Death By Analysis (Ch. 1)
Chapter 1.
He dodged the third vase that had been launched into the air, moving to hide behind the door as it smashed into the wall beside it. Giving it a second, he leaned hesitantly around the door.
“Lily! Lilllyyy, common. You have to- oop!” He slunk back behind it just as the fourth and final vase in the room shattered to jagged bits against the wooden frame. Good. She was out of ammo. Groaning, Sam took in a long deep breath and closed his eyes. The reaction was expected. He could deal with this. They just had to take it one step at a time. Grey eyes opening back up, he looked to the side as he leaned his head against the door. “Lily? You good now?”
Good? Good?! She was most definitely not ‘good’. Scrambling back onto the bed in the middle of the room, she teetered sideways as she stripped off one heel, holding it poised as her final weapon. Chest heaving, her long black hair splayed over her shoulders and over the top of the grey evening dress, her frazzled state a stark contrast to its elegant folds as she took a defensive position.
A disappointed curve twisted Sam’s lips when he received no reply, knowing from the sounds of the room beyond that she was once again using the bed as a strategic high ground at which to attack from. Running one hand tensely through his short black hair, he gave her one more moment before he fixed the collar of his white dress shirt and stepped out from behind his shield.
–
-Two weeks prior-
–
Red jowls flapped in their flurried cadence as Talyor Hartaway, a sparely bearded pudgy fellow and Lily’s 2 o’clock appointment, paced around the room in his usual flustered manner, fervently explaining the prejudice cast upon him by his mother. His words had turned into a garble of accusations and undue bias that had become a white noise as Lily kept her eyes locked on him, head gently tilting in a knowing nod; a puppetry show that she’d perfected over time. In truth, Lilly White didn’t care what Mr. Hartaway had to say, nor was she listening in the least.
Was it her job to care? It was supposed to be, but what good was there in listening to someone who didn’t want to be fixed and, upon aiding in any way, would storm out only to return again the next week, explaining the same thing he did before. No, Lily had given up on him long ago. Given up on him, the nooner before him, Mr. Headington, and given up on her other two Monday moaners, Mrs. Janell and Mr. Rathwod, as well (a term that Jane, her secretary, had lovingly given them).
Once Hartaway went into his normal ending tirade, facing the windows while he ‘spoke’ to the world, Lily’s icy gaze turned towards the various certifications and degrees on the wall. Sure, they looked great adorning it, but the tiny pieces of paper could do little for a therapist who’d lost all hope that there was any chance of doing real good for her patients. Years ago, when her cliental had still been people scraping together money to pay her fees, the story had been different. They had struggles and real issues and, most of all, they all wanted help. To change. To become better people.
Now, however, as her eyes disdainfully returned to Hartaway, she was vividly reminded that, as the amount she was paid went up, the amount she cared about the work had gone down. The cliental had changed, her reputation raking in people who could afford to page the high wages of the Windy city, and who were all too willing to give it to her at weekly intervals. Sure, there were a few people who need help and came to her, but the vast majority that visited her each week were people with too much time on their hands and too few social skills to figure out what to do with it.
Lily let her eyes wander to the clock, straightening her position in her chair as she realized it was already 3:45, fifteen minutes over Hartaway’s normal time.
“Yes,” she broke in, not hesitating in the least to make a comment though she hadn’t been listening, “well, I believe you’re getting things on the right road, Mr. Hartaway. From what you’ve expressed to me this afternoon, I can say you’re making some pretty good progress. I suggest that, for next week, you look back over your reflections and really think about what you’re feeling. Write them down, and then bring them in so we can go over them together.”
For the eleventh time.
Sputtering to a stop, Hartaway went to verify the time on the clock before giving a hurried nod. “Yes. Yes. You’re right. Self reflection should undoubtedly answer my questions.”
He was quite the expert, wasn’t he?
Fumbling with his jacket, he straightened it out as he headed towards the door, shooting Lily a smile and a mock salute.
“Same time next week and you can bet I’ll be thinking on those things, and I’ll have a novel for you no doubt!”
Lily smiled warmly, motioning to the door. “And please leave it open this time, if you would, Mr. Hartway. I look forwards to next week.” Her calm, warm composure that existed by default never failed to leave her clients with a positive feeling, and Hartaway gave her a wider smile before he shuffled quickly out the door.
Puffing the breath into her cheeks, she slowly let it escape her lips as she rose to walk across the room to her desk. Plopping down behind the glass desktop, she stuffed Hartaway’s untouched file in the bottom drawer, fingers dancing across the name tabs as she ran further back into the alphabet, stopping once she reached the blue tab marked with the letter S.
A smile curled warmly across her lips as she reached for one of the files. Picking it up, she splayed it open on her desk as her eyes ran over the typed case notes. A shimmer returning to them, Lily White felt a small surge of rejuvenation enter her bones as she flipped through the pages; she was about to reach her favorite part of Monday’s. After a few moments of looking over last week’s notes, her eyes danced to the clock on her computer screen and, as one more single moment flipped over to 3:55, her gaze turned expectantly towards the doorway.
Impeccably on time, in strode the man whom Lily felt held the world in his eyes, one Mr. Samuel Oliver Guise. Sam was the iconic philanthropist playboy, the type that movies fought to portray and yet somehow cheapened. Unlike the silver screened depictions of his stereotype, Lily had been surprised to find a man who spent a great deal of time avoiding the spotlight all while completing actions that should have placed him within it. The last charity dinner he held had raised over three million in a single evening from a small crowd who had enjoyed the full moon on one of Hawaii’s most illustrious beaches. Of course he had played modest while regaling her with the story, but it wasn’t hard to tell just how extravagant of an venture it had been. However, despite the numerous things he had done, in the end his life had delivered him to her and, each week he spent on her couch had only further revealed two things: One, Samuel Oliver Guise felt there there was something missing from his life and, two, that he desperately wanted to fix the problem.
“Good Evening, Lily,” he chimed as he sauntered in, taking off his jacket to throw over one arm as he approached the suede couch. “How is my favorite shrink today? Seems like you might have have a tough one,” he smiled, grin always the same no matter how much he complained of feeling worn thin. Pointing behind him, he gestured towards the door. “The walrus seemed particularly red-faced today. Sure you don’t need a few moments? I’ve got a new game and a high score that’s just dying to be beat.”
Politely smiling, Lily shook her head with a small laugh. “I’m fine. And, no, that is quite alright. Some people just tend to get a little…heated more so than others when letting things out. It’s like the way peppers get the blood flowing. Ranting just lets the mind open up.”
Sam took his seat as Lily gestured to it, sinking into the couch and leaning back, a soft sigh escaping past his lips; a reminder to her that he truly enjoyed coming here. Each and every time the man sat down on the couch, it seemed as though his mind began to relax, shoulders releasing from their perfectly held poise. The bright look in his eyes retired to its quarters, replacing itself with the tired true gaze he held only for behind closed doors.
Knowing his routine, her eyes flickered to his pocket an instant before he reached for his cell phone, turning it off before shoving it into the inner pocket of his jacket. It was her cue to begin. She rose from her desk, moving over to the chair seated just three feet away from the couch to the left. Her hands folded gently in her lap as she leaned back, eyes running over him one last time before raising up to slowly meet his gaze.
“So, how was Venice?”
“Oh, you know, terrible. I mean, all the extravagant buildings, the culture, the fact there’s water everywhere,” Sam replied sarcastically, infectious grin spreading across his face. “Nah, it was lovely. When is Venice not lovely? Well, it has its days, I’m sure but even when I lived there it always has its charm”
“You lived in Venice? That’s a new one.”
Nodding his head, Guise replied, “Yeah. It was a while back. Right before I ended up moving back to Colorado.”
She chuckled. “I can’t imagine what it was like, going from scenery like that to-“
“To mountains and far less moisture? It set well with me at the time, believe me. Always been a fan of snow myself.”
“I see. So it was a welcomed move. Well, did you head to any places that held fond memories? Maybe somewhere you liked to haunt back when you lived there?” Lily shifted forwards, leaning on the arm of her chair.
The man who had his heart open to everyone seemed to keep himself, both physically and emotionally, at a distance. His movements, even while subtle and calculated, couldn’t evade Lily’s trained gaze. As she shifted to the right to lean on the arm of the chair, he gently shift how he was sitting to maintain a perfect distance. Hiding it as though he intended to face her more, it was something she had figured out nearly a half a year back, noting that even while his emotions were loosened, he stuck to his guns on his rules for personal space.
“Yeah. I took your suggestion and tried to…reconnect with places I had been before. Think back to how I felt then and how I feel now.” He paused for a few moments, eyes gazing across the room as he tried to summon up the words he wanted to find. “I went back to a few places and, yeah, they were good reminders of different places in my life. Nothing like getting nostalgia for younger years, right?”
She smiled warmly but stayed silent, knowing that pensive look in his eyes. He had more to say.
Eyes resting on the coffee table in front of him, he continued “It was strange, but I remembered little things that I thought I’d forgotten. Things like how people’s steps sounded against that old ground. How the murmur of certain accents were more appealing to my ears. That smell in the air when a good strong breeze comes riding in. There was this one corner I used to always walk along and, even though it’s been built up after all these years, some of the same buildings are still there. If I raised my head up and gazed towards the sky, I got this feeling like I was back there again. Back in time to those earlier years. And I just stood there and the memories came flooding back to me. Faces, voices, images of late nights strolling the streets and days sitting at cafés.” Guise closed his eyes, summoning the sensations back to him that he’d bottled up just to bring back to Lily’s office.
Lily leaned back as she listened, allowing Guise to move forwards a little as he elaborately explained emotions that he felt attached to certain things, not knowing why he specifically felt that way about them. He told her of the summoned memories, and how some of them had made him feel distant rather than closer at odd intervals. He felt as though part of his time had been lost and could never be recaptured and yet he regained a small shard of hope, a youthful ideal as he called it, that lifted his spirits.
For a solid hour and a half, the two sat talking back and forth, Sam doing most of the talking though he was one of the rare few who actually stopped to ask questions. Not just “do you think I’m crazy” or “Am I a bad person for-“ questions, but ones that he’d obviously thought over during their time away. He reached out through deep interpretations of his own feelings, always sounding so jaded to the woman who was the same in age. He sat and poured out every ounce of though he could think to give her and Lily sat enthralled through it all, cataloging his comments in her memory in order to access for later reflection.
Sam was so forthcoming with his emotions and yet, in the same way he constantly regulated his need for personal space, there was a piece of him that he always held back. This too failed to escape Lily’s intuitive nature, and as he spoke she noted when he paused or lingered on a word too long. His eyes would search back and forth on the ground, as if trying to carefully choose another word than the one that had popped into his mind first. Occasionally, he’d stall mid sentence switching over to a similar idea, but obviously not the one he had been going to talk about. Making mental notes of each one, most of Lily’s physical notes on Sam were centered around this guarded mystery of the man who was reaching out and yet refused to touch an extended hand.
So infatuated with his dilemmas and personal introspection, it was Guise who finally leaned back and gazed towards the clock. “Woah. Bit over the clock today, doc,” he smiled sheepishly in an apologetically.
Lily’s eyes snapped to the hands on the wall, giving a soft nod of her head. “It’s quite alright. I’ve got another two hours free before my late nighter stops in. “
“You do those?” he asked. Realizing she had never mentioned it before, she gave a curt nod.
“I do. Many of my clients need to come in during their off hours and I stay a little later than most people work to see that they have someone to talk to. One downside of the job happens to be very little free time.”
“And thus why I decided to help people from afar. Doing good at a distance. It’s best for both parties involved that way,” he smirked as he moved to stand, grabbing his jacket. Sliding it back on, he took out his phone, turned it back on and returned it to his pant’s pocket. Lily rose to stand with him, giving him one of her warm smiles.
“You’re doing wonderfully, Sam. Honest. You’re already making progress and it’s only been about eight months. Had I anyone to brag to, I’d tell them you were my most promising client,” Lily said as she turned around and walked a few steps back, moving out of Sam’s way. “Now, I know I spent most of the time listening tonight but next week I’d like to spend some time going back over a few points that you’ve made. I think there’s quite a few things to work on,” she smiled as she raised her chin, her eyes holding an approving pride for the man’s progress. She really had hope for him.
Sam nodded his head. “Alright, well I’ll be looking forwards to it then and, Lily,” he paused eyes going to her hand for a moment before back up at her. “Thank you. I honestly can say I feel a great deal better since I’ve been talking to you.” He’d said that after every time and, surprisingly, Lily felt it was genuine compliment. As Guise turned, he parted his lips a little bit, seeming to always have more he wanted to say. Though she normally let him slide, wanting Sam to come around without feeling pressured, she decided to give it another shot tonight.
“And I always feel as though I’ve helped you made some progress, despite things that you hold back,” she answered quickly as she paced back to her desk, back facing to him as she reached to mess with the papers that were sitting atop it. “I understand that there are things that just take time to surface, and talking about the issues that make up the walls surrounding it will eventually help it come out, however, I just want you to realize that I am always here if you decide you need to talk before then.”
Guise watched her with a look of constrained pain, eyes screaming that he had more to say but, as always, he blinked it away with long lashes and choked it back with a charming grin. “Thank you, Lily. I appreciate it. I’ll be sure to call if anything comes up,” he replied, and her lips mouthed the exact words as she faced away from him, settling into a sad smile when finished. She listened as his footsteps headed towards the door and she turned back around, taking a seat at her desk.
Pausing abruptly, Sam stood in the doorway, head tilted to the side before he sighed, eyes dropping to the floor. Spinning on his heels, he turned to look back at Lily who was now rummaging through the files on her desk, having expected the man to leave as planned. His eyes lingered over her for a moment and, as she leaned forward to rest an elbow on her desk, soothing her forehead with one hand, he smiled.
“Lily,” he called softly, though the woman startled anyways, quite accustomed to their normal routine. When she finally lifted her head to look to him, he just let his eyes scan the room and the window as he asked, “Anyway you can pencil me in for tomorrow night? There’s somethings that I’d really like to get off my chest. Maybe rant a little myself. Free up my mind a bit.”
Her mind stalled for a moment, the opportunity she had been waiting for all this time coming as quite a surprise. However, she quickly stammered out a “S-sure. I mean, of course. I’veee-“she instantly turned to her computer, flipping up her schedule. “I’m open any time after seven.”
Smiling , Guise nodded softly. “Alright. Dinner it is then. I’ll bring the food, you just bring that mind of yours.” He paced back a few steps with a hesitant worry surfacing within his light gaze. Finally he gave one last nod before spinning around and heading quickly out the door.
Lily’s eyes lingered there for several moments more, heart swelling at the fact that he’d finally cracked. She’d known that, eventually, he’d want to get everything out there. It had all just been a matter of time and Lily had patiently awaited it, nudging him towards it with gentle suggestions and understanding smiles. Rising from her desk, she took in a deep breath as the exhaustion that came every Monday settled in over her body though her mind refused to come down off its emotional high; she was finally going to get the bottom of the mystery that was Mr. Samuel Oliver Guise.
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Well, there’s chapter one all finished up. Hopefully you’ve enjoyed the introduction of these two characters. Truth be told, Lily was a late edition as I swapped out the original therapist for her, feeling as though Guise and here had a bit more chemistry than my first choice. Mind you, this is a work in progress and I am finishing each chapter week by week, so you’re seeing this as I’m writing it. Even though I have the story structure down, I still am a bit apprehensive about posting these rough drafts! Well, as always, I would love to hear your comments (even though this was a bit brief) and here’s to hoping you have an awesome rest of the week! Also, as before, you can expect to see Ch. 2 coming your way next Weds!
He’s In the Details (Story 1, Pt. 3)
(Continued from Part 1 which can be found by clicking here. )
(And Part 2 which can be found here.)
“Lonny?” the fuzzy voice wafted in my ears, repeating again shortly after. “Lonny Boy.”
My eyes slowly blinked open as I fought to focus in on the form above me. Only about an inch from my face, our noses nearly touching, was the strange mutated sheep-esc face of Phos. As my mind had not yet solidified his face to memory, there was little I could do at such a terrible sight other than scream, lashing out with two unmanly slaps that caught the equally startled Phos across the face, causing the devil to let out a strange bleating as he scrambled back.
As soon as he was away from me, I instantly sat up, chest heaving as everything came quickly back to me; however, everything was still a bit hard to take as I gazed about the room, eyes first going to the window, realizing how low the sun must be in the sky for it to be that dark outside. As I began to recall what happened, I turned my head down to the side, checking under the end table and finding that Ninny was still there, eyes still wide and unblinking. The tilting of my head sent a rush of pounding blood to it that it had obviously not requested, making my pulse beat loudly in my ears. Groaning, I reached up and gingerly touched my sore skull, finding a bit of wetness there.
“Well, nearly made a liar out of me, Lonny! Heh. Would have been the first man I killed if youuuu-,” Phos stopped himself, clearing his throat as he decided against finishing his joke.
As I brought my hand in front of my alarmed eyes, I found the blood there to be dark, a sign that it had been dry for quite some while and, thankfully, upon examining my skull, I found it wasn’t cause for panic. With a relieved sigh, I let my head fall forwards into my hands, trying to sooth the pounding.
It was only when the buzzer at my front door began to sound in rapid succession that I came back to the moment, having felt foggy minded since the fall. Standing sluggishly, I slowly made my way to the door. Opening it, I gazed out at the devil who was laughing his head as he continuously pushed his nail into the soft doorbell, ringing it even as it stood there.
“Ha! Bet that is driving you crazy. Well, why don’t you try this on for size?!” He slammed his nail down one last time, making the button stick to cause the ringing to continue.
I slowly reached out, gently thudding my fist against the wall next it. The sound stopped as the button became dislodged. Phos stared at the button, going silent as his nose twitched a few times. I turned around and began to walk back in. The sound of his hooves against the ground followed me in, leaving the door open. I moved back to my chair near the table, turning to look up to him as he walked past me, his eyes going up to the clock.
“Oh, time flies when you are having fun! Going to have to be on my way soon,” he said with a snort before turning and looking towards the box. He reached out, poking it with one hand.
“But…it’s only five o’clock,” I muttered, eyes glancing up towards it was well before back at the demon. “The box says you’re here for the day, right?”
“Awww, hate to cut the date short myself, Lonny Boy, but those are the rules.”
“But the box s-“
“Yeah, yeah,” he muttered, waving me off with a bit of annoyance in his voice. “I know what it says, but damned enchanter was a two bit, so it’s a little off. Do you know how hard it is to get someone to make one of those things? And not even to mention the price of having something engraved again, especially these days! Anyways, noticed you didn’t have any candy for tonight,” he said with a wave of his hand, motioning towards a large stack of candy in a bright green bowl.
“I…where did you get that?” I wasn’t quite sure I wanted to know.
“Good ol’ thunder thighs house. You know she wasn’t going to pass out most of it out anyways,” he snorted with a chuckle.
I shook my head, sighing; I was so sure Mary was going to find out. Never did, but I was on edge for a good few weeks afterwards, avoiding her at every turn.
I slowly arose from my chair, walking over to pick up the bowl of candy, holding it my arms. I couldn’t remember that last time I’d taken part in Halloween. I was always traveling about, forgetting about such things I deemed childish.
As I ran my hand through the colorful assortment of mixed candy bars and little wrapped truffles, I distantly asked, “Like Halloween, do you?”
“Food, fun, and frightened children; what’s not to like, Lonny?” Phos answered with his, by now, signature snort.
My eyes rose from the bowl to the devil who was busy inspecting the box, fingers running along its ominous exterior as he smiled, silently gloating over how terrifying it looked. I stared at his back, realizing how at ease I felt with him in that moment. There was it, the thing I had been looking for all this time, though it was quite different than I had expected. Sure, he wasn’t about to eat my ears while he made me watch or anything such as interestingly gruesome, but it still it was something more. Something else out there that-
Phos suddenly raised his head, as if hearing some far distant sound, and I could feel it within me, knowing it was time. My eyes briefly raised to the clock, noting the time was exactly five-twelve. It was then that my mind recalled the question I possessed before taking my little tumble.
“Phos! Wait, where do you-“
“No time for questions now, Lonny. Gotta be on my way,” reaching down, the devil placed his hand on the box to open it, though paused, eyes turning back to me. “Hey, Lonny boy!” I’ll never forget that pose he was standing in. He was looking back over his shoulder as he crouched over the box (hooves slicing into my once flawless wooden table). For a long moment, our gazes met, my green to his yellow, the silence between us was only accented by the suddenly loud tick-tick-tick of the seconds hand on the clock. Then, the same wide grin I had first seen him with spread steadily across his face and he gave a hearty, “Happy Halloween”.
Then, as quickly as he had come, he was gone. No flashes of smoke, no dissipating into a cloud of bats. It was just as though he never existed at all. It was a blink of reality shifting, of worlds changing. I slowly brought my gaze down towards the now closed box. I stood there for a long while just thinking, the brisk October wind filling the room as it blew out the firelight. It’s strange how your mind wants to deny what you’ve seen once its gone, tries to change it. Even as I stood there, just moments after he had ransacked my house, that doubting belief crept into my thoughts. What if he wasn’t re-
“TRICK OR TREAT!”
With another squeaky scream, the candy came up into the air before it clattered across the ground in a rainbow rainstorm of sugar and cellophane. At the door, the small group of children and one adult who had gathered were giggling profusely, the leader of their dubious troop dressed in his all red costume that was, what else, but that of the cliché devil. The humor was not lost on me at the time and once I managed to pry myself from the spot, I joined them in their laughs.
“Alright, alright. Jokes on me, come and get your earnings. You can have whatever hit the floor,” which appeared to be half of what had been in the bowl to begin with.
The energetic children all entered in, the accompanying parent watching as they scrambled across the floor in an attempt to score the biggest share. Halfway through their rummaging, a bright pink fairy stopped in mid grab, head turned to the side. She stood up and walked back over to me, tugging gently on my sleeve. Confused, I silently walked over with her a few feet before she stopped, pulling me down with a point.
“Mister,” she muttered softly, and I allowed my eyes to be directed across the wooden floor into the corner to a dark shadow under the end table. There, still perfectly petrified in a state of eternal poof, sat Ninny still gazing blankly out towards the direction of the living room. Letting me go at last, both I and the little girl stood up as she thoughtfully , and most correctly stated, “ I think there’s something wrong with your cat.”
–
–
–
She’s never really recovered from that night, you know. Neither have I, for that matter. I spent a good deal of the time after (what wasn’t spent cleaning, of course) walking around in sort of a haze. There were so many things now that finally came into my mind to ask him now that the shock was gone. Well, now that it has lessened, I should say. Where exactly was it that he went to? What else had been here in this world? Who were these other-kinds that he mentioned so vaguely? What more was there? More maddening than not knowing if there was something more was knowing there was, in fact, something more but not knowing anymore about it! Oh dear, that sentence is just a mess as the thought itself…
Attempting to be a little clearer and more concrete, I should say that I now had more questions than when I began. There was more than I could have ever imagined possible that came through that solitary, little box. I’d learned that it was possible for objects to hold more than intent, more than what now seemed like meager human emotions. They held worlds. They held demons. They held, above all, endless possibilities.
However, I must also add this: no matter how maddening my questions can seem, I appear to have a leg up over all those philosophers who are left pacing back and forth with no answers in sight. My answers, you see, are only months away. Mere hours, really. Of course it’s June now but, really, what are five months compared to the scheme of things? I mean, I haven’t even moved the box, you see. It’s still there, still is sitting, on that damaged table just feet beyond my favorite chair. It’s right there under that clock, across from that fireplace, just waiting.
Waiting for those twelve strokes to chime and then, for all the questions in my mind to be answered. What else was there? Where did that portal lead? What did Phos mean when he’s said he’d look in on Mary when he returned? But, above all, there was one question that continued, in my mind, to reign supreme: what in the hell could a demon need with three sets of underwear, fifteen pieces of silverware, a power brick for a lap top, a coffee pot (minus the machine), two light switch covers, the bell off a cat’s collar, and one Men’s Health magazine?
Apparently, my not so dastardly friend had been busy while I was asleep.
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Well, that wraps up the first draft of Lonny and Phos’ first encounter! Yes, I eventually fell as though I will be writing more of these two together, having fun figuring out the scheme of things. However, that’s all for now, folks! This lil’ story here is done, though I must admit I toyed back and forth with which ended I wanted, and ended choosing this one above the other possibilities. Now, for next week, I’m working on a little story called Death By Analysis which isn’t in first person, so that means I’ll be a bit more back in my element. You see, I’ve never really written first person other than this story so the next one might seem a little more coherent. Well, sort of coherent. Besides, how coherent can a story about a therapist and her favorite client turning out to be a- well, I don’t want to ruin it. I guess you’ll just have to come and read for yourself 😉
He’s In the Details (Story 1, Pt. 2)
(Continued from Part 1 which can be found by clicking here. )
The soft light of morning, along with some rhythmic sound, called me awake. My eyes fluttered open as I stared at the familiar ceiling of my bedroom, realizing the distinct feel of my own bed. I slowly parted my lips, tongue running out to wet their cracked and dried exterior. As if summoned by one of its symptoms, my head began a dull throb that was only accentuated by the soft, constant sound of a leaky pipe dripping in a stead succession. I had my fair share of intoxicated evenings, but this one had taken the cake. Slowly, a smirk came across my features as I recalled the demon that had been devised by my large volume of drinks. I gave a soft chuckle before letting out a long, relieved sigh. Hallucination or not, the box had to go. Better safe than sorry. In fact, that whole back room that had been so precious at once could be auctioned off. Yes, that was the first thing I would do today, get all my unwanted junk together and haul the lot out to the auction house, right after I fixed that leaky pipe. I was surprised I had let it get so out of hand in the first place with the rate it was going at. Besides, last time the pluming needed work-
It was then that I remembered that, in the old style design of the house, I had no bathroom attached to my bedroom and the nearest pipe was an entire hall length away.
Perplexed, I sat up, eyes instantly widening at the sight of the devil sitting on top of my dresser, hand under his chin and a bored expression slapped across his features as he parted his lips in a steady succession, letting out a flawless imitation of a leaky faucet.
Slamming against my headboard only allowed for about six inches more of space between him and I, but no distance could have been too short. A small smirk slowly fell across his features as he uncrossed his legs from beneath him, jumping forwards onto the floor.
“Rise and shine, Lonny boy! Were you going to sleep the day away?” he teased as he came to lean on one of my bedposts, head tilting to the left as he looked over at me. “Oh, I severely hope it’s the drink that makes you look that way! I’d avoid a mirror if I were you, might just break!” He turned away from me, clacking nosily out of the room and down the stairs.
I just sat there, eyes wide on the doorway. It was the shock of last night all over again; however, I mustered the strength to follow after him cautiously. To my surprise, the house was in a complete state of disarray with chairs in the foyer not pushed in, random clothing articles draped here and there as if my house had been the site of some wild frat party. Plates and bowls that were half full on the counter; apparently he had been just as clueless as I on what exactly it was intending on eating.
As I ventured out after him, I stole quick glances around my house, realizing that my keys along with my wallet were missing from atop the shelf near the door and that my mail had been scattered about; a few personal letters that had been opened were now discarded on the floor. I stopped suddenly as I realized some dark matter had been spattered about my door, rimming the handle as well. Blood. It had to be blood. I hesitantly stepped forwards before reaching one hand out, swiping at it. No, too sticky. I gave it a sniff; it was chocolate.
I finally found him standing in the entry way, awkwardly pushing down one leg on a board that he seemed intently focused on. So, I just stood there for a few long moments before finally realizing he wasn’t paying attention to me at all and this, for some reason, seemed to summon a bit of courage in myself. I watched him as he shifted his weight back and forth, observing just how strange of a beast he was. It was then that my mind had the reprieve it needed to focus and, in that flicker of thought devoid by fear, I became curious to what exactly he was.
“So…, um, sir, what-,” I cleared the cowardice from my voice, “What do I call you?”
For a long moment he didn’t answer me as he seemed intent on the floor board under his right hoof. He was pressing on it, brow furrowed as he watched it closely. He suddenly stopped once before pressing down on it again. Then, a second time. Finally, when he pressed his weight on it again, the board creaked. Finished in his task and pleased with the results, he finally turned his attention towards me.
“Well,” he said thoughtfully, “what you monkeys seem to be able to pronounce is…hmm, well, you can call me Phos.” Finding something funny, he smiled to himself before saying“ It’s what Mary called me too, though she more frequently called me an aggravating little bastard but,” he flicked a hand into the air with a chuckle, “speak nothing but good about the dead.”
“Phos,” I repeated with a bit of hesitance. That was definitely not what I expected. Something along the lines of Lucifer, or of Hellspawn would have been more fitting. Something longer and with more than one syllable at the very least.
Playing with the board one final time, he had returned his gaze back towards him, hands on his furry hips. For a long moment, we were both just silent as we met eye to eye. It was an awkward, shared silence though, and Phos seemed just as unsettled as I. He turned to look about the house. I felt compelled to say something.
“So, y-you knew my name. You know, back there…just a few moments ago.”
“Yep,” he answered, twitching his nose.
“I…well, how did you know t-hat name?” I squeaked.
“Cat told me,” Phos answered plainly
“Oh, I-…excuse me? The cat? What cat?”
“You’re cat, Ninny. Big black one. Has a bit of a stuttering problem.”
“My cat….told you the nickname? The one that I hate?” I was a little bewildered.
He sighed, tilting his head as he looked towards me as he shrugged. “You shouldn’t call her fat, all I’m sayin’.”
I didn’t quite know how to respond to that, both confused that he could talk to my cat and that that she apparently understood what I was saying enough to know that I called her fat. As I contemplated this, a few more moments of silence passed between us again. Phos sighed, looking back and forth before finally turning to me.
“So, got any cattle out back?”
“No,” I asked hesitantly, worrying that this was some sort of trick question as I lived in a well spaced, but also well populated urban area.
“Oh…..chickens, perhaps?” His tone seemed a little hopeful.
“No…no chickens,” I answered.
“Oh,” he grunted with a frown before he turned away, slowly stalking through the downstairs hallway, looking in and out of rooms for things he hadn’t yet disturbed. He finally turned into the bathroom. I hesitantly followed behind.
As he began rummaging through drawers, I stared distantly at the back of his shaggy head. It was a disarming view of him, really. His ears seemed a little too large and floppy behind his gigantic horns which I began to wonder how his thin neck could possible support. Not having to contend with that unnerving gaze and hellish smile, my mind had been freed to wander over his countenance and, more importantly, his purpose. I didn’t have trouble as I had already figured out, with little hesitation, that he obviously was some other worldly beast, however, what he was doing here (other than unrolling and squeezing the toothpaste unevenly back into its tube) was quite a mystery to me. For some reason, it just didn’t feel as though I’d unleashed some great evil in the world unless it was an evil with OCD who intended to upset every little corner of the universe, starting with my own.
I really hadn’t wanted to ask the question out loud, but it was a wonder that had begun to bubble over in my mind. Taking in a deep breath, I finally steeled my resolve. “So,” I called out to him, keeping a little ways back just in case. “When are you going to get to the whole… being evil…thing? The damnation and such,” I asked cautiously, my voice trailing off as I lost what little confidence I had mustered. “I-I mean, not that I am rushing you, er- sir. I just was wondering what your…plans were for the world, and all. Now that you’re free for a day.”
“Damnation?” he mumbled over his shoulder, not seeming too interested in the conversation.
“Well, yes. You know, being evil and all that. The-the tormenting souls, and condemning the world sort of..thing.”
“Oh, that,” he called back over his shoulder as he removed the toilet paper from the roll and placed it back on backwards. Giving a pleased grin towards it, he stood back to face me. “ You know, there’s not much variety in your humans. Every time another one of you gets the box, it’s always the same thing. I’m getting tired of explaining this, but for the sake of brevity and your curious mind, I’ll say it again. That’s you’re department, Lonny.”
“My department?”
He grinned widely. “Yes. Well, or should I say, the department of your species,” the devil answered with a wafting roll of his wrist. “All those nasty little delicacies are of their doing, I’m afraid. Well, I’m not afraid of them. In fact, I’m rather amused. Humbled by, even.”
The confusion that spread across my face must have been evident, because the devil rolled his eyes and shook his head, attempting to turn away from me and end the conversation there; however, I wasn’t about to let that go.
“What about the….you know…the whole, supreme evil deal? The master of darkness…..the…devil thing.”
“Ah. That,” he seemed to understand exactly what I mean. “Loose translation, I’m afraid. You see, the word had a little bit of a rough time being passed through the centuries. Not the devil, a devil.”
“Oh, I- what?”
Giving an annoyed sigh as he loosened the top off of the vitamin bottle, he turned slowly around.
“A, not the. One of many, that sort of thing. You’re a history buff, you look up the word origin. Devil was a term for a sort of annoyer. Satan, which I have been called more time that I can count by you unimaginable lot, means and adversary. In general, not one.” Groaning, he turned around to seat himself upon my sink, crossing one thick leg over the other, readjusting his leather pouch in the process (which my memory now recalls was quite bulbous after having seeming rather flat the night before). “ Now, your understanding of the devil, as I understand it, means mayhem, damnation, utter chaos and the likes. Large scale tyranny and the crumbling of civilization; that sound about right?”
“Yeah,” I said confidently enough.
“Plagues? Possession?” He tilted his head a little, eyes narrowing.
“Well, yeah, of course. ” I had become almost excited by this time, thinking that I was on the right track and about to goad the old goat into doing something interesting.
He turned his head upwards and to the side, wafting me off with a hand. “Not my department, Lonny Boy.”
My eyes narrowed on him, a confused look overtaking my face. He looked back, noticing my expression. One clawed hand came up to cover his face, muffling the incoherent mumbling that followed after. Finally, after giving another sigh, he turned around to me, crossed his arms over his chest and gave me a good long stare.
“I went too fast for you, and obviously was a little too vague. Let’s try this for, hopefully, the last time. I don’t do any of those things. Not the death and damnation. No possession or mass scale chaos. None of it.”
It was slowly sinking in, but I needed some sort of clarification.
“Wait…so….war?”
“Two men. One thing. ‘Nough said,” he answered definitively with a snort.
“Plagues?” I asked meekly.
“Germs. For the love of all, what century am I in? Did you go through another dark ages or something?”
I ignored his comment and quickly continued, not really enjoying what he was suggesting.
“B-but serial killers and being influenced by evil, a-and getting possessed? And there’s a million terrible things that can’t possibly-“
“Sorry, squirt. Hate to disappoint you and all but, once again, that’s you’re department. Humanity has seemed to corner the niche market on nasty” he chuckled.
“Wait, so you’re not going to do anything like that? No, fire and brimstone? No screaming or walls bleeding, or being scared out of my mind?” I muttered.
He looked away, almost seeming ashamed. “No,” he answered quickly. “I do…other things,” he said with a pause, eyes looking back and forth at the pile of clothing, “Like this!” He reached out quickly snatching a pair of socks. He grinned at me as he pulled them into separate hands, dropping one black sock back to the pile before letting disappear behind a closed fist. He quickly opened his hand, having made the sock disappear into thin air. He gave a triumphant chortle at my bewildered look, mistaking it for awe. “That’s right. And it’ll be gone for weeks!” he snickered.
I, of course, wasn’t impressed at all by this. Annoyed, perhaps, but I thought there was something I was missing. I thought perhaps he was lulling me into a false sense of security, lying to me before he let me have it, so to speak.
“What about, you know, opening the box and all? Letting you out. Isn’t that some crime? I mean, you’re going to do something to me because of that, aren’t you? Condemn me to eternal suffering o-or drive me insane?” Phos, by this time, was now rolling his eyes and looking perpetually annoyed. He muttered something under his voice before he turned back to face me completely.
You humans and your little morbid fascination,” he snorted, “Can’t please anyone these days. Just not the same. Before it was a little sheep frightening, chicken eating, and a manic laugh and it’d send them running for the hills. Now you can’t get anywhere unless you’re murdering someone, doing something all creative to. Can’t just kill a man straight out these days or-“
“Ah ha! So you have killed someone!” I interjected quickly.
“I- what? No, no, no. I don’t do any killing or whatnot. Far too messy and not half as fun as driving you out of your minds. What I said was that you can’t get any attention these days. All those serial killers and dictators shoving you out of the limelight with their over the top antics. Not any gigs left for us other kinds anymore.”
“Gigs?”
“Jobs, Lonny. Jobs. You’re a thick one, aren’t you?”
“I know what you meant but, I…well, how is frightening people a job?”
“How is it not a job? Sharpest tool in the shed here. Right, listen up because I’m getting sick of having to explain things to you. Us other kinds kept you humans from getting too out of line. Rhymed, that one did,” he said with a toothy grin, smugly shifting his weight to his other hoof. “Anyway, so we’d come over, scare the knickers off of you for doing things wrong and, in the mean time, get whatever you left behind. Funny how people forget their coin purses when they think they’re going to get cursed or something. And precious family heirlooms aren’t so precious as the weight of your hides when you think they’re in trouble either! ”
“So…you scare people off and, what, pilfer their houses? Never heard of that one before.”
“Well, I suppose the stories only carry the important things over. The juicy parts, you know. Makes for good stories when you through fleeing from damnation or being torn part, but the bits about how John returned home and couldn’t find his favorite pocket watch are less impactful, if you know what I mean. Still, it was a good living. Getting this here and there, and normally a good meal, too! Had to know how to do it right. Oh, those were the good ol’ days.”
He turned away from me, trotting noisily off through the house as he began once again messing my display cabinets and pressing his nose up against the glass to insure marks. All the while, I stood there silently, just watching him dash from corner to corner doing abhorrently obnoxious but rather meaningless things; a scuff on the floor that would have to be buffed out, a licking the paint off a vase, chewing the corner of a tapestry while bending a precious blade.
I sat myself in a chair as he danced around, making annoying noises and tilting the picture frames on the wall so that they were ever so uneven. I couldn’t help but just watched, fixated on this thing was so terrifying and, yet, not at the same time. It didn’t make sense to me, not one bit, and I spent hours just watching him ghost from point to point in my house. It was a sort of stupor I had entered into, both from the situation and the words that had passed between us that I still struggled to understand when all around me were pieces that begged to differ. I had spent my life collecting these things, beliving firmly that there was some great evil, some guiding hand that tainted them and, that by just possessing, I might be able to glimpse and understand. It was the belief in something more than what Phos seemed to suggest.
The clacking of his hooves as they dented the wooden stairs barely fell on my ears as I gazed towards my priceless collection of beheading swords on the wall. It just couldn’t be like that. There had to be something more than-
“Wooo! Look at the thighs on that one!” came the sudden crowing boom from the upstairs.
Jolting in my chair, I spun to look up the stairs before I took up after them, wondering what in the worlds the devil could possibly be yelling at. As I entered the upstairs foyer, I felt my heart sink to see the back end of Phos facing me as he leaned forwards with his head against the glass of a partially cracked window. One hair hand rapped against the glass again.
“Stop walking, fatty! You’re rattling the china in the-,”
I had closed the space between Phos and I before I realized it, knowing that the window of my house looked out over a distant walking trail that was quite popular at that time of year. My hands were on his shoulders as I scrambled to pull him back.
“What- you- shhhh!” I pulled him to the side, looking down at the trail in time to see a rather familiar round faced woman look around at the house. “Jesus, if Mary even thinks that was me she’s going to shoot me.”
“Shoot you?” he gave a snort, “I’d be more worried about getting eaten if I were you.”
Mary just looked around before finally continuing on her way at a rather brisk pace, thankfully, as I shut the window and slumped my elbows on the frame. Head bowed forwards, I lifted it slight and found that both the devil and I were nearly shoulder to shoulder in the small space in the narrow hallway, his face no more than a foot from my own. The sheer sight alone of his face in that much detail sent me up against the adjacent wall (not that the smell was any less alarming, mind you).
It was the odd silence and the wide grin on his face as he just unnervingly stared at me that forced me to say something. For a lack of other things, I just motioned to the window with one hand.
“A-and what if someone would have seen you? I mean, you-you’d have been hard to explain and-,”
“Oh, quit worrying your pretty head, Lonny. No one’s going to see me. Got a sort of technique for that. I’m quick,” he grinned.
I shook my head.
“Quick, sure, but still,” I leaned down to gaze back out the window, watching the semi busy trail full of joggers, some already in garb for the night to come, at distant intervals. “I mean this window is pretty bare and I don’t think you-,” Phos was no longer standing at my side. Confused, I fell silent and began to look around. The house was silent as I strained to listen for his clacking hooves and, yet, there was nothing. I slowly made my way down the hall until I finally came to pause at the top of the stairs.
“See?” Phos yelled, suddenly standing right behind me, which caused me to tumble forwards down a few stairs, barely catching my weight on the railing. The devil laughed as he followed me down, patting me heavily on his shoulder.
“Oh, so you like that, do you, Lonny boy? Well, I’ll just keep that in mind.”
“H-how-“
“Don’t have to be seen when I don’t wanna. Little perk of mine. Makes for a bit of jealousy with the others,” Phos gloated.
It was then, for the first time, his use of the word others finally soaked into my head, sending a bit of a chill down my spine.
“Others?” I asked. “There’s more of…you?”
“Of me? Well, only one of me, Lonny. Broke the mold with perfection here!” he snorted. “ But, others? Sure. I said a devil earlier didn’t I? Plural. Many. You know, I’m starting to worry about you, Lonny. Passing out can do funny things to a person’s head. Giving you the benefit of the doubt here.” He turned and walked back up the stairs, moving to the window once again to look back out of it. “Lots of us other kinds. Big ones. Small ones. Some who could fit in a bread box and others who might find the ocean a bit tight.”
“So, there’s more here? More of things like you?”
“Hmm?” he muttered, seeming lost out the window before he turned to look over his shoulder at me. “Oh, here? Not really. Few that hold out still, sure. Lots used to be here though. Lots.” He turned to look back out the window. “It’s where you get all those stories from, Lonny. Fairytales and whatnot. ”
It was the first time that my heart had left in a good way, the entire time when I heard him say that there had, indeed, been others there before. It was a revival of my beliefs, the fluffing the hope that there was something much more grand going on behind the scenes.
“So, not just things like you but, what, more like…err…dragons and werewolves…well, they were here but they left?”
“Sure, there were lots more other kinds, but yeah. They left. Wasn’t really much we could do to contend with what was going on.”
“What…what went on?”
“Outsourcing,” he answered with a disdainful tone.
I nearly laughed, but the sheer sound of the devils voice caused me to hold it back.
“I-,”
“Like I said before, Lonny, people got all creative on large scales. Started going above and beyond, or so to speak. Burning, raiding…making examples of their own villages, plotting behind the scenes to do horrible things and blame others. Downright overwhelming, if you ask me, but it worked.” He sighed as he stood back from the window, tapping the ledge before turning around to face me. “Couldn’t keep up with the competition. That plus the fact that people started getting fed up and wise, forming little hunting parties. Started making trophies out of us. Was just plain degrading in the end and all over not a pretty thing. So, to save our hides and look for work in other places, most of us other kinds just up and left. Went back to the old bump and grind as you’d say.”
I’d never actually say that, but I understood his point well enough to know what he meant. It wouldn’t have taken a genius to realize that there was obviously some place that these ‘other kinds’ were going to as Phos had mentioned them leaving a few times now. I looked over the devil, who seemed quite pensively picking his nose as he gazed of down the hall. I cleared my throat and gave a soft smile.
“So, you said you, the other kinds, just left. Where exactly did you leave to? I mean, where is it that you go?” I had, before this conversation, distantly thought he went back into the box every year, staying in some sort of altered reality there till the next, but I was obviously wrong in that assumption. In memory of the start of this, my eyes glanced towards the stairwell and down towards the living room where it still sat. However, when I glanced back, I found only a thick green streak on the wall where Phos had been standing.
I instantly spun around, expecting that the beast was going to be standing behind me again. However, much to my dismay at the time, he wasn’t there.
“Phos?” I called out timidly. “P-phos?” There came no response. Even though I had just learned that the beast wasn’t going to do anything horrid or ghastly, there was still that feeling that one gets when watching a horror movie and knowing that the bad guy is going to pop out from some dark corner; however, this was real, and the fact that he didn’t need a dark corner to pop out of did nothing for my nerves. I found the narrow halls suddenly too narrow and instantly made my exit of them and headed for the stairs.
In retrospect, I should have seen it coming and going for the stairs was a poor idea. Never the less, it happened. I was on the fifth step down when the devil was suddenly next to me, his feet balanced on the thin railing, with his hands on either side of his face and a terrible garbled yelling coming out of his mouth.
The stairs were suddenly in front of my face, then out again, then back in again and, if I would have to think back and guess, it was the fourth from the bottom that pain took a back seat as I came limply sliding onto the floor. Unlike before where everything had simply gone dark, this time I distinctly remember Phos’ voice calling my name with a particularly uncertain tone and, from where I was laying, the sight of two large green eyes that gazed out from the darkness below an end table; Ninny had obviously made her hiding place underneath the sturdy piece of furniture, and her normally portly body seemed double the size as she remained, terrified, as everything ghosted into unconsciousness.
______________________________________________________________________
So there’s part two! Only about 1,500 words left to go on the next post, so it will be a short little quip of a read. Thanks for taking the time to check it out. While I don’t feel like this is a great story ever written, I am in love with the idea of Phos and the relationship that could exist between these to characters. As always, feel free to post critiques, ideas, hints and whatever else you’d like. I welcome each and every ounce of feedback since I know I still have a lot of room for improvement. In fact, the whole reason I post my longer works on this blog is to stay motivated, maybe make someone smile, and to learn where I can improve at. So, while this may not be a master piece, I figured I gotta start somewhere, right?
He’s In the Details (Story 1, Pt. 1)
I always held the belief that objects could hold intent. I believed that the sheer force of an intense sentiment, those raw and feral emotions of passion, fear, and rage, can become absorbed, if you will, into the very atoms of an item until they themselves have become a carrier of that lingering response. And that is, my dear friends, what idea had always permeated through my consciousness. That is what called me to this strange fascination of mine; the procurement and preservation of these tainted items.
To me, each one seemed a shard of the ethereal, a souvenir of the metaphysical that exists above human perception, a reminder that the world is something more than what we’ve made it out to be. Above all, that is what pulled me; the allure of something more than this mundane existence that has been hollowed out and filled with factory work, social media sites, and t.v. It was a way to constantly connect myself with what I believed as the truth of the world, the mystical powers that swayed and influenced the hearts of meager men. The eternal darkness that seeps into the very soul, and consumes their minds. It was, in my mind, the tie to the immortal grandeur of greater evils, otherworldly entities.
I say was, however, for a reason. An odd, reason that I hope to fully set in my mind by writing this all down. It’s one that you might not believe, and not one that I fully understand. A reason that started with something simple. It started with an estate sale, a box, and a bad, highly intoxicated, poorly executed decision.
–
–
It was the middle of March when I found myself in the Midwest, a hotspot for collectors like myself. The sale had been at an archaic aging farm house that set in the middle of a sprawling estate. The road, which took several minutes to drive down, was private and marked with the usual no trespassing sign that seemed almost redundant for such an exclusive residence. The previous owner, a reclusive (big surprise there) elderly woman had passed, leaving all of her worldly possessions behind for whomever they fell upon. Though the attendant at the door readily offered a back story, I waved him off; I wasn’t interested in such unimportant tidbits.
A whole assortment of eclectic items filled the old house on the day that I entered, among which was the box. Instantly attracted to it, it seemed to stand out from the odd vases and old texts, having an air about it that was most dark. It is these sort of items I am attracted to most, ones with ominous tone such as the macabre marked box, adorned with what could only be described as anti-cherubs at each of the corners. The entire box, including the little grimacing figurines, was made out of some heavy onyx hued wood that had its own way of absorbing yet never reflecting the light. I distinctly remember running my hands over the smooth edges, eager to open the box as I felt the odd scrawled writing twisting and turning under my fingertips. Barely visible, I couldn’t make it out in the dim light of the house. Perhaps the intrigue at finding out what it said was half the reason I bought it though, admittedly the other half I must attribute to the willingness of the bored looking attendant to part with it for a mere thirteen dollars. I collected a few other interesting pieces that day, though it would turn out that the dark container which was no larger than a bread box was my true prize.
It was some days afterwards that I finally was able to make out the illusive inscription that rested just below the lower corner of the box (which I had found, much to my disappointment, to be empty on the inside). I had tried before in all sorts of light, even reducing myself to a jeweler’s eyepiece under the brightest light to figure out the inscription to no avail. It was completely by mistake that, when indulging myself in a rather guilty pleasure of writing only by the light of an oil lap, the inscription became clear. The growing light of the newly adjusted wick had crept across the darkened wood floors until it had found its way up and onto the coffee table where the previously perplexing box was resting. It was only when my mind took in the fact that the color of the flames was actually reflecting off its surface that I slowly rose and made my way over to it. As stark as print, I could make out it. I couldn’t understand it, mind you but at least I could make out the seemingly incoherent words. Stalking back over to my desk, I instantly scrawled it out across my notebook, interrupting my previous literary endeavor.
Patefacio in primo ictu omnes sanctificat et Eva, eo die, diabolus tuus erat.
The more I read over it, the more it sunk in until distant memories of once studying endings and obscure phrases lit into my mind; it was Latin. Even when being able to distinguish the language, I was still at a loss. Thankfully, for those who cared as little about the ancient language as myself, there was always the ever prevalent second brain; the internet. With little delay, I was able to quickly translate it as meaning
‘Open on the first stroke of All Hallows Eve and, for the day, the devil will be thy company’
A charming little incantation, to be sure. Alluring? Distantly. I took it for something meant for a long lost satanic cult. Things like this were worth a great deal to the right buyer, making the little piece even more invaluable to the little collection of mine. The closest thing I had currently, which paled in comparison, was a badly rusted ceremonial dagger for some unnamed occult sect. It was unique, but it lacked the air of the box. In fact, I hadn’t really taken the time upon first purchasing it to really notice the odd feeling of apprehension it brought but the long, solitary nights had given me plenty of chance to let his feeling soak in. In fact, upon entering the room, there was that immediate calling to cease continuing followed by an almost instant calling of one’s gaze to its placid albeit sinister visage. Now, I had an abstract painting at one time that, when stared at too long, made a queasy feeling in the pit of one’s gut followed successively by a nauseating headache and, at last, followed by the product of nausea, but nothing like this. No, the box was definitely unique and of its own.
Unbeknownst to me at that time, the feeling that I found so thrilling would soon begin to lose its novelty. Throughout the remaining season, I gradually moved the box further and further back into the house until it came to rest within my ‘vault room’; a softer name for the place where I move things I am sick of seeing. However, make no mistake, it wasn’t from my lack of interest in the box, but rather to avoid keeping both I and my solitary roommate, a solid black cat whom I affectionately call Ninny, from the rooms we actually wanted to occupy. I should have realized that the seemingly growing sensor that perfumed the air with apprehension was a sign of things to come. Instead, I let it slowly drift from my thoughts as spring ended and summer began to run its course. A heavy year of traveling in pursuit of my dreams of procurement made the much celebrated season flit by without a passing thought. It was finally late into autumn by the time my cat and I had returned, well on our way to planning our usual thanksgiving dinner tradition of steeling our nerves for the family reunion where she would hide herself under the bed and I in the basement stairway.
Content with being home from the long travels, I began drifting through the house in a comfortable haze, passing the door to my vault as I paced about. Once I crossed the threshold of the door, I felt a wave of anxiety slam into my body, ceasing the movement of my feet as I became solidly planted on the floor. There, in the very back corner at the furthest point in the house, sat the box. I instantly noted that, while all the surrounding items that were cluttered around it had a healthy heap of dust sitting atop of them, the smooth surface with its frightening faces was free of debris. There was something about its state that sent a shiver down my spine, however, the following revelation washed away the shiver as quickly dashed through the house to my computer. I shook the mouse back and forth frantically, the black screen slowly flickering back to life. My shaky hand commanded the cursor down to the right corner, resting over the time display and, as the small date box popped up, I felt my blood run cold; it read Friday, October 28th, 2011. I had just two days before Halloween, and I was unable to shake the dreadful feeling that this wasn’t some great coincidence.
–
If I said I did the smart thing and up and left for another vacation, I would be lying. Instead, I felt some great need to deny how foolish I was being about the entire thing. Bucking up, I decided to convince myself that the feeling was a mere overflow of the terrible things that happened. That the only touches of the metaphysical left in this world were of influence and emotions. And, above all, I convinced myself that I would, with no exceptions, even think about touching that box. Over the next two days, I kept myself as obstinately occupied as possible. They were filled with mundane things such as dusting the dust off my favorite pieces, rearranging my collection of murder weapons, and other normal tasks. On the day before Halloween, I had even ventured to my mother’s which aroused her suspicion at my unusually willing visit. However, not even the impending doom that the box promised could make me weather the torment of my mother’s unrelenting persecution of my existence; for hell hath no fury like a woman who thinks you’ve done everything in your life just to spite her. I returned late in the afternoon and, unable to keep the strange feeling of apprehension out of myself, I turned to the only thing which I know to steel my nerves and allow me to relax my mind.
It was on my ‘elevbinty-eth’ pitcher of assorted liquor that I sauntered foolishly into the back later that evening. Leaning against the doorway of the vault room, I glared at the box as if I were some silver screened cowboy eyeing down the new trouble maker in town.
“Wehlll,” I slurred, “it’s just youh and meh, tough ghuy.” I slowly made my way over to the box. For a moment I stared looking down at it before I turned my gaze to my half full stein in my right hand. Jostling it a bit to judge its weight, I placed my opposite hand on the box. Slowly sliding the mug down next to the box, I quickly placed it down just as I picked it up, pulling a cliché movie tactic; Better safe than sorry. Whoever said in wine there was truth also forgot to caveat it with ‘and in hard liquor there a good chance of pure idiocy’.
Pleased with myself, and feeling rather smug, I meandered back into the fire lit living room with an idiotic grin slapped across my face. The drink had done its work and I was feeling somehow superior to the box and its ominous waves of tension. Giving a deep chuckle to myself, I glanced upwards at the wall clock. Eleven fifty eight; how convenient. I scoffed at the ticking arms, crossing my own over my chest as I returned my gaze to the shady container. An entire minute passed by as I was in my state of superiority, only being pulled out of the drink induced dominance by the tenth chime of the grandfather clock in the foyer. Without a thought, as is often the case when one has consumed that much alcohol, I lunged forwards and quickly placed my hand on the box. The eleventh chime sounded. With as much finess as I could muster, I ceased the lid and flipped it open. The twelfth chime reverberated off the walls, assaulting the silence before slowly drifting away until the still that had been before returned to the house once again.
In front of me sat the box, empty just as before.
Unwilling to admit even to the nothingness around me that I was relived; I gave a triumphant chuckle that was quickly interrupted by a rapid serious of hiccups. Well, at least the moment had been mine. Taking in a deep breath, I reached down and flipped the box closed, the clack of the lid being so loud I startled myself. However, the sound didn’t stop there as a clacking came from behind. I spun around as fast as uncoordinated motor skills would allow and turned to face the source of the sound.
There are those things that, at first, the brain wants to deny but ultimately not even the shock can turn away from and, what sight I met was one of those very things. There he stood in front of me, as tall as timbers compared to my own short statue. His face was elongated like an animal, reminding me of some mutated, dingy sheep. Large, twice curling black horns glinted in the flickering light of the fire spanning out on either side of his thin face, accented perfectly by pale pointed ears. The large, unruly mane of thick, mattered fur tapered its way into a ridge that followed down his spin in shades of dingy grey like some feral hog. A tattered leather satchel hung across his bare man-like chest, coming to rest atop the thick fur that adorned him from the waist down, furring out his muscular, powerful legs that came to culminating cracked and yellowed cloven hooves.
With narrow, coal rimmed yellow eyes he gazed about the room, his horizontal pupils dilated impossibly large. Thin lips curled back into a wide spanning grin that seemed to distort his face into some hellish semblance of a Venetian comedy mask.
“Tea time for-,” came a gruff, cracked voice. He paused in his speech eye ceasing their searching, gaze falling directly to me. My knees went weak. “Well, you’re certainly not Mary,” he continued. “Where is the old goat?” The devil cooed affectionately as he looked around. With no answer coming from my trembling lips, it seemed to dawn upon the demon after a moment of silence. “Oh, she came over didn’t she? Well, I suppose I’ll just have to look her up when I get back, won’t I?”
I had no idea who Mary was at that moment, but my mind in its frantic attempt to latch onto something real, something familiar, instantly began searching through its memory banks. Quite quickly, I vaguely recalled the name of the previous owner as M. Matine. The grip on reality quickly slipped away again, however, as it locked on his last phrase of ‘getting back’. Where exactly did she go that something as ghastly as him would be able to ‘look her up’ when he returned?
“Now, let me see. Family? Friend?” He pondered, looking at me before around. “No. I recall what she said about her family….hmmm. Ah, antique collector! I should have known. Haven’t dealt with one of you in centuries. You’re great fun!” He chimed as he tilted his head, giving a small chuckle. He came forwards, cloven hooves scraping nosily across the floor. I recoiled back over to the top of the table, shamelessly scaling it and placing it between me and the nightmare that stood looming in the dim light. He merely grinned wider, obviously taking delight in my reaction. Carefully looking me over, he leaned forwards and sniffed the air before chuckling. “Ah, cowards courage! Good vintage, too!” Turning away, he suddenly began stalking off as he huffed the air, nostrils flaying as he began scenting his way through my house.
I watched him disappear into the next room, the sound of his dragging hoof steps being the only link to reality that I had at the moment. Numb in my confusion and disbelief, he returned shortly after, the empty mug in hand as he continued lapping at the rim.
“Replica,” he said suddenly, voice half muffled by the glass. “That one too. No good. Someone got cheated,” he chuckled, moving to run his hand over one of my prized samurai sword. “Hah, not even a good fake! You should do more research, my boy!”
The devil continued to look over all my prize pieces with a scrutinizing gaze, pointing out two more imposters in my midst before turning back to look at me, tossing the mug behind him. As it shattered on the wall, I jumped back a few feet.
“Alright, that was for free. Now, what have we to eat?”
‘Not me’ was the first thing that came to my mind, but I finally managed to push out a questioning, “E-eat?,” with an embarrassing prepubescent squeak.
“You freed me, you feed me. Them’s the rules.” He turned away from me, jutting his neck out once again as he noisily snorted at the air. “Common, boy, time’s a wastin.” He began to stalk off towards the kitchen, beckoning me with one wave of his hand.
I followed in sort of a stupor, watching as he reached out at a passing shelf, un-centering one piece and knocking another over from their carefully planned out places. He stopped for one moment, taking the time to huff towards one of the spotless glass cases, spattering its cover with wet flecks before walking off, dragging one hand against its partner, leaving long greasy streaks across its surface.
His hooves cut into the white tile floor of the kitchen while he paused in the door way, hands going to his wide hips as he gave a few appeased nods of his large, shaggy head before continuing forwards. He began instantly rummaging through cabinets, leaving them half open or all the way as he began his search for substance, my mind flickering to what would actually tickle his fancy. He found the storage for the plates, taking out a two. Holding one in each hand, he looked over his shoulder at me, eyes gleaming before he turned quickly, running his sandpaper like purple tongue against each. As it dragged across the finely crafted surface, it left long gouging streaks. I thought it some show of how he could easily use that gangly appendage to rip flesh from the bone.
He let the plates fall carelessly to the counter top and I grimaced at the small chips that fell beside them as they were a one of a kind set. He, however, seemed unaffected as he clacked over to the sink, turning on the water, leaning down to take a few messy gulps before turning back to his quest, leaving the faucet running at full blast as the hot tendrils of steam began to wisp their way through the air. The numb began to slowly fade away as he made it to the fridge, throwing it open as half his torso disappeared inside. The disapproving grunts continued as he began rummaging through its contents.
“Such fatty foods! I’d be watching that waistband if I were you!” One long arm came back, holding a half eaten confectionary delight that many middle aged women would have gladly fought to the death for. He suddenly let his hold go, allowing it to go crashing to the ground. The half chuckle and snort sounded, being instantly followed with a sarcastic, “You’ll thank me later!”
As I watched him lean back, taking a few bites out of a peach before returning it to its place, my mind began to slowly realize the entirety of the situation. My knees gave way as I leaned back against the counter, suddenly feeling the color rush away from my face. One large ear swiveled backwards, as if able to hear my manliness screaming away like a frightened school girl. He turned to look over his shoulder, lips smacking as he ate all but a spoonful of the remaining granola.
“Looks like we got a fainter,” he laughed with a sneer, lips curling back to reveal an entire row of well sharpened, pointed teeth.
The image of his smile, which seemed far from that at the time, was the last thing I remember right before the ceiling. Then, everything had gone black.
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So there’s part of my first story published to the public. Well, that’s not true. A former version of this story was put into a flimsy little notebook at my college, but this one is a complete re-write of that one and I doubt anyone even gazed at it. Now, even though it is a re-write, this is about a second draft after I’ve combed through it for errors and such. Still a work in progress, but one I thought people might enjoy. Come back next Weds for the second part of He’s In The Details to see how this plays out. (Also, any critiques or comments would be absolutely loved and appreciated)




