The next morning, Huck wakes up in the middle of the night. He's worried about what's going to happen to his family when he wakes up. He wants to make sure they're okay, but he's also worried about how he'll react to the fact that someone's been killed in his house. He asks his wife to tell him what happened, and she tells him that she ate some cake on the upper deck. Huck's stomach hurts, and he asks if there's anything wrong with the cake. She says it's fine, but she's already told her that if someone ate it, it'd kill them. She tells him to cut the cake, and Huck tells her that he has a drug called "the wild fly" that he uses to breed livestock, but that it shouldn't be eaten by humans. He tells his wife not to worry, because someone upstairs has already died from eating the cake and he doesn't want that to haunt him. He also tells her not to even think about running away from the house, because there is no way to escape.
The next morning, Huck wakes up in the middle of the night. He's worried about what's going to happen to his family when he wakes up. He wants to make sure they're okay, but he's also worried about how he'll react to the fact that someone's been killed in his house. He asks his wife to tell him what happened, and she tells him that she ate some cake on the upper deck. Huck's stomach hurts, and he asks if there's anything wrong with the cake. She says it's fine, but she's already told her that if someone ate it, it'd kill them. She tells him to cut the cake, and Huck tells her that he has a drug called "the wild fly" that he uses to breed livestock, but that it shouldn't be eaten by humans. He tells his wife not to worry, because someone upstairs has already died from eating the cake and he doesn't want that to haunt him. He also tells her not to even think about running away from the house, because there is no way to escape.