The creature grabbed my wrist and squeezed. My wrist bones ground sickeningly against each other. My stomach roiled with sudden nausea. My vision dimmed. I shrieked, and damn near fainted.
“I swear to you, I have no idea what you’re talking about —I’m not trying to
“The other —you mean Danny? You know where Danny is? Just tell me, and I promise you, you’ll get your soul.”
“That’s great, except I’m not lying.”
The creature plunged its hand into my chest, grasping tight my soul as I had done to so many in my time.
No —not like I’d done.
This was worse. So much worse.
The man-thing squeezed, and what I felt was so awful it made all the pain I’d ever experienced seem like a fucking spa treatment. Death itself was but child’s play compared to this. To being swallowed whole by Nothing.
A horrid emptiness pressed in on me —chilling, absolute. The muted colors of the pre-dawn desert seemed a thousand rainbows strong compared to the terrible void that engulfed me. My thoughts were stripped away —my very sensations —until I found myself longing for the agony of my broken and bloodied physical self.
Until I longed to feel anything at all.
As I plunged ever deeper into the abyss, cast alive into the creature’s unholy In-Between, I heard its voice as if from somewhere high above.
And just like that, the Nothingness lifted.
I was in the desert.
I was in the desert, and I was alone.
14.
“Sam!”
A single, barked syllable. Urgent, it seemed, but I couldn’t make sense of what it meant, and anyways, it was so very far away. My eyes fluttered open for a moment, only to be assaulted by grit and wind and morning light. Then my lids came tumbling down. I didn’t see the point of stopping them.
“Goddamn it, Sam, stay with me!”
I felt a slap across my face. The words seemed louder now, their meaning more apparent. I recognized my name, at least, if not the person saying it.
“I swear to Christ, Sam, if you die, I’m gonna fuckin’ kill you.”
Gio. Right. The tough-guy cadence was a dead giveaway. What I didn’t know was why he was making such a fuss.
And then it all came back. The desert road. The sudden stop. My little chat with the old man.
No, that wasn’t quite right. That thing was
God or not, that thing had plunged me into Nothingness —horrid, empty, complete —and given me an ultimatum.
Three days before the Nothing was forever.
That last thought got me moving. I sat up, or tried. It didn’t take. Gio was saying something, but I was having trouble hearing him. I once more opened my eyes. The world was kind of blurry, and a little gray around the edges, but at least this time they stayed open. Seemed like progress to me.
A sudden lurch, and I was off the ground. Gio wheezed and grunted as he hauled me over to the ruined Fiesta, cursing all the while. My head lolled back, and I spied the patch of dirt that I’d been sprawled out on. The desert sand was darker there.
Dark like rust.
Like blood.
We reached the car. He tossed me in. Like the plot of land I’d left behind, his hands and shirt were slick with blood —my blood. Gio’s face was a mask of concern. I tried to tell him not to worry, that I’d be all right, but the words died on my lips. I couldn’t find the breath to speak, and my chest hurt like crazy —a sharp, burny sort of pain. After a couple minutes of struggling to speak, I forgot what I was trying to say in the first place. And a minute after that, it didn’t matter.
I was once more asleep.
A prickle in my sinuses, a sudden burning in my throat. My eyes fluttered open, and consciousness returned. Gio sat, expectant, beside me, a vial of smelling salts cracked open in his hand. The backseat of the Fiesta was littered with gauze and tape and spent tubes of ointment. I think a good half of that ointment wound up on my face, slathered over my numerous contusions and leaving me a sticky mess. My ribs were now taped, and though it still hurt like hell to breathe, the pain was of a more manageable sort. My right arm was in a sling —the shoulder back in place, it seemed —and the wrist the creature’d squeezed throbbed in time with the beating of my heart.
“Wh-where…” My voice sounded thick and wet and wrong. Gio must’ve thought so, too, because he frowned.
“Round back of a twenty-four-hour pharmacy.” He caught me eyeing the gaping hole in the Fiesta’s windshield, and smiled. “Don’t worry; nobody saw us pull in, and I didn’t steal this shit or nothin’ —I bought it with cash outta the morgue dude’s wallet. How you feelin’?”
“Peachy,” I croaked.
“Yeah, you look it. You wanna tell me what the hell happened back there?”
“Long story.”
“Seems to me, we got a while.”
No, I thought, we don’t. But what I said was, “You remember the bug back at the mortuary?” My Ms sounded like Bs. My Gs rattled like phlegm in the back of my throat.
“Yeah?”
“I just tangled with a few thousand of his friends.”
“Wait —you’re telling me
“More like a bug
“A bug monster? As in, a monster made of bugs?”
“Pretty much.”