\chapter{Character Sketch} \by{Ghost Hat} I frowned as I looked at the crime scene. The lawn had been well kept once, but now it was all wild. The grass had been green once, but now it was all brown from the blood. The blood was from a corpse named James McDaniels. He was ten years old. He was murdered here last week in front of his house. James McDaniels' father had hired me to find out who killed his son{\ldots} or what. My name is Luke Bavarius. I'm a private eye. I'm whom they call when the police can't handle a case. Or if they don't want to. This is one of those cases because James McDaniels' father, James McDaniels Senior, is a crime boss for the mafia and the cops don't like him. I don't like him either, but I'm a desperate man. I looked around and inspected the white chalk circles from where his body was found. There were two. One for his body and one for his head. The kid had been decapitated viciously. Just thinking about it made me taste vomit in the back of my throat. At first the police had suspected the kid's father. It makes sense. The crime boss's case of alcoholism was publicly known. But he had an alibi in his frightened wife and anyways it didn't make sense since he hired me to investigate his son's murder. A guilty man wouldn't do that. It might have been a rival gang, or even a cop trying to get back at McDaniels Senior, but I didn't think so. The crime was too violent. The force used to tear off the kid's head, the distance it had been thrown, the amount of blood{\ldots} it had to be personal. I didn't like to think that another kid could do this. I didn't even know how since to rip even a kid's head off you would need at least the strength of a gorilla. But I couldn't dismiss a lead until I followed up on it. An investigator follows his instincts and mine said I was on to something fishy here. At the school I questioned everybody. Everybody who could have had contact with James McDaniels. As I talked to more and more people, I started to draw a picture in my head. The picture was one of James McDaniels, and soon the picture got more and more detailed. He was sent to the principal a lot because he picked on other kids. He would torture, beat, and steal from anyone smaller than him. He was a bully of the worse kind, just like his dad. I guess it's true that the apple really doesn't fall far from the tree. ``Is there anybody James really picked on? More than everybody else?'' I asked a little boy during lunch. He was maybe a third grader, and he didn't seem too unhappy about his late tormenter being dead. Who could blame him. The boy looked thoughtful for a moment and then pointed to a dark corner in the cafeteria. He said with a mouthful of hamburger, ``Tommy. James hated Tommy because Tommy was never afraid of him.'' I thanked him gratefully and looked over in the corner. A boy was there and it was strange. Every other kid here was eating lunch and laughing with each other. But not this kid. Not Tommy. He was alone and hunched obsessively over a bunch of papers. I think he was drawing, though I couldn't see what from here. I knew I had to talk to this kid. ``Hey Tommy, what are you drawing?'' I asked carefully, sneaking a peek at his masterpiece. It was a picture of the cafeteria and all the kids in it. I figured it'd be a child-like scribble, the sort of stuff normal kids do, but I was surprised to see that it was pretty good. ``Hey, you're better than I am,'' I joked. ``It's just practice,'' Tommy mumbled, covering the drawing with his hands. He looked away from me and stared hard at the wall. I paused hesitantly. I don't talk to lots of kids in this line of work, but I knew that I had to try. ``Tommy, I need to talk to you about James McDaniels, okay? I'm trying to catch the guy who murdered him, and I need a big guy like you to help me.'' Suddenly the school bell rang and all the kids got up to leave. Tommy shot up like the red plastic of the kid's chair he sat on had burned him. He grabbed his backpack. ``What can I do? I'm just a kid,'' he snarled angrily as he shoved past me, rushing off to math class. I blinked as I watched him go, and then I squinted down at the papers he had left. He was going to be in a lot of trouble if any of this was homework, but as I pushed the papers around I saw that there weren't any words on them, just drawings. Some were of nice things, but most of them were grotesque and disgusting, blood, flesh, and vomit so realistic it turned my stomach. One of them caught my eye in particular and I picked it up. It was a creature all shadowy and dark. Its tail looked vicious and I could feel the terrible expression on its face in my very soul. But what caught my eye the most was the head it held in its hand. I recognized that head. I recognized the house behind it. It was James McDaniels' head and that was his house too! That night I staked out Tommy's house. The sky was as stormy as my mood. The clouds turned and swirled around as viciously as the insides of my stomach. Even the lightning made me feel like vomiting, but I smoked a Marlboro instead. It calmed me down enough to think. I didn't know how, but I knew that Tommy was a murderer. I needed to prove it somehow and get him put away, maybe put away for life. The broken clock radio flashed 12:00 A.M. in glowing green light. All the lights in Tommy's house were off. Strange kid. All alone, but he ain't scared of the dark. Tommy's parents had gone off to a fancy party hours ago. Tommy's dad wore a tux and his mom, a nice looking dame, wore a sleek little number. I didn't expect them back any time soon. The rain pattered on the top of my beat-up Oldsmobile like hundreds of little mice feet. The lightning flashed and Tommy's house was lit up in black and white, like some old horror movie. I wasn't scared, but I reached inside my jacket and stroked my Beretta. Thunder grumbled like a monster, a hungry one at that. My imagination went a little wild as I thought of all those pictures Tommy drew. That kid could draw all right. The rain kept pattering away. Pattering away like thousands of little mice feet now. But suddenly, with a loud thump, something huge landed on the roof! It shook the car and I bounced inside and looked up in surprise. The surprise turned to horror as I saw a huge indentation above me. That was no mouse! No, I doubted it was even a really big rat! I pulled out my loaded Beretta and aimed at the roof above me and fired three rounds in quick succession. I know I missed it though because I felt the thing leap off the roof and land on the street outside the car. Nothing but rain came through the holes, good news for my seat cushions but I wouldn't have minded the cleaning bill. It was too dark with night and rain to see outside the window, so I opened the car door and leapt outside, squeezing my pistol blindly into the air. The thunder cracked then, even louder than my gunshots and I heard a scream louder than them both combined. I peered into the wetness and saw a dark figure clutching at the side of its neck. Thick black blood oozed from between its fingers and as it screamed again, more vomited from the creature's mouth. I moved closer, clutching my Beretta with white knuckles. I was staring at the creature's head, but I realized what a mistake that was when I recognized that horrid expression on the monster's grimacing face. I leapt back. Just in time as a whip, faster than a speeding semi, struck right where my skull would have been. It was the creature's tail. This thing. This man that was more monster than human was the beast from Tommy's drawing. My brain was struck with awe, but luckily my hands didn't care about what my brain thought. My fingers squeezed at the Beretta's trigger over and over again, filling the creature full of holes. Black blood sprayed out from all over the creature's body, mixing with the pure rain, like mixing demon urine with holy water. The creature gave one last angry garble as it lurched towards me. I could have sworn it said something in English but I don't know what. My brain was on automatic as I fired my semi-automatic, the barrel spewing out bullet after bullet. Finally the beast staggered and collapsed, right at my feet. Its tail gave one last feeble lash and subsided. Up close I could see how truly hideous it really was, with pulsing black veins and oozing pustules all over its body. I licked my lips and tasted salt, which surprised me since rainwater is fresh. I was crying. I knew I couldn't stop now. My hands shook with the nervousness I had felt from the assault of Tommy's monster, but I reminded myself of whom I was. I was Luke Bevarious. I was a private investigator. I had faced down lots of tougher situations than some kid with a coloring book. I went inside the house. It was much quieter inside the house than it was outside. The water dripping off my coat sounded loud in my ears as I went from room to room, searching for the boy I knew must be there. Finally I found him. It must have been his bedroom. I spotted a bed and dresser out of the corner of my eye, but mostly I saw the drawings. Hundreds and hundreds of drawings stuck all over the walls and the ceiling, the floor and every bit of furniture. And in the middle of the floor was Tommy. He sat beside a flickering candle and didn't bother to look up at me when I opened the door. Tommy was drawing. ``Put down the pencil,'' I said, my voice sounding harsh and gravelly. ``I got a pistol pointed at your head, boy. My fingers have minds of their own sometimes, I can't promise anything if you don't.'' ``You're just in time,'' Tommy said with a soft smile. I was surprised when he did what I told him to do, tossing the pencil playfully off to the side. But something was off. His smile was more than just a regular kid's smile. My eyes widened in horror as I bolted forward and snatched up the just-finished drawing. I gazed at it with terror as I turned around to face the door I had just used. Yes, it was just like the drawing. The kid was good. Really good. The End.