mirror of https://github.com/nealey/Horrors2
121 lines
3.7 KiB
TeX
121 lines
3.7 KiB
TeX
\chapauth{Blurry Gray Thing}
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\chapter{Monstrous}
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In the shadows of our overcrowded cities lurk unspeakable horrors.
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No one knows or can imagine the horrid reality that lurks beneath
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our wholesome fa\,cade. I am one of the few people who does. I
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am a private detective. My name is Luke Bavarious. These are my
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stories.
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I was investigating a brutal serial killer operating in the bad
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side of New York. When I saw his latest victim, I was stricken by
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the horrid brutality of his violence. The murderer cut out the
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homeless man's heart, stabbed him through the eyes, and
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carved him open from buttocks to head. Vomit forced its way past my
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teeth, and poured into the gutter, mixing with the unfortunate
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victim's blood. That night, I went home and drank whiskey
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until the alcoholic poison killed all the feeling in my
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brain.
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I used my detective skills to track the murderer to a warehouse in
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the worst part of the city. I knew the killer had to be there. All
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of the monstrous murders pointed to it. As I walked there, I felt
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nauseous. The people all around me were garbage. Prostitutes and
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thieves. They did not deserve to live. But they did not deserve to
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be brutally murdered.
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I stalked carefully into the warehouse. My combat boots carried me
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silently through the shadows. I heard a man ranting and I saw a dim
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light coming from a small room. It had to be him.
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``Why are there so many of you now? Where are you all coming
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from!?'' The man was insane. Whoever he was talking to
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grunted.
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``You can stop pretending! I know what you really are. I
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won't let you get away with it! I'll kill all of
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you!'' he was screaming. I had to save his victim.
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I smashed open the door with my shoulder. There was an old man in
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horribly ragged clothing tied to a chair. There was also a thin,
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pale man with pitch-dark hair, holding a knife. The knife was rusty
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and fat from all the blood it had drank. I raised my Beretta at his
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head.
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``Hold it! Let him go!'' I ordered the killer.
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``No! Please, you don't understand,'' he said. His
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face was twisted by tears and rage. He raised his knife to impale
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the victim's face.
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``No, you don't understand. Put down your weapon, or I
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will shoot you,'' I ordered again. The rust-colored knife fell
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out of his hands. He was sobbing. I started untying the old man.
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The old man smelled like blood. I thought it was because he was
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injured.
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``No!'' screamed the murderer. ``Don't let him
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loose! He'll kill us both! He's a monster! You
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don't understand!''
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``You are the only monster here, pal!'' I untied the old
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man completely.
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Suddenly, the homeless man let out a horrid roar. It almost
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deafened me. I could not do anything to stop him. He flew at the
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murderer teeth-first, like a human-sized vulture, and tore at his
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neck. Blood the color of ripened apples exploded all over the tiny
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room, and shone bright red in the light of a single bulb. I fired
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my Beretta at what I had so incorrectly assumed was a victim. The
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recoil shot through my arm but he did not stop. He tore apart the
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man's skin, muscles, and arteries with horrible strength,
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even as I squeezed round after round into his back. His growls
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mixed with the sound of shells hitting the floor. Soon, the
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murderer was a pile of ruined meat.
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He turned around and looked at me with eyes dark as dry blood. I
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knew my gun could not stop him. I dove to grab the murderer's
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knife. I knew what I had to do. The old man dove to grab my
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throat.
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No one had ever solved that crime. I told the Chief of Police that
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I found two more victims in an old warehouse, but couldn't
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handle working the case any longer. The murders continued. Every
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month, a new homeless man was found cut open, with his heart carved
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out. The police knew it was all done with the same knife, but no
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one knew who was doing it.
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