Fear the Barfitron (12 page)

Read Fear the Barfitron Online

Authors: M. D. Payne

BOOK: Fear the Barfitron
11.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I looked at the Director. He looked even more terrified than I did.

“SUSSUROBLATS!” he screamed. “ALARM!!!”

And that’s when all of the roaches screamed and dropped off the ceiling.

The roaches plopped down one by one, like massive ugly brown drooly raindrops. The Nurses squealed and bolted out through the door into the hallway. The Director followed.

“Let’s get outta here!” I yelled.

We ran into the hallway and turned right to get back into the lobby, and the exit beyond.

“Move it, y’all!” yelled Shane.

We ran so fast, the house shook.

We got to the end of the hallway and saw the Director and the two Nurses frozen in front of the door.

“Get out of our way,” Gordon yelled.

The Director and the Nurses didn’t move an inch. And I could see why.

They were surrounded on all sides by the massive roaches!

We turned back to where we had run from, and saw a few zombies being chased into the lobby with the large roaches at their heels. They looked terrified.

“Sussuroblats,” cried the Director. “Sussuroblats!”

“Sussuro…what?” asked Ben.

“I guess that’s what they’re called,” I said.

The sussuroblats closed in, forcing the zombies into the same small circle with us and the Director and the two Nurses. The crawled over one another, hissing, screaming, and drooling as they got closer.

“I think I smell their breath,” said Shane.

“Ugh, you’re right!” I said.

“GRELCH, GROWWWLCH, GRUUUUG!” cried the sussuroblats. They sounded like they were burping and screaming at the same time, and when they weren’t screaming, they were gnashing their snaggleteeth together, making wet, snapping sounds.

They were getting closer and closer. Shane took a karate stance. One of the old zombies tripped over another, and fell back into a pile of them. Almost as soon as he hit the floor, they swarmed him, latched on, and began slurping up his juices with their nasty mouths.

“Oh, man!” cried Ben. “We’re roach meat!”

The zombie was drained fast. Just as they finished their meal, one of the old witches appeared at the top
of the stairs. She had a small vial of potion in her hand.

“Hellloooooo!” she cried, and for a moment, the roaches stared up at her. She flung the vial down into the pile of roaches that were sucking on what was left of the zombie, and they exploded!

The witch disappeared, and a cry of “Go, Go, GOOO!” could be heard from the hallway beyond the top of the stairs. A group of Nurses, clad in SWAT gear, spread out through the retirement home. There were still at least three dozen roaches left after the witch had worked her magic. Half of them headed up the stairs and the other half closed in on us!

The Director reached one hand into his suit, and pulled out a Taser. He zapped a sussuroblat that jumped toward him, and it fell on the floor. One of the Nurses stomped on the bug, and it grunted one last moan as green goo oozed out of it. Its nasty roach legs twitched.

Shane was kicking like crazy, stopping the roaches with big, squelchy hits. He kicked some of them just as they were jumping at him to bite. Teeth were flying out of screeching roach mouths.

The roaches that had gone upstairs scurried into bedrooms. Old monsters poured out of the hallway, trying their best to shuffle away. Many already had roaches stuck on them, slurping away! The monsters flailed about, trying desperately to get them off. Nurses were ripping roaches off old monsters left and right, but
more disgusting bugs came out of nowhere to latch on to the moaning monsters.

But the old monsters weren’t completely defenseless. A few of them were actually performing the karate chop that Shane had demonstrated before, and a few of the chops actually landed, sending roaches over the banister and down into the lobby.

For all of the Tasing, kicking, chopping, and stomping that was going on, there seemed to be more and more roaches, and our circle was getting smaller.

A half dozen roaches were closing in on Ben, Gordon, Shane, and me. We backed slowly onto the stairs.

“I can’t keep this up,” yelled Shane as he kicked another roach in its ugly mug. “There are too many.”

“I’ve got an idea!” I said. “Follow me!”

I sprinted up the stairs, dodging downed old monsters and roaches. My friends followed, and we turned down the dark hallway to the Staff Only section of the retirement home.

“Ben!” I yelled. “I need to pull the candlestick out of the wall again. Shane and Gordon, just hold them back for a few seconds.”

Ben dropped to the floor. I jumped up to the candlestick, planted my feet on the wall, and pulled just as Ben held my feet in place.

Gordon grabbed a tattered, cobwebby painting from
the wall to help Shane hold back the roaches that had gathered at the end of the hallway.

This had to work, or we’d be roach meat!

Sure enough, the candlestick moved back into the wall and the clicking moved from the wall to the ceiling.

“Squeeze your backs against the door,” I said.

The roaches snapped and spat and screamed. One jumped up and took a bite out of the painting. We stared at a dozen more through the hole in the canvas. Another tried to jump through, and Shane karate-chopped it down. Gordon stomped on it for good measure.

The ceiling opened with a
whoosh
, and the metallic claw came swooping down inches in front of our noses.

It scooped up all of the roaches. They screamed even louder, knowing they were trapped. Their drool rained down on the tattered carpet as the claw lifted them higher.

As soon as the claw was above our heads, I yelled, “RUN!”

We sped down the hallway, the light from the growing fireball throwing our shadows on the floor. When we reached the end of the hall, we turned around to see the claw engulfed in flames. The roaches’ drooly screams slowly died out and a few of their bodies exploded in the heat. POP. SNAP. SPLOP. The claw disappeared into the ceiling, and we were back in a dark hallway once again.

By the time we got downstairs, most of the roaches had been cleared out. One of the vampires was still passed out on the stairs. The old werewolves had turned into dogs, and were chewing on a few roaches. A Nurse in SWAT gear kicked a roach, which flew over the banister…

…and right onto me!

And it wasn’t dead!!

I screamed as the roach knocked me over. I was amazed at how strong it was. It had pinned me to the floor, its spiny legs scratching all over me. It crawled up my stomach and chest before I could lift my arms up and stop it right before it lunged at my throat.

“Ben! Gordon! Shaaaaane!” I screamed in a panic.

Now I could REALLY smell bad breath. It was inches away from my face as I tried to lift it off of me, to push it far enough away so I could scramble back up.

“GRELCH, SHMELCH, BRALCH!!” the sussuroblat mouth, so human and disgusting, spat and yelled at me.

“SOMEONE HELP!!!” I yelled, as the hideous mouth got closer and closer. I could feel the heat of the roach’s breath on my cheek. I turned my head, and the smell of rotten flesh came pouring out of its mouth. I could hear it snapping at my ear, when suddenly—

“Get over here!” yelled Gordon.

He lifted the roach into the air, and turned it toward
the Director. The Director plunged his Taser into the roach’s underbelly, and—

Click. Click. Click.

“Drat,” said the Director. “The batteries.”

The roach squirmed its way loose, right up Gordon’s arm and—

CRUNCH

It bit right into Gordon’s neck. Gordon screamed a phlegmy scream.

A Nurse tossed the Director a fresh battery pack. He ejected the old pack, smashed in the new one, pulled the roach off Gordon, and slammed it face-first into the floor.

Gordon clutched his neck, but blood bubbled out from between his fingers. It wasn’t a lot, but he was unsteady on his feet.

The Director knelt down in front of the roach and jabbed his Taser onto its belly. He zapped and zapped and zapped.

“I. Despise. You. Nasty. CREATURES,” he growled.

Zap, zap, zap…

POP!

The sussuroblat’s head exploded in a shower of hot green guts.

The Director rose up slowly, calmly straightened his rumpled suit, wiped down the Taser with a handkerchief, and placed it back inside his suit pocket.

The lobby looked like a war zone. The Director was staring through the glass next to the front door. His face was blank with shock. The Nurses looked upset. One looked down at what was left of the dead zombie and then punched the wall angrily. Ben looked like he was going to be sick. Gordon, who was now slumped at the bottom of the stairs, had stopped bleeding, but the area around the bite was starting to turn a shade of green. Shane, who still had a large cockroach leg twitching in his hair, was cleaning guts off his face with a rag one of the Nurses had handed him.

I had to find out from the Director if we should be worried about Gordon’s bite. But first, I had a much more pressing question.

“Where is the jar you’re always dipping into?” I screamed.

“Why?” the Director, still shocked, said.

“Just give it to me,” I said. “You owe me that much.”

“Fine,” the Director said. “Nurse Inx, go get the jar.” The Director waved one of the Nurses off to fetch it.

I turned to Gordon, who was looked like he was going to pass out.

“How are you doing?” I asked.

“Not so good, dude,” Gordon said. His voice sounded like he needed to clear his throat of the biggest loogie ever. “I feel really hot. And nauseous.”

I helped him over to one of the leather chairs in the lobby and sat him down.

Nurse Inx came back into the lobby holding the jar. He handed it to me, and I could see at once that there was nothing in it. Scared, I unscrewed the top as quickly as I could.

“It’s all gone!” I looked at the Director in horror.

“Yes, it would appear that someone put it back in the fridge after finishing it,” said the Director without any emotion, adding, “How cruel.”

“WHAT?!” I said, completely freaked out. “Where’s all of my lebensplasm? It was in the fridge this whole time?!”

“What?” asked the Director, raising an eyebrow.
“Would you expect it to be in the pantry? I prefer my marmalade cold.”

“Marmalade?!” I screamed so loud that Nurse Inx jumped. He headed up the stairs to help the old vampire, who had finally woken up.

“Yes,” the Director said. “What did you think it was?”

I locked eyes with the Director. I still wasn’t sure I could trust him. By the look on his face, I don’t think he trusted me, either. But, if it wasn’t in the jar, it had to be somewhere. He did say that my lebensplasm was keeping the monsters alive.

“Where is my lebensplasm?” I asked.

There was a pause. The Director stared strangely at me. He cocked his head like a dog would when you whistle at it. Shane, who had finally realized there was a cockroach leg in his hair, tossed it to the side and came to stand next to me, ready for whatever happened next. Ben was tending to Gordon.

“Why…your lebensplasm…,” started the Director slowly, “is inside you. If it weren’t, you would be dead.”

“The day after I started volunteering at Raven Hill, you held a meeting with all of the mon—”

“Residents!” insisted the Director.

“You held a meeting with all of the residents,” I continued. “In that meeting, you said that my
lebensplasm was going to go a long way in keeping them alive. Then you pulled out that jar, spread that goo on a piece of toast, and started eating it like it was the best thing you’d ever tasted.”

“I see you were spying about earlier than I thought,” said the Director. “Nevertheless, your lebensplasm was not in that jar of marmalade. I just happened to need a snack after such a long day.”

“Okay, fine!” I said. “I get that the marmalade isn’t my lebensplasm, but what about the comment? You know—that my lebensplasm is helping to keep the residents alive?”

“You believe that the residents are ‘monsters,’ as you like to call them, yes?” the Director asked.

“Yes,” I replied.

The director looked at Shane, who was still standing next to me.

Other books

Tempting Fate by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
The Training Ground by Martin Dugard
Snake Eater by William G. Tapply
Playing Dead by Jessie Keane
The Goblin War by Hilari Bell
Flawed by J. L. Spelbring
Lord of a Thousand Suns by Poul Anderson
Murder on Amsterdam Avenue by Victoria Thompson
Death at the Door by Carolyn Hart