I heard him wail as the head came up at him and he tried to hit it a
second time and it moved so that he overshot his mark, and saw the jaws
clamp down on his arm just above the wrist. His scream went higher,
shriller. Beneath it the awful crunch of bone as the jaws ground down
and through him and the hand crumbled away, falling off his arm,
falling slowly like the limb of a tree under a chain saw.
I got to my feet.
Light swung wildly around me as he battered the dog with his
flashlight. His bad hand, I thought idiotically. I could see the gout
of blood pulsing, pouring off his other wrist, the long slash mark on
the animal's back where I'd hit him.
I ran toward them, off-balance this time, and reached them just as the
flashlight flew out of the bandaged hand in a wide arc and the animal
moved again. The light guttered out, clattering against stone, and
then went on again, its beam playing over the floor to the right of me.
My second stab at him had been darkness. The pitchfork jarred against
solid rock.
When the light went on again there was just a gurgling sound.
Steve was facing me, sitting, his back to the wall beside the
entranceway. His eyes were rolled up so only the whites showed. His
head lolled off to one side. His mouth was open, and something dark
spilled down across his chin.
The dog was at his stomach.
Pulling.
I froze.
The dog's haunches tensed as it tugged again.
He seemed to fold and sigh, his body sliding down the dark wet wall.
Ismelled urine and feces. In his lap everything turned a ghastly
white.
The dog let go. Its jaws continued working something. Its head turned
slowly and looked at me.
I backed away.
The animal just stood there, watching me. Its eye catching a beam of
light. The room was filled with the stink of us. I backed away
further, slowly. There was a column just to the left of me. I wanted
to put it between us. I wanted to hide.
I watched his eyes.