mirror of https://github.com/nealey/Horrors2
274 lines
6.5 KiB
TeX
274 lines
6.5 KiB
TeX
\chapter{Yellow Eyes}
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\by{A Child's Letter}
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``I'm not lying, Daddy!'' whimpered Kaitilin Axelplax, a six-year old
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girl with an admittedly active imagination. ``I promise
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you---{\em promise} you---that I saw it again! Saw
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{\em them} again!''
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Hubert Axelplax smiled his sick and twisted smile while
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nonchalantly wiping the rust-colored tobacco drippings oozing down
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his chin. Delicately, he set his Coors on ane Igloo cooler doubling
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as an end table.
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``Kai, what've I told you 'bout {\em lyin',} you little
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{\em bitch!''} Without warning---though she knew it was
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coming---Hubert, with speed belying his significantly
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overweight frame, backhanded Kaitilin, sending her flying into the
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wall. She collapsed in a heap, knocking over a floor lamp in the
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process.
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She stood, fought to find her balance, then, reeling from the blow,
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vomited profusely all over the threadbare couch. Rust-colored blood
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seeped wistfully from her gashed eyebrow.
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``I {\em swear,} Daddy! I saw the thing with yellow eyes! It was in
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the mirror!'' Again, she threw up. Hubert took three long strides
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towards his daughter's trembling form and unbuckled his belt in one
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fluid motion.
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``You're {\em just} like her, you know that? Just like that
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{\em whore} of a mother of yours!''
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He raised the heavy leather strap above his wickedly grinning head
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and---
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* * *
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Luke Bavarious' radio cackled to life: {\em All units, we've got a
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10-34 near Forty-second and somewhere near Dyer. Possible 10-45;
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10-52.}
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Distractedly, Bavarious holstered his Beretta, taking a moment to
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admire its clean lines, its intoxicating heaviness.
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Suicide would have to wait.
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He took one last, long drag on his cigarette, then tossed the
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remainder out the window of his car. Baravious picked up his radio
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and responded, ``Dispatch, this is Bavarious. I'm in the vinicity;
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10-76. I'll check it out. Over.''
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{\em 10-4, Bavarious. Out.}
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For the first time in a long time, Bavarious smiled. Nothing like
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an old fashioned assault with possibly fatalities to enliven the
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night. He had to admit it: he liked this work.
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Within minutes, Bavarious arrived at his destination. He parked in
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an alley and realized he must be the first officer on the scene.
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Everything seemed eerily quiet---especially for New York. Like
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liquid, with practiced movement, he unholstered his sidearm and
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kicked in the door.
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The apartment building's lobby was empty. Bavarious involuntarily
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shivered, then made his way up the first flight of stairs. As he
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walked gingerly through the halls, when he was just outside of
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apartment 209, he thought he heard muffled giggling. He realized it
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was the only sound he'd heard since entering the structure.
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Adopting a professional demeanor, he knocked.
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No one answered.
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He knocked again and followed with: ``Police! Open up!''
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He thought he could faintly make out the sounds of a children's
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program, probably coming from a television. The giggling subsided,
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replaced with whispered commands. Something ponderous within the
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apartment dragged---or was dragged---across the
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floor.
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Then, silence.
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Bavarious was about to knock again when, suddenly, the door opened,
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and a little girl---no more than six or seven, answered.
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``Hello, Officer!'' she giggled. Bavarious surveyed her quizzically,
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noted the poorly bandaged laceration above her eye, then looked
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past her into the depths of the apartment's foyer. He thought he
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glimpsed something twist subtly in the shadows. He blinked.
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``Uh, good evening, Miss. Are your parents home?''
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``I don't h---I mean, no, officer, they're not. My mama died
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when I was little, and my daddy, he's{\ldots}um{\ldots}he's---''
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She seemed to cock her head, as though hearing an inaudible
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voice.
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``---he's out buying more beer.'' She suppressed a laugh.
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``Is he?'' mused Bavarious. ``Miss, what happened to your
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forehead?''
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Suddenly, the girl's demeanor changed, plunging from sunny to
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downright icy.
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``Officer, it's past my bedtime. I need to---you need to
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leave.''
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``Mi---''
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``{\em Right} now.''
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Though he couldn't explain it, Bavarious sensed an impossible
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authority in her voice. An authority that hadn't been there moments
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ago. He glanced at her again and thought for a moment her eyes were
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glowing, yellow, bending his will to hers. He shook his head and
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looked back into the apartment---anything to get away from that
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jaundiced gaze! That's when he noticed what appeared to be a
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rust-colored trail leading from an overturned Igloo cooler toward
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another room in the apartment.
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``I'm afraid I can't do that, Miss,'' he intoned as he brushed past
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her, intently avoiding her piercing eyes.
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Curiously, she said nothing.
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His Beretta held out before him, a talisman against the darkness,
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he followed the trail into a bathroom. There, in the tub and amid
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the stink of beer and feces, lay the body of what Bavarious assumed
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was the little girl's father. The man's belt was still clutched in
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his hand.
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The man's hand was resting on the countertop, a good seven or eight
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feet away from the rest of him.
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Unable to control his emotions, Bavarious puked all over the fetid
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corpse, displacing several flies. As the chunks rolled slowly down
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the disemboweled form, giggling erupted from behind him. He
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jumped.
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``I told you you needed to leave,'' breathed the little girl, whose
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eyes had ceased glowing and now positively {\em surged} with
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wicked yellow light. He noticed for the first time that her hands
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were the color of rust.
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Bewitched, Bavarious could do nothing as her arms shimmered and
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became a writhing mass of tentacles. He told his brain to send an
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impulse to his trigger finger, but it wouldn't obey him. It had a
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new master now.
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{\em Good night, Officer Bavarious.} projected the little
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gi---
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{\em Her name is Kaitilin. How do I know that? How d---}
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{\em I---yes, good night, Kaitilin. I'll{\ldots}be{\ldots}going{\ldots}now.
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If{\ldots}if that's all right{\ldots}}
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* * *
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Luke Bavarious awoke outside of an apartment building somewhere
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near Forty-second Street and Dyer Avenue, sprawled across the hood
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of his car. The sun had just begun to rise above the tangled mass
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of skyscrapers all around him. His mouth tasted like vinegar, and
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he smelled like a slaughterhouse.
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``What am I doing here,'' he wondered aloud.
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The sun thrust a glinting beam of radiance through a break in the
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buildings; it fell with purpose on a second-story window of the
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apartments in front him. Following its path, he thought for a
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moment he saw two points of yellow light blink, then vanish.
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``Weird,'' he muttered.
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