it was too late. From somewhere in the darkness, I heard a tinkle of shattered glass. And then, the room began to shake.

“Gio,” Theresa whispered, “what the hell did you do?”

I grabbed the wire from his hands and followed it. It terminated in the center of the room, its end tied around the jagged neck of a wine bottle, which had until recently been perched precariously atop a folding chair. But it hadn’t contained wine. The black stain that spread across the floor beneath the chair smelled of iron. Of death. Of blood.

I noticed something else, then, too. A pattern on the floor, encircling the chair and the growing stain. It glowed a sickly green, intensifying as the blood soaked into the concrete. At first, my mind could make no sense of its elaborate symbology, but as the glow intensified, it resolved itself before me. It was less a language than a sort of stylized image, one that conveyed greed, temptation, seduction, absorption —followed by a hollow eternity of oneness, of torment, of relentless hunger.

I might not’ve recognized the language in which it had been written, but I realized at once what these symbols said.

Abyzou.

“Guys,” I shouted, all pretense of stealth abandoned, “we need to move!”

I ran back the way I came. From behind me came a horrible rending sound, as if the very fabric of reality had torn apart.

And then a sickly wet slithering of tentacles against concrete.

And then the chitinous clicking of the demon’s beak.

“Don’t look at it!” I shouted.

“Don’t look at what?” Gio replied in alarm.

“No problem on my end,” Theresa said, though the bravado in her voice rang false.

I came upon the conduit so fast, I damn near fell in. Then Gio and I hoisted the ladder up through the hole, and tried to brace it against the one above.

But we were too late. A tentacle lashed out from the darkness, glistening in the watery light filtering through the plastic sheeting from the street, and swatted the ladder. It clattered across the room and skittered off the unprotected edge, tearing loose a sheet of plastic and toppling to the dirt lot a floor below. When it hit, it loosed a flurry of surprised shouts, and a pop-pop of startled gunfire. The police were closing in.

I aimed the sawed-off at the darkness, and it thundered in my hand. Then another tentacle wrapped itself around its barrel and yanked it from my grasp.

A wet dragging sound filled the air as Abyzou approached. I caught a glimpse of glistening gray skin, and felt a sudden pressure in my mind. Join us, it said. Join us and never be alone again. Luxuriate in ecstatic, excruciating want for all eternity.

I clutched my hands to my head, and tried to shake the thoughts. Only when I pressed tight my eyes did they ease, but even then I couldn’t banish them. Beside me, I heard Gio whimper and hit the ground.

“So hungry,” he muttered. “It’s so goddamned hungry…"

But there was no fear in his voice. Instead, he sounded full of sorrow. Sorrow and longing.

I fell to my knees. I knew if I didn’t do something soon, Gio would succumb, and he’d forever be one with this queen bitch of the underworld. But for the life of me, I couldn’t muster the will to stop her.

“Jesus Christ,” Theresa said, “what the fuck is wrong with you two?”

A wet fwack like hitting a waterbed with a baseball bat, and the cursed creature squealed. The pressure in my mind suddenly eased. Another couple, and I once more found my feet. I opened my eyes, and the pressure once more intensified, though not so badly as it had before. And what I saw amazed me: damn near seven feet of Afroed black woman going to town on a massive, squid-like hell beast with a length of rebar like it was some kind of unholy piñata.

If Abyzou had an ass, Theresa was seriously kicking it.

“You boys OK back there?” she yelled. Her voice was hoarse from exertion, and she was covered in green-black gore, but I could swear her tone was positively cheery. And still, she kept on swinging.

“Getting there,” I managed. “You?”

“Right as rain.” Fwack. “This bitch keeps trying to show me something,” she continued. “I can feel her rattling round my brain, trying to trick my eyes. Sucks for her they ain’t worked in years.”

“That’s my baby!” Gio cheered, though when I looked at him, I found he was facing in the wrong direction, his eyes buried in the crook of one elbow.

“Now, you boys got a job to do. I got this chick.”

“You sure?”

“Hell yes, I am. I’ma teach her a lesson for hitting on my man.”

Gio protested, but he was no help to her down there and knew it. So reluctantly, he came with. Since Abyzou had relieved us of our ladder, we were forced to take the stairs. I’d hoped we’d already avoided —or, in the case of Abyzou, triggered —any protections Danny’d enacted, but if I’m being honest, I knew damn well we hadn’t.

Each floor was separated by maybe twenty steps, with a landing in the middle. The stairwell was molded concrete, with no handrails, no windows, and nowhere to hide should trouble come. We crawled forward in utter darkness, worried with each movement some fresh hell would be unleashed. It wasn’t until we reached the landing I realized Danny’d been cleverer than that. After all, he didn’t need to kill intruders —just delay them. And this latest ploy of his would do exactly that.