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Andrew thought, I've lost my beacon, that's what I've done.
"It wasn 't your fault," it said. "They did something to you."
I nodded. "Yes, they did something to me."
Blood gushed from where the demon had ripped off my beacon. It poured out like a waterfall. I didn't even know I had that much blood, but yet it gushed out, soaking into the ground.
The larger demon took another step toward me. I forced myself not to cry out in fear or disgust. I had no idea what trick this creature was trying to play by insisting it was my wife… my wife, if such a revolting thing could even be imagined… but maybe if I played along I could defeat it.
"Where are Roger and Samantha?" the demon asked.
I shrugged.
"Are they alive?"
Yes? No? What was the best answer? Did this demon fear them? Did this demon need them?
"I don't know," I said.
The demon stepped away from me. Its scaly, slimy skin glistened in the sunlight. "I'm taking Theresa," it said.
It crouched down next to the fallen demon. I couldn't let it take the little one. I'd be punished if I didn't slay them. I had to kill them as quickly as possible.
"I'm going to send help for you," the demon said. "Everything will be okay, I promise."
The demon scooped up the smaller creature in its wretched arms.
Blood continued to pour from my chest. And then it squirted from my eye. I wasn't sure how I could see with blood squirting out of my eye, but I could. Suddenly it squirted out of both eyes.
"Stop it!" I demanded, rubbing at my eyes to block the flow. "I need that blood in me!"
The blood that had soaked into the ground bubbled to the surface, quickly rising over my shoes.
The demon had cursed me.
I saw faces in the blood. Screaming faces. Laughing faces. Crying faces. All of them looking at me.
I turned and ran.
I didn't care if I'd be punished. I didn't care if the demons got away. I had to escape, get out of here before I drowned in my own blood and the faces sunk their fangs into me.
I ran into the forest. Sap oozed from the trees, trapping birds and squirrels and other forest animals within. Razor blades flowed in the sap, slicing the poor things without mercy.
I smacked into a tree, knocking my face off. It hit the ground, face-down. I continued running, leaving it behind.
Trees reached for me with their branches, ripping off my arms and legs, which were replaced with new arms and legs for the trees to rip off. I'd never realized I had so many arms and legs.
I wished my chest would quit bleeding. This was getting ridiculous.
As I ran, I glanced behind me (without turning my head, which was odd) and saw a giant pile of my twitching arms and legs. I could also see a tongue flapping around in there, even though my own tongue was clearly still in my… oh, nope, wait, it was gone.
I ran out into a dirt clearing. An infinite clearing, where the trees couldn't detach any more of my limbs.
In fact, the clearing was kind of boring.
I twiddled my thumbs.
I twiddled my tongues, since I now seemed to have two.
That demon had looked kind of familiar, now that I thought about it. Maybe I'd tried to slay her in some other plane of existence. Maybe we'd dated. It seemed unlikely that I'd ever dated a demon, but I'd done some experimenting in college.
I heard a sound like a squeaky faucet handle turning, and the blood flow from my chest grew weaker and weaker until it stopped altogether. With a sound like a zipper closing, the wound healed, leaving only a scar that read "Do Not Pry Open."
The ground rumbled.
Earthquake!
Or a tornado with ground-rumbling properties!
Tornado with ground-rumbling properties. That was just silly. I laughed at my own foolishness, which was difficult with seventeen or eighteen tongues in my mouth.
And my severed pinky. I wondered how that got in there.
Something emerged from the ground in front of me. I hoped it was a bag of gold instead of a zombie.
The object broke free to the surface.
It was a tombstone. The inscription read "Graverob This, Asshole."
Another tombstone burst out of the ground: "R.I.P. Andrew Mayhem." Then another: "R.I.P. Helen Mayhem." Theresa and Kyle Mayhem followed.
Hundreds of tombstones burst through the ground. One emerged directly underneath my feet, knocking me to the ground. As I fell I hit my head on a tombstone, knocking off the top half of my skull.
I lost consciousness for a few years.
When I recovered, I yanked off my new beard and realized I was surrounded by millions of tombstones. They were so close together that the people had to be buried standing up, or several bodies deep. Or else they were really tiny people.
I bellowed in terror, just for the hell of it.
Goblin made his way through the tombstones. My arch-nemesis was looking bad, his face a patchwork of scars and gashes, but I had to admit his cyborg makeover did look pretty cool.
"Andrew," he said, nodding politely.
"Goblin," I said, returning his nod.
"Why aren't you digging?" he asked.
I shrugged. "Dunno."
"Don't you know where you are?"
I looked around without moving my head. The iron gates read " Sanity Cemetery."
"I'm in Sanity Cemetery," I replied. "Duh."
"Your sanity is buried here, Andrew," Goblin informed me.
"I'm insane?"
"Yes."
"That sucks."
"Surely you don't think all of this is real, do you?"
One of my tongues popped out of my mouth and oozed along the ground like a speedy slug. "Dunno."
"You must dig," Goblin said. He peeled off one of his scars like a sticker. "Dig deep."
"With what?"
Goblin pointed to my right arm. It had become a shovel.
"Ah, thanks," I said.
"Dig."
Okay, I'd dig. Digging was fun.
A tombstone in front of me read "Casket For Sale (Only Used Once). Serious Inquiries Only, Please." A red X glowed in the dirt in front of it. I wondered if this could be some sort of sign.
I began to dig. It wasn't easy, because when you're digging with a regular shovel you use your feet to slam it into the ground, but I couldn't do that because the shovel was my arm, and so it was pretty awkward at first and it kind of hurt my back, not to mention the whole weirdness factor of having my own arm be a shovel, I mean, the tongues were weird, too, but at least they were just multiples of a standard body part, while a shovel was a completely foreign appendage to the human body.
At least the ground was soft.
"Gonna dig that grave, gonna dig it deep," I sang, as a chorus of souls in torment accompanied me. "Gonna dig my sanity right out of the dirt."
"He's gonna dig his sanity right out of the dirt!" sang the tormented souls.
Helen Mayhem. Why did that name sound so familiar?
Oh, right. Because she had the same last name as me.
I dug and dug and dug. Worms squirmed out of the sides of the hole and recited non-rhyming poetry to me.
Theresa Mayhem sounded familiar, too.
Oh, right. The last name thing again.
The hole was now well over six feet deep. That damn tombstone better not have been lying about the casket for sale.
Kyle Mayhem. That name also rang a bell. I couldn't quite put my finger on why it rang that bell, or what particular bell it rang, but…
Was he my son?
My arm-shovel struck casket.
I crouched down and brushed away the soil. It was a pretty nice casket. I wondered why somebody would sell it.
I threw open the lid.
My brain was inside.
I picked it up, careful to use both hands so I didn't drop it. It was lighter than I expected.
Helen. Theresa. Kyle.
Where was I supposed to put this brain? I did a quick check and saw that the top of my skull was still missing. "Hey, Goblin, watch this!" I said, tossing my brain up into the air as high as I could.
Helen in my arms, the baby in her womb…
My brain sailed back down to earth. I positioned my skull just right.
Helen almost breaking every bone in my hand during labor with Theresa…
Almost there… almost there…
Kyle, the most beautiful baby ever born in the entire world, even with that gook all over him…
Perfect catch!
"I'm sane!" I cried out. "In your face, multiple tongues!"
I kicked tombstones out of the way as I did my victory lap. They scattered to the wind like playing cards. "Goooooooo Team Mayhem! Woo-hoo!"
I smacked into a tree.
Then I threw up.
I tried to spit the extra tongues out of my mouth, but they weren't there.
My finger hurt. At least the stump did.
I braced myself against the tree and vomited again. What a horrible, horrible nightmare, but it was already starting to fade…
No, it wasn't. Nothing was fading but the visions.
I wasn't a demon slayer. I was a husband and a father and a best friend.
And a madman.
I'd tried to kill Helen.
I'd stabbed Theresa.
The reality of the situation hit me with such force that for several long moments I could do nothing but stand there, gasping for breath.
One of the tombstones fluttered past my ear and faded away.
I bent over, but there was nothing left to vomit. I dry heaved a few times, and then wiped off my mouth and desperately tried to figure out what to do.
It didn't take long to come up with the answer. Of course, it was a vague answer, not particularly helpful, and without a plan of action attached to it, but at least I knew I had to get back to my family and get them to safety.