Far Horizons: Tales of Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Horror. Issue #11 February 2015 | Page 17

set like a man and two more of equal size set to the sides like a horse . The mouth was ringed with... ,with… I staggered back and grasped at the closest crate for balance as my stomach heaved and everything I had eaten for the last two days burned its way up my throat and out my mouth. I gasped as soon as I could draw breath and glanced up to see the creature much nearer, all four of its eyes set deep within the heavily armoured head stared straight at me and the short writhing tentacles that ringed both sides of the mouth were reaching towards me. My stomach turned again and even though there was nothing left I heaved again and again, my belly a band of tearing pain. Crack, Crack. The shots of a police .36 rang out close to my face. One bullet vanished into the gloom, the other bounced off the thick plates on the creature’s chest. It moved toward me and came into the light falling through the grated hatch overhead. Of its own will my right hand had found the butt of my revolver and drawn and fired from the hip. My mind struggled to understand what my eyes could see, it seemed to blur and become clear but each time I could see it clearly it was somehow different from before. Realising what I had done I brought my arm up and sighted at the creature now no more than a dozen feet from me. It was tall, a head taller than me and perhaps seven feet in height. It was huge, twice my width, the vast bulk of its shoulders some four feet wide, even without counting the spikes that covered the huge plates of scale or bone that overlapped across its upper body. Crack, Crack. Both rounds bounced, I saw one glance off the head just above one of the eyes on the front. Crack. Crack. Click. Click. My revolver was empty, but my mind took seconds to recognise the sound. I knew this, I had seen it. Before, in the hotel. When it killed Garrety. When it killed me. This close the smell struck me. Death and decay, flesh and blood left to rot. The stench of a great carrion beast, the stench of the grave. Its face, its face, twisting, swirling, I wanted to be sick, no. I must be strong, dizzy, falling, no. Its face was broad; the entire lower half was a mouth of fangs larger than my fingers, dizzy, my stomach churning. The upper half of its face was bone or scale covered in spikes or horns jutting out sideways and to the back, two eyes My stomach again fought against me, I could not stop it but I was exhausted and did no more than gasp and choke as the muscles across my belly spasmed and could do no more. PAGE 17