Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Narcissism

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Now listen, I’m not saying I was the bastard love child of George Clooney and Ryan Gosling or anything like that, but when you factored in my soft features and my career, there was no denying I was a serious catch.

The problem is looks meant everything to Hannah. Everything.

See I’d known since early on in our relationship she sought validation through her physical appearance. Personally, I blamed her parents. In our first year of dating, while we lay side-by-side on the beach swapping stories about our crappy childhoods, she told me her dad once refused to put up her school photos.

When she asked why, he patted her head and said, “Don’t take it personally honey, it’s not your fault your acnes so disgusting.”

So, you can understand where her toxic obsession sprung from. Not that I’m excusing what she did, just making the point that although her skin may have cleared up, those self-esteem issues most definitely did not.

It’s funny, in a grim sort of way. Because between her long, golden curls and piercing brown eyes, you could count the number of times Hannah needed to buy her own drinks on one hand. And her fixation with ALWAYS being the centre of attention could get a little…corrosive.

Like one time, at a gala dinner, the senior partners at my firm practically started a Battle Royale craning to get a closer look at my Cesare Attolini suit and new Yacht-Master Rolex—the one with the bidirectional rotatable bezel and black dial.

Had Hannah stayed home that night, it probably would have gone unnoticed. I woke up the next morning only to find a fist-sized tear beneath the lapel of that dinner jacket, along with two buttons missing.

In the months following ‘Attolini-gate’, she insisted on attending every last cocktail party and charity ball, no matter how mundane, in the flashiest dress imaginable, her hair all done up, luscious and bouncy. With a glass of champagne in hand, she endlessly referred to herself as my trophy wife. Or the winning lottery ticket that blew into my hand.

Little by little, these snide remarks ate away at me. From the way she talked, you’d think she married a professional Shrek impersonator, so the next time she dropped a ‘don’t you think you’re punching above your weight with me honey?’ quip in front of polite company, I casually replied, “Actually, I reckon we’re about even looks wise.”

As I polished off my whiskey, there was a long, awkward pause, interrupted only by one startled on-looker choking on a shrimp tartlet.

To Hannah’s credit, her temper didn’t boil over until we got home. However, rather than explode because of the humiliation, she just endlessly ranted about how I’d placed us on equal footing physically.

Thirty minutes of shouting, screaming, and stomping around the house later, with half the furniture sprawled across the floor or broken, she said, “Fine, we’re even. You’re the window dressing AND the main breadwinner in this relationship. Congratulations.”

With that, the bedroom door slammed shut behind her.

Did I already know this encounter was headed to a bleak place? Absolutely. It was almost dawn, though, and I could feel Hannah’s raw fury from the far end of the hall. So, I spent the night in the guest room.

Hopefully a little rest would help dissolve that temper…

The next morning, from across the breakfast counter, the beautiful woman stared right through me.

“Everything okay?” I asked, my voice all meek.

She finished her coffee, tossed the empty cup into the sink, and exited the room without a single word.

Over the next few days, I’d catch her watching me whenever she thought I wasn’t paying attention. While in the shower, the bathroom door would shiver open, just a little, and I’d quickly turn off the water and shout, “Hello?” only to be met with silence. In the middle of the night, floorboards would squeak and I’d catch a glimpse of a figure in the outside hall, but by the time I flicked on the bedside lamp and scrambled to my feet, the quiet house would be snoozing peacefully.

Meanwhile, I refused to believe the obvious truth: that I was terrified of my own wife. I mean, it sounded ridiculous, and if my buddies caught me tiptoeing past the master bedroom or jumping at my own reflection, they’d have said, ‘You can bench 220 but you’re terrified of your missus? Puh-lease’.

So, rather than go stay at a hotel, I marched into our room one night, bouquet of roses in hand, and announced to Hannah that I couldn’t hold a candle to her. I said every time the human beam of sunlight I was privileged enough to call my wife and I stood next to each other, I looked so ugly by comparison on-lookers wondered whether my parents might have been related.

Hannah gave me a long, hard stare before pulling back the bedsheets.

What was I meant to do, wait for a damn smoke signal? I hopped straight in, desperate to believe we’d closed the book on that ugly chapter of our marriage.

When I woke up, my hands and feet were bound to the bedposts by metal cuffs. My dearly beloved sat on top of me wearing a face mask, her hips straddling my chest. In her gloved hand, there was a glass container filled with clear liquid.

Hannah said, “I’ve been mulling over what you said, and you were right before: we are equal.” As she unscrewed the lid, a pungent aroma seeped out singeing my nostril hairs. “But that got me thinking, if I’m not the pretty one, what exactly do I bring to this marriage? Nothing, that’s what. So I’m gonna knock you down a few pegs. You know, to even things out.”

The container dangled directly above my skull, slowly tipping forward, inch by terrible inch. Along the side, there was a yellow and black illustration of a beaker spilling over a bare hand and eating away at the flesh.

Oh fuck.

Now a stammering mess, I choked out a feeble, “Hannah…please…”

The last thing I saw was her big, bright smile—the smile that made so many men melt like butter in a hot pan. Then, scalding liquid doused my eyes, and an invisible battalion of hungry ants sunk their mandibles into my skin.

From there, there are only vague echoes of me clawing my way across the room, a scream issuing from my bubbling lips, and eye-jelly oozing onto the carpet. Either I broke free from my restraints or Hannah released me.

The world appeared as blobs of swirling colour, and the front of my nightshirt kept growing hotter by the second. As I ripped it off over my skull, there came a flash of bright light, accompanied by laughter.

It occurred to me that Hannah was probably watching this with great amusement, delighted by her husband’s disfigurement. What I didn’t realize at the time was that she’d also snapped photos to WhatsApp to our closest friends.

In the morning, they’d wake up, open pictures of me wrestling my shirt over my head—accompanied by the caption *my ugly man’s got that beach bod—*and chuckle at what they believed was my ‘disgusting Halloween mask’.

Disoriented, still burning, I screamed for help through liquifying lips, again and again. There came no response.

My phone wasn’t charging on the bedside cabinet. I fumbled around on my hands and knees, past the carpeted hall, finally uncovering a cold, tiled floor. The bathroom.

Guided by muscle memory, I worked my way over into the bathtub, my hands spider-walking up the side. With help from the towel rack, I dragged myself to a standing position.

The controls for the shower sat at chest height. Still blind, with the inferno raging on my face growing worse with each passing second, I mashed buttons until a blast of perfect, icy water hit me in the face, providing momentary relief from the pain.

It wasn’t long before the showerhead got yanked from its holster. The jet pelted me in the stomach, moved across my torso, and around the side of my thighs.

As it turned out, Hannah decided to record an Insta story. Water fight with the hideous hubby. Love how we’re still sooo goofy after all these years!

I toppled over the side of the tub, my ribs thudding against the floor. A short time later I found myself in the outer hall and as my hand groped for floor, it found only a handful of air, and I went toppling down the stairs.

Disoriented, bruised, I found myself trapped in that maze of a house. This wasn’t working. My only chance of summoning help was with Hannah’s phone, but how to get it from her?

With a series of stiff shoves, my darling wife wrestled me onto the armchair in the lounge, her delicate voice barely audible through the agony-filled haze.

She eased herself into a seat across my lap, one arm draped across the back of my neck. Oh fuck—she was taking a selfie, she was actually taking a selfie. She really had lost it.

The second I saw a flashing light, I sprung into action. Later, I was told in the action shot captured by the phone my face had the consistency of strawberry jelly, and where our cheeks touched melted skin stretched out like the warm cheese on a piece of garlic bread.

Still blind, I lashed out, swiping at Hannah’s chest and arms. The phone went spinning out of her hand and she tried to run, but I cut off her escape, knowing if she slipped away I’d be left there to rot.

With every ounce of strength in my body I reigned down blows, hearing bones crunch and teeth shatter. My 'better' half fought back, swiping at me, tearing away chunks of flesh so large medics would later tell me huge portions of bone shone through.

Hannah collapsed onto the floor, groaning. Just from running my fingers across her crumpled features, I could tell she didn’t that ‘more breathtaking than the first day of summer’ smile anymore, and most of the polish had been wiped off those well-defined cheekbones...

From there, my survival became a game of Marco Polo with the phone, which had taken shelter beneath the sofa. In the centre of the screen sat a blurry green button. I tapped it, and then a concerned voice spoke back at me.

I screamed. I screamed until the police officers kicked open the front door, then I lay in the back of an ambulance speeding toward the hospital, the sirens loud in my ears, a paramedic promising everything would be okay—that they’d save my vision.

Twelve weeks I spent in recovery, my face encased with bandages. The authorities took Hannah for her own quick pit stop in the emergency room before carting her off to jail, where she’s currently awaiting trial.

From what I hear the other inmates have taken to calling her the elephant woman…

 

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Credits 

My Wife Hates That My Son Is Just Like Me

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My wife and I are very different people. Her delicate, careful nature has always opposed my reckless and adrenaline-junky lifestyle. She’s tamed me down quite a bit, but people still comment that we are the definition of “opposites attract.”

When my wife announced the pregnancy, our families placed bets on who he would take after. My wife and I prayed that he might just adopt both of our traits, because admittedly, our strong personalities had their flaws. She was a perfectionist to a fault, and I was a troublemaker at heart.

When I held Hayden in my arms for the first time, I felt full in a piece of my heart I didn’t even know existed. I’ve not always been the nurturing type, but Hayden made me want to be.

It didn’t take long for Hayden to grow into his personality. He was carefree, adventurous, boisterous and snarky. It was clear who he took after. Everyone called him my “mini-me.” My wife rolled her eyes every time that comment was made. I could tell she was insanely jealous, and it was like she was angry with me for it.

By the time Hayden was 8, he had developed a scary number of my traits. I mean, it was scary. His mannerisms, his interests, his way of thinking, his argumentative style. It was like he was a reincarnation of me, much to my wife’s disdain.

The truly scary part was the speed at which Hayden adopted my traits. He was already mimicking my troublemaking behaviors; sneaking out, talking back, playing recklessly, even being a bit of a bully to his friends. Even I didn’t start acting out like this so early on.

It got worse. I watched him shoot a squirrel with a BB gun then strangle it until it stopped moving. Weeks later, we found our cat Baxter barely moving, covered in blood in Hayden’s room. Last month we went on a father-son fishing trip. He put a fishing hook in my shoe. It pierced right through my heel, and he insisted it was a prank.

“He wouldn’t be like this if he wasn’t so much like you!” My wife screamed at me.

She was right. A lot more than she knew.

But still, I didn’t think it’d happen so soon.

I didn’t start strangling animals until I was at least 16. I knew what came next after the animals and “pranks” stopped satisfying the urge. I knew what he truly craved, because it’s what I crave.

With age, I’ve learned how to manage my urges. But Hayden was only 8, impulse control was non-existent for him. Only time would tell what he’d turn into. There was no fixing it.

I looked into Hayden’s eyes, tucking him into bed. I prayed that I’d see something in them, but all I saw was darkness.

He only squirmed a little as I held the pillow over his face.

I just wish he could have been more like his mother.

 
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Credits

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Turn the Page

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Miss Elliott looked curiously at the boy seated at the table in Adult History, a large volume open before him. His tablet was next to the book, his fingers busy on the screen. Every few minutes, he would pause, and turn a page of the book.

He would come in every day after school and stay there until closing time. Children weren't supposed to stay there unattended, but the library had evolved into after-school care for tweens, and the librarians knew until a child went missing there wasn't much they could do about it.

This boy never went to the Children's section. Just sat at this table, turning pages and playing on his device, brushing his fair almost white hair out of his eyes.

Eventually she went up to him, breaking her strict librarian code to never disturb anybody reading.

"That's an impressive book you've got there- History of the Russian Empire!" she remarked.

The boy looked at her.

"Mummy will pick me up at 5." he said. "I'm ok."

Miss Elliott sat down next to him. "Do you enjoy learning about the Russian Empire? Or for a school project?"

The boy turned to the empty chair on his other side, mumbling.

Then he went back to his device. He swiped out of his running game, and started typing.

"Im turning pages for the ghost. He loves reading but he cant turn pages himself. Bc hes a ghost."

Miss Elliott tried to absorb the information. Then she looked at the empty chair, noticing how the book was angled towards it. She concentrated, staying still.

As she focused, the air shimmered and thickened, assuming a human form seated on the chair.

A human form avidly reading.

Then she typed.

"Do you like turning pages for the ghost?"

The boy shrugged. "he comes to my dreams if I don't. When we were away i had nightmares every night."

The thick air reading swirled and rustled, and the boy hastily turned the page.

Miss Elliott typed "how can I help you?"

The boy shrugged again, brushing his hair. A text from Mom popped up. He turned to the empty chair. "Mom's here early" he said. "I've got to go- but this nice lady can see you, she'll turn the pages for you"

He snatched his tablet, and without looking at Miss Elliott, rushed away.

MIss Elliot hesitated. The air rustled and an impatient growling hum rose. Hastily, she turned the page. The humming died down.

That night, she had the most terrible nightmares about the library full of dead and dying people.

The library was almost empty in the morning. Almost, but not quite. The Russian Empire book was out on the table, exactly where they had left it, and Miss Elliott knew the reader was waiting for her.

The memories of the nightmares fresh, she obediently sat where the fair-haired boy had sat, and turned the page. The air rustled with content.

The boy never returned to the library again.

 
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Credits

Pet Monster in the Basement

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My daughter is the absolute love of my life, she is my spitting image a little mini me that likes to follow me around and do all the “guy” stuff a father would do. When I work on the house she is the one that hands me my tools, though she is only 7 years old she already knows what a pair of channel locks look like, she even knows how to properly use a measuring tape; I find it to be the most adorable thing whenever her little finger counts how many 1/16's or 1/8" of an inch something is. I know most parents probably wouldn’t feel safe with their 7 year old handling tools but I’m always there to supervise her and make sure she learns how to respect said tools, me telling her as usual

“These are what?”

“They’re not toys” she would always respond in her cute soft voice bringing a smile to my stoic face.

Whenever we do finish a project together my little helper would gather up all the tools and place them carefully into my tool box, trying her best to pick up the container to hand it to me. Her little arms would just aggressively shake with effort; trying her best to lift the heavy box, so I would usually let her try for several minutes, me watching on with enchantment at her ambition. Finally after giving her several minutes to try and seeing her huffing and puffing from exhaustion I will bend down to her level and kiss her little forehead and then pick up the heavy box taking down into the basement where I house the rest of my equipment. She always wants to go down there, an idea I am not to fond of; knowing I have way too many tools and construction material out in the open where she could easily get hurt. This only made her curiosity grow and for being a small child I could imagine how much her imagination must of built up what was down in the basement, so I decided to use that wonderment to my advantage, I told her there was a monster living in the basement. I figured this would be the perfect deterrent to discourage her from ever wanting to go down there.

I know what your thinking, what kind of father tries to scare their 7 year old kid, well I guess me, and I know what probably bothers you even more why wouldn’t I just put a lock on the door. You see, that’s where I have an issue I don’t like locked doors; for the longest I didn’t even lock our front door something my wife would always scold me about, but for the sake of my daughter when she was born I did comply in locking the front door; to my wife’s delight.

When I was a kid I was captivated with the game hide and seek, I would always badger my mother to play with me, something that I could clearly see annoyed her. So I would a lot of times just hide from her and eventually jump out of my hiding spot to scare her, the times my mother would jump I would feel a sense of victory as if my 'stealthiness' deserved some award. My mother unlike me seem to always lock doors in fact almost every door had a lock on it even our closets. So one day while my mother was cooking I decided to hide in my parents closet and jump scare her whenever she came upstairs to find me for breakfast. I quietly tippy toed into their room not wanting the floor boards to squeak, I then unlocked and slid open the closet door, I walked in and shut it behind me. I crouched down and waited quietly in the darkness giggling to myself already envisioning my mothers reaction and that’s when I heard the growl, it was coming from behind me. It was a horrid sound as if a rabid dog was snarling at me ready to pounce, I turned my head to the noise trying to figure out what it was and to my dismay it was pitch black I couldn’t see a thing.

That’s when I heard my mother enter the room and I guess she had seen that the closet door was unlocked and came over to lock it, me enthralled with the devilish sound that was protruding from the darkness left me unaware at the time that she had locked me in there with whatever was making that sound. I tried to get out but the door wouldn’t budge, I banged on the door and screamed for help, tears falling down my cheek I could hear the sounds of that growl growing closer. I even wet myself from terror as I felt a heavy warm breath permeate on the back of my neck and that’s when my father finally opened the door, I fell to the floor crying hysterically him looking on with befuddlement. Ever since that day I hated the idea of locked doors I guess you can say I was traumatized as far as whatever the hell that thing was I just accept the fact that my imagination got away from me.

So as I told my daughter about the monster in the basement I saw her eyes light up, not with fear but with excitement. I quickly realized my mistake but didn’t feel like crushing my daughters heart after I told about some monster so I continued playing along.

“Really a monster in the basement” she asked.

I nodded.

“But you gotta promise me not to go down there okay” I told her.

She happily nodded her head up and down; she had the hugest smile that I had ever seen.

As the weeks passed I didn’t even give much thought at what I told her I figured she would forget about it, but I would catch her every once awhile just staring at the basement door, I wanted to tell her the truth but seeing how enthralled she was with this imaginary monster made me hesitate from the idea of breaking that dream for her.

As time went on I started to notice a weird smell coming from the basement, it was a foul scent as if perhaps a critter died in the wall; but every time I would go down there to acquire the source of the smell I could never find it. My daughter always at the top of the stairs would tell me its because of Harry,

“Who?” I remember asking.

“He's the monster” she told me back.

I wasn’t too sure if was cute that she gave her imaginary monster a name or was it getting out of hand. The smell grew worse with each passing day and I was determined to find the root cause, I was ready to demolish the walls and find that dead creature that was inundating my house in its horrid stench, but my wife reminded me of our yearly camping trip, I was a bit perturbed knowing the smell would only grow worse but I didn’t want to disappointment my family and we went on our little getaway.

Returning home I had completely forgotten about the smell, that was until I stepped inside the house, the stench had grown worse and I vividly could tell it was coming from the basement. I told my family to wait outside as I headed towards the basement door, I cautiously opened it and the foul smell hit me like a bag of bricks I nearly fainted; it was terrible I felt myself begin to gag. It was as if dozens of animals had died down there and their rotting corpses drenched the air with their stench. I turned on the light to the basement but the bulb didn’t illuminate

“Perfect” I told myself.

I covered my nose the best I could with my hand and proceeded to head down the stairs into the darkness until I heard my daughter walking towards me.

“baby I said to wait outside” I told her.

“Its Harry, its what he eats” she told me.

“What?” I asked back with a perplexed expression.

“I feed it cats” she responded back.

And that’s when I heard it; the sound that terrified me when I was a kid, it was that growl, it was coming from the bottom of the stairs. I slowly turned my head, sweat inundating my body, my heart rate began to accelerate.

“No not possible” I whispered underneath my breath.

I stared down into the dark basement trying to make out anything and that’s when I saw it, 2 ghastly eyes glowing in the dark staring right up at me.

“It’s just Harry, don’t be scared” my daughter said, me barely making out her words since I was too engulfed with the presence of this demon, then what my daughter said next chilled me to the bone and my eyes widened with utter terror,

“I haven’t fed him since we left, he’s…just…hungry”.

I shut the door after that and grabbed my daughter, retreating back to our vehicle. We haven't returned home in a few days, my wife thinks I'm going crazy and my daughter well, she misses Harry. I'm not sure what the plan is but I know one thing for sure and that is I'm not returning back to that home anytime soon.

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Credits

The Crooked Girl

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Kids grow like weeds. It’s hard to believe that my daughter is three now and she just loves to draw. She’s always bringing me a new scribble. A picture of the neighbor's cat, a picture of our dog, or sometimes even the playground.


She’s just a kid so the drawings of me don’t really resemble anything more than a balloon with legs and as an overweight single father, I try not to take offense.
 

After dinner, she’ll bring out her crayons and paper. Earlier this week, while I was watching my football game, she walked up to me with her latest masterpiece.
 

“This is beautiful!” I said with pride and watching her smile light up her face. My heart always fluttered when she did that.
 

The drawing was a simple view of our front yard and house. She sketched out a simple box with a square window and an oversized triangle for our roof. The usual depiction of me, a blob with legs, holding hands with her, and another figure that seemed far more detailed than both of us. It looked like a girl, somewhat bigger than her, triangle dress and with her head tilted at a ninety-degree angle and wild eyes that made her look like she was in a perpetual state of surprise and a laser focus on my daughter.
 

“Who is this?” I asked with concern.
 

“The crooked girl. She lives in the closet.” She exclaimed.
 

My heart beat a little faster after hearing that. I’m sure it’s just the child’s imagination. I glanced over at her little pink drawing table and noticed that this crooked girl was in almost every drawing she had drawn earlier.
 

“Who is the crooked girl, baby?” I inquired.
 

She muttered, not really answering me. I asked again, and she returned a watery-eyed glare, and then her lip started quivering.
 

“Okay honey, it’s okay. We don’t need to talk about her. Time for bed anyway!” I said scooping her up into my arms.
 

I tucked her in and gave her a kiss on her tiny warm forehead.
 

After I was sure that my daughter was sound asleep I walked over to the closet. Taking a breath and then opening the closet door I can’t say what I expected to find, but what I saw was the usual pile of toys and clothes. As I shut the door, I thought that I heard a faint gasp.
 

I’m sure it was just air escaping from the closet.
 

It’s now been twenty-four hours. The police have found no trace of my daughter. I try to not imagine the worst, but my heart is in a perpetual state of breaking and I am now living a parent’s worst nightmare.
 

But what scares me most is what I found when I went to wake her up this morning. Tucked away in place of where I thought she was sleeping, was one of her dolls.
 

Its head twisted at a ninety-degree angle. 

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Credits

My Father Was The Scariest Man I Ever Knew

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My first memory is desperately trying to muffle my brother's cries. My Dad is towering over us, yelling that we should shut the fuck up.

Crying always made Dad angry. Everything did, really.

The old fuck died years ago, but he stays a part of me. I'm an angry girl. Not easy to love. I have never had a boyfriend. I never even had friends, really, except for my little brother.

He is the functional one. Doesn't even remember half the stuff Dad did to us, just kind of... blocked it out, I guess. He is able to live. He has tons of friends. He even managed to fall in love, and they had a baby girl. I always wanted kids. I never got the chance. The jealousy was eating me up, but I wasn't really angry at my brother. I understood why everyone prefered him over me.

And he is the only one who ever loved me.

That is, of course, until the night he asked me to babysit his kid.

I still remember his screams. The terror in his eyes. The blood on the crib. Him trying to get it off, to fix his only daughter, to make her breathe again. Have you ever seen someone giving CPR to a baby?

It didn't work.

I just stood by and watched. Everything. The trial was a blurr. I barely heard my sentence.

Even now, the only thing I can focus on are my brother's letters.

He hates me for killing his baby girl, but he has kept in touch. After all, there was a time where we were the only good thing in each others lives. He knows that I saved him back then. A bond like that doesn't break.

And so he keeps writing.

I hold onto these letters. Every word about him recovering, him living, him thriving again, has been a tiny spark. A confirmation that I made the right call.

That is until I saw what he wrote yesterday.

"I'm going to be a Dad again."

I put the letter down quickly. I was feeling sick.

My father was the scarriest men I ever knew.

Until I arrived at my brother's house that fateful evening and saw him standing over the crib, covered in blood.

"Shut up", he whispered, "shut up, shut up, SHUT THE FUCK UP."

I cleaned him up. He just kept staring into the distance. Murmuring. And by the time I was done, he had just... blocked it out.

So I took the blame. I took the sentence. He was my baby brother. And he had a life to live. He is a good man. He is a kind man. One moment was all it took. And he does not even remember it.

But I am sure, when his next child cries, my father will awaken once more.

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Credits 

I Have A Special Visitor

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At night I have a special visitor that comes to see me. After Mommy tucks me into bed I stay up waiting for him. He knocks on my window and I let him in. He told me his name was Steve.

At first I was scared because I thought he might be a monster, but he said he was a friend of Mommy's. He plays dolls and house with me, we have tea parties, and he lets me show him all my princess dresses. I'm really sad when he has to leave but he says Mommy doesn't like him there even though they are friends. I'm not supposed to tell her.

Steve said he would take me on a trip one day if Mommy lets him. We will go on a road trip to Disneyland and eat all the good snacks and go on my favorite rides. I can't wait, but he says not right now because it would make Mommy mad.

I really really want to go, so I asked Mommy why she doesn't like her friend Steve anymore. She acted really weird and dropped her cup on the floor. She said she didn't know anyone named Steve.

But then Daddy asked her,

"Didn't you have an ex-boyfriend named Steve?"

I couldn't hear what she said but she left and I didn't get to ask her about the trip.

I told Steve I was sad because we still couldn't go. But he told me it was alright, and that we will still go. He said it was because he was my real Daddy. He told me that if we wanted to go on the trip, all we have to do is get rid of the other Daddy.

I’m so excited!

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Credits

Monday, September 11, 2023

A Hidden Radio Station

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Rain splattered against my cracked windshield. The engine of my 2004 Toyota Camry screeched, echoing in the surrounding darkness. I tried to keep a proper grip on the trembling steering wheel. The whole damn car was rumbling. I prayed I would make it home, at least.

I usually don’t drive home from work without music. Tonight, however, I had to do two things: Let my thoughts settle after the outburst I had at work. And listen attentively to the engine, making sure it didn’t explode on me or whatever. I’m not a mechanic, but that sound it gave off didn’t sound normal at all.

Fuck, I thought to myself, I’m gonna need a new job. As soon as possible.

As if laughing at my misfortune, the engine roared and shuddered. “Ahh fuck you too,” I murmured.

I was about thirty-minutes from home, driving on the back roads to avoid the highway. Being surrounded by forest on either side gave off an unsettling feeling. It didn’t help that the flickering headlights struggled to fight with the abundance of darkness.

Goosebumps shot up all over my body as my mind started imagining stupid scenarios. What if a ghost appeared in the middle of the road? And, What if Slenderman is lurking in those woods?

All those creepypastas took a toll on my mental health.

In an attempt to drown out my thoughts, I turned up the radio. At that point, I couldn’t care less if the engine exploded on me. It’d be doing me a favor. I flicked through some stations, the typical radio songs played like Doja Cat and Imagine Dragons. I found one song that sounded good, but the radio station bleeped out every other word.

I sighed, continuing to press the worn-out ‘Seek’ button.

Channel 505.1 nearly caused me to swerve out of the road. My tires spun and squealed as I straightened the steering wheel.

“What if a ghost appeared in the middle of the road? Or what if Slenderman is lurking in those woods?” My voice reverberated throughout the car speakers.

My lips were sealed shut. I didn’t say that.

What the fuck? I thought to myself.

“What the fuck?” I said through the radio.

Why the fuck is my voice in the radio? Was I losing it?

“...Was I losing it?”

I’m just tripping. Maybe those sleepless nights are catching up to me. I pushed the seek button, my finger shaking. Channel 505.2 came up.

“This is it,” a female voice said through the radio. “No one cares and no one will ever care. They just want me for my fucking body. Yet, I keep falling for it, hoping one of the men who says they’re different actually means it. Pathetic. This is it. Do it.”

The radio turned to static.

My eyes stayed glued to the road, glowing letters displaying 505.2 in my peripheral vision. What kind of song was that? I brushed it off as some sort of outro to a love song and reached to press the seek button again.

Before I could press it, a raspy male voice said, “Sorry about that folk! It appears we’ve lost connection to this brainwave frequency. That can only mean one thing.” He sighed. “Our deepest condolences to this person’s family. Anywho, stay tuned as we connect to our next brain!”

What the fuck? This is impossible. Was this a prank? Maybe some bored radio workers? If that was the case, why was my voice… Holy shit.

I pressed the previous button, channel 505.1 popped up.

“...Maybe some bored radio workers?” My voice said through the radio. It also turned to static. The same raspy voice said, “Well that was something, huh? It’s rare when someone is aware. We’ll get right back to his thoughts after this short commercial break. Stay tuned!”

I turned off the radio and glanced around the car as if expecting to see hidden cameras. There had to be a logical explanation for this. How does one connect to brainwave frequencies? I’m no neuroscientist, but I'm 99.9% sure that’s impossible.

If… If this is true, why was I tuned into it? How was I tuned into it?

Up ahead, the forest was ending, meaning I was about 5 minutes from home now.

I just… I need to sleep. My mind was playing tricks on me. Yeah that’s what it was. That’s the only thing that made sense. I chuckled at myself and murmured, “A radio station that plays people’s thoughts? I’ve officially lost it.”

After 5 uneventful minutes, I pulled into my apartment complex and parked in front of my apartment. The rain still pattered softly on the roof of my car. As I turned off the engine, a heavy silence settled over the vehicle. Steam seeped up from the hood as if the car was sighing with relief.

I stepped out and hurriedly walked to my front door, fumbling with my keys. After I entered, I stumbled over something—a small pile of objects I couldn't quite make out.

I flicked on the light switch to find it was one of many dirty piles of clothes. My mother’s voice echoed in my mind, “When I'm gone, I won’t be around to clean up after you. Quit being lazy!” My lips curled up to a smile and I picked up the clothes one by one.

After I finished cleaning up, I grabbed one of the liquor bottles from my kitchen counter. My kitchen doubled as a living room. I never thought it was odd to have carpet-flooring in there until I invited a girl over. She laughed at the random stains and never called me back. Whatever, it is what it is.

I sunk down on my ripped sofa with a sigh. My mistake, the living room tripled as a kitchen and mini gym. There are a few dumbbells and barbells in the far corner. As well as a pull-up bar in the doorway to my room.

I turned on the smart tv and loaded up Spotify. I shuffled through songs while taking sips from the tequila.

“Welcome back to StreamMind! I am your host, Bob. Tonight we’re connecting to the mind of a struggling father with a wife and two daughters. Safe to say we can expect stressful thoughts.” The raspy voice chuckled.

What the fuck…

I looked at the tequila bottle as if it was causing me to hallucinate. I’ve only had three sips and there’s no way they kicked in this fast. Plus, it’s alcohol. It’s not like it can even cause hallucinations.

The man continued, “Before we get started, I want to thank all of you for listening. I won’t lie, this started as a science experiment. But as the streams skyrocketed, we decided to brand ourselves as a business. I can’t stress how much y’all mean to us. As always, enjoy!”

My heart raced. A chill shot up my spine. This was real. They’re tapping into people’s minds… This has got to be illegal.

I gulped down another shot of liquor. The father’s thoughts played.

“I’m gonna fucking kill her. Who the hell does she think she is saying she’s taking the kids this week? No… No. She is gonna die.”

My eyes widened.

“Better yet,” the father continued, “I’m gonna kill all of em’. I’m working my ass off to provide for this ungrateful family. Why should I even continue?”

Anger surged through me. It practically sobered me up.

After a pause, he continued. His voice was shaky, “What… What am I thinking? Why would that ever cross my mind?”

I couldn't pull my eyes away from the screen. A part of me wanted to shut it off and pretend this never happened. The other part of me knew this father was a ticking time bomb. I had to do something. I should report this to the police…

But how? What would I say? How would they know where to find the man?

I took another swig of tequila, hoping it would numb my anger and unease.

The thoughts took a darker turn. "No. No, I should just end it all. Drive off a cliff and take them with me. They don't deserve to live if they're going to ruin my life."

My chest tightened. I stood and paced around the living room, the thoughts still playing in the background.

The thoughts got cut short.

“Woah!” Bob said, “It’s clear that man was demented. I mean, did you listen to his conflicting thoughts? Wow!” He chuckled.

He’s… He’s using this for content? My blood boiled.

“I’ll tell y’all what. A man like that does not deserve to live. Wouldn’t y’all agree?”

I stopped in my tracks, facing the glow of the TV like a deer in headlights.

“If anyone tuning in is interested in dealing with him, his name is Jasper. His address is 308 Gegra Royo Lane.”

308 Gegra Royo Lane, my mind repeated. I looked around, grabbing a pen and paper from my coffee table, then writing down the address.

“Anywho, our next connection will come after this short commercial–”

I shut off the TV and stood in darkness. My mind raced like a lone ranger riding through an open field.

I marched to the corner of the living room and started curling the dumbbells. I had to channel this anger somewhere.

As I worked out, my mind was churning. I knew I couldn't just sit by and let this continue. Reporting it to the police might be an option, but I had no concrete evidence, just a chilling broadcast. And what if they traced it back to me somehow? I couldn't afford to put myself in danger.

…And what if no one else decides to take action? That man will do something terrible.

I must take action.

***

Three days passed. I spent my saved money to buy a Glock 19. It’s scary how easy it was to get. Just talked to a few crackheads and they hooked me up with a local dealer after making sure I wasn't ‘the feds’. Once I bought it, I watched multiple videos on how to handle and properly clean a Glock 19.

I also wrote goodbye notes to all my remaining family and friends. It’s set up to send itself out in a month if I don’t check back. I didn’t plan to die, but just in case.

I did some research. Jasper didn’t live too far away from me. 23 minutes away, according to the GPS.

I packed up some food and supplies, then headed out.

The drive was uneventful. I sat in silence the whole time, praying my car would make the trip. I didn’t dare turn on the radio again. I couldn’t stand listening to another second of that intrusive and sick station.

I pulled into Jasper’s street. He lived in the suburbs. The houses on either side had white picket fencing. The lawns were almost unnaturally green and well-manicured. Heads turned as my beat-up car drove by. The squealing engine caused them to gossip.

Dramatic as fuck. Acting like they’ve never seen a car like this before.

I parked my car three houses down from Jasper’s house. There were no cars in the driveway. I assumed he’s out working.

I tucked my Glock 19 into my jeans and stepped outside. I walked to Jasper’s house, fake-smiling at people who walked by.

I approached Jasper's two-story house. It was painted a dark shade of blue and trimmed hedges lined the front yard. Taking a deep breath, I walked up the driveway and to the front door.

I’ve never broken into anyone’s house before. I thought I’d ring the bell and make sure no one was home first. I didn’t dress like a robber anyway. I’m wearing blue jeans with a black polo shirt.

I pressed the doorbell and took a step back, trying to appear casual while adrenaline surged through my veins.

I heard shuffling from behind the door. The locks clicked, and the door opened a crack. Jasper's face appeared. His eyes were bloodshot and bore heavy eye bags. An overgrown beard took up one third of his face.

“Hey, uh… Do I know ya?”

My heart raced in my chest.

"Hey, sorry to bother you. I'm, uh, new in the neighborhood and just trying to meet some people. My name's Aizen."

His gaze softened a bit, “New to the neighborhood, huh? Well, I'm Jasper. Nice to meet you. But look, now’s not really a good time. I have to go—"

“No worries, I wouldn’t want to interrupt whatever you got going on.”

He peeked his head out, eyes darting back and forth. “Cool, thanks.”

As he was about to shut the door, I stuck my foot in.

“Hey, Jasper, before you go can I ask you something?”

He looked down at my foot, his eyes twitching.

“What?”

“Have you heard of a radio channel called StreamMind?”

“Stream what? No—”

I drew my Glock 19 and aimed it at his temple. My finger wrapped around the trigger. I squeezed three times. Jasper’s head whipped back. His body went limp. He folded over himself, slamming onto the porch pavement. Blood oozed out of his forehead, forming a pool around him.

Watching his eyes roll back into his head felt… Relieving.

I aimed the gun at his chest and fired twice. The bullets ripped through him. Blood splattered on my face and clothes. Whoever said killing someone is difficult is lying. This was easy. I grinned and turned around.

There was a crowd of spectators. People stared at me with shell-shocked expressions. The whites of their eyes took up the entire upper half of their faces.

I walked past them as if nothing happened and hopped into my Toyota Camry. I cranked the engine, but it wouldn’t start. Black smoke rose up from the hood.

Fuck, fuck. Not now.

I twisted the keys. The engine howled. The crowd of spectators walked towards the car. One of them threw a rock.

The windshield shattered. Shards flew towards me. I tried to duck, but it wasn't fast enough. My face was stung by the shower of glass fragments. Blood trickled down my cheeks.

I cranked the engine again.

It turned on.

I put the gear on drive and stomped on the accelerator. My tires spun. The smell of burnt rubber filled the car. I looked back to see the crowd of people running after me on the road. What the hell just happened? Why are they–

My car slammed into something. My face whipped forward and slammed on the steering wheel. I looked up with watery eyes. The whole bumper was caved in. Thick, dark smoke obscured the view. What the hell did I hit?

I stumbled out of the car, my legs were wobbling. The world I was seeing spun. A migraine hammered the inside of my head. I looped around the front of the car, struggling to keep balance.

I hit a fucking telephone pole.

The wood of the pole splintered. It was gonna fall. I darted forward and turned back, waiting for it to fall.

The crowd of people, Fuck, they were marching towards me. They held rocks and make-shift weapons.

I stumbled back. This was it. My final moments.

The crowd walked under the telephone pole. It broke and fell on their heads. They were squashed instantly. Driven into the ground like nails. Blood shot out in all directions. It looked like a red tsunami.

H-Holy shit.

My whole body struggled to stay upright. Witnessing this made me want to throw up. I knew I had to get out of there.

I looked left into the road. An SUV slowed to a stop, looking at the disaster that had just unfolded. There was only one person in the car. Perfect.

I hurried towards it. “Help! Help!”

The man inside turned to me, his eyes widening. “Oh, god. Oh, god! Get in, I’ll take you to an ambulance!”

I looped around to the driver's side.

“Get in the passenger—”

I pistol whipped him and dragged him out of the car. He kicked and punched. I pistol whipped him again.

I hopped in and stepped on the gas pedal. The chaos shrunk out of sight in the rearview. I took a right, leaving the street, and zoomed out of there just as the police were rolling in.

What the fuck just happened? I thought to myself as I turned on the radio. My vision was tunneled, and I didn't even feel the cuts on my face.

The radio was tuned into Channel 505.1. “What the fuck just happened?” My voice said in the speakers.

It turned to static.

Bob’s raspy voice came in, “Holy guacamole, ladies and gents! Did y’all just hear that? Those are the thoughts of a psychopath! What does he think this is, GTA V?” He chuckled. “Now, if you ask me, a man like that shouldn’t be alive–let alone roam free. Wouldn’t y’all agree? If you would like to take action, his name is Aizen. He lives in a shitty apartment complex. The address is 505 Arabella Road.”

***

Ah shit. Well, this is it, Reddit. If I survive whatever is coming my way. I’ll give you guys an update. Or better yet, stay tuned to Channel 505.1. 

---

Credits

Ginger


I saw her again last night.

This time, it was onstage at the campaign rally.

One minute, the crowd was cheering for me, praising my every word. Banners reading: TELLER 2 SAVE AMERICA dotted a sea of faces, each of them crying out for a better future, a better America! One minute, I made my vows to them.

“There is deep division in our country! A division between good and evil! Between those guided by morality and those who have forgotten it! But together, we can heal those wounds! We can fix this broken nation of ours! We can remove its flaws, cast away its broken pieces and build it back greater! We can come together as one people, under one God, as one America!”

I heard them cheer for me.

I looked out at the crowd… and there she was.

Her head tilted to the side. Her short blonde hair hanging limp from her head and her pure blue eyes fixated on me.

The moment I saw her, my voice caught in my throat. She shouldn’t have frightened me…

She shouldn’t have.

But those eyes that locked with mine… there was a message in them. Something for me. I forgot about the rally. I forgot about the people, the signs, my speech. I just saw her.

The crowd hung on to my silence, waiting for me to continue but my mind had come up empty. My mouth suddenly felt dry and I could do nothing but stand there like a deer in the headlights, helpless so long as her icy stare was fixated on me.

Once upon a time, I’d loved her eyes.

‘Eyes of that shade are actually indicative of pure aryan heritage,’ I’d told her. ‘It’s a sign of a pure bloodline. That’s something to be proud of!’

Now, they just filled me with terror.

I needed to make an excuse, find some reason to leave. I needed to say something! Anything! But the words didn’t come.

Finally I turned, disappearing offstage.

“Mike, what the hell are you doing?” I heard one of my aides ask, but I didn’t respond to him. I just needed to get out of there. I needed to leave. I needed to get away from her!

***

I first started seeing her about two months ago, around the same time that I announced my campaign. I’d be out on the street, either on the campaign trail or out and about when suddenly I’d catch a glimpse of her out of the corner of my eye.

At first, I’d thought that it was just my imagination or a case of mistaken identity. Obviously it couldn’t be her! Ginger was long gone. She was nothing but a bad memory now.

I even went to her grave to lay some flowers and said a prayer for her, hoping that maybe it might give me some peace of mind.

It didn’t.

As I knelt by her grave, I could see her amongst the headstones, her head tilted to the side… her cold blue eyes locked on to me. That stare filled me with an icy dread. I stood on unsteady feet, staring at her as she stood and watched me. A couple of strangers walked past her, not even seeming to notice she was there.

For a moment, I wondered if this was all in my head… a manifestation of guilt, perhaps? But what happened to her wasn’t my fault! If anything it was her brothers! That stupid oaf had been the one who’d killed her, not me!

It wasn’t me!

I turned away, leaving the cemetery as fast as I could. My hands were shaking as I gripped the steering wheel and drove away. I could still see her in the distance behind me.

***

“We can’t…” She’d said. “You’re… you’re married… it’s a sin…”

“Come on, sweetheart… for you, I’d commit any sin.”

She’d laughed at that line as I’d kissed her neck.

“You’re terrible…” She giggled.

“Oh, I know…”

It had been a mistake. I knew that then and I know it now. But, Ginger had been an attractive young woman and I am a man with needs! People make mistakes. We’re all only human.

The affair was short. We only met up a few times before my wife caught on and that was the end of it. I told Ginger I couldn’t see her again and that should have been the end of it.

But no…

No, she came back…

***

I saw her backstage after a town hall a few weeks ago. She didn’t move… but she seemed to follow me, keeping pace behind the crowd as I left. I could see her watching me… her neck still tilted at an odd angle. She kept following me. Even when I left the building and went out to my car, she followed me, a shadow in the dark, identified only by her tilted head.

I didn’t lose her until after I’d started driving and even then… it might not be entirely accurate to say I lost her.

More like… I chose to stop seeing her.

Whenever I knew she was there, I tried not to look.

Tried not to acknowledge her.

But she hasn’t gone away.

No matter how hard I’ve tried to ignore her, no matter what I’ve done to reassure myself that Ginger is dead she won’t go away!

It’s not even my fault!

***

“I can’t raise it on my own!” She’d said, tears streaming down her cheeks. “Please, Mike! Please, nobody needs to know it’s yours I just need-”

“No!” I’d snapped. “No! No, I can’t have it out there! I can’t!”

“Well then what the hell am I supposed to do?”

“Just get rid of it!”

She’d stared at me with a look of horror in her eyes.

“Get rid of it…” She’d repeated. “Mike that’s murder… you know it’s murder, you said so yourse-”

“And right now, I’m saying get rid of it!”

She’d stared at me with this look… with these tears of betrayal. She didn’t get it.

“Get rid of it,” I said again. “This is MY career that’s on the line here, not yours. Get rid of it!

She’d cried… she’d begged.

But in the end she’d left.

Three days later, she was dead.

Her brother was the one tried for her murder. A witness said he’d seen him push her down a flight of stairs. She’d broken her neck in the fall. He said she’d begged him to do it, but the judge hadn’t decided that was convincing enough evidence.

Either way… the pregnancy was taken care of and Ginger was out of the picture. It wasn’t the ending I’d wanted but… it would suffice.

***

Seeing her at the campaign rally shouldn’t have spooked me so much. But that look in her eyes… I think after everything, it just broke me.

After I left the rally, I went to the hotel I’d been staying in. Called my team and said I’d been feeling ill, and went upstairs to run myself a hot bath to try and relax. While the bath filled, I went to sit with my laptop and check some emails. I sent off a few quick apologies to my staff, and asked them to draft a letter to my supporters apologizing for my sudden departure. I figured I could still spin this into a positive. Say I was ill when I came onstage, but still wanted to give my best for them. It’d make me look like a harder worker or something.

After a few minutes, I figured the tub should be ready. I poured myself a drink and went upstairs again, ready to put this miserable night behind me.

Tomorrow… I’d need to find a way to deal with these… visions. Find some way to stop seeing her.

Tomorrow.

I took a sip of my drink as I reached the top of the stairs, already feeling a little more relaxed and then…

There she was.

Inches from my face.

My heart skipped a beat as I stared into her cold blue eyes. Once again, my voice caught in my throat.

“Michael…”

Her voice was a low whisper that turned my blood into ice. I felt a hand on my chest and I saw her lips curl into a knowing smile.

And then I was falling.

I reached out to try and grab her but she was already gone… and the stairs were rushing up to meet me.

***

The doctors say I won’t walk again. They say I’m lucky I only broke my spine.

Lucky.

No…

I don’t think I’m lucky at all.

There’s debate on if I can even still run in this campaign now… people think I’m dropping out. Honestly - I think they might be right. Even if I don’t, I doubt I’ll live to see the end of the primaries.

She’s in the room with me now.

Watching.

Smiling.

I’m not sure if she’s savoring this… or waiting for her chance to finish me.

Both, maybe.

This isn’t the ending I wanted… but I guess it’s what I’ll get.

---

Credits 

Demons Don't Say Damn

https://miro.medium.com/v2/resize:fit:736/1*1e8i4KFLv8IOBTkKtCD08A.jpeg

The first thing you have to understand is that my brother was not born a killer. He wasn't raised a killer, either. He didn't skin cats, he didn't throw rocks. The only person he ever threatened with violence was me, and I knew he didn’t mean it. They say it must have been our father’s fault, that he must have been a horribly cruel man, to make John turn out so wrong. True, our dad was a raging alcoholic who burned himself to ashes while trying to make dinner, but he didn’t have a mean bone in his body. It hurts, when my neighbors give each other conspiratorial looks, or hint about how hard it must have been to be John’s sister, or wonder obliquely why no one noticed his sadism. Y’all had better be kind, because I'm not going to let some strangers on Reddit bad-mouth him, no matter what awful things you think he did. That’s the point of this post. To tell all of you the truth.

He was John Edward McDonald, and he hated his name with a burning passion. He wasn't a bad kid, but he was Trouble, like that, capitalized. Whenever he'd gone off and snuck somewhere he wasn't supposed to, or given an adult some extra sass, mama would yell his hated full name through the house.

"John Edward McDonald, you come here right this instant and apologize!" she would call out, with that disappointed tone of voice all mothers seem to master.

"Don't call me that, mama! I sound like a criminal, like goddamn John Wilkes Booth!" he would yell back from the far corner of his room where he always went to hide when he was in trouble, like clockwork.

Of course after that came the inevitable reproach about appropriate language. That was another thing about John, he had a dirty mouth like you wouldn't believe. It was instinctual to him, his tongue mixing up swears and unleashing them like a hurricane at anyone who happened to be nearby. It always threw people for a loop when they first met him, this blonde-haired little cherub cursing like a sailor on crack and making the bad words sound so natural that they were almost unnoticeable. Mama tried to train it out of him, she really did, but he had a stubborn streak a mile long and two miles wide.

I guess all of these stories about our childhood are my way of telling you that I didn't know, that there weren't any signs. I've heard family members of other murderers saying those same words like a mantra, like a benediction, like a desperate prayer to be absolved of guilt, and I don't know how true they are in this case. Maybe there were signs of what was to come; maybe I missed them. But I was certain then, as I am now, that there was nothing wrong with my brother beyond a god-awful sense of humor.

The first ripple in the pond, so to speak, came in the form of a phone call. When I heard the ringing, I almost didn’t pick up. I was settled in my fluffiest armchair, the one that always settles around me and makes it hard to get up again. My phone was all the way on the other side of the room, and I figured that there wouldn’t be any harm in calling back later. Now, I loved my little brother, I really do, but that boy had the biggest mouth on him. I was nice and settled in my big comfy chair, and I knew that if I started talking to him, I wouldn’t be able to get back to my show for an hour at least.

But… I answered. And he didn’t say anything. That was the strangest thing, first. John was always off like a rocket as soon as you gave him even a lick of attention, words tumbling out of his mouth like there wasn’t any room for them in his brain.

I thought he called me accidentally, at first. It wouldn’t be the first time. But I could hear, ever so faintly, his breathing on the end of the line, rapid and sort of choked, like there was something caught heavy in his throat.

“John?” I asked, laughing a little. The breathing got louder, faster, with a whimper twisting up the exhale every so often, but he still didn’t say a thing.

“John,” I said again, uncertain. “This ain’t funny.”

There was silence for a moment, and then he started moaning, not the type of fake-ass noise you get on porn sites but a real animal sound, like he was in too much pain to scream. As soon as I heard that, I was on the way out the door, not even bothering to grab my coat off the hook. I loved that coat, I wore it everywhere, even when it was hot as Satan’s asscheeks outside, but the only thought I had was for my little brother.

There were a couple years, in the 2008 recession, when mama spent every moment trying to keep a roof over our heads, and during that time I practically raised him. I made sure he ate something other than junk food and got his homework done, comforted him when he got bullied for his secondhand clothes. I still worried about him, even though by then we were both adults who lived miles apart. In my mind, John will always be the little boy that I built Legos with while mama was sobbing in the kitchen because those goddamn paper-shufflers, as she called them, had laid her off.

I knew him, and his pranks leaned more towards pelting strangers with snowballs. He wouldn’t do this to me unless he was really and truly hurt.

“John, I’m coming, stay with me,” I said into the phone, trying to decide whether to hang up and call 911 or get someone else to do it. The line was slowly filling with white noise, his groans being distorted into long wheezes and clicks that sunk downwards like a decaying oak tree.

He heaved in a great gasp of air, then whispered through the crackling static. “It wasn’t…”

“Don’t try and talk, it’s okay.” I tried to unlock my car, a beat-up Honda that used to be painted blue but was so scraped up that you could barely tell, with trembling hands. The key slipped out of my fingers.
John swallowed, hard, and seemed to gather his strength. I finally got the door unlocked and swerved down the street. The little speed-trap sign flashed as I sped by it, slow down, and I pushed harder on the gas.

“It wasn’t me, I didn’t fucking do it,” he said, the static rising to nearly cover his last word. There was the sound of movement, a thump as the phone was dropped, and John screamed like he was being flayed.

The line went dead.

I called the police while I was still driving towards John’s apartment, knowing that I would get there before them, especially at the rate I was driving.

John lived in a run-down area, not quite the slums but certainly not the sort of place that you want to walk alone at night. The few people that I passed walked with purpose, their coats drawn tight around them.

His apartment was one of the few that actually looked inhabitable, with all the windows intact and a cheery little garden out front. His apartment had a copper knocker in the shape of a middle finger, which he’d found in a goodwill, then promptly told me to come over so I could see it. I lifted the knocker and let it fall, once, twice.

When John opened the door, I immediately smelled something awful, like milk gone bad, but a dozen times worse. Other than that, though, there didn’t seem to be anything out of place. He was wearing the sweater I’d given him for his birthday, his hair mussed like he’d just woken up and his glasses sitting askew on his nose.

He blinked slowly at me, like a lizard on a rock. “Hello, sister dearest.”

“What’s wrong?” I asked, out of breath because of my run from my car to his door.

John smiled politely, folding his hands behind his back. “I’m afraid that I have no idea what you’re talking about.”

“John—” I paused. He continued to smile. “You don’t talk like that.”

I took a step back. He hadn’t cursed, not even once, in the entire conversation. John tossed out shit and damn as easy as breathing. I don’t think I’d ever heard him get through a sentence without a little bit of what mama called the devil’s tongue.

The man in front of me just kept on grinning.

“There’s something wrong with you, isn’t there?” I said. “Something really wrong.”

He didn’t respond.

I placed a hand on his shoulder, carefully. I could feel the coldness of his skin through his clothing.

“Look, just let me inside. We can figure this out.”

He stepped aside wordlessly, gesturing for me to enter, still with that smug fucking smile on his face. The door opened wide, and I made my way inside, turned the corner into the living room area.

My brother was lying dead on the couch, in a pool of blood, his throat ripped open. His roommate, a quiet man I’d only met once, was sprawled on the floor beneath him, just as dead. The smell of decay and rot was overpowering.

John’s throat looked strangely collapsed, and after a moment, I realized it was because there was a hole in it that extended deeper than just the cut that had killed him. His vocal cords were just gone, leaving skin dangling in ribbons and muscle shredded. I could see his spine.

Distantly, I heard the click of the door locking behind me.

“What?” I said, my voice faint.

“What,” he repeated, in a scratchy, gnarled approximation of my voice. “This ain’t funny,”

I realized what I should have known from the start. This was not my brother.

“Just let me inside. We can figure this out,” he said. “There’s something wrong with you.”

With every sentence, he sounded more and more like me, the interference disappearing from his words.

I stumbled backwards, away from not-John, trying to say something, to deny the whole situation, anything, but nothing came out. I tried again, gaping like a fish, and couldn’t take a breath. Across the room, not-John opened his mouth, wider than should have been possible, unhinging his jaw like a snake. His teeth ended in sharp points, and his tongue hung limply against his chin. His jaw was hanging almost to his chest by then, and I could see the inside of his throat, exposed by his stretching face. His vocal cords looked strangely out of place, like they didn’t belong with the rest of the macabre scene, and with a surge of nausea, I knew that they had come from my brother.

I clawed at my throat, trying to get air, as his mouth opened wider and wider. It was like I was choking on nothing, the oxygen being stolen from my lungs before I could use it. With black spots forming in my vision, I wrenched a painting off the wall, a landscape that John had done himself years ago. Tears blurring my vision, I drew on my schoolyard frisbee practice and threw it at not-John as hard as I could. It spun right into his open mouth, bashing against his tongue and knocking against his teeth. The corner hit the back of his throat before rebounding onto the ground, and he gagged. Suddenly, I could breathe again, and I ran for the door.

Not-John hissed at me, and blurred forward in a flash of blood and too-long limbs. He grabbed me by the back of the neck before I could react, his fingernails digging into my skin, and covered my face with his dangling, elongated mouth. I could feel his teeth digging into my forehead and my chin, pressing down. Blood was flowing down the sides of my neck and towards my ears as he tried to crush my head like a grape with the strength of his bite.

Screaming, I flailed blindly for a weapon. My hand closed on something small and heavy, and I slammed it against the side of not-John’s head.

Music started playing, blaring loud enough to shake the building, and the weight of not-John pinning me down disappeared. I thought I was hallucinating at first, but when I blinked the blood of my eyes, I saw him writhing on the floor, frantically clamping his hands over his ears.

The thing that I’d grabbed had been a computer, still open with the music paused, and when I hit him with it, the sound had turned back on. His skin was flexing and pulsing, like he was being torn apart from the inside, and blood was leaking out of his pores. But not-John still got to his feet, laboriously, his bones cracking with every movement. He snatched the lamp off the ground and spun it between his hands, limping towards me. One of his feet didn’t seem to work, so he dragged it along as a dead weight.

I squared up, staying loose and low, like I’d taught my brother when we were still in school. He’d been having some issues with bullies. In the end, he didn’t even have to throw any punches, just threaten.
Not-John raised his lamp and I got ready to fight.

Of course, that’s when the cops arrived. They put a dozen bullets into him within two seconds, and he went down hard, still twitching but too weak to move. I was pretty attached to my life, so I got down low and put my hands up quick. They screamed at me anyways, told me to put my face on the floor, and one of them cuffed me while her partner waved a gun in my face.

Later, after I’d repeated the story half a dozen times and spent a day in a holding cell, they let me go. I didn’t tell them about the voice-shifting monster, of course, just that my brother had called me and when I arrived, I’d been attacked.

The paramedic who tended to my bite wounds told me that she’d never seen anything like them. She wanted to know what happened. I told her I had an encounter with a wild animal. It wasn’t far from the truth.

John’s body, the one that I’d seen in the apartment, had never been found. They went back and looked again, after I told them that I’d seen it, but the only thing they could identify on the couch was a strange red slime that smelled like sulfur.

In analysis, not-John had the same DNA as my brother, and so the official story got told. According to them, my brother had gone insane, killed his roommate, and tried to kill me. The biggest news that had ever hit my town before that was Ms. Davies committing tax evasion, so the murder was in the headlines for weeks. When I tried to tell my friends that it hadn’t been John, they just looked at me with pity, so I stopped trying. It never got picked up by any major newspapers, thank god for small mercies. It was just another murder, after all.

My cousin works at the funeral home. She told me yesterday that not-John’s body had disappeared. She thinks it got stolen. I don't believe that.

It’s amazing, the sort of things that can be bought when you have three thousand dollars worth of savings and nothing else to lose. I’ve got a couple assault rifles by the door, a machete hanging in the kitchen, a dozen bluetooth speakers, and a flamethrower hanging on the hook with my best coat. If the thing that killed John comes knocking, that bitch is going to get grilled like a cheap hamburger.

My brother was John Edward McDonald, and he deserves to be remembered. 

---

Credits

Sunday, September 10, 2023

A Pale, Grinning Face

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While sitting on my bed last night, I looked up and saw a pale, grinning face peeking at me from the closet. 

Every ounce of my blood turned to ice, and chills seized my whole body, freezing me in place. The face quickly retreated, ducking behind the door. I stared at the place where it had been for a moment, then screamed at the top of my lungs and leaped up from the bed. The world blurred around me as I hurled myself out into the hallway, crashing hard into the wall and then righting myself and sprinting to the top of the stairs, where I paused, turning back to stare at my bedroom door.

My mind raced. What should I do? Call 911. Yes. Of course. There was somebody in my house. Of course I should call 911. Oh, shit! My phone. I had left my phone on my bed.

I stood there trembling for a moment, the sound of my heart thundering in my ears. My mind and body were both on fire as I tried to figure out what I should do. My instincts were screaming at me to leave the house, to run to a neighbor for help even though it was well past midnight, but then I remembered that I kept a baseball bat in the downstairs closet, a heavy metal one meant to cave in the skull of any intruder if necessary.

My fear started to turn to anger at that moment. My adrenaline began to roar with bravado rather than terror. I stormed down the steps, threw open the closet door near their base, grabbed the bat, and headed back up to face the interloper.

As I rounded the doorframe and stepped back into my room, all my courage deserted me. The man, if it even could be called a man, stood there naked on all fours, half in the closet and half out of it. He was staring at me with bloodshot eyes, still grinning, swaying backward and forward in some kind of bizarre undulating dance. His arms and legs were oddly disjointed and looked almost like they were all facing the wrong way. He was completely hairless and had no ears, and his nose looked shrunken and shriveled. His ribs jutted out from his sides, and he was pale like he’d been locked away somewhere far from the sun for decades.

As I stared at him, rendered immobile by horror, he lowered himself and got even closer to the floor, supporting himself on his almost-backward elbows and gazing down at the brown shag carpet beneath him. Then he started shuffling toward me in what looked like a perverse imitation of an army crawl.

Any notion of retrieving my phone fled my mind in an instant, as did any notion of trying to crack the thing’s skull with my baseball bat. I flew down the stairs faster than I ever have before and bolted out into the night, slamming the front door behind me without looking back. Not knowing what else to do, I ran to the home of one of my neighbors, a guy I’ve been friends with for many years, and banged on his door until he opened it. He was extremely pissed at first, but when I explained the situation to him, his anger melted away, replaced by concern.

He called the cops. It took them about twenty minutes to show up. After I gave them my account of the night’s events, I stood on my front lawn in slippers and pajamas, watching anxiously as they entered the house to search it from top to bottom. The search dragged on and on, and I stared at the front door, expecting them to emerge at any moment with the man in cuffs. One of the officers stayed outside with me, and I admit I ignored most of his attempts at small talk.

After half an hour, the cops came back out and told me they hadn’t found any trace of the guy. That was possibly the worst news I could have received just then, and it sent another chill down my spine as they delivered it to me. They promised to patrol the area for the rest of the night, but I didn’t feel safe there, so I ended up retrieving my phone, keys, and some other essentials from inside- escorted by an officer at my insistence, of course- and heading out to crash with a friend who lived a few minutes away. (My neighbor likely would have let me stay with him, but he has a wife and kids and I didn’t want to impose, so I didn’t ask. My other friend lives alone, has a spare bed, and stays up until 3 AM playing video games most nights, so I texted him and then drove over after he responded- it was just much easier.)

I wish the story ended there, but now I know I’m not safe anywhere. I managed to fall asleep in the guest room of my friend’s house for a little while, but I woke up after a few restless hours just in time to see a figure scuttling into the bathroom on all fours. It glanced over its shoulder as it entered, and I saw that big grin on its face in the faint light of the just-breaking dawn.

I lay there too scared to move for a while, staring at the doorway, tracing the outline of the sink with my eyes and expecting the intruder to reappear at any moment. The world grew lighter and lighter until finally there was enough sunlight for me to feel a little safer moving around. I got up, and cautiously, bat in hand, I entered the bathroom.

There was nothing there. I would almost have thought I dreamed it, but I know I didn’t. You see, I know I left the bathroom door closed when I went to bed.

I don’t know what to do now. I’m not a superstitious guy by any means, but I don’t think this thing is human. I mean, if it’s just some kind of deranged man, how did it follow me between houses like that without my noticing, and how did it just disappear twice- especially from the bathroom? There’s one window and one door in that bathroom, and I could see them both from where I lay. Unless that thing squeezed its way down the shower drain, it must’ve just vanished into thin air. And what am I supposed to do about that?

 ---

 Credits

Be Careful Playing Chess With The Old Man At The Park

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I have always prided myself on being a good chess player. When I was a little younger, in my early teens, I gained quite a bit of notoriety as a "wunderkind" reaching masters and punching well above my weight class in Chess circles. I moved away from Chess in my late teens, and just like every other muscle, if you do not stretch and flex it, you lose it. I might not be the master I once was, I still play blitz and rapid, and enjoy the casual match. Definitely no tournaments for me though.

Speed chess in the park is arguably one of the most fantastic experiences one can experience. You never know who you meet, what sort of playstyle you will be going against, what experience level the player across from you has, if they are classically trained or not. The possibilities are endless. On top of this, you get to have a genuine human connection without technology which in this day and age is such a rarity. I have made it a habit of at least once a week coming down to the park to play, at least for an hour or two, just because of how much enjoyment I get from playing one of my favourite childhood games with strangers, for nothing more than bragging rights.

Yesterday wasn't any different, I made my way down to the park, holding my portable wooden chess set and went down to the tables. Mondays were always hit or miss, either tons of people playing or nobody. On this particular Monday, it was unfortunately the latter. The only person at the tables was this elderly man that I had never seen before. I casually walked over to him, and introduced myself:
"Hey there, I'm Brian. Care for a game?" I said, while extending my hand, my chess set tucked under my opposite arm.
"Hello Brian, glad to play you." he said, shaking my hand and extending his arm inviting me to sit across from him.
"My pieces or yours?"
"yours. You aren't ready for mine." the man said while grinning at me. That caught me off guard, but I decided to let it go. It's just a game after all.

I set my pieces up, and he his. Just like that, the game was on. I was playing White, and started my standard kings pawn opening. He countered with his, and I developed my pieces in the standard Spanish game.
"A student of theory I see." The man grinned again. "you've been playing this game for a while, I can tell. Just not quite as long as I have." the man said, while winking at me.
"I've dabbled in my fair share of matches." I replied, while moving my knight. Something about this man's demeanour unsettled me, yet I could not place it. It wasn't for another couple of moves that I realized that he wasn't looking at the board at all, just at me.

"Brian, you said your name was?" The man asked, his gleaming eyes pointing daggers directly at mine.
"Uhh, yeah. I'm just now realizing you never gave me yours." I replied, my confidence beginning to falter.
"I go by many names, but my friends call me Scratch."
"Am I your friend?"
"We are old friends actually Brian."
"Did we meet back when I was playing tourneys on the national circuit?"
"Something like that." He smiled again. I was rapidly becoming more and more unsettled, and it showed on the chess board. My positioning was crumbling, and he began methodically advancing his pieces.

"What is this attack? I've never seen it before." I said, trying to change the topic.
"You can call it. . . personally developed. Slow and deliberate. no matter how long it takes" He paused as he moved his bishop to take my Rook. "the pieces will fall. It is one of the absolutes of this game."
"I will not go down that easily though." I replied, checking his king with my Queen.
"No you will not." Scratch chuckled while moving his king out of danger. "You will live a long and fruitful life and die peacefully in your sleep next to your wife."
"My wife?" I laughed as I replied. "I am incredibly single and don't have any prospects of a relationship."
"For now, yes. Give it a few years."
"How can you be so sure that I will get married and die in my sleep?"
"Lets just say I have it on good authority that you will make it into your 70s."
"I am not in the business of trusting strangers on a park bench I've just met while playing Chess."
"I've already told you, we are old friends."
"Sir, I do not believe that I have met you before."
"We've met. It was the night you drowned." He said, while capturing my queen. "Check."

When I was 10 years old, my family was having a bonfire, and I went into my backyard to grab another piece of firewood. I had tripped over the garden hose which was haphazardly laying next to our pool, hit my head, and fell in. Officially I had been dead for four minutes, but my dad, who was a paramedic, managed to resituate me before going to the hospital. The thing is, nobody except close family knew about this. I didn't even tell my close friends. They only knew that I hit my head and had to go to the hospital.

"Who are you? Did you work in the hospital?" I replied.
"Like I said, I am an old friend. Checkmate." He said as he moved his queen. He was right, I missed the checkmate and moved to attack instead of defend.
"But, who are you?" I repeated, still dumbfounded.
"I think you know who I am" He said, winking again.
"But if you are. . . Death, and you say that I am going to die of old age, why are we talking now?" I asked flatly, still dumbfounded the words left my mouth.
"Because I am not here for you. I'm here for her." Scratch said, pointing at an old woman sitting underneath a tree. She wasn't ready to go quite yet, and I knew you'd be here, so I fancied a match."
"why play me if you knew you were going to win?"
"I always win, but I love a battle."

After that, the man got up and walked over to the woman. I don't know when he left, but I waited. It was only 20 or so minutes before the ambulances had began to roll up. I found out later she managed to call 911 with concerns of a heart attack before she passed. I have been at a loss for words the past day, and thought that writing this out would help me process what had transpired. As I am finishing this, I still feel uneasy, but I will leave you with this parting lesson:

Be careful when playing chess with old men at the park. 

---

Credits

I Inherited The World's Worst Genetic Condition

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You think you know your family. What they look like, how they speak, how it feels when they pat you on the back and say ‘welcome home’. None of us truly know any other person; not completely, often not in the ways that matter. I thought I knew my family, but I didn’t. I was a fool with wool over my eyes. I’d been living in a fantasy which was seconds away from crumbling down around me at every turn throughout my falsehood of a childhood. This is the story of how I learned what my family really was. What we really are. Maybe it can help you, too, or maybe I’m just looking to vent to the only corner of the internet who’ll really understand. Believe it or not, I don’t really care, I just need you to read. I need this after the weekend I just had.

It was this past Saturday that it started. The air was cold as I walked up the drive leading to my childhood home. I hadn’t visited in years; work in the city had kept me too busy. We lived out in the country, so I didn’t often get to come out and see my family. Mum always said that I was too absorbed in my work for my own good, and she was right. I finally got the chance to get away for the weekend, though, and got on the train as quickly as Mum could shout it at me on the phone. That afternoon, there I was, listening to the crunch and crackle of the gravel as I walked up the driveway with my pack of clothes slowly shifting at my back. I took in the sight for a moment and walked up to the front door to knock.

Seconds after I knocked, the door swung open with enough force to blow my hair back. Mum was there, holding the door open and looking at me with a wide smile. I felt a swell of emotion in my chest and brought her in for a hug. We stood in the doorway for a few moments, just holding one another, but voices from inside drew my attention further into the house, to where I saw my brother, Joshua, sticking his head out from behind a wall to see what was going on. He was younger than me, all bones and no meat, and he looked near-exactly the same as when I’d last seen him in person a number of years ago. He had longer hair, but it was the same boyish face under there, and I gave him a smile that he replied to with a middle-finger. As you can tell, we loved each other greatly.

I was brought into the house then. Stepping into the hallway felt like a dream; I suddenly felt ten years younger, like I was coming home from a long day at school rather than returning after years. It felt like I was waking up from a lengthy and restful nap. Making my way through the home was stranger than even that, as in each room I entered, I felt like I was simultaneously at home again, and also a stranger, an alien in my own life. Everything was precisely as it had been the last I saw of it, but it was so undeniably foreign to me now that I felt myself torn in two, part of me feeling joy at revisiting the memories of my childhood, and the other part of myself feeling a deep ache in my chest at those same memories. I was still so far away from this house, still trying to catch up to my own sense of nostalgia.

Next, I was brought into the living room where everybody currently at home was gathered for a few drinks. All of us kids were adults now, and Dad was always one to sort things out over a good drink, so I wasn’t surprised that everyone had already cracked open a few, even if it was still early afternoon. The room lit up when I entered, and it gave me a warm, fuzzy feeling in my chest to see it. I sat down and looked everyone over to familiarise myself with how they looked. My other brother, Daniel, also younger than me, was still the lanky runner he’d been in high school. My only sister, Rachel, was the only one to take after Mum, both in looks and in attitude, as she was chatting away with everyone on the couch as she waved at me across the room. I paused for a moment, and realised that my father wasn’t in the room. In fact, he was nowhere to be seen at all, even as I peered down the hall toward the bedrooms. We’d never been especially close, but I had been looking forward to seeing him after all this time away. He worked a lot when I was young, always travelling to different places, and so I was never really connected to him the way I was to my mum. It was a shame he didn’t come to see me that night, but I could live with that. I had before, and I probably would for the rest of my life. I tried a smile for my siblings, which was returned with much more enthusiasm than I truly felt. I took a deep breath in and stepped over to an unoccupied seat, feeling a sinking in my stomach, but ignored it and began to catch up with my siblings.

We spoke for hours. As it turned out, my father was sick in bed, and couldn’t come out to see everyone. He’d caught some illness that Mum couldn’t explain, but it was very contagious. The doctor she got to look at him had contracted it, too, and was bedridden also, so there wasn’t a chance she was letting any of us see him. She barely went in there, and every time she did, it apparently was with a nurse that she’d hired. I felt bad for my dad, but put my energy toward keeping up with the conversation taking place in front of me.

I wasn’t much of a drinker, but I had a few of my dad’s cheap beers, and was tipsy after a long while of sipping on it between long-winded explanations of what was going on with my work. We made dinner an hour or two after I arrived, everyone working together to make one of Mum’s stir fry dishes. Dinner was marvellous, and as the sun set and we became tired from our collective travels and efforts with dinner and the long stretch of conversation, it was time for some of us, especially those of us who weren’t so accustomed to alcohol, to sleep. I was among them, as I was the oldest yet the least used to drinking, and even my youngest sibling, Rachel, had more of a tolerance for it than I had at just nineteen years old. I was twenty-six, Daniel was twenty-four, and Joshua was twenty-one. I got some teasing from my siblings about this, but I brushed it off easily enough. Soon, everyone was going off to their separate rooms to sleep, and I was about to join them in rest, but a hand fell on my shoulder as I was about to enter the room I’d be sleeping in.

I turned to see my father, gently holding me in place and giving me a deadly serious look. I immediately took note of how he could barely stand by himself. It seemed to me that keeping me there was only half the reason he was grasping my shoulder, as he almost seemed to sway slightly in place as I waited for an explanation. In the silent moment that followed, I examined his face closely now. He was pale, far paler than I ever remembered him being. He was almost half his usual height with how far down he had to bend, seemingly for comfort. He was looking up at me, which had never happened before, and I questioned in that split-second of quiet if I was truly looking at the man who’d done half the job of raising me, or if I was looking at another person entirely, weak and feeble and old. That was really the thing that stood out to me the most, how old he looked. He’d never truly acted his age, always having get togethers and drinking sessions as if his middle-aged body could handle the same amount of alcohol as his twenty year old self could. He looked at me through sunken eyes and grimaced, an expression which forced me to do the same.

“Wait up,” he said, the first thing he’d said directly to me all night. His voice was hoarse, seemingly from disuse from the sound of it.

I didn’t say anything back. I found myself unable to say anything with how hard my heart was beating, so hard I thought it might leap up out of my throat and escape my body. He was supposed to be sick, bedridden, but here he was, touching and interacting with me as if he weren’t. Did this mean it was safe to see him? I had no clue, but I simply nodded and turned around to walk back over to the couches I’d spent the whole night sitting in, talking to everyone else. I sat down while wondering what this could be about. We hadn’t had a real conversation in years. Mum and I spoke often, every week or so, but the lengthiest conversation I’d ever had with my dad about what was going on in my life was when I was seven and joined the soccer team he’d pushed me to join and he just gave me a clap on the back and taken another swig of his drink. I had no way of knowing what he wanted to talk about; I was shocked that he wanted to talk at all! I sat down and waited for Dad to talk first, knowing at the least that he had something he wanted to say, and clearly it was important enough to get out of bed to say it to me, despite being supposedly ill.

He hobbled over to the couch and agonisingly plopped down into it. It seemed as though every little movement pained him. He sat on the couch for a moment before speaking, taking some time to simply breathe hard as he rested after the herculean effort of walking to the living room. I studied him during these few seconds, noticing that he looked even more different from my memory of him than I’d clocked from my previous close-up look at him mere moments ago. The hair on his head had almost entirely vanished, a few wisps at his temples the only remaining vestige of his youthful mane. He was nursing a drink in his hand, something other than his usual beer, which meant it was probably medicine. When he winced, the teeth that peeked through his lips were yellowed and rotted, as if he hadn’t brushed them in decades. That was strange, as he’d been the picture of health for his age when I’d last seen him but a few years ago. How could he deteriorate so fast? What had happened to him? At last, he seemed to gather the strength to speak.

“Hey,” he said simply.

“Hey. Are you okay?” I asked.

“Yes. No. Depends on the weather,” he joked. He was never too concerned about it, but being in this state ought to have made him a little bit more aware of his health, right? Apparently not. When he laughed, it sounded like a balloon being deflated as he hissed out a prolonged, pained giggle at his own unfunny joke.

“Be serious. Mum said you’re sick,” I said.

“Yeah, she would’a. I’m not picture perfect, but I never have been, so it’s nothing for her to worry about,” he said in a wheezing rasp that had me wincing in second-hand pain.

“She also said you got someone else sick with the same thing,” I admitted. “Must be a little bit worrisome.”

Dad looked at me with a grave expression on his face, which was paler than moonlight. He shifted in his seat a bit, and a loud pop came from his side of the room, accompanied by a strangled grunt of pain from him. I moved to stand, but he held a hand out to me and just trembled in place for a while as he came down from the pain. I saw the savage look in his eyes as they filled with hurt and pain that I couldn’t even begin to relate to. I don’t think I’d ever seen someone in quite as much agony as I was seeing my father in at that moment, and I don’t think I’ll ever see anything like it again, knowing what was to come.

“What’s wrong with you? No jokes, please,” I asked.

“Might as well. If it’ll be any of ya, it’ll be you,” he said, waving a lazy finger at me.

“What do you mean?” I asked again.

“Well, this’ll take some explaining,” Dad said. He lifted an arm up and out towards me. “Help me up.”

I stood, took a few steps, and I was upon him in no time. I grasped his hand in mine and pulled upwards, lifting him easily. He was thin as a rake under those baggy clothes, light as a feather; so thin I thought I’d snap his wrist if I pulled any harder. Jerkily, he got to his feet and groaned as pain seemingly flared up once again. Once he was settled on his feet, Dad began to walk, motioning for me to join him. We walked down the hall silently, not a word passing between us. We reached the back door soon enough, and we stepped out onto the patio where the clear, chill night air awaited us. Dad sat in a chair that had a lot of give, a chair that I didn’t remember. They must’ve gotten it for his comfort after he’d fallen ill. I sat opposite him, in a chair that had a small cup holder on the arm, still sporting a flat cola. I gave him a look that begged to explain, and he did.

“D’you remember how I used to travel?” he asked me.

“For work, yeah?” I asked in return, not seeing where he was going.

“Yeah, work, well you’re half right. It was for something, but it wasn’t work,” Dad said with another scowl.

“You lied?” I asked him. So it was going to be one of those talks, the kind where you sit down for a quick chat with your dad and have your entire childhood recontextualised by a single off-hand remark. Joyous joy.

“I did. Oh, don’t look at me like that,” he snapped, waving a hand at me. “Your mum knew what I was doing every day I wasn’t with her, and I didn’t enjoy it, but it worked.”

“What worked?”

“Right, right,” he said with a hazy quality about him. It seemed he was losing lucidity. “Well, boy, I guess you could say that my dad was unlucky. Ran into some big opportunities, but also big risks, and took ‘em all in stride. Even curses and consequences he took onto himself without a care in the world for how it’d impact him in the future; and curses he took. He’d run afoul of quite a bit of people in his youth, and one of them fancied herself a witch.”

“Wait, wait, wait … you’ve got to be kidding,” I said, laughing at the ridiculousness of where I thought he was going with this.

“Shut up and listen, boy. No jokes,” he said, parroting my own plea for serious consideration back at me. I looked at him and barked out a laugh again, but didn’t move to leave or talk against him any further.

“This witch, as she liked to call herself — my dad screwed her over, real bad. She lost her job because of him, though I’ll never know how. She thought she was owed, she wanted something from him, but he never gave her a single cent of reparations. She was left to get bitter and angry, and then she appeared one day, years later, and saw my dad with me, and said—” Dad continued, but he cut himself off.

My father lurched violently, spilling out from his chair and onto the cold pavement below him. I stood to catch him, but I was too late, as he fell on his face and sprawled on the tiled patio with a painful looking scrape of his face along the ground. I moved to help him up, but was kept back by a swipe from his hand, which caught me on the forearm and caused three lines of searing pain to erupt on my skin. I watched as his nails scratched across my forearm and sliced deep into the flesh, a gush of ruby red blood oozing out of the gouges in my skin and muscles. I pulled my arm back with a cry of pain, my voice breaking as I screamed. I stumbled back and tripped over myself, falling on my ass as my father laid helpless on the ground across from me.

The hand that cut me came down and pushed on the ground, and I got a good look at it for the first time since he’d put it on my shoulder those minutes ago. It had changed, with deep, inky black veins showing through the skin, bulging up and travelling up his arm until they disappeared under his shirt sleeve. The nails had transformed from regular, white keratin to faded yellow blades that protruded from his fingertips, as though he had sprouted the claws of a beast. The hot crimson blood poured from my arm and down onto my lower body as I was struck with a fear that paralysed me, ice cold fear gripping me and forcing me to give in to panic. My father looked up at me as he pushed himself up with that one deformed arm, and yellow eyes peered back at mine as I took in what had happened. The entire left side of his face was red and was dripping with thick, dark blood, darker than I could ever imagine blood being. It oozed out as if it were old and congealed, running down his face in coagulated globs rather than in hasty rivulets, like mine was flowing from my own injury. We sat and looked at each other as we were, both injured and bleeding on the ground and neither, seemingly, sure where to go from there.

“She said …” Dad said through the agony clear in his broken, raw voice, “… that the sins of the father shall be passed onto the son as if he himself were wicked.”

“What the fuck?” I half-whispered, too baffled to even scream.

“She cursed me, boy. She cursed me to live with the sins of my father on my shoulders, always bearing down on me so that we’d both know it was his fault I’m like this!” he explained.

“That can’t be true. Why are you telling me this?” I asked, trying to stop my injured arm from shaking.

“Sins of the father, boy! It’s a curse on the family!” Dad yelled quickly, no longer trying to be quiet.

I felt a sinking sensation in my chest as I realised what he must have meant. It was hereditary, that had to be what he was saying. Suddenly, the pain in my arm went numb in a cold way as my breathing picked up and I began to panic in earnest. I couldn’t deny what I was seeing anymore; my father was cursed and I was as well. The only question that remained in my mind was what the curse actually did, but I soon got a clue in the form of my father’s affliction accelerating, seemingly worsening before my very eyes.

Unless my eyes deceived me, the shoulder of Dad’s right arm, the arm that had been growing more and more monstrous this whole time, popped out of its socket and hung limply at his side. He howled in pain as his arm was further jerked upwards, seemingly against his will. He lifted his dislocated arm up and the same occurred to his elbow, the joint tearing itself as his arm elongated and stretched to inhuman proportions. The pitch black veins spread across his skin, consuming the entirety of his visible arm and beginning to crawl up his neck and face on the half opposite the one he’d skinned. His fingers then flexed themselves out of their sockets, displacing themselves with a series of dull cracks and pops of flesh and bone tearing themselves apart to warp this way. I simply watched with my jaw dropped as my father became something else before me, sprawled out on the patio and writhing in blinding agony. He called out weakly, pitifully, and looked me in the eyes with that yellow gaze he now possessed.

“It comes in waves! You can’t keep it from happening, but you can hide yourself, keep others from finding you when you’ve changed! I thought I’d have more time to explain it all, but now’s the time. You’ve got to kill me! Now, before I change completely!” Dad yelled, screaming bloody murder as his other arm began to twist, bend and pop its own joints out of place.

“I can’t!” I sobbed.

“You can! There’s a—AGH!” Dad tried to say, but couldn’t before he lurched again.

His leg jerked out, probably on instinct, as the curse began to spread to it. The reflexive kick was powerful enough to send the glass coffee table we’d talked over flying, and glass shards sprinkling over the both of us when it shattered against the brick wall of the house. I shielded my face from the volley of glass, and when I dropped my good arm and saw what had become of the formerly sturdy table, I understood what needed to happen. This thing my father was becoming would be a danger to our family if this curse was left to turn my father into some creature. None of us would be able to stop him from killing us if he turned completely. He was right, he needed to be ended now, before he became a real problem later.

I took a look at my injured arm. The bleeding had slowed down, but it was still pulsing with blood every few seconds. It didn’t hurt anymore, though, now that pain had given way to terror and panic. I was on an adrenaline rush that kept me from really feeling what was probably a devastating injury, which I could confirm for myself as I realised that I couldn’t actually move my arm below the elbow; it was paralysed as if by magic. I supposed it was magic that had done this to me.

Standing up was a mighty task. I felt a rush surge to my head and I became lightheaded as I rose to my feet. I looked down at my father and saw that all four of his limbs had become mangled, bloodied tangles of flesh, the joints bent out of shape and the skin ripped and torn so that they were all jagged, broken strips of flesh painted maroon by dark, thick red liquid. He was looking up at the sky, and although there was a roof over the patio, I doubted he saw it. He almost looked dead, but I knew he was still alive as I could hear his haggard, shallow, wet hacking and coughing as he took his last breaths. The death rattles rang out in the silent night air as I stumbled closer to his broken body, which would surely begin to move again soon. My arm hung at my side as I leaned towards him and took my own deep gulps of air to gain my breath back.

“How do I do it?” I asked, my voice eerily steady.

“I have a gun. Please,” he begged. His words were slurred as he coughed up blood.

I haltingly crept closer to his body, and found that the limbs did not stray out and strike me. This curse, whatever it truly did to my father, must have finally completely broken his body. I used my one good hand to search the pockets of my dad’s clothing, and eventually found a pistol stuffed down his baggy nightgown. I pulled it out and knew it was probably loaded and ready to go. He’d planned this. I took a deep, clear breath, and looked my father in the eye as I stood over him.

His yellowed eyes slowly drifted over and locked onto mine. I felt bile push up my throat, and I wanted to throw up, but I held it back and pointed the gun at my father’s head. I knelt down, not confident that I’d get it right from any distance, and pressed the barrel to Dad’s chin, angled so that it would tear right through his head. We met eyes once again, and he gave me a look that made me feel guilty. This wasn’t right, but this was his, our lot. I felt the need to say something, but whatever had been holding it back broke, and I began to sob and cry at the task set before me.

“Do it,” he said with his final bit of life.

I knew I had to do it, as I got startled when one of his legs jerked. He was starting to move again, and if he could cut me and flip that table with his frail body, then what could he do to the rest of our family? I let my feelings show on my face, openly weeping to my father as I held a gun to his head. I nodded as his arm twitched, his hand closing in a fist, and knew it was time. I put my finger on the trigger and looked back at my dad’s face.

He was entirely consumed by the curse. There wasn’t a patch of natural, pink skin in sight. My father was an inky black thing, a creature born to kill and maim, but I could put a stop to it if I just moved my finger a fraction of an inch towards myself. I took one last look into my father’s eyes as his yellow irises focused back on me, but it was different this time. He wasn’t looking up, at peace with himself, he wasn’t looking at me, regretting that it had come to this. No, he was looking at me with a need in his eyes, a hunger.

I closed my eyes.

BANG.

It was done.

I don’t know how long I sat there, eyes closed, fists clenched, crying so hard I thought I would faint. Eventually, whether it was seconds, minutes or hours, the noise of what had happened seemed to have woken the others up, and they emerged from the house and onto the patio to find me crouched over a mess of tangled flesh and bones with a gun in my hand, sobbing so loudly that I hadn’t heard them come.

Mum’s hand on my shoulders snapped me out of it, and I spun around in a panicked frenzy, so fast I slipped on the bloody patio floor and tumbled to the ground, dropping the gun. I looked up at them, and saw that all my siblings were looking horrified at Dad, crying and trying to keep the others from seeing what had become of his body. Mum, though, was at my side, as if I was the one that needed to be reassured. I’d been reassured, and I still didn’t feel any better. I spent that night silently, not saying a single word to a single person as Mum went on to explain things to my brothers and sister.

They understood quicker than I had, mostly because of the cursed corpse on the patio, but they were still shaken, and nobody said much over the next few days. I requested a week off work to stay around while my arm gets better and we figure out how to bury Dad and how to deal with my curse when it shows itself. I still don’t completely understand it, but I don’t think anyone does, and that gives me some solace in this time of confusion and doubt.

I’ve been feeling different these past few days. I know it’s the curse. It’s creeping up on me and I can feel it, day by day, getting stronger. I’ll have to make arrangements to hide myself away while it works its magic. I’m getting started on that after I write this all up.

As for why I’ve typed this all up, people need to know. I need to have it be known. The sins of the father shall be passed onto the son as if he himself were wicked, but that’s not true. I’m not wicked. My father wasn’t wicked. Those who punish the son for the father’s sins, they’re the wicked ones. People think they know how the world works, they think they’re right, and they think they know those around them, but they don’t know any of those things. They just hope they’re right and do the exact same thing they’d do if they knew they were wrong. That’s the way of the world.

I know better, and now you do, too. 

---

Credits

I Talked to God. I Never Want to Speak to Him Again

     About a year ago, I tried to kill myself six times. I lost my girlfriend, Jules, in a car accident my senior year of high school. I was...