mirror of https://github.com/nealey/Horrors2
232 lines
8.9 KiB
TeX
232 lines
8.9 KiB
TeX
\chapauth{The Bananana}
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\chapter{Deja Vu}
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Luke awoke in a bed.
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He stared at the ceiling; his head ached, pounded as he struggled to sit
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up. He was in a clean white room.
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There was a noise. Familiar. Welcome.
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The window, with drawn curtains yellowed with age, easily let light into
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the room. The sun flooded the room, bouncing off the floor with a soft
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mahogany glow, and gave the entire room a hospitable warmth. The
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blanket, worn and frayed with use, was nonetheless comfortable, and only
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added to the rooms ivory radiance. Beyond the tarnished brass rail
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footboard was the only other thing in the room that wasn't. A black
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door, defiant and bold, contrasted the pearlescent efforts of the rest
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of the room.
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Beneath the door drifted the smell of home. Of warm bread. Of eggs. The
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sounds and clatter of morning seeped through as well; of voices
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murmuring, talking, laughing, accompanied by a symphony of pots and
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pans.
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Luke swung his legs over the side of the bed. His head still ached, but
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it was lessening; he still couldn't remember a thing, everything before
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waking up just felt like a hazy dream. He searched the room for his
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personal affects to no avail. No shoes or clothes, no wallet or keys,
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and most importantly, no holster.
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He didn't like any of it but, at least for now, he felt in no real
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danger, and decided to take a look around and see what he could find out
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about\ldots about everything.
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He stood.
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He savored the feel of the sun warmed floor. He stretched, reaching for
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the speckled ceiling before he lost his balance and feel back onto the
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bed. He lay there, basking in the light, when he began to listen more
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closely to the sounds behind the door.
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That voice. He recognized it! The other too! He knew them both.
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No, he thought. He had to be dreaming. There was no way he had heard
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right.
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He got up and turned towards the door. Behind him, through the window,
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the trees began dancing lightly in a sudden fresh breeze.
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He stepped to the door, and reached for the knob. He felt a warm heat
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radiating from the door. But the voices persisted. He had to know who
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was just beyond the door. He grabbed the knob, and instantly recoiled in
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pain as the burning hot steel bit into his hand.
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``What are you doing'' asked a young boy from the corner of the room.
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He had startled Luke, and was lucky the cold steel of his Berretta wasn'
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t weighing against his chest like it normally did. The child, no more
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than 10 years old looked pale and unwell. He looked as though his mother
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had dressed him for church, black Sunday suit, shined black shoes, even
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his jet black hair looked as though it had been slicked back by an
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overbearing mother.
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``Wha\ldots who are you? What am I doing here? Do\ldots Do you live
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here, is this your home''? Luke said, studying the strange child.
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``That wasn't part of the deal'' the boy replied eerily un-phased by
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Luke's questions.
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Deal? Luke didn't know what the kid was talking about.
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``Don't open the door'' the boy warned.
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Luke knew what was on the other side. The voices he had heard, the
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voices he could hear right now, were of his family. His wife. His
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son. Sitting, waiting. He could hear them now, as he listened, he could
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see them in his mind. Her red locks swaying and bouncing as she prepared
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their breakfast. His boy, sitting at the table, his feet dangling from
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the chair, smiling and laughing.
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The young boy continued.
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``Don't open the door.'' He said again.
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The room grew dark.
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Luke looked outside, and watched as the trees now shook and swayed
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violently amidst an angry grass sea, heaving beneath the dark sky, as
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rain began to pelt the glass.
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``What are you doing here? Who are you?'' Luke tried again.
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``You're not listening.'' the boy's eyes narrowed and he carried on,
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``Enjoy it. Lay back down this time. Stay and enjoy it.''
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The kid must be sick, Luke thought to himself, he's not making any
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sense.
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``I've got a son about your age, he's right in there'' Luke said
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pointing to the door, trying to distract the child, ``Do you have any
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friends? I'm sure my boy will play with you. Do you like pancakes? My
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wife, she makes the best pancakes.''
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``Luke'', the boy cut him off, ``Your son and wife are dead. They've
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been dead, since the fire. You know that. You know the deal. Stay
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here. Enjoy it.''
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``What do you know about my wife and son? What do you mean they're
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dead.'' He stared at the child, ``Boy, I know your sick but you can't
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talk like that, it's not right. Listen, listen to them, can't you hear
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them, they're in there right now, look I'll show you'' Luke turned to
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the door.
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``Please Luke,'' The boys face was unchanged, his voice placid but
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firm. ``Don't open the do\ldots{}''
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``Hey!'' Luke yelled interrupting the boy, ``now I don't know what in
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the hell you're going on about, but it ends right now. Get out of here
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you sick freak, get out! Get ou-'' Luke searched for something to
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threaten the boy with, grabbing a lamp that had been behind him, but he
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turned back only to find the boy had disappeared, he was gone.
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Luke rubbed his eyes. Had the boy really just vanished? It was
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impossible. As he stood there wondering what had just happened, he
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noticed that his head didn't hurt any more. He turned to search the
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room again, search for the boy, search for his belongings. He looked out
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the window. Outside the air was now enraged, thrashing about flinging
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rain and debris everywhere. It made Luke more even more uneasy, but he
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remembered the door, and he shook the feeling off. He reached once again
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for the knob, as the roar filled his ears.
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He grasped the knob tightly preparing for the searing pain when suddenly
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it was deafeningly quiet. He turned and looked back outside. It was
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bright, very bright out, and the trees and sky were calm. The door was
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cool to the touch, and Luke pulled open the door, eager to see his
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family.
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Black. Charred wood. Everything, all of it, consumed. He steeped through
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the crumbling doorway.
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A burnt frame stood in place of former walls; the ghastly skeleton now
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surrounded all the ash and rubble that had been a home. Outside,
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surrounding the house were people. Fire crews, emergency personnel,
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neighbors, all of them just standing around the house, all of them just
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silently, chillingly starring. Luke was standing in what used to be a
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kitchen, when he recognized it. This was his house, this used to be his
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home. Where the sink had been rose a pair of pipes, jagged and singed,
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but sturdy and resilient. And then he saw them. Across the blackened
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room lay the dark remains of a woman clutching a child.
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He couldn't breathe, he couldn't swallow. Grief and sorrow were
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throttling him, and suddenly he let loose in heaving spasms as he ran to
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his family. He knelt, sobbing, over what was left of them.
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``No'' he uttered
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The crowd erupted in a bellowing barrage of whispers that come from
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everywhere and nowhere at once. Not on person's mouth was moving and
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yet their voices were infinite, filling the air with an angry accusatory
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heat.
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``You did this''
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``This is your fault''
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``They came for you''
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``Why did you let them die?''
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``They came for you''
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``No\ldots {\bf no!}'' Luke screamed, ``I couldn't stop them\ldots{}''
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``I tried to save them'', he continued.
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Amidst the churning crowd suddenly stood the boy again.
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``I asked you not to open the door this time. I asked you to stay on the
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other side.''
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``I\ldots I tried to save them'' Luke sputtered out.
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``No'' reasoned the boy, ``no, you damned them. You dug too deep into
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our affairs; you stuck your nose in our business. When we sent our men
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here to fire the house, we sent them for you. It was you that did this
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to your wife. To your son. You are responsible.''
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``I tried\ldots{} I came home\ldots{} the flames, they were everywhere'' Luke carried
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on, distantly.
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``But don't worry. There's more.'' Said the boy, ``We have much more
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for you''
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``No,'' Luke said sitting up, looking at the boy. ``it doesn't matter
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now''
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The child stared back with hollowed eyes and an emotionless gaze that
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should have terrified Luke.
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``You can't do anything to me now\ldots just kill me. Kill me''
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The boy's brows furrowed, his face twisted, pulled and broke. He
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smiled, and then began to laugh.
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``Kill you?'' He said regaining his composure, ``Why? Why would I kill
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you? No. We have something much worse for you.'' The crowd's maddening
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chants began to bleed through the boy's speech. They seemed to scream
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now, everyone of them and none of them at once. Angry, haunting howls
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pierced through Luke's hands as he covered his ears.
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``No, {\bf noo!}'' he screamed as he began to beat his head against the
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rubble. But it did nothing to lessen the shrieking crowd. He had to end
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it. He looked around and saw the pipe sticking out of the foundation. It'
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ll do he thought.
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He stood, the cries and screams still pursuing and punishing him. He
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struggled over to the pipe, rusty and charred. He'd have to be
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quick. He'd only get one chance. He took a breath and slammed his head
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down.
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Luke awoke in a bed.
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He stared at the ceiling; his head ached, pounded as he struggled to sit
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up. He was in a clean white room.
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There was a noise. Familiar. Welcome.
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