Sunday, January 19, 2020

Part 006 - The Devil's Own Accomplices*

A scream echoed through the house. Muffled, yet, penetrating, it didn’t stop. How could a woman hold such a sound? Wouldn’t she ever run out of breath?
John hid in his closet, headphones over his ears, hands pressing on his mouth, trying to keep his voice within his thin eight-year-old frame. Neither the shrieking in his head or the walls and clothing surrounding him blocked his mother’s screams from his hearing.
He longed for help or escape, but he knew there was neither for either of them. His father’s mansion stood high on a hill, and old trees ringed the slopes. A wall ten foot tall and three foot thick topped with electrified barbed wire contained the woodlands. Hungry dogs roamed the grounds. 
The nearest neighbors, their scared and scarred servants lived five miles away.
There would never be a savior for them.
Sean struggled against the nightmares embedded in John Smith’s blood. His memories were so strong; they kept Sean paralyzed with fear. Waking briefly, he wiped sanguine sweat from his forehead. It glared like neon on his pale flesh. A stabbing pain raked across his back and dragged him back into his victim’s thoughts.
The belt buckle, the frame, and bar forming an H and the prong a trident struck John on his back, opening another wound in his flesh. He lay over the leather pommel horse in his father’s study, his hands gripping the wooden legs. At twelve, after years of practice, he no longer had to be strapped down. It was a victory over his father, as was his refusal to scream. 
His father no longer beat them with extreme vigor. Age, he was now in his late seventies, and some disease ate at his muscles. His physical weakness didn’t rob him of his scary behavior, though. 
John turned his head and looked at David. His ten-year-old brother, strapped to his bench, still screamed when struck by the metal symbol of their father’s beliefs.
Francis Dashwood fell back in his overstuffed leather chair and dropped the belt to the wooden floorboards. 
“Get out,” he barked. He unbuttoned his trousers and reached inside, touching himself. “Tell your mother to come to me.”
John stood, some of the congealed blood split, making his wounds ooze.
He loosened the leather holding his brother down, dragged David’s arm around his neck, and hauled them both away from the devil that spawned them.
After dropping David off in his monklike room, lying on his stomach crying into his arms, he went in search of his mother.
She sat at her dressing table. The furniture, like the woman, was dressed in pink frills and abundant lace. She brushed her strawberry blonde hair in slow strokes.
“You didn’t scream,” she said. She watched John in the mirror.
He shook his head.  
“He will be all the harder on me for it.” 
John shrugged.
She smiled at him as she touched her breasts. She licked her parted lips, her eyes closing slightly. 
John watched her. He grew hard. He would use this image when he touched himself tonight and listened to her scream.
“You better go,” he said. “He already had his hands in his pants when we left him.”
She rose slowly, her movements languid, sexy, enticing, musical.
Sean felt hard all over. (This was some fucked up shit.) He couldn’t break free from the images flowing through the blood he had consumed. Paralysis gripped his body keeping him tethered to the bed. John’s blood was strong, stronger than Sean’s ability to fight the horror of the boys’ lives. When he got free of these visions, he’d kill Doctor Death for chaining Sean to John’s consciousness. 
He learned a lesson in the power of past experiences if only he could break free.
The crawl space on the other side of the wall to their father’s study had peepholes. John and David hid in the closeted area, watching their father and mother. Their parents knew the teenagers watched them. John was sure they performed for them. 
John knew their family was unique. He watched and listened to other boys. He knew there were others like them, but not many. And so they had to keep their secrets. 
They celebrated his seventeenth birthday last week. Early graduation from his private high school happened next week. He received a black sports car as a gift. He loved racing it along the snaking roads around the mountains.
David nudged his shoulder.
Their mother lay motionless on the floor, a plastic bag over her head. Their father stood over her, his flaccid, naked chicken flesh quivering. He cried over his wife, soft, pathetic whimpers. He collapsed. Oh, for gods’ sake. 
“Come.” John pulled on David’s shirt, dragging him with him. David tried to stay in the closet. John slapped him. “Get your ass moving, or you’ll regret it.”
The boys entered the study without making a sound. David stood off to one side while John went to the big oaken desk and picked up the antique Marbles fish skinner knife.
Francis turned on his knees, big, wet doe eyes watching John. He saw the knife in his son’s hand and tried to stand.
“Don’t bother,” said John. “I’m going to cut your throat.”
“No.” Francis clasped his hands as if in prayer. “Please, no. Don’t kill me.” The beast of their nightmares cried, loud, racking sobs. 
John fisted the sparse, white hair on his father’s head, exposing the old man’s neck. He sliced from ear to ear, the blood pulsing from the open wound, turning their mother’s frilly pink panties bright red.
* “During the day, memories could be held at bay, but at night, dreams became the devil’s own accomplices.” ― Sharon Kay Penman, The Reckoning

Part 005 - Vows Deep Revenge*

Sean didn't miss the fact that Doctor Death didn't deny he considered Sean a patsy. Say that three times fast, and you got the perfect feeling of the con job.
"The least you could do is consider it," said Doctor Death. "You could do lots of good. Help people." He positioned his amorphous self on the counter in front of Sean. He solidified his face into the image of his human self.
Sean sucked in some air that he didn't need to live. 
"You're beautiful," he said.
"I was." Doctor Death smirked. "A lot of good it ever did me."
Sean flicked his hands at the objects in the sterile kitchen, shaking his head at an entire room furnished with high-end appliances and yet never used.
"I suppose you grew up rich, too."
"Oh, yes," said Doctor Death. "We had the best the world could offer, including the most advanced lessons on human depravity." The ghost poofed gone.
Rubbing his fingers against the counter surface, Sean marveled at the marble appearance of his skin. The gallon of John Smith's blood he had sucked out of the man's body made no difference to the tint of his skin. 
He got up and went to the kitchen window. He held his arm out to the light. Where the sun shone on him, his flesh disappeared. He played in the sun at the kitchen window until dusk, and the light moved off around the building.
Doctor Death had a point. He needed a base of operations if he were to find the person who made him a monster. All he had was a memory of a face and a place. He'd need time, money, and resources to track down his maker. And let's not forget the blood. The one undeniable fact of his new life was that he needed human blood to thrive. While not an original concept, killing bad guys would at least salve his conscience. 
He'd turn himself into an avenging angel. The opposite of Lucifer in name, but with the same purpose. He'd wash the world of evil and send the souls of his condemned to the Bearer of Light in his grave, dark hole without any pity. He would create himself as Noctifer, Night-Bringer, the god of death and vengeance, hope to victims everywhere.
He'd need another name (Are you confused yet by all of the names? Well, buck up, Buttercup. There will be many more.
"Doctor Death?" Sean called out to the stale kitchen air. 
No response.
Sean headed down the hall. May as well investigate the place. 
Dark blue walls served as a midnight backdrop to crystal snowflakes, each with a tiny label identifying its origin: Waterford, Lenox, Swarovski. Lasers, their mechanisms hidden in the Damask wallpaper, sparked on the ornaments, millions of stars dancing in the narrow space.
Sean stumbled, palm on the wall to support himself. He needed to give this body a rest. Six days of constant movement depleted even the walking dead. Most of that time, he didn't refuel; the low octane of rodents not enough to count. He could lie down in the midnight hall. The carpeting was two inches thick, soft, clean-smelling. Who would disturb him? Well, that was the thing. He didn't know who might bother him.
The safest place must be in John Smith's bedroom. He couldn't imagine anyone going in that room of horrors willingly. 
Leaning against walls, he made his way back to the killing field. 
He tossed all of the stuffed animals into a corner. He took the pink bedspread and wrapped Smith's desiccated body in it, dragged it to the plushy pile, and covered it with the toys. He kicked the dead man's clothes over to the same corner. 
The carpet needed replacing. Blood splattered the cotton candy fibers with deep rust, this spot looking like a set of lungs, that spot like two hands making a shadow butterfly.
He locked all of the doors and windows, except for the transoms above the French doors, allowing a breeze to air out the smell of death.
Rifling through some cabinets in the bathroom, he found fresh bed linens, all in pink except for one set in white. What was with this guy and pink? He'd ask Doctor Death the next time he graced Sean with his presence.
He changed the sheets. He didn't want to think about what might have taken place on that bed, but at least it looked clean. He didn't know if he could catch any diseases or illnesses. He hadn't been a vampire for long, and no one had given him an operating manual. So far, some things were very different from folklore, so he learned as he went. 
An oval, full-length Cheval mirror in white oak stood in the walk-in clothes closet. Sean moved it out into the room, next to the bed. Using a tube of bright red lipstick he found in a drawer in the bathroom, he wrote Doctor Death a note. The ghost needed to know not to wake him. He needed a good twenty-four hours of downtime.
Plus, he wanted the ghost toasty to know that he was seriously considering the dead man's idea. They just needed to get some things straight, maybe even write out a contract. Nah, no written evidence. They couldn't sign anything in blood. DD didn't have any blood. Perhaps he could use ectoplasm. But Sean's blood wasn't his own. Would it be binding? How could you create a binding agreement between a vampire and a ghost? They could swear on a bible. Would their words be enough? He vaguely remembered something about binding spirits in his extensive reading. He knew it involved some cost. Nothing was free. He already lost his soul. What else was there to give?
He lay down, crossed his arms over his chest like Bela Lugosi asleep in his coffin. He chuckled at the image.
Yeah, he definitely needed a nap.  
* With a bloody flux of oaths vows deep revenge. ~ Francis Quarles  

Friday, January 3, 2020

Part 004 - Skin for Skin *




Sean couldn’t decide what made him sicker: David Smith’s out-of-the-blue revelation about his relation or the idea of taking over the life of his dead child.
“Hold on a second, David.” Sean’s hand ruffled the ghost’s vapor as Sean attempted to corral the frenetic spirit.
“Doctor Death. My name is Doctor Death.” He wailed like a classic haunt. “Can’t you ever get my name, right? It’s not David, or DD or Ghost Toasty.” He whirled around the room, small thunder clouds knocking over Lladro porcelain figurines and a Baccarat Crystal Midnight Elephant. Sean cringed as tens of thousands of dollars shattered on the Antique Java Bamboo Floor.
“Right,” said Sean. “You have name issues that bring out your inner poltergeist. I’ll keep that in mind, Doctor Death.”
The ghost hovered over the mess he created, a grin on his ethereal face.
“This bears practicing,” he said. “Emotions are, indeed, a powerful thing.”
“That’s not new news,” said Sean. He flopped into an overstuffed leather chair. 
“You might not want to sit there,” said Doctor Death. “That chair is upholstered in human skin.”
“Gah.” Sean jumped up. “If you expect me to live in this house of horrors, you are sorely mistaken.” He moved to a spot in the room that kept him as far away from everything as possible. He pointed around the room. “Skin and blood art on the walls, human leather chairs.” He squinted at one of the corners. “Are those shrunken heads. Seriously, what the fuck, man.”
“Hey, chill,” said Doctor Death. “You’re a vampire for gods’ sakes.”
“No.” Sean headed for the door. “There’s no chilling going to happen here. This place is just sick.”
“Right,” said Doctor Death. “Why do you think I was so hot for you to take John out? He needed killing. Someone needs to clean up his mess.” He flew in front of Sean, his image, if not his body, blocking Sean’s exit. 
“Think about what would happen if the police came in here and started examining all of John’s ‘things.’ The trauma it would cause, the chaos. Innocent people would be hurt and damaged. Who knows what all he’s got hidden in this place, the buried secrets.” 
“I don’t know what you mean,” said Sean. He stepped forward, one leg touching Doctor Death. Pinpricks of ice ran along his calf and thigh. He backed up. “Move out of my way.”
“No.” Doctor Death scooched forward into Sean’s personal space brushing against Sean’s chest. 
Sean backed up.
“Hear me out,” said Doctor Death. 
Sean sighed. “Fine, I’ll listen for a few minutes, but I’m not doing it in here.” 
“Let’s go to the kitchen,” said the ghost. “It’s clean and completely untouched by my brother’s perversions.”
The kitchen was white and shiny, from the white tile floors to the slick marble counters and the snowy cabinets, no stainless steel or wood or glass. The stools at the bar and the table and chairs were all made of slick and slippery milky Formica®.
“Sit.” Doctor Death pointed at a seat. “He never came in here. No one has ever used this room for anything.” 
Sean scowled.
“Trust me,” said Doctor Death. “I wouldn’t lie to you.”
“Says everyone ever who lies as much as they breathe.” (Doctor Death no longer breathes, but we all know he's lying and can't be trusted.)
“How do you expect this partnership to survive and thrive with that kind of attitude?”
“The last person I trusted turned me into a vampire.” Sean sat at the spotless breakfast bar. “I’m all out of the trust business.”
“Whatever.” The specter settled his misty self in front of Sean. “I guess this room won’t get much use with you, either.” He chuckled.
“I’m not living here.”
“Oh, come on. Hear me out.” Doctor Death’s body moved along the smooth surface like fog on a lake.
“I assume,” said the good doctor like a lecturing professor, “that since I found you wandering the deserted town of Bodie, hungry and thirsting for blood, you no longer have a home to go to.”
He waited for an answer even though he didn’t ask a question.
“Your smug tone is annoying,” said Sean. 
“Am I wrong, though?”
“No, you’re not wrong.” Sean wiped non-existent dust off of the counter. “I no longer have a home.”
“Tell me about it.”
“It’s none of your business. Move on.”
“I can always track you down.” Doctor Death puffed out his chest. “I’m a superb investigator.”
“Can’t investigate someone who doesn’t exist,” said Sean. “You don’t even know my real name. And vampires don’t have any DNA.”
“I’ll find out eventually, but it’s not important right now.” 
Sean leaned back, arms crossed.
“You need a base of operations. You need an income.” Doctor Death waved his arms around the room, parts of himself floating away on air-conditioning breezes. “This place is perfect. A mansion in a gated community, with security teams patrolling the area, electronic alarms, and cameras. Not to mention big fat bank accounts.”
“I’m not living in a place full of body parts.”
“We’ll clean it up. There’s plenty of room out back to burn John’s special creations. No one will know.” Doctor Death began to vibrate. “Imagine the bad guys we could go after from here. We can start with John’s notes since he was targeting the same people in whom we’re interested. We could clean up the world.”
“This is all just a little too convenient,” said Sean. “I get the feeling that you’ve been planning this for a while and looking for the perfect patsy.”
“I won’t deny any of that,” said Doctor Death. “You taking over my dearly departed brother’s estate as my beloved resurrected son satisfies both of our needs and wants.”
Doctor Death brushed up against Sean. Sean tingled like a sleepy foot waking up.
“Us dead folks need to stick together,” said Doctor Death, “and it’s good to keep busy when you have all of eternity to kill.”

* Job 2:4 Satan replied to the LORD, “Skin for skin! A man will give up everything he has to save his life.