by Susan Ee
I dig into my pocket and pull out a handful of industrial-strength earplugs. He looks at the orange plugs in my hand, then back at me. I grab one and push it into his ear.
He understands and puts one into his other ear. I know they don’t help a lot, but they must help some, because his face relaxes a little. He gets the attention of the two Watchers beside us who also pluck earplugs out of my hand and put them in their ears.
I give Raffe a quick hug. I don’t care who sees me at this point. Raffe might, though.
As if to prove it, he glances up at the sky. The rest of his Watchers and hellions are hovering above the fight where the noise is less. And beyond that is the cloud of winged spectators. I’m sure it’s just my imagination, but I sense the arctic winds of disapproval coming down at us from the spectators above.
He came down to help us rather than hunt us even though the entire angel host was watching.
Raffe makes a twirling gesture to his two Watchers. They nod.
The two Watchers jump into the air and make the same twirling gesture to the rest of the Watchers hovering above.
Raffe’s entire crew dives down through the painful noise and blinding lights and lands on the bridge.
When angel meets Watcher, they’re like two feral cats meeting each other in an alley. They raise their feathers, making their wings look spiky and larger than before.
At first, our freedom fighters assume that there are just more enemies to fight and withdraw into a more defensive position against them. But when they see the Watchers attacking Uriel’s angels, they waste a second, watching the scene unfold with slack jaws.
I raise my arms and whoop even though no one can hear me. I can’t help it. With Raffe’s group, we now have a fair shot of fending off Uriel’s attack.
Everyone else must feel the same way, because all around me, people shout and raise their arms in a war cry.
The lights turn off again, throwing the world into utter darkness.
I stand still, not having anywhere to hide while the angels can see and we can’t. Someone brushes by me in the dark. I want to hunker down and cover my head, but I just have to trust Raffe and the Watchers to keep me alive.
When the lights turn back on, Raffe is fighting beside me. He and his two winged opponents flinch as the light hits them.
There are more people alive than I’d hoped. The Watchers did the fighting for us while we were blind. Now they’re all blinded, and it’s our turn.
I rub Raffe’s arm to let him know it’s me and take the sword out of his hand. During the disorienting few seconds while the angels are covering their eyes, trying to adjust back to the light, we humans attack.
I cut and slice the angels closest to us while other people attack single angels in groups large enough to overwhelm them. Raffe’s Watchers fought while we were helpless. Now we fight while they’re debilitated.
We’re working together as a team, Raffe’s group and my people. We bridge their weaknesses and they bridge ours. We’re a weird, ragged, mismatched group compared with the perfectly formed, powerful, beautiful angels, but we’re still beating them back.
Adrenaline is pumping through my blood, and I feel like I can fight ten of Uriel’s angels. Screaming my head off in a war cry, I run for the next squinting angel who is shielding his eyes.
Raffe falls to the ground wrestling blindly with two angels who are working together to hold him down. I stab my blade through one’s back, and Raffe kicks off the other.
I feel like we have a real shot at beating them back with all of us working together.
But the glorious elation ends too soon.
The cloud of spectator angels begins coming down on us, hard and fast.
IT’S NOT SURPRISING that the spectator angels are jumping into the fight now that Raffe and his Watchers are defending humans against other angels.
As the spectators begin diving, the fog around them begins churning. The angels falter in their flight and look around.
A cloud of locusts bursts out from the fog surrounding the angels.
I search the chaos for a glimpse of my sister but don’t see her in the swarm of wings and stingers.
A bloody body drops from the center of the locust cloud.
There’s a heart-stopping moment when I can’t see any details. I want to shut my eyes in case it’s Paige. Instead, my eyes are glued to the body as it falls.
I can’t see anything until the body gets close enough. When it does, there’s just enough time for me to see who it is.
Iridescent wings flutter in the wind. A scorpion tail. A white streak in flowing hair.
Then he smashes onto the asphalt.
I can breathe again.
Paige. Where is she?
In the sky, the swarm of locusts closes in on the angels. Paige sits regally in the arms of a locust followed by the rest of the swarm.
We all stare. Paige is covered in blood. I hope it’s mostly White Streak’s. She drips blood from her mouth. She’s chewing something.
I don’t want to think about that. I’m careful not to look too closely at White Streak, who lies broken on the bridge.
The old leader is dead.
I can’t get my mind around it. My baby sister—queen of the locusts.
Paige lashes out with her voice and hand with a fury that reminds me of Mom. I can’t hear what she’s yelling, but she sweeps her arms, and the cloud of locusts follows.
They crash with the spectator angels in a tumbling mash of perfection and monstrosity. Blood starts raining down on us as stingers and swords clash.
My sister is keeping the spectator angels from coming down on us. Doc and Obi were right about her.
A surge of pride and fear swirls inside me. My baby sister is a savior.
Then the lights turn off again, and we’re plunged into darkness.
I feel a hand grabbing Pooky Bear out of my grasp, and I know Raffe has the sword again. I crouch down low to stay out of the way and cover my head. I just have to trust him to keep me alive while I’m blind and deaf.
Behind my closed eyes, I see the impression of my sister riding a locust in battle.
WHEN THE LIGHTS turn back on again, I see someone trying to climb up the broken edge of the bridge from below. He has his mouth open in a frantic scream. Whatever it is he’s trying to get away from is worse than what’s on top of the bridge.
I run over to help him up. His hand is sweaty, and he’s trembling. I can’t hear a word he says, so I lie on my stomach at the crumbling edge and look down. I can see the bottom of the hideaway net strung below the bridge.
The net is broken. People cling to it in clumps, as if trying to get away from something. They’re all staring wide-eyed at the turbulent water below.
The sea churns and explodes as a multiheaded sixer beast shoots up in a cascade of water. Its six living heads all have their mouths open like a misshapen fish jumping for bugs.
One of its heads sees me and snaps its jaws.
The apocalyptic monster grabs and bites several people with its six live heads. It then disappears back into the bay with the bleeding, squirming victims.
The dark water splashes and swirls as the last victim’s hand disappears into the vortex.
Everyone below the bridge is in a panic. They crawl over each other, trying to get away from the spot where the sixer appeared.
How long has this been going on?
Jumping up, I rush over to the ladder that was pulled up to try to keep the talent show audience hidden beneath the bridge. A thought pops into my head—what if Doc was wrong and humans are not immune to the sixer’s plague?
I can’t let all those people die just because there’s a chance of something going wrong. I unlatch the ladder and drop it down the side. They need to get out of there. They are now almost literally the low-hanging fruit
in this war.
Our people scramble to the edges of the nets, some of them climbing over each other. There are as many people who fall into the water trying to escape as there were people who were taken by the monster.
The water churns again, and another sixer jumps up from the water. The distance they can jump is astounding. It greedily grabs people with its six jaws and drags the screaming, squirming people down below, into the depths.
“Come on! Get back up here!” I wave to the nearest people on the nets. They may be safer on the battlefield than where they are now.
As people begin climbing back up, I run through the chaos to the other escape routes around the bridge and lower the ladders. People begin streaming up the ladders as soon as they’re in place.
The music stops.
We all look up. Even the angels and locusts pause midfight to look. What now? When this is all over, I never want another exciting moment in my life ever again.
Someone in a white suit flies above the stage. It’s Uriel. His wings look off-white in the bright artificial light with a web of stark shadows.
My ears ring from the lack of sound. I peel back my headphones.
“The trial by contest is over.” He speaks in a regular voice, but in all this silence, it sounds like he’s shouting. “Raphael has proven himself a traitor. I am now the undisputed Messenger.”
Just as he says that, someone screams. A sixer climbs over the edge of the bridge. People back away as soon as they see the six heads with the seventh lying limp on its shoulder.
An angel near the sixer crashes onto his knees. His face is turning red, and he’s sweating. Blood dribbles out of his mouth.
Another sixer climbs over the other edge of the bridge.
More people scream as they frantically try to get away from the sixers, but we can’t go far on our bridge island. We herd together like frightened animals.
Two locusts near the sixer begin coughing. Then choking. They try to flap their wings, but they tumble to the concrete.
Blood begins dripping out of their mouths, their noses, their eyes. They make pitiful mewling and choking noises as they writhe on the bridge.
It’s the apocalyptic pestilence.
“RAFFE!” I TRY to get his attention. “Get off the bridge! These monsters have angelic plague!”
A low-flying angel falls out of the sky, moaning like his insides are churning. Blood drips out his mouth, ears, nose, and eyes as he writhes on the concrete.
Angels take to the sky, avoiding the sixer. The words angelic pestilence are whispered in the air along with the whoosh of wings.
Every winged creature flies off the bridge, away from the infected angels and locusts. But only the winged ones can get away from the sixers.
If Doc is right, we humans are immune to this plague. But we’re certainly not immune to a sixer killing us by force.
“Penryn!” Raffe calls to me from above, floating on his snowy wings. “Jump off the bridge. I’ll catch you.”
I rush over to the edge of the bridge where my mom is. Maybe the Watchers can catch her and whoever else is willing to jump. Luckily, my sister is in the air, far enough away to be safe.
An angel who hovers too close to the bridge screams. He convulses in the air as he begins crying blood tears.
Another sixer climbs over the edge of the bridge near Mom. She runs toward the center of the bridge like everyone else. How many of these monsters are there? I scramble to the side, yelling for my mom to head for a different part of the bridge.
“And his number is six hundred threescore and six,” says Uriel from the air, his voice booming through the panic. If he’s surprised by the plague, he’s not showing it.
As I near the edge of the bridge, I see more of the bay. The bloody seawater is peppered with sixers swimming toward us.
Two more climb over the edge. All around us, more sixers reach up and climb on top of each other to get on the bridge.
Six hundred sixty-six. It’s not just the number tattooed on their foreheads. It must be how many of them there are.
I look up.
Raffe floats above me.
The angel just below him begins to writhe in pain. His nose begins bleeding.
I wave to Raffe to get away. “Go!”
Raffe hovers. Two of his Watchers grab his arms and drag him up.
All around, people run every which way. Guns fire. Screams everywhere.
“I’ll save your Daughter of Man’s head to graft onto one of the beasts,” says Uriel to Raffe. He’s flying well above us where he has a good view of the slaughter.
Sixers pour in from every edge of the bridge.
We humans back into the center as they lumber toward us. I have my knives out, but they might as well be toothpicks pointed at an army of grizzlies.
“Penryn!”
I look up to see Raffe watching me with anguish in his eyes as his Watchers hold him at a safe distance from us.
Raffe grabs the dried fruit hanging off his neck and brings it to his lips.
He bites into it.
It bursts between his teeth, oozing what looks like thick blood down his lips.
THE BITTEN FRUIT smokes.
The smoke takes shape into the Pit lord we fought in hell.
He looks worse than I remember. Although the pieces I sliced have grown back, his wings still look like old charred leather, now covered in layers of scars. There’s a new chunk missing out of one wing, and he has a gnarled gash through his lips that makes him look like he has two mouths.
He leans over to Raffe in midair as the Watchers bristle and form a protective line near Raffe.
After that, I can’t watch anymore. The sixers are attacking around me.
For a while, I’m lost in the screams and sprays of blood from the massacre. Bullets fly everywhere, but I don’t have time to worry if I’ll get hit by a stray as I slash at a sixer’s head with everything I’ve got.
The screams intensify. At first, I assume people are getting slaughtered. But there’s something about the pitch that sounds inhuman.
The sixer that I’m fighting suddenly gets hit with three whip heads.
I have to blink to make sure I’m seeing what I’m seeing. Are those the Consumed whip heads from the Pit? I look around, trying to see what’s going on.
Under the spotlights, the shiny sea is covered with the Consumed propelling through the bay. They converge on the sixers that are still in the water.
Heads shoot up out of the water, screaming with their razor hair shooting out in front of them.
Their teeth latch onto the sixer in front of me and immediately begin chewing their way in.
The sixer writhes in pain, trying to scrape off the heads. More land on its shoulder and burrow.
Everywhere, the sixers are being attacked by whip heads. They’re ignoring the people around them as we huddle in the center.
I look up. The Pit lord with the charred wings looks down at us with a satisfied look on his face. He’s very pleased with himself.
Beside him, Raffe watches me. I can’t read his expression. What did he do to make this happen?
“Are you all right?” he shouts.
I nod. I’m covered in blood and cut up, but I can’t even feel the pain, not with all this adrenaline flowing through me.
All around, the whip heads are chewing their way out of the sixers. The sixers’ living heads are being chewed off and are thudding to the concrete. In their place, the whip heads sprout, taking over the bodies.
Their screams turn into shrill laughter. Mad. Intense. Gleeful.
The possessed sixers lumber off the bridge and into the water.
It occurs to me that if the real apocalypse ever starts, these Consumed sixers might come back from the bloody sea as the real beasts of the apocalypse.
&
nbsp; “A PAIR OF archangel wings and a new army,” says the Pit lord.
“What have you done?” Uriel flies over to Raffe. “Do you know how hard—”
Raffe whips his sword across Uriel with intense fury. Uriel barely manages to get his own sword up to block, but he gets hurled by the force of Raffe’s blow.
Uriel tumbles out of the sky, landing hard on the bridge.
He staggers up, bleeding and holding his shoulder. It looks crushed. Before he can regain balance, a crowd of people rush him.
A woman slaps him, screaming about her children. Then another comes and kicks him. “That’s for my Nancy.” She kicks Uriel harder. “That’s for little Joe.”
Another person jumps in and begins wailing on him as a fourth runs up and begins plucking his feathers. After that, Uriel disappears under a mob of angry humans.
Feathers fly. Blood spurts. Knives slash up and down in the spotlights as arms pump, covered in blood.
Everything else has stopped—the music is off, the lights stay on, the angels have stopped fighting, and the Consumed sixers have quieted.
There’s only the eerie glow of the spotlights beaming in every direction and Uriel’s screams.
The angels look confused, unsure of what to do next. Maybe if Uriel’s supporters had actually been loyal and cared about him, as opposed to following him because of what he could do for them, maybe they would risk themselves to save him. But before the uncertain angels can make a move, the crowd over Uriel begins to disband.
Several people hold up grisly parts of him as trophies. Bloody feathers, clumps of hair, a finger, and other parts too bloody to recognize.
Okay, maybe we’re not the most civilized beings in the universe, but then, who is?
“I’VE FULFILLED MY end of the bargain, Archangel,” says the Pit lord. His burned wings sweep back and forth lazily in the air. “I saved your pitiful Daughter of Man and her family. Now it’s your turn.”
Raffe hovers on his beautiful feathered wings in front of the Pit lord. He nods with a grim expression.