Chapter Ten Spilling All the Tee(Th)

Istill can’t believe he’s replying to me. But then his words register, and a sick trepidation grows inside of me. “What does that mean? What—”

I break off as a sudden bang echoes down the hallway, followed by a loud, bone-chilling roar. One that doesn’t sound nearly as muffled as it should.

“What the fuck is that?” Luis demands, his silver eyes wide and more than a little wild.

Before I can answer, a massive shadow lumbers into view that renders both me and Luis speechless. It’s like nothing I’ve ever seen or heard of in my life. Its unnaturally large, wolf-like body has a serpentine head covered in fiery amber eyes. Hissing snakes, ready to strike, have replaced its upper extremities, and when it opens its mouth, its palate, gums, and tongue are covered in giant, knifelike teeth.

It gives a low, ominous growl, and I watch in horror as all of those teeth clatter to the floor, some of them hitting us, slicing us open, as they fall. And much to our horror, new ones immediately grow back in their place, turning its gaping maw into a brand new horror-show.

“Run, Clementine!” Luis screams as he scrambles backward. But I’m already moving, his terrified yelps adding to the frigid terror inside me as we race for the staircase at the end of the hall.

Fuck the chricklers. Screw the ghosts.

Because it seems like Uncle Carter didn’t exactly do a great job securing that loose door. Because the monster behind us is nothing short of all my worst nightmares. And right now, it has all of its many, glowing eyes currently fixated on us.

We start to run, and I’m too terrified to look behind me, but the creepy clattering sound its teeth make as they hit the floor keeps getting closer. How many times a day can one creature lose its teeth anyway?

I push harder, run faster, but I’m still not fast enough. Something strikes my shoulder, and a weird, tingling numbness flows down my arm. I glance back just in time to see one of the dozen snakes that make up the monster’s “arms” retracting—and another one coiling as it gets ready to strike at me again.

“What the fuck is that thing?” Luis yells over to me. “Besides something straight out of a horror movie?”

I’m running so hard that I don’t even have enough breath to answer as I weave to the left, trying to get out of the strike zone. It doesn’t work—the snakes are too damn long. Another one catches me on my lower back, its teeth sinking in fast and hard. I twist to the right to dislodge it and keep going.

The rattling sound that comes with every step it takes tells me that even though it managed to get free of its pen, it is still chained. But it seems like the chain is long enough to reach most, if not all, of the way down the hall. Because that seems like a really banner decision on Uncle Carter’s part.

“Run faster!” I urge Luis, just as one of the snakes grabs him by the ankle and brings him down. Luis manages to kick himself free and keeps sprinting.

One of the snake hands comes flashing toward my head. I duck to avoid it. But then the creature releases all of its teeth again in a hailstorm of sharp blades. I try to shield myself, but it’s futile. The teeth, acting as natural daggers, make quick work slicing at my skin.

Luis reaches over to pull me out of the danger zone.

I shoot him a grateful look even as I yell, “Keep going!”

The monster shrieks again, and suddenly it’s going for my best friend instead of me, its long snake-fingers wrapping around Luis’s forearm.

Luis whirls around and lets out a long, low snarl that might be the most terrifying sound I’ve ever heard him make. The monster must think so, too, because it rears back for a moment before responding in kind.

But a moment is all Luis needs to free himself. We take off one last time, aiming for the staircase. We even make it to the second step before the beast grabs onto me again. It wraps the snakes around my waist and starts pulling me backward.

A scream sticks in my throat as I desperately try to pull myself from its grasp. But it’s got a hold of me now, and it’s not letting go.

Luis positions himself on the next step and tries grabbing the snakes from around my waist, two at a time. But every time he pries two off, two more take their place in a Sisyphean nightmare.

“Just go!” I tell Luis as the creature bares its teeth again. “Get out of here.”

“Hell no.” Luis looks beyond insulted at my words.

But now I’m too busy trying to squirm away to care. Desperate, terrified, with my heart slamming against my ribs, I do the only thing I can think of. I lift my left leg and kick backward as hard as I can.

I may not have my powers, but I’m manticore strong, and when my heel connects with its knee, it does so with a sickening crunch. The monster bellows in rage, swaying violently, and the snakes hiss miserably as they unwind themselves from around my arms, their fangs catching me in several places and raking through my skin.

“Move!” Luis yells.

I surge forward, racing for the steps like my life depends on it—because it probably does.

Behind us, the creature has recovered, too. It extends all four twisted, slithering hands toward us just as it reaches the end of its tether.

It lets out a sound that is half hiss, half roar, and all terrifying, but I don’t look back as Luis and I pound up the stairs. We get to the top, all but collapsing into the hallway as the doors close behind us.

Before either of us can so much as catch our breaths, Roman, a hall troll, pops up, demerit book in hand. “Clementine, you know you’re not supposed to run on the stairs. This is your second offense this week. I’m going to have to write the two of you up.”

“Are you serious?” Luis snarls indignantly.

The troll just tsk-tsks. He rips off our demerit slips and hands them to us.

“Have a nice rest of your day,” he tells us. “Oh, and get that bleeding under control, will you? You know it’s against the student safety code, and I’d really hate to have to write you up again today.”

As he turns and stomps his way back up the hallway, a loud burst of thunder shakes the whole building. Roman lets out a loud squeal as he jumps about three feet in the air and drops his clipboard.

“If all it takes is a little thunder to freak him out,” Luis snarks, “I’d hate to see what he’d do if that thing made it up the stairs.”

“Drop more than his clipboard, probably.”

Luis turns to look at me blankly. And then we both crack up, because it’s either that or cry. And there’s no way in hell I’m facing Jude with red, puffy eyes.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.