mumbled distractedly as he picked up a syringe with red contents, then shook his head and replaced it. His expression grew thoughtful but after a moment it cleared. He retrieved two syringes that contained what looked like chocolate pudding and passed one to Jacques. Apparently the consistency was pudding-like too, because the needle looked more like one of those turkey baster injector things. Except about twice as big.
Dr. Nikas crouched before me. âLift your shirt, please?â
Wary, I lifted it to right below my boobs. Apparently that was high enough, because Dr. Nikas placed a cool hand on my stomach and set the needle about an inch above my belly button. âThis might be a bit uncomfortable,â he said and then drove the needle into my gut.
A tiny yelp escaped me, and it was with some small relief that I felt Philip stiffen behind me as Jacques did the same pipe-to-the-gut move. It took at least a minute to inject the substance, during which I breathed in shallow pants against the pain.
A bit uncomfortable, my ass.
âDr. Nikas, this
sucks
. Iâll stick with the buzzing teeth.â
âGive it a moment, Angel,â he murmured.
About ten seconds later the bee-teeth sensation faded. âThatâs better,â I breathed. Unfortunately, rather than echoing my sigh of relief Philip groaned and jerked against my back.
Monitor wires caught at me as I tried to twist to see what happened. Jacques slapped the intercom on the phone and shouted, âReg!â to call in the other lab tech, then moved to us and wrapped an arm around Philip to keep him upright. Philip twitched and let out a shuddering cry. I swiveled the chair, not caring that clips and patches pulled off, and stared at Philip.
âAngel!â Dr. Nikas said with urgency. âTurn around. Stay
still
.â
I didnât. I couldnât. Not with the side of Philipâs face looking as if a billion ants crawled under the skin. In seconds, the flesh split as an ugly patch of rot formed and deepened, exposing bone and teeth. Zombie stench, distinctively heavier and sweeter than cadaver stink, rolled over me in a sickening wave. I stared, shocked. Weâd had trouble during treatments before, but thisâ
Dr. Nikas took me firmly by the shoulders in an unexpectedly strong grip and turned me with the stool until I faced away from Philip again. He pressed me back until I could feel Philip jerking and shaking against me, and held me there.
âAngel, I need you to stay right here,â he said, voice calm and reassuring. âHeâs going to be fine, but I need you to help me by remaining still and keeping in contact with him. Itâs important. You have it?â
Gulping, I met his eyes and nodded. âI got it. Sorry,â I said. âThat was seriously freaky.â
He squeezed my shoulders, then released me and turned away to work with the vials and syringes on the tray. Dr. Nikas always fixed things, but that didnât keep my heart from trying to thump its way out of my chest. Philip gurgled and twitched, and I held my back against his. âYouâre gonna be okay,â I said, as much to reassure myself as him.
A tall and angular man with close-cropped red hair slid to a stop in the doorwayâReg, his head swiveling this way and that as he took in the scene. Jacques barked out a couple of orders for an ice pack and âbrain formula ninety-nine,â and Reg disappeared again.
My cheek started itching, and I fought the urge to scratch itâpartly because I wasnât supposed to move and mostly because of the fear it would be gross and rotten like Philipâs.
Dr. Nikas returned to us with three syringes in his hand then injected them, one after another, into Philipâs IV. I waited anxiously for them to work and let out a breath of relief when Philip relaxed about a minute later. Reg entered with the needed items in hand and passed the ice pack to Jacques.
âPhilip,
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