The fly had no head.
The man was enjoying an after-work whiskey when he first noticed it, buzzing frantically against the picture window displaying the final strains of daylight streaked across the sky in a festive tangerine color. It was the fly’s insistence that got his attention. Careful as he was with keeping the doors and windows closed, flies and the occasional bee still made their way inside, so this was not out of the ordinary. There was a strange desperation to this particular fly, however. It was almost acting like it wanted to be noticed. And to its credit, the bid was successful.
The man picked up an old Sports Illustrated and rolled it into a tight cylinder to give the fly a fatal riposte. With his arm raised like Jason Voorhees brandishing a blood-stained machete, he readied himself to strike whenever the fly tired itself out. And when it finally did (roughly thirty seconds later, though it felt longer), it stopped almost dead center in his line of vision. If he leaned in just a few inches closer, the filthy thing would be able to reach out and touch the tip of his nose with one of its thin, hairy legs. And just when he was ready to bring the magazine down, he halted. Something was wrong with this fly. It was a few more seconds before he figured out that the fly was moving about without a pilot, so to speak. This also wasn’t out of the ordinary, because he knew a lot of animals continued moving even after losing their head.
As he understood it, however, these life spans were extremely short and even more chaotic. This fly seemed oddly in control, using two of its legs to brush off its thorax and wings with the grace of a model in a shampoo commercial. Save for its head being missing, it looked like every bug he had ever squished or mercifully waved outside, but he continued to be transfixed by it as it lackadaisically walked across the glass in a zig-zag pattern. This might suggest that it was indeed nothing more than a misfiring nervous system on the verge of death, but its movements were clean and precise. The man was certain that if you drew over its path with a marker, you’d have a pattern like the one at the bottom of Charlie Brown’s yellow shirt.
Intrigued, he opted not to kill it, taking out his phone to capture it on video. As soon as he hit record, the fly flew away, its steady buzzing fading as it disappeared down the hallway. Of fucking course. He briefly looked around and listened for it, but wherever it had gone, it was tucked down tight. He guessed the next time his cleaning lady came, she’d find its withered husk of a body on the floor somewhere, paying it no mind as she swept it into a garbage bag while listening to whatever serial killer podcast had her interest at that moment. The man’s money was on Dahmer or perhaps Edmund Kemper.
He bid the fly a respectful farewell and resumed enjoying his after-work whiskey, which soon turned into three. With his head buzzing pleasantly from the booze, he entered the kitchen to make himself a snack. He decided on some instant mac and cheese (as gross as it was delicious) and waited as the microwave hummed and counted down. It was in its final ten seconds when the fly appeared again, flying in a steady circle around the ceiling’s light fixture. Was it the same fly? It couldn’t be. For one thing, it was bigger. Not massively so, but enough to be noticeable. As if sensing his curiosity, the fly parked itself briefly on the side of the fixture. The man stood on his tiptoes to get a better look and sure enough, it had no head. But how could it have gotten bigger? It had barely been an hour since he last saw it. What was more likely? That there were multiple flies in his house with no head, or that one had grown in a matter of minutes?
His knowledge of insects was a bit lacking, but both seemed pretty inexplicable to him. What was even more inexplicable was that the fly seemed to sense his bewilderment rubbing its front legs together like a man about to enjoy a succulent prime rib dinner. As the rest of its life could be measured in seconds, the man decided to let it have its fun. There were no magazines in sight, so he’d have to settle for the roll of paper towels on the counter. Not as effective as a magazine, but still strong enough to stun it. He already imagined it falling to the tiled floor in a lazy arc before being crushed to oblivion under his foot. He didn’t know why killing this particular fly seemed like such a satisfying prospect. Perhaps it was the booze, or maybe it was just how unusual and unnerving the sight of it was. The fly continued to rub its legs together as if inviting the man to strike, and he was happy to deliver.
Unfortunately, the fly buzzed away just as the paper towels hit the light fixture. It wasn’t a hard hit, and while the paper towels were soft, it was still enough to knock the fixture loose, sending it to the ground where it shattered into a million shards of frosted white glass that went everywhere. It was the kind of mess he’d still be cleaning up weeks or even months down the road when a stray shard would inevitably bury itself into the sole of his foot late one night when he came into the kitchen for a sandwich or a glass of water. As he fired off a number of colorful obscenities, he grabbed the broom and dustpan, plotting his revenge as he swept the shards up. Part of him knew it was just a fly, but another part of him also couldn’t help but think that the ugly little thing really was taunting him (and having fun doing it).
After sweeping up the glass, he saw it was after midnight. That probably meant it was time for bed. Fuck that fly. He quickly downed some water and shuffled down the hallway to his bedroom. For as irritated as he was, he imagined he could laugh about it someday and even share it as a somewhat amusing anecdote. The headless, unstoppable fly. Yes, there would be people who would say he was exaggerating, but he’d know the truth, and that was enough, he supposed. As he climbed into the bed to the usual groan of his aging mattress, he thought he heard something. Although not completely comfortable and settled, he sat still and listened. Nothing. Just the booze and his mind fucking with him. He shifted around a bit, producing more squeaks and groans, and there it was again. No mistaking it this time. The fly was back and buzzing around just outside his door. He turned on the lamp he had on his nightstand to see it enter his room. And it was even bigger this time, no mistaking that, either. While it was a nuisance before, now it was getting a bit scary. He estimated it to be about the size of a hummingbird. Still small, relatively speaking, but could flies get that big? And this quickly? One thing was for sure, he had to kill it. It was unnatural in a way that was beginning to feel dangerous. The only trick was doing it in a way that wouldn’t completely obliterate it. He had every intention of bringing it to the local college, which he knew had an entomology department. Maybe it wasn’t a discovery, but it was worth noting just the same. He might even be able to get some money out of it. He watched the fly make its way around his room, trying to discern if it had any kind of pattern. It was an absurd notion, but so was the very nature of the fly itself. It eventually parked itself on the screen of his brand-new 4K television. Its wings fluttered once, then twice as it rubbed its thorax with legs roughly the size of a baby’s finger.
Even as far away as he was, he could still see detritus and God knows what else falling from its hairy body. It was enough to make him nauseous. Yes, this fucking thing had to die. He looked around for a makeshift weapon and saw the toe of a running shoe sticking out from under his bed. Dare he use it? The TV hadn’t been cheap, and he definitely couldn’t afford a replacement. But then the fly did something he didn’t expect at all. It lazily turned itself clockwise so its headless top portion was facing down. It then buzzed against the screen several times in quick succession. And the hits had some power. They were hard enough to produce a sound akin to thumping, and was that a cracking he heard? Jesus Christ. This wasn’t like at the window earlier, where it was acting like every other fly who couldn’t grasp the concept that just because you could see the outside didn’t mean you could access it. This was doubly unsettling because the fly couldn’t see anything and yet here it was, trying to break his fucking television. What else could it be? It rested briefly and then resumed its kamikaze dives against the screen. The thuds were even louder, and the cracking of glass was unmistakable. This little fucker. While his bewilderment was strong, his growing apoplexy was stronger as he swung his legs out of bed, trying to move as silently and discreetly as possible. Either the fly hadn’t noticed, or it was content to die, having successfully destroyed his television. Oh, this little fucker.
With the shoe raised, he prepared to strike. To his satisfaction and delight, the fly seemed oblivious to his presence as it continued to hammer his television. When it stopped to rest again, the man made his move, bringing the shoe down in a slightly hesitant arc. The goal was to stun it, but the fly made it to safety just as the shoe connected with the screen, producing a crunching that he instantly regretted. How could he have been so fucking stupid? If the fly had damaged his television, then he had thoroughly fucked it. He briefly considered going to bed and worrying about it in the morning, but why delay the inevitable? He grabbed the remote, still bearing the glossy protective plastic, and turned the television on, revealing a rainbow spiderweb of cracks over the smiling face of Phoebe Waller-Bridge. His Amazon FireStick had decided to recommend Fleabag, a show he had put off watching for far too long, and now it looked like he wasn’t going to ever see it.
“You stupid bellend,” he imagined her scoffing. “Is this something you can tell your family and friends about now?”
No, it wasn’t. And that meant the fly had to die in ways he never thought imaginable. Fuck the entomology department at the local university. He was going to annihilate this thing, piss on its remains, and then burn what was left of it.
“Where are you, you fucking piece of shit?” he hollered, knowing full well at least one of his neighbors would hear him. He dropped his shoe and went into his closet to get his tennis racket, something purchased at the behest of an ex. It was used once before the relationship ended. Since then, it had been collecting dust, meaning it was time for it to finally earn its keep. Finding it required moving a lot of other forgotten shit around, but when he did discover it, he saw it not as a relic from a time he’d rather forget, but as his own Excalibur, a powerful weapon capable of slaying evil that was any size, which was good because when he stood up and turned around, he found himself eye-level with the fly. And it was even bigger. He estimated it to be roughly the size of a robin now.
It hovered contentedly, waiting for him to make his next move. And he was happy to deliver. He blindly lashed out with the racket, grazing his nose, which hurt like hell. The fly lazily dipped left, causing him to miss it completely. He wasn’t expecting it to be a killing blow, but it was frustrating and even a little humiliating. The way it was supposed to play out was that he was going to stun the fly, knocking it to the ground before grinding it into his carpet, and reducing it to an ugly stain that would serve as a warning for others of its ilk. As he touched his finger to his tender nose, he watched as the fly resumed its eye-level position. Just when he was getting ready for his next (and hopefully fatal) strike, the fly did something he didn’t expect at all. It tried to go inside his mouth.
The man gagged and flailed as the horrid thing planted its sticky, hairy legs on his lips and tried to push itself inside. It filled his mouth with the taste of rot and copper as he imagined the legion of bacteria burrowing themselves deep inside his body, subjecting him to countless diseases, some of which probably hadn’t even been discovered yet. Perhaps that would be his legacy. Patient Zero for some terrible illness he had caught from a whole new species of insect, his name appearing in medical journals and textbooks for generations to come.
At that moment, the prospect of that was the only thing worse than the disgusting thing trying to work itself inside him. He did his best to grab hold of its cone-shaped abdomen, but even that proved difficult as it twitched and wiggled like the sizable posterior of a dancer in a hip-hop video. With no other recourse, he ran face-first into the wall, producing a nuclear blast of light and pain inside his head. He felt warm blood pouring from his nose and knew that it was broken. But he wasn’t the only one that had taken damage. He felt the unmoving fly slip out of his mouth and heard it hit the floor with a plop. The wet sound was particularly impressive when you considered how thick his carpet was.
While he wanted to revel in this small victory, the plop was also the straw that broke the camel’s back as he doubled over and produced a thick rope of chunky vomit that splattered his feet and shins. There was a good ten seconds of retching before he was in control again (relatively speaking). With his eyes fully open, he scanned the ground for the fly, hoping to find it covered in his vomit and blood. Assuming it was, he’d be happy to add urine or even feces into the mix to make it the cocktail this thing deserved, his carpet be damned. It was threadbare and ugly, anyway. But to his dismay, the asymmetrical puddle lay about two feet to its left.
Worse yet, it was recovering, frantically brushing his saliva and mucus from its body as its almond-sized wings fluttered. He raised his right foot and brought it down hard, but the fly got away right before it landed. He felt it tickle the sole of his foot, an unpleasant sensation made even worse when he connected with the floor. There was a crunch followed by a lightning bolt of pain that shot up his leg as he lost his balance and collapsed onto the bed. The fly zig-zagged over his head before exiting his bedroom, its rusty buzzing still loud and pronounced.
He didn’t know if his ankle was broken, but it was sprained, meaning he’d be hobbling around on crutches for the next month and some change. And what the hell would he tell people when they asked him how it happened? Some shit about playing racquetball, he supposed. And while most people would likely throw in the towel and call an ambulance, he refused to let the fly win. It was amazing how personal this felt, particularly when he remembered that the fucking thing didn’t even have a head.
He pulled himself up, taking every precaution not to put any weight on his injured foot, which was already purple and swollen. He hobbled over to the tennis racket and picked it up, praying with every fiber of his being that his aim would be accurate and true in his subsequent attempts. He exited his bedroom and limped down the hallway, using the wall for support and knocking several pictures to the ground, the frames cracking and even shattering in some cases. He’d have to remember to watch his step once this was over. It almost made him laugh, as not long ago, he was grousing to himself about encountering a stray piece of glass in the kitchen. He reached the living room and listened for the fly. As intimidating as its size was, it also gave him an advantage. It had fewer places to hide and was much noisier now. It only took a few seconds for him to spot it perched on the armrest of his couch like an ugly Rorschach blot.
“End of the road, asshole,” he said, surprised at how low and hoarse his voice was. “You may have won a couple of battles, but I’m about to win the fucking war. Any last words?”
Despite everything, he managed to laugh as its wings twitched again, seemingly acknowledging this challenge. And while part of him admired its moxie, the bigger part of him wanted it dead in a way that probably wasn’t healthy. Big or not, headless, or not, it was still just a fly. A tiny thing born in shit, doomed to live an almost imperceptibly short life before dying violently or anonymously (or possibly both). He twirled the racket as he limped over, the fly still parked on the armrest. At that moment, it looked like some sort of absurd art sculpture, so much so that the man was tempted to get his phone and snap a photo of it. But that would be careless and sloppy on his part. He suspected it was waiting for him to make exactly that kind of mistake. Instead, he sat down. Not next to it, of course. No, he didn’t want to scare it. He wanted it to feel comfortable, like an accepted part of the landscape. And it seemed to work, as the fly didn’t move. It was about six feet away, which meant he’d have to inch even closer to it before landing a strike. As he started to do so, he heard a squishing sound. The man was horrified to see it growing in front of him in real time. The thick, wet sound grew louder as everything on the fly stretched and expanded. To the man, it looked painful, which should have brought some joy, but mostly, he just felt sick again. Although the whole ordeal lasted less than thirty seconds, it felt like an eternity, and when the fly (now the size of a pigeon) lifted off from the couch and disappeared into the kitchen, the man felt very stupid. He had been handed a golden opportunity to finish the fucking thing off, and he had blown it. Angry with the fly, but angrier with herself, he stormed into the kitchen with his racket ready.
The fly was now resting on the door of his microwave. With a swing worthy of Babe Ruth, the man let it rip, missing the fly by millimeters as it took off again. The racket smashed through the door, which stung, as the microwave was barely a year old and hadn’t been cheap. The fly continued to taunt him by circling his head like the world’s dirtiest halo, and it was all downhill from there. The man went berserk, indiscriminately smashing everything around him. His rack of coffee cups? Gone. His blender? History. His air fryer? Dented, and possibly busted. And yet the fly remained unharmed.
After bringing the racket down on the counter and chipping it, the man gathered just enough control and patience to realize that it was shot, the frame misshapen and its strings unruly and jagged. He whipped it to the floor and looked around for a backup. Within seconds, he spotted a can of air freshener. Perfect! Normally, such a thing was kept in the bathroom, but after accidentally torching his dinner the other night, he had brought it into the kitchen to help with the stench. It was an incident that was annoying at the time but felt like kismet now. The fly was now on the ceiling, no doubt waiting for the man’s next move. He started acting casually again (or as casually as his present state would allow), grabbing the can of air freshener before opening a drawer to look for the kitchen lighter his mother had gotten him for Christmas three years ago. Like the racket, it was something that hadn’t proved very useful (until now, anyway). After finding it under a spatula and a pizza cutter, the man drew it out and dropped it to his side. The fly remained on the ceiling, which gave the man a horrifying thought. What if it was gearing up to grow again? These moments of rest weren’t because it had any vested interest or concern in what the man was doing (how could it? The fucking thing didn’t have a head), but because it was simply engaging in a biological function. The growth required it to be still, so that’s what it did. But if that was the answer, the man had no interest in finding out for sure. Instead, he raised the can and the lighter, flicking the latter on. Nothing. No spark, no flame. Just a hollow, plastic clicking, followed by a now-familiar squishing sound. The man looked up and saw the fly growing yet again. What was once a bird was now the size of a Labrador puppy. The man went into a frenzy, trying to get the lighter to spark to life to no avail. The fly’s transformation was nearing its completion, its legs squirming like the limbs of an unruly newborn. He saw its wings buzzing awake and knew this was his best shot. With one final snap of the lighter, an orange orb appeared at the tip. It was barely a flame, but it would have to do. He triggered the air freshener, producing a surprisingly bright and intense flame whose sole purpose was torching the bane of his existence. And it served that purpose well. The man heard the frantic buzzing of its wings as an acrid, burning stench filled his nostrils. It took him a second to understand it was the burning body of the fly he was smelling. Victory was all but assured if it hadn’t already been claimed. The lighter died, leaving behind a sickly chemical smell of burnt strawberries as the man kept his finger on the air freshener dispenser for several seconds. The fly was on the move again, but it was also on fire. No, it wasn’t the glorious fireball you’d see in a movie or TV show, but it was still visible, a dull orange flame similar to the one produced by the kitchen lighter. Head or not, he had hurt the fucker. Fire was the answer, but several more clicks of the kitchen lighter confirmed it was out of juice. He had a sudden yearning for his smoking days (for a host of reasons), and tried to think of what else he could use. He imagined hobbling down the street to the gas station to buy a lighter and croaked a brief burst of laughter. The proprietor was a very sweet older Asian woman. He could already see the look of horror on her face and decided that staying inside until this was resolved was his best course of action. But what to use as a lighter? His drawers were full of junk his well-meaning mother had sent him over the years, and that’s when it hit him. The lighter had come from his mother, who always bought in bulk. That meant there was at least a three-pack of them somewhere in the apartment. And they had to be more reliable than their empty brethren. He started in the kitchen, ripping the drawers free and sending their contents flying. Empty storage containers, utensils, and a bevy of assorted other crap, most of it useless.
It seemed the lighters weren’t in the kitchen, but to be sure, he kicked the emptied contents of the drawer around, hoping to uncover them, and barring that, a pack of matches. No luck. He moved into the living room, catching a glance of the fly on top of his bookshelf. It buzzed its wings as if to say it was ready, but the man ignored it. Let it recover. Once he found those lighters, it was all over. BBQed fly would effectively be on the menu. He went into the hallway closet, tossing aside coats, a cooler, and some barely used barbells. He checked the top shelf to find nothing there, either. Despair was starting to set in. He could clean himself up and go to the gas station, but he tried to imagine what the fly would do with him gone. It was careless to turn your back on an enemy, and even more careless to leave it alone in your home. His bedroom was also fruitless, even after emptying his closet and drawers, making it look like a bomb had gone off. His Hail Mary was the bathroom, and while he only begrudgingly searched it (thinking for sure it was a dead-end), he found the lighters below the sink, propped up between a container of drain cleaner and some Clorox wipes. The box was a three-pack, though it only contained one lighter, its body a bright and vivid red, which was almost poetic. He clicked it, and a bright, vivacious flame snapped up from the tip immediately. He had no clue how it had ended up under the sink, but it was here now, a valued item with meaning and purpose. He frowned when he remembered that the air freshener was back in the kitchen, but as that was also a gift from his mother, he found a fresh pack of three waiting for him under the sink as well. He decided on Fresh Linen because “fresh” was the keyword here. Once the fly was dead, he’d have the very arduous task of getting his apartment back into shape, but that sort of excited him. He could remodel it, throw away the shit that accumulated over the years, maybe get it to a place that would allow him to host parties again, or (gasp) bring a date home.
As he marched down the hallway with his makeshift weapon poised and ready, he supposed part of him should be thanking the strange creature that had invaded his home. It had acted as a catalyst for improvement. But then he remembered his nose, his television, and everything else that had bit the dust during this ordeal and decided it deserved very little. Upon entering the living room, the fly was still on top of his bookshelf. While he didn’t fancy fire so close to his books (most of which were very dear to him), he also wanted to catch the fly before its next growth spurt. He flicked the lighter, bringing the flame to life before unleashing the air freshener, which produced a stream of fire even more brilliant than the first. Unfortunately, the fly was ready, taking flight well before the flame reached it. Frustrated, the man blasted it again, the flames licking his ceiling and causing the paint to peel. More remodeling, but that was okay. His living room needed it. He chased the fly around the apartment, firing every chance he could, sometimes in short bursts, others longer and more pronounced. He had to stop several times, once to put out the curtains in the living room and another time to extinguish the towels in the bathroom. What was most frustrating was that the fly never stopped. It flew around in irregular patterns, dodging the fire with a deftness and agility that made the man think of the ninjas he saw in those silly martial arts movies from the 80s. But that was giving it too much credit. Head or not, it was just an insect, even with its nightmarish ability to grow and operate without a head. And if he had needed further proof of that, it finally came to a stop because it was still subject to fatigue. It rested on the seam between his wall and ceiling.
Now that it was unmoving again, he could see just how damaged it was. Its otherwise shiny body had an ugly streak of black that went from its thorax to its abdomen. Some of its thick black hairs were singed or burnt off altogether. The man looked around for something to stand on. He had a stool somewhere, but that would require leaving the room. No fucking way that was happening. Instead, he opted for his coffee table, which was comprised of glass and metal. Was it strong enough to support his weight? He recalled dropping a full can of beer on it without getting so much as a ding, so he reasoned it was at least sturdy. He didn’t need long, just enough to aim and fire. And when the fly hit the ground a flaming mess, he’d stomp it until it was no longer recognizable. Given how big and meaty it was, he thoroughly expected the sensation to be as satisfying as it was sickening. Either way, he was ready.
He placed one foot on the coffee table followed by the second, doing his best to ignore the brief but labored cracking sound. The fly remained still as he took aim. Was it already dead? Could they die standing? Given how many rules of biology it already defied, it was definitely possible. He lowered the lighter and air freshener and leaned in to get a closer look, prompting the coffee table to let out a short, protesting screech. Time was of the essence and if the fly wasn’t already dead, it soon would be. He leaned back and readied the air freshener and lighter. The flame flicked on, and just when he pressed the air freshener’s trigger, the table gave, and the man fell through, a thousand tiny needles piercing the soles of his feet. That pain was brief, however, as he fell back, his left leg shooting straight up. His right wasn’t as lucky, as his foot had wrapped around the coffee table’s leg. There was a crunching sound that reminded him of broken potato chips followed by an unbearable explosion of pain that reverberated through his entire body. What was merely sprained before was broken now, no question about it.
He needed help, and he needed his phone to get it. And neither one was anywhere near him. Although his eyes were blurry with tears, he looked up and saw the fly moving. It turned its obscenely large body toward him, and the man’s mouth reflexively filled with the taste of rot and copper as he knew exactly what the fly was planning. He fumbled around on the ground, looking for his weapon, which would have worked perfectly had he not fucked things up so badly. Amidst the immense pain and overwhelming humiliation, he enjoyed a tiny bit of relief when his hand wrapped around the air freshener. But where the hell was the lighter? He felt and pounded the ground around him but came up empty-handed. With a graceful vibration of its wings, the fly took off, its path sure and direct. As the man began to blubber and scream, he held up the air freshener and let loose, misting the fly as it landed on his face, which did nothing to slow or stop it. The man slapped and grabbed at the fly, striking his injured nose, and producing a fresh wave of pain strong enough to make him almost pass out. With no strength or recourse, he felt his scream silenced as the fly quickly and easily burrowed its way into his mouth. He wrapped one hand around its greasy abdomen, but it was too late. The fly was inside him — crawling, moving, growing. Unable to breathe, the world began to swirl and darken. Before it was all over, the man felt one last tickling sensation deep inside his belly as the fly fluttered its wings.
When the police arrived later at the behest of several very grumpy neighbors complaining about the noise, they all agreed it was the most brutal and horrific crime scene they had ever witnessed. None of them even knew where to begin. The strangest part was the victim’s remains. It looked like he had exploded. And while the apartment was a horrid mess of blood and entrails, the police could still discern what part was what. But on top of the dozens of questions they already had, one, in particular, stuck out:
Where the hell was his head?
Michael Subjack (he/him) was born in a small town in Western New York. His work has appeared in a number of publications. Most recently, he had stories in the anthologies Heavy Metal Nightmares (Phobic Books) and Trigger Warning: Curses (Madness Heart Press).