“See him?” Sun asked.
Andy gripped her hand and tried to peer down the hallway. There was still some residual smoke, and some of the overhead lights had blown out when the bomb went off.
“Looking for meeeeeee?” Bub said in the distance. His vision was apparently better than Andy’s.
Bub came into view, dragging something behind him.
“Oh, Jesus,” Sun said, backing away.
“You all remember Raaaaaaaabbi Shotzen.” Bub pulled the two halves up to the gate.
Andy didn’t want to look at the ruined mess, but he couldn’t help it. The body no longer looked human. It was just blood, guts, and bones.
“I’m ressurecting hiiiim. Would you like to seeeeeeee?”
Sun turned away. Andy glanced at Dr. Belgium, and saw him taking his own pulse. He faced Bub.
“We’re not afraid of you,” Andy said.
Dr. Belgium cleared his throat. “Actually, um, I am.”
“Shall I bring the rabbi back to life, Fraaaaaank?”
“No no no, I wouldn’t like that at all, Bub.”
Bub stroked his chin with his talons, as if in thought.
“How about this insteaaaaaaaad.”
The demon touched his claw to one of the larger parts, and a moment later, it began to shake.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
The corpse’s arms and legs rolled and squirmed as if they were boneless, like the tentacles of a squid. Organs inflated and split. The rabbi’s skull expanded like a water balloon, undulating and jiggling.
Sun had witnessed death, up close. She remembered being a med student, visiting the morgue for the first time, and how creepy it felt even though she’d been prepared for it. Sun had encountered burn victims, and fatal car accidents, and once even operated on a man who’d gotten his hand caught in a meat grinder.
This was most horrible thing she’d ever seen.
And then it got worse.
The flesh began to blister and bubble, and when the bubbles reached the size of baseballs they separated from the body and shot into the air with a loud PHLOP sound. A few at first, and then all at once, like microwave popcorn.
Several of the chunks flew through the bars, landing at Sun’s feet with wet thuds. She watched, holding her breath.
With frightening speed, the flesh took shape. Curled up at first, like an embryo, maturing in fast motion. The head formed, arms, legs, a tail. It stood up, about the size of a large vampire bat, with matching bat wings. Black and red, sporting tiny horns, and claws that looked like fish hooks. The thing opened its mouth, revealing rows of needle sharp teeth.
“A little Bub,” Belgium gasped.
Sun watched it waddle over to her and leap onto her shoe. Fear had paralyzed her, memories of her childhood and that horrible bat in her bedroom assaulting her mind.
The thing chirped like a bird and stretched open its jaws, ready to bite her leg.
Andy kicked it across the room.
More fist-sized chunks sailed through the bars. Dozens. A few took to the air and began to fly around the room in quick figure eights.
Sun still couldn’t move. A demon landed on her shoulder, screeching like nails on a chalkboard. It was going to bite her, and she couldn't get her muscles to work.
“Ow!” Dr. Belgium yelped. He had a nasty gash across his cheek. “They're like flying razor blades!”
“Move it!” Andy smacked the demon off Sun's shoulder and yanked her away from the gate. The Octopus was full of them now, flapping and squealing, diving at the group with claws out and mouths wide. Fifty or more.
Andy pushed Sun under a desk and pulled another desk over, trying to seal her between them. The things, the batlings, circled around and around, diving in and taking bites out of Andy’s hands and head. Sun could glimpse the blood through the swirling tornado of monsters.
Belgium picked up a chair and swatted at them, knocking several out of the air. When they fell he picked up his knees and stomped marching band-style, crushing them with his heels.
One managed to escape the stomping, and hopped over to Sun’s hiding place.
Damn it, Sun, move! her mind screamed.
But her body didn’t listen.
The batling jumped up onto her shoulder. It’s maw stretched open, bloody drool leaking down its chin.
MOVE!
But she didn’t.
The demon bit into Sun’s shoulder, hitting a nerve, doubling her over.
The pain galvanized her. Sun clenched the batling in her fist, feeling the pointy little bones snap under the pressure. She threw it aside and scrambled out from under the desk.
Fear be damned, she was ready to fight.
The demons saw a new victim and swarmed.
Sun grabbed a computer keyboard, yanked it free, and began to whack batlings left and right. But for each one she hit, ten hit her. The pain came from everywhere at once, pain like gigantic bee stings, sharp and burning. Nipping at her arms and back. Going for her eyes.
They're eating me alive, Sun thought
Something bit into her ear and she smashed it against the side of her face. Another became tangled in her hair, clawing and gnawing at her head. She pulled it off, taking some hair with it.
Bub’s giggling filled the room—a disturbing sound like a small child being tickled.
Sun could no longer see. Her torn scalp bled down into her eyes, burning like salt water. She wiped a sleeve across her face and saw a figure fall to his knees, covered with batlings.
Andy.
In four steps she was at his side, rearing back the keyboard, smashing it against his chest. Eight batlings dropped off. She repeated the move with his back, putting all of her strength into the blow.
It probably hurt, but not as much as being eaten alive.
The demons she killed were quickly replaced by others, covering Andy like a fur coat.
This is futile, Sun realized. We’re all going to die.
Which really pissed Sun off. She tried to block out some of the panic and think. They couldn’t hide, or get away. Killing them one at a time was too slow. What did she know about bats? They were nocturnal, they used radar to navigate, they were eaten by hawks, they hibernate when it gets cold...
“Cold,” Sun said aloud.
At the far end of the Octopus was a fire extinguisher. Sun beelined for it, tossing the keyboard aside. The extinguisher was a big one, at least sixty pounds, and the fire engine red color meant it was filled with carbon dioxide. She yanked it from the wall housing and pulled the pin.
In one hand, she grabbed the funnel cone and aimed at the cloud of batlings. With the other, she pulled the trigger.
A spray of sub-zero CO2 burst from the nozzle with an explosive SHHUSSH sound, freezing batlings as they flew. They dropped from the air, covered in frost. When they hit the ground they twitched and flopped around in a stupor.
“Cover your eyes!” she yelled at Andy before giving him a healthy spritz of healing cold. She then zapped Dr. Belgium, who had curled up into a fetal position near the Purple door.
“Help me! Kill the ones on the floor!”
Frank and Andy began to step on the fallen batlings, while Sun tracked down the remaining few still circling the Octopus. She ran out of CO2 with only one demon remaining, and she managed to swat that out of the sky with a clipboard.
When the last batling had been crushed underfoot, the childhood giggling began again.
Bub.
The demon clapped his hands in glee, his lips peeling back and his tongue obscenely bathing his own face.