mirror of https://github.com/nealey/Horrors2
140 lines
5.5 KiB
TeX
140 lines
5.5 KiB
TeX
\chapauth{gigz}
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\chapter{What Went Wrong}
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There is blood everywhere. My clothes are drenched with it, my
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hands slippery. I look down at the dead body of Mrs. Trencher, her
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throat still gurgling as she gasps for a final breath. The pencil
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in my hand is a dark crimson. Slowly beads of her blood fall to the
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already massive pool of blood on the floor. I look up and see that
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everyone is staring in horror. It then occurs to me that I am
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laughing harder than I ever have in my life.
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Flash.
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I wake up with a start, scared out of my mind. I am gripping my
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pencil so hard I can hear the cheap wood start to splinter. It was
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a dream. That's all it was. Hell of a dream though. My name
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is Luke Bavarious. I am seventeen years old, and a senior in high
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school. I am not shut-in, I am not excluded by my peers, and I am
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not ridiculed and mocked. Frankly, people just like me and I get
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along with everybody. I think something has happened to me. I just
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have no idea what.
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Mrs. Trencher is my English Literature professor. I have never
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harbored any sort of ill-will towards her. Her tests can be a
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bitch, but she is not a disagreeable person. Her classroom habits
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don't evoke the anger of any student. She is all-around well
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liked and respected. She gives us candy when we study for tests as
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a class. She gives us candy when we aren't studying.
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There is no reason that dream should have happened. I got plenty of
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sleep last night. I wasn't up late, and I fell asleep right
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away. I woke up on time, I had a bowl of cereal and a glass of
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orange juice, and I made it to school without being rushed.
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It's 11:32. Class is continuing as normal, and Mrs. Trencher
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didn't notice me sleeping. Then again, she is the type of
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professor that continues on with her lesson with, or without, your
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participation. If you miss the material, it is your own fault. I
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shake my head and continue copying her lecture notes into my
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notebook. At this point, I have zoned out and am copying the notes
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without paying any attention to what they are. I'll read them
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over lunch, so I at least know what she is talking about.
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``The elements of gothic fiction are easy to identify. In
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almost all of them, a woman is trapped in a circumstance she cannot
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escape from. This is usually a house. She has little time before
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she suffers `a fate worse than death.' There is
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something or someone keeping her in the house, by means of force or
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obligation. Somewhere in the text, her savior will enter the house,
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learn of the situation and save her from that Hellish
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fate.''
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Flash.
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I look up from my notebook, and see the blonde pony-tail of the
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classmate in front of me. With my face torn in a bloodthirsty rage,
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I reach forward and grab a hold of it. I yank it back towards me,
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her face now staring at the ceiling in pain and confusion. Without
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a word, I lunge forward and plunge my pencil deep into her left
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eye. She screams. I scream. She is screaming from the pain, I am
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screaming because I am delighted. I twist the pencil deeper into
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her eye-socket. She convulses, and I hold fast. I stand up, leaving
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Jenny to writhe in her chair. I look at my hand. I slowly drag my
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tongue across my middle finger, savoring the taste of her
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blood.
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I laugh harder than I have ever laughed in my life.
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Flash.
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I wake up on the floor next to my desk, tears stinging my eyes.
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Everyone is crowded around me; Mrs. Trencher has sent Jenny off for
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the nurse. Her eye is fine. I look up at the concerned faces
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hovering over me.
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``I'm fine; really{\ldots}I've just been feeling a
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little ill. That's all.'' The words have to be choked
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out through the tears. I try to stand, only to find a hand on my
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shoulder, keeping me at my position on the ground.
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``Francis, are you sure you're okay? You shouldn't
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try to move. Jenny went to get the nurse, just sit tight.''
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Mrs. Trencher's voice is thick with worry. She was one of the
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few who cared about her students. For a split second, at the
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mention of Jenny's name, I had the image of my pencil twisted
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deep into her cornea. I almost throw-up.
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``N-no, I'm okay, really{\ldots}''I pull myself to
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my feet, using my desk as a crutch. I'm not really okay as I
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say I am. I am unsure on my feet, and my vision is blurry.
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Everything is swimming, but at least there isn't any blood. I
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look around at my classmates; every one of them is staring at me
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horrified. I'm not the first person to faint in class.
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Melissa did two weeks ago in Biology. We were dissecting frogs, and
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she is squeamish. As it turns out, I had screamed in absolute
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terror, fallen out of my desk, and laid on the floor convulsing in
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tears.
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Jenny walks through the classroom door, a very scared looking Ms.
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Surough, the school nurse, in tow. I look up at Jenny, tears still
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fresh in my eyes. Ms. Surough sets an arm around my shoulders and
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leads me out of the room. I numbly follow her direction towards the
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nurse's office. Something is wrong with me, and I don't
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know what.
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Ms. Surough tells me to lie down on the couch in her office. I
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happily oblige.
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``So, what happened, Francis? Are you okay?'' Her voice
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stays level, but you can tell she is concerned. You can see it in
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her eyes. The only thing I can think of when I look at her is the
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image of my brutally attacking Jenny. What the fuck is
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happening?
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``I'm fine, really. I just think I'm
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overtired{\ldots}I didn't eat this morning. I think
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that's it. Just overtired and a little stressed from work.
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Really, I'm okay.'' I'm trying to convince myself
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more so than Ms. Surough.
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That's it, really. I'm just stressed from work. I guess
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I did go to bed too late, and didn't eat enough for
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breakfast. I'm okay. Really, I'm O.K.
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I am O.K.
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