mirror of https://github.com/nealey/Horrors2
157 lines
4.9 KiB
TeX
157 lines
4.9 KiB
TeX
\chapter{Invisible Monsters}
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\by{Ghost Hat}
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Nobody could see! Nobody could see! It was a nightmare. Abby ran
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for her life, as hard as she possibly could. What else was there to
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do when a monster was chasing you? Her lungs gasped for air already
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and her limps burned with exhaustion, but that thing didn't even
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breath hard.
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It wasn't the monster chasing her that frightened her the most
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though. It was the fact that she was the only one who could see
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it.
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Lurking about the corners. Hiding in the shadows. She thought it
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was her imagination. She thought she had been going insane. They
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said you showed the first signs of schi\-zo\-phre\-nia when you became a
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teenager. But then, it must have slipped up, for she had seen it
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squarely, with both eyes. What's more, it knew.
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And then it gave chase.
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Down the sidewalks, across the streets despite the busy roads. She
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must have been nearly killed five times by squealing cars. She
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barely kept herself from tripping several times down the steep
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hills. And still it chased her, it seemed to like watching her run.
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Enjoying itself perhaps. It loped in plain sight.
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But only she saw! Only Abby saw the monster. Everybody else saw a
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crazed girl running through the streets, no thought for her own or
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others' safety. How did Abby know this? Nobody had believed her
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when she said she was seeing things. Nobody screamed and ran
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despite the fact a monster ran loose upon the same streets. Maybe
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she {\em was} crazy, but she wasn't going to stop long enough to
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find out.
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How she wished she had paid better attention! Though even if
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she had spotted the creature earlier she would not have known how
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to defend herself against it. It had been following her for weeks
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though. Weeks in which some shadowy thing had been watching her,
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plotting against her{\ldots}
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No time! Abby ran.
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``You stupid kid!'' some guy screamed as Abby swerved past him. The
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streets were full of people, making it hard for Abby to run at full
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speed. She had to slow to dive and jump between and around them.
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And there were carts everywhere. The beast! The beast was catching
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up! Run! Run!
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An alleyway. Not a place she would normally go. That's wear drug
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addicts and homeless people hung out, but it meant there would be
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no people. No people meant no obstacles. Abby ra! She ran down the
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alleyway.
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It took a moment for Abby to realize her mistakes. People might
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have noticed if the monster had jumped her in front of them. Even
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if they couldn't see it, they would see that something wrong with
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her. With no people around, it could kill her in privacy. That was
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her first mistake. The other was that this alley ended with a brick
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wall. 10 feet high.
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{\em Oh no,} Abby thought, gasping for breath so hard she couldn't
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speak. She had enough to scream however. She felt the wind rushing
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by as the monster swooped in on wings of black. So close now that
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she could see purple in those leathery wings. So close she could
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see its gleaming yellow eyes. No pupils. Just shimmering metallic
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yellow.
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It swooped in and landed with a great gust of wind on the cement
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ground. It stood on two legs, like a man. But it was no man. Abby
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was suddenly trapped between the brick wall and it. And then it
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opened its mouth wide and inside it were hundreds of sharp, silver
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teeth. It hissed and Abby screamed as it bent forth to devour
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her.
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Another rush of air, but from behind the creature. A sudden blur
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and then the creature was on the ground, wings spread flat. It
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screamed a terrible scream and Abby covered her ears in terror.
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Animal instincts took over and she hid behind a dumpster, eyes
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squeezed shut, hands clamped over ears. She would never leave this
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place. She would stay, stay and hide forever.
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She did not see what had overcome the creature. All a blur. She did
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not see the man who had saved her until he tapped her on the
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shoulder, and then pulled her out much to her horror. It had to be
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that creature! That awful creature!
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``Agggh!'' she screamed as loudly as she could. Abby writhed and
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tried to break free, still blind. Still crazy. Still insane with
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fear.
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``Stop crying. You've been saved,'' said a voice. Abby
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looked up, blinking heavy tears from her eyes, and found a man. An
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ordinary man.
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Abby was silent, just staring in disbelief. Just a man. And behind
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him. Nothing. The creature was suddenly gone. As if it had never
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been there in the first place. She panted, sweating, hair a mess,
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skin as white as snow. Just a man. And yet. ''You saw it? You saw
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it?" she hissed, horrified for what the answer could be.
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``Of course I did,'' the man said in a voice as soothing
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as butter. ``And it's gone now. It will never bother you
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again.''
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Abby gave a choke of laughter and could not help but hug the man,
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her entire body trembling. The ordinary man reciprocated with one
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arm, his other sliding towards his back pocket. He thought, in a
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distant sort of way, that the child in his arms was warm. But the
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blood from her throat would be warmer.
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