\chapter{Invisible Monsters} \by{Ghost Hat} Nobody could see! Nobody could see! It was a nightmare. Abby ran for her life, as hard as she possibly could. What else was there to do when a monster was chasing you? Her lungs gasped for air already and her limps burned with exhaustion, but that thing didn't even breath hard. It wasn't the monster chasing her that frightened her the most though. It was the fact that she was the only one who could see it. Lurking about the corners. Hiding in the shadows. She thought it was her imagination. She thought she had been going insane. They said you showed the first signs of schizophrenia when you became a teenager. But then, it must have slipped up, for she had seen it squarely, with both eyes. What's more, it knew. And then it gave chase. Down the sidewalks, across the streets despite the busy roads. She must have been nearly killed five times by squealing cars. She barely kept herself from tripping several times down the steep hills. And still it chased her, it seemed to like watching her run. Enjoying itself perhaps. It loped in plain sight. But only she saw! Only Abby saw the monster. Everybody else saw a crazed girl running through the streets, no thought for her own or others' safety. How did Abby know this? Nobody had believed her when she said she was seeing things. Nobody screamed and ran despite the fact a monster ran loose upon the same streets. Maybe she {\em was} crazy, but she wasn't going to stop long enough to find out. How she had wished she had paid better attention! Though even if she had spotted the creature earlier she would not have known how to defend herself against it. It had been following her for weeks though. Weeks in which some shadowy thing had been watching her, plotting against her{\ldots} No time! Abby ran. ``You stupid kid!'' some guy screamed as Abby swerved past him. The streets were full of people, making it hard for Abby to run at full speed. She had to slow to dive and jump between and around them. And there were carts everywhere. The beast! The beast was catching up! Run! Run! An alleyway. Not a place she would normally go. That's wear drug addicts and homeless people hung out, but it meant there would be no people. No people meant no obstacles. Abby ra! She ran down the alleyway. It took a moment for Abby to realize her mistakes. People might have noticed if the monster had jumped her in front of them. Even if they couldn't see it, they would see that something wrong with her. With no people around, it could kill her in privacy. That was her first mistake. The other was that this alley ended with a brick wall. 10 feet high. {\em Oh no,} Abby thought, gasping for breath so hard she couldn't speak. She had enough to scream however. She felt the wind rushing by as the monster swooped in on wings of black. So close now that she could see purple in those leathery wings. So close she could see its gleaming yellow eyes. No pupils. Just shimmering metallic yellow. It swooped in and landed with a great gust of wind on the cement ground. It stood on two legs, like a man. But it was no man. Abby was suddenly trapped between the brick wall and it. And then it opened its mouth wide and inside it were hundreds of sharp, silver teeth. It hissed and Abby screamed as it bent forth to devour her. Another rush of air, but from behind the creature. A sudden blur and then the creature was on the ground, wings spread flat. It screamed a terrible scream and Abby covered her ears in terror. Animal instincts took over and she hid behind a dumpster, eyes squeezed shut, hands clamped over ears. She would never leave this place. She would stay, stay and hide forever. She did not see what had overcome the creature. All a blur. She did not see the man who had saved her until he tapped her on the shoulder, and then pulled her out much to her horror. It had to be that creature! That awful creature! ``Agggh!'' she screamed as loudly as she could. Abby writhed and tried to break free, still blind. Still crazy. Still insane with fear. ``Stop crying. You've been saved,'' said a voice. Abby looked up, blinking heavy tears from her eyes, and found a man. An ordinary man. Abby was silent, just staring in disbelief. Just a man. And behind him. Nothing. The creature was suddenly gone. As if it had never been there in the first place. She panted, sweating, hair a mess, skin as white as snow. Just a man. And yet. ''You saw it? You saw it?" she hissed, horrified for what the answer could be. ``Of course I did,'' the man said in a voice as soothing as butter. ``And it's gone now. It will never bother you again.'' Abby gave a choke of laughter and could not help but hug the man, her entire body trembling. The ordinary man reciprocated with one arm, his other sliding towards his back pocket. He thought, in a distant sort of way, that the child in his arms was warm. But the blood from her throat would be warmer.