mirror of https://github.com/nealey/Horrors2
235 lines
12 KiB
TeX
235 lines
12 KiB
TeX
\chapauth{Brushingworth}
|
|
\chapter{Chamber Pop}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Feebly, Luke Bavarious reached into his mouth and pushed on his
|
|
molar. He winced as it shifted unpleasantly in its socket. Pain
|
|
shot down his jaw and Bavarious clenched the edge of the sink. The
|
|
dried blood caked onto his hand cra\-cked and fell into the sink in
|
|
large flat scabs. Bavarious raised his head and turned on the
|
|
water, hot all the way. Steam rose from the large sink. Bavarious
|
|
was in the basement of his office building. The door he had just
|
|
stumbled through was still open, letting in the night's
|
|
biting cold air; Bavarious didn't notice. He spat twice,
|
|
three times, into the sink and plunged his hands into the water,
|
|
clenching his fists at the near boiling temperature. The liquid was
|
|
quickly polluted to a dark red.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
``Shit,'' Bavarious let out as he finally opened his
|
|
office door on the sixth floor. Inside the lamp on his desk lit the
|
|
dim room. Someone in the plastic chair preceding his desk turned.
|
|
What the fuck, Bavarious thought suddenly, but he let out no sound.
|
|
``Ah, you're back,'' said the small boy sitting in
|
|
front of him. ``I've been waiting almost an hour.''
|
|
``Well sorry kid,'' Bavarious responded as he trudged to
|
|
his desk chair, ``I've just about had enough people for
|
|
today.'' The kid stared at him unblinking. He was probably
|
|
thirteen or fourteen. ``Mr.\ Bavarious? I need to speak with
|
|
you about an important matter. Don't you think it's a
|
|
little funny that a kid like me is here to see you? Let me
|
|
introduce myself, I'm Oscar Crowley.'' While the kid was
|
|
talking, Bavarious unloaded his Berretta and gave the kid a
|
|
sarcastic glace every now and then. ``Alright listen
|
|
punk.'' Bavarious gestured with his Berretta as he spoke,
|
|
``Today's over. Finished. All that's left for me
|
|
is a bottle of Jack back home. If you've got some sort of way
|
|
of paying me outside of Monopoly money and lemonade stands than
|
|
tomorrow you can come back and give me your sob stories, tonight go
|
|
home. It's passed your bedtime anyways.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bavarious was spread eagle hanging upside down on the moldy couch.
|
|
He watched Law and Order on the TV upside down in front of him and
|
|
sipped whiskey from a bottle, most of which by this point dribbled
|
|
down his forehead. He didn't hear anything when the figure
|
|
slid open the kitchen window. From the fire escape a dark and dim
|
|
figure in combat boots stepped into the apartment. Bavarious, due
|
|
to an insurance commercial that annoyed him even in his inebriated
|
|
state, lifted the bottle for another swig and saw in the reflection
|
|
of the moving glass a dark figure lunging toward him. Bavarious
|
|
raised his hand to stop the intruder but the figure quickly batted
|
|
away his drunken defenses and closed two gloved hands around the
|
|
detective's throat. Bavarious' eyes bulged and he
|
|
coughed a mixture of alcohol and vomit. Flailing, Bavarious saw
|
|
that he was still holding the bottle of Jack and quickly smashed it
|
|
over the head of his assailant. After gasping for several minutes,
|
|
Bavarious got up to check on his unconscious prisoner. The man, if
|
|
it was a man, was clothed only in a long brown overcoat. His head
|
|
and face was covered by the coat's large hood. The
|
|
man's head was completely devoid of hair, Bavarious
|
|
couldn't tell if he was shaved or simply never grew any. His
|
|
face was what made Bavarious recoil. Under what should have been
|
|
the man's eyebrows (which were also missing) was nothing but
|
|
a series of gashes and burns. Large scars ripped up and down the
|
|
man's face, the larger ones continuing down into the robe
|
|
that Bavarious didn't want to look under. The only human
|
|
feature about the man's face was a vertical gash, about three
|
|
inches wide and four inches tall, where the intruder breathed
|
|
harshly.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
{\em I need some coffee}. Bavarious walked unsteadily in the
|
|
gutter. He had left the man/thing in his apartment exactly where he
|
|
had fallen. Probably not something he would have done sober but,
|
|
tonight he wasn't in the mood for procedure. His boot caught
|
|
the edge of a storm drain and he tumbled, scraping his hand on the
|
|
concrete. He sat that way for awhile. Watching the dirty water
|
|
funnel into the sewer. When he was ready to keep moving, he looked
|
|
up. Standing right next to him was Oscar Crowley. ``I told
|
|
you,'' said Oscar disappointedly. ``What the fuck are you
|
|
talking about kid,'' Bavarious spat, feeling only slightly
|
|
embarrassed at his language in front of the boy. Turning, Oscar
|
|
walked away from Bavarious. ``You're gonna lose yourself
|
|
in darkness, man.''
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
{\em What?} Bavarious watched the little boy walk away and thought
|
|
about the cryptic message. Did the boy know something about the
|
|
monstrosity that had just attacked him? He had to find out. Getting
|
|
up, he stumbled down the street and turned into the alley he had
|
|
seen the boy enter. Suddenly, he halted. Down the three foot wide
|
|
alley was nothing but a couple of garbage cans, a dumpster and some
|
|
wires running through the water on the ground. What slowly dawned
|
|
on Bavarious was that this was the very same alley that he had
|
|
encountered the monstrous noise violator early that day. He slowly
|
|
walked to the end of the alley and back three times, looking for
|
|
any way the boy could have left the alley without him seeing. On
|
|
the third trip back he gave up and decided to go for that coffee
|
|
after all, but stopped halfway out. He had been running his hand
|
|
down the eastern brick wall of the alley and this time he felt a
|
|
faint vibration in the stone. He put his ear up to the wall and
|
|
listened. At first he didn't hear anything and the wall
|
|
seemed to have settled, but a few seconds later he hear a slight
|
|
thudding sound and felt the wall shake once again. Bavarious
|
|
scanned the wall for a window or drain that might lead inside the
|
|
building. Seeing nothing left the alley.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
From the street the building didn't look like much. He couldn't hear the
|
|
thudding from this far, and the front wall didn't seem to be
|
|
shaking. The front had an old-fashioned lighted sign that read ``Larry's
|
|
RR'' and offered a jukebox, soda fountain, and coffee. The front windows
|
|
were broken but had been boarded up by strong looking wood. {\sc
|
|
Blackout Armistice} was splashed across the left board in black
|
|
spray-paint. After trying and failing to make sense of this felonious
|
|
abstrusity, Bavarious looked up to examine the upper floors of the
|
|
building. Most of the windows were boarded, plenty were broken, through
|
|
a few he saw a spare bookcase or desk but nothing was moving in any of
|
|
them. The longer he contemplated the lofts; he began to notice something
|
|
about the rooms. He couldn't quite focus on it immediately, probably
|
|
thanks to the last of the Jack still digesting in his stomach. Suddenly
|
|
he caught it. In a few of the rooms he could see the same orange-tinted
|
|
light faintly. Every so often the light would flicker or go out
|
|
altogether for a few seconds. While this could have been attributed to a
|
|
bad electrical line, Bavarious noticed that in every one of the rooms
|
|
the light responded identically, as if the same bulb was burning out at
|
|
the end of every kitchen socket.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bavarious pulled his Beretta. {\em I'm going in}. He
|
|
wasn't sure why he was going in, but he was sure he was
|
|
going. He leapt up onto the right display window and landed on
|
|
broken glass. With the butt of his gun, Bavarious smashed into the
|
|
wood. Chips flew away but the barricade seemed unharmed. He tried
|
|
several more times and then went the front door. Bavarious
|
|
couldn't see through the glass door but it seemed to be
|
|
blocked only by paper. I hope I'm not gonna regret this. He
|
|
pulled his leather sleeve over his right hand and slammed the butt
|
|
of the gun through the glass door. It shattered and the glass fell
|
|
on both sides of the door. Through the paper he could see the decay
|
|
of an old caf\'e and the same orange light. He reached through
|
|
the tear and tried to unlock the door. The lock seemed to be
|
|
rusted. Sighing, Bavarious steeped one leg then the other through
|
|
the door, kicking away the rest of the paper.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
On the other side of the dining room the orange light poured
|
|
underneath a door that Bavarious thought looked like a bathroom. He
|
|
crossed the space quickly and approached the door. It was indeed a
|
|
bathroom, but the sign had been defaced. What had once been a
|
|
standard female figure had some sort of black stain on the front of
|
|
her skirt and was dripping black liquid from between her legs.
|
|
Bavarious thought it was the same spray-paint as the outside
|
|
proverb but he didn't examine it closely. He stood with his
|
|
hand on the door for a moment and suddenly he hear the same
|
|
thudding, much louder now, and a shuffling murmuring. Inhaling,
|
|
Bavarious opened the door with his Beretta drawn.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Inside Bavarious took one and a half steps before stopping dead in
|
|
his tracks. His eyes glazed over and the orange light of the room
|
|
shined off them like blisters. The room was cavernous. The entirety
|
|
of the building had been hollowed out and Bavarious could see the
|
|
rooms he had seen from the streets above. They seemed to be
|
|
perfectly untouched until they simply ran out of floor. They gaped
|
|
out into sepulchral like pockmarks as if someone with a wrecking
|
|
ball had tried to demolish the building from the inside out. On the
|
|
floor of the room were fold-out metal chairs arranged in rows
|
|
giving the building a church-like atmosphere. The chairs were
|
|
almost completely filled with people. Bavarious couldn't tell
|
|
much about them due to the brown hoods they were all wearing.
|
|
Somewhere in his brain Bavarious recognized them as the same that
|
|
the man who had tried to kill him had worn. The same part of his
|
|
brain that realized there were over four hundred of them. That part
|
|
of his brain wasn't really important to Bavarious at that
|
|
moment. In fact he barely even noticed the room or the people in
|
|
the chairs. His eyes swept past them and were drawn to the sight
|
|
they were all apparently there to witness.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At the far end of the room, a few yards to Bavarious' left,
|
|
was a man standing like an accursed teacher at a rusted wooden
|
|
fold-up table. Lying on the table were various medical instruments
|
|
and a small girl. Bavarious thought she might have been seven. She
|
|
had long tangled blonde hair that stretched past her shoulders and
|
|
ended soiled in the puddle of blood that she was lying in. The girl
|
|
had been split open vertically from neck down; the cut had not been
|
|
clean. The man at the table had removed most of the contents from
|
|
inside her but apparently left the connections. Spare blood vessels
|
|
and muscle ligaments crisscrossed over her and draped down to
|
|
various organs that were spread out on the table. Terrified,
|
|
Bavarious noticed that the girl was breathing slowly into a mask
|
|
that was connected to a makeshift airtank below the table.
|
|
Bavarious looked away and saw that at the front of the table, a few
|
|
feet from the first row of chairs, was the body of the man he had
|
|
shot earlier. The body was similarly dissected and seemed to be
|
|
waiting for some sort of terrible transplant procedure.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bavarious stood frozen. He mouth was slightly open. Suddenly, he
|
|
saw a door across the room open and Oscar Crowley step out. He was
|
|
also petrified by the scene and stood standing for several moments.
|
|
When he saw the girl on the table, however, he shouted
|
|
``Sam!'' and charged up the room. The onlookers seemed
|
|
shocked as well and Oscar made it almost all the way to the front
|
|
of the room before one of the men in robes reached out and grabbed
|
|
the back of his shirt. He was stopped dead by the strength of the
|
|
man. Slowly the nearest of the congregation raised from their seats
|
|
and helped subdue the boy. He kicked and bit at all that came near
|
|
him but eventually they dragged him to the front of the room in
|
|
custody where the standing man removed the mask from the girl and
|
|
placed it over Oscar who spat into the mouthpiece but eventually
|
|
slowed his thrashing and eventually closed his eyes. From there
|
|
most of the group returned to their seats while a few laid Oscar
|
|
next to the splayed corpse. Suddenly, Bavarious realized he was
|
|
sobbing.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|