THEY’RE COMING TO GET YOU!

       I had to laugh.
       Harry raised one bushy Neanderthal brow at me and said, “What’s so goddamn funny?”
       I held up the magazine cover. There it was, in full color, lar­ger than life—a grainy image of men in blue beating another dumb bastard with night­sticks. The caption read, “CAN’T WE ALL JUST GET ALONG?”
       Harry put down his sandwich and snorted as if it was the dumbest thing he’d ever seen. “Kid,” he grunted around a mouthful of roast beef, “the day we all get along is the day the world fucking ends!”
        I chuckled in agreement. “You got that right! Why, just the other day I was saying how—”
       The cab company window shattered. A pair of bloody arms covered in broken glass thrust themselves through the blinds and clawed at Harry’s face. The wind blew the stench of rotting flesh inside the tiny one-room office.
       Harry moved remarkably fast for a man I’d never seen stand up before; I guess he pushed off hard with his stumpy legs because his chair wheeled backwards like a rocket against the far wall. He clawed the snub-nosed .38 from its holster, but was too shocked to fire. The hands continued to flail through the broken blinds, trying to grab hold of prey that was no longer there. A low, frustrated moan came from whoever the attacker was. It was then that I noticed a curious thing—the attacker’s arms, while badly cut by broken glass, were not bleeding! The blood on his arms was dry, probably at least an hour old because it had turned a scabrous shade of rusty-brown.
       Harry recovered his wits enough to swear up a blue streak that would have put a sailor to shame. He shot his .38 three times through the window. The blinds obscured his aim, but I heard at least one of the bullets smack wetly into its target. The hands suddenly withdrew, but the moaning continued.
       I could hear the soft, slow shuffle-crunch, shuffle-crunch of dragging feet on broken glass coming closer to the front door. It had a large glass panel in it with the cab company’s name and phone number stenciled in white. Harry was trying to tell me something, but it came out garbled. I couldn't understand him. Nothing was making sense anymore. I tried to get to my feet.
       Shuffle-crunch, shuffle-crunch...


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