mirror of https://github.com/nealey/Horrors2
183 lines
5.4 KiB
TeX
183 lines
5.4 KiB
TeX
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\chapter{The Monsters in the Night}
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\by{rinski}
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Some would say I have seen it all. They luckily don't know
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the half of it. I have both seen it all and then I have
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additionally seen some more things. Unspeakably horrible things.
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Things that would shatter your mind like a car wreck. For me,
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it's just part of the job. You see, I am a monster hunter.
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The name's Luke Bavarius. And I love my job. Because I hate
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monsters.
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I was at my office desk. I poured a cup of dark coffee. I
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accidentally burned the coffee, making my office smelled like a
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raging inferno. I drank the acrid blackness anyway. It tasted like
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a punch in the throat. But it's pungency and aroma would keep
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me awake. Awake through a night as black as coffee itself. I needed
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it: I felt tired and dizzy for some reason. I put my feet up on the
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desk. I took another sip of bitter liquid. Then the phone
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rang.
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My son's voice echoed through the cold, lifeless plastic of
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the phone's receiver. I have three sons. They are volunteer
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fire fighters. Usually they can't make calls while
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volunteering. The call was therefore perplexing.
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``Dad? Dad, you are in terrible danger!''
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``Terrible danger? Me?'' I scoffed at his
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insinuation.
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``Son, don't you understand? I have seen it all. What
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dangerous fate could possibly surprise me?''
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Before anything else could even happen, a smash caught my
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awareness. A window vomited glass fragments from its mahogany
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frame. A terrible entity was intruding through a now-broken window!
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Glass hit the ground like shells from my Baretta. Speaking of
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which, I withdrew my steel companion from its sheath. Time to
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investigate.
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The commotion was caused by a horrid foe indeed. It was a seething
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mass of tentacles attached to a pair of sickening butterfly wings.
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Parts of it glowed like certain eels can glow.
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``Son? I'm gonna have to put you on hold!'' I
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predicted, stabbing the ``hold'' button with my left
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index finger. I unholstered out my Baretta and flicked off the
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safety because there was nothing safe about the situation.
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Before the fight had begun, it was over. A mere twenty bullets
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reduced the monster to a twitching heap of calamari. The
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bullet-riddled monster could have made swiss cheese jealous. An
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acrid stench filled the office. The stinks of vomit and blood and
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putrid smoke and diherria mingled in an unholy potpurri. Its
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pungency induced nausea. My eyes watered protective tears. The
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atmosphere of my office was now more stench than oxygen, making
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respiration difficult.
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I coughed. I holstered my Baretta in its sheath. I picked up the
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phone.
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``Dad, you have got to get out of your office because you are
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in terrible danger!''
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SMASH! Another creature erupted into my office. The window
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atomized. Glass fragments splashed the floor like razor sharp
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raindrops.
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``I appreciate your concern, son. But your ol' D-A-D can
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handle a few monsters. I am a monster hunter by trade. And the hunt
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is on.'' I hung up the phone with confidence.
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This monster was no ordinary panther. It was covered in poison
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quills that rustled like amber waves of death. Its face was that of
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the common fly. Its arms were like a nefarious---suddenly, the
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beast attacked, interrupting my mental registration of its
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descriptive traits. No matter. My index finger instinctively
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triggered the Beretta's firing mechanism. A steel barrage
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sonic boomed towards the fiend. Soon it was just another lifeless
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object cluttering up my office floor. Blood gushed from its wounds
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like a Nile River of rusty fluid, courtesy of Luke Bavarius.
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The stench staggered. I coughed, gritting back vomit.
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Suddenly, a cacophony of smashes erupted. My remaining windows
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exploded in a crystalline supernova. The air was thick with a
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dangerous confetti of glass shards and monsters. Eight more
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monsters had broken in, causing this turmoil.
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``My property value has gone `out the
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window.''' I said with gallows humor.
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The odor elevated to a living nightmare about burning corpses. It
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consumed my senses. I vomited. Twice. Some came out my nose. My
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eyes burned. Tears stained my face with anguish and despair. I
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faced my impeding annihilation with eternal sadness and morbid
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frustration.
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``N-N-NOOOO-O!'' I puked out sobs and some of the coffee
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from before. I shot blindly, managing to kill one last monster. The
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remainder closed on me like a curtain of death. Knowing I was done
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for, I vomited one last time. Then passed out.
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I awoke later with a start in a hospital. I coughed. The cough
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tasted like ash and my mouth felt like a chimney. I called to a
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nurse, ``Nurse what is going on?''
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``I don't know how to tell you this, Luke{\ldots} but
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there was a fire in your office. You inhaled the smoke and
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hallucinated. Your son called to warn you, but by that point you
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were virtually insane from fumes. Your other two sons were the
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first ones one the scene. You{\ldots}''
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Suddenly, she was sobbing. I sobbed too. For I had known all
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along.
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``Y-you murd-urdered th-them with-with your Barett-etta. Then
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your third son showed up with more firefighters and you killed him
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too.''
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I thought I had seen it all. But none of the horrid monstrosities I
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had seen could have prepared me. Not for this. Not for a
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realization that hit me like the weight of a neutron star full of
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freight trains that were carrying my murdered sons. I was the only
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monster in this tale.
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When I heard the news, my mind shattered like a car wreck. And I
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screamed and screamed and screamed{\ldots}
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