On this wild October Evening
By alphadog1
- 2071 reads
...As I return to the broken porch broken porch on this wild October evening, The old farmhouse, rest’s with its grey peeling wooden walls and its crumbing out-buildings, yet it looks alien to me. Even though the memories of this place haunt my soul. I look away from the congealed litter, stuffed in the corners by the wind. I look between cracked wooden floorboards, to see the dirt beneath. I stare up and look through the blistered and buckled ceiling of the veranda, up into the house, into the dark of the attic. I seek sanity. It is an act of desperation; an over tried method, that has never really worked. The ghost riddled memories crowd upon me, in a cycle of terrifying repetition again and again and again.
On the horizon, whey coloured clouds roll over. They ripple over and upon each other, into an envelope of broiling darkness that gathers overhead. Across to my left, along the dark dirt road, that starts by the broken picket gate; I can see the yellow tape close to where I parked my car. "There and no further" the taped line states, with words that even after ten years working with the local cop's I never really want to read.
To the right, slowly swaying along the edge of the dark dirt road, stands the large old oak trees. The wild wind whipping, has stripped them of their leaves; their branches are bare. Taught, like old spider’s limbs. They groan with the sound of old twisted rope and whisper with menacing hints, discordantly played against the ice rain, that lashes against the dirty and partially broken window panes, with a dark, hollow, drumming. In the growing twilight, their grey bark is full of wrinkled shadow’s, making Faces, twisted with age and some fathomless cruelty. They slowly turn towards me.
I become aware of a strange scratching sound. I look to where the sound was coming from. Though I can’t be sure, I feel , deep in my gut, that, whatever it is , is coming from behind the old barn door. I turn towards the barn. The scratching gnawing sound happens again. Only this time I hear something else; something that sounds disquietingly similar to the mirthless giggle of a little child. I feel my heart begin to thump heavily in my chest. I take a cautious step forward. There’s a clatter. A howl. A low moan. A sudden snapping, cracking of something heavy, stamping hard upon old dried cord-wood.
I pause and hold my breath.
‘-Hello?...Is anyone there?’
I can hear the subtle quake in my voice. I want to call out his name. But but, I dare not, dare not speak. I start to shake; as I feel my nerves begin to shred. so I tried to think about happy times, how once the sun shone warmly and how we four happy children -all boys- ran amongst these farm buildings. The images don’t stay. They flee into the shadow. I hear the padding and then the slapping of retreating feet. Once again my nerves begin to get the better of me.
I stare at the old barn door. Not taking my eyes off it. Seconds pass.
The world becomes dizzy. Colour spots fly in front of my eyes.
There is a sudden explosion of noise. I shout a squeal as my heart rises into my mouth. Suddenly a form; someone… or… something, almost half formed -moving far too quick to get an accurate description- dart’s from the left, through open broken doorway, then back into the deep dark recesses of the crumbling barn. I try to take another step. But my feet are frozen solid to the spot. There’s something there… I can feel it… feel its’ malevolence staring directly at me. Its hostile animal eyes, full of hate burning into me…chilling me to the bone. I stare. Stare Stare.
‘Mr Freeman ?’
I jump at the sound of a voice and suddenly turn.
‘Mr Freeman?’ this time her voice her voice sounded a little cautious.
‘Yes, yes, Richard Marcus Freeman… ’I stare at the petite woman in the tight fitting grey and navy dress that reveals the right amount of cleavage and calf to keep my interest; so I smile warmly. She looks about twenty, almost half my age.‘…but you can call me Marcus…and you must be… Ms Atherton?'I smile and reach out, with an unsteady right hand.
She takes it gently. It feels warm to the touch.
‘Mrs Dianna Atherton…’
‘Pleased to meet you.’ I nod. Her hair is platinum, the colour that Munroe wore so well; and it suites her too.
'...likewise.'
I smile and hold here her eyes for far too long. They’re large, round and forest green. A thought is contained. A secret touch.
She takes an uncertain step up onto the porch and walks by me, leaving the delicate scent of Channel No 5 in the air as she passes. She walks towards the crumbing entrance. As she reaches the door, she turns and smiles then she blushes slightly as she looked away. Pulling her white handbag, that hung from her left wrist, closer to her midriff, before examining the deadbolt.
‘I, I understand that you were sent here, to Boston, from from New York? ’
I nod. '-yes, yes fiive years ago.'
‘-Personally I wouldn’t have called you in, but but I have come to understand that you have an “expertise” that that Detective Sullivan considers useful...’Her voice sounds direct, forcing me to be more open with her than I want to be. I also hear the cynical slant on the word expertise and try not to let it bother me. But it does.
Yes…’ I replied, feeling awkward ‘…We worked togethe-’
‘-yes, yes, he told me, the Etherton case in ’sixty three, five years ago now?’
‘-He told you? Yes, five years.’
My mind went elsewhere. Deep into a brown, dirty cellar, cluttered with gritty magazines and filled with terror. A pale blue chair, and a man slumped in the chair smiling at me with dead eyes. The black barrelled revolver pointing directly at my face, and the words “Time to die mother-fucker!” shouted at me in a voice that rolled its way through me like a freight train.
I could feel myself shake a little.
‘-It’s supposed to be a-‘
‘-Yes, yes, a black file…’ her voice sounds strained as she fights with the dead-lock placed on the door. ’… Sullivan’s an old...' she growls as she fights with the lock '...friend. He recommended you when I called him, after I was set up as the investigating officer, once we found… ahh.. ’ a sigh of satisfaction as the deadlock slips back, with a thick click ‘…what we found.’
I heard the mirthless laugher once more, I can’t help myself. I turn to stare towards the barn once more; feeling the nape of my neck begin to tingle.
‘-Well… you better Follow me. ‘
She pulls a switch-blade from her white handbag, to slice the hidden seal of yellow tape I had seen so many times before. Then after putting the knife away. There appears a flash light. Its clicked on, before the door is pulled fully open with a slow creak. Despite the strong smell of corruption, the hall brought back happy memories, of old metal trucks being pushed along black and white tiles, their tippers full of dust and rocks, while the scent of acid sweet lemonade and rich fruity laughter came from the kitchen.
Time slips back as we almost collide.
‘Watch your step!'
I look down and took a step back.
The naked body is large. Its yellowing skin is distended abound the abdomen which slowly slithers , writhes and undulates , giving the disturbing appearance of being alive. But…It is alive with those that feed off the dead.
Dianna puts some vicks under her nose and along her top lip, the she gives the container to me as she then, in a dull monotone duly makes verbal notes on the scene.
'-The throat had been ripped out, almost to the point of decapitation. The left side of the face, the nose and the lower jaw, have been gnawed away by a…a…a wild animal…where… where the eyes should have been are...'
Are two cavernous holes. Glistening maggots slowly writhe; while plump black flies, with large red eyes, angrily buzz in sharp darts about the room. The smell of death becomes terrifyingly oppressive. My heart thuds sickly in my chest. I want to retch. Nuzzled vomit and bile rises water fills my throat. I gag it back.
'We received a phone call at, at about four this morning, from a, a person unknown, stating there was - and I directly quote from the call “a cadaver found in suspicious circumstances at the Morrison farm.” Cadaver, who says that? Anyhow, two patrol officers found this, taped it up and called it in. I was called out here with Sullivan hour or two ago, he suggested that I call you….The rest you know.
‘-You seem to be taking this rather well.’ Noting her objectivity.
‘My father was a butcher, I’m used to slabs of meat. Rotten or otherwise.‘What do you make of that?’Dianna pointed with her torch towards the far hall wall.
Written in blood, were the words Mors! Nex! Angelus Mortis!‘it means-‘
‘-I know what it means.’ My words are sharp, ice riddles me.
‘-Look…’ I hear strain in her voice, ‘…when Sullivan told me what happened, I couldn't believe it, I I really couldn't. But, but when he showed me the file-‘
‘-A file you’re not meant to see.’
‘-You know, I couldn’t have bothered…what did you have planned today? Another trip to the Rehab centre? The Church you go to? Even the employment exchange? If you can do what he says you can do-‘
‘-There’s only one reason that you’d call me.Or that Sullivan would have even mentioned me at all, and that’s because there have been others... Have there been? Other’s?’
Dianna tries to talk but falters. She’s rolled out of the way.
‘-I can tell you by simply looking in this room that there have been at least another five, all the same M.O , throat gouged , left to bleed out and all called three weeks after the crime; and where were they? all of them circling this place. Like reference points on a map. I I also bet you can’t find any finger prints, foot prints or any fucking thing to suggest that another person has been here. Then there are the words…’ I point at the Latin, ‘…written on the wall.’
She stares at me, I can see she’s pissed, but I’ve had enough, yes she’s sexy, but she’s a condescending bitch that needs to know what she’s up against. ‘....What you want me to do is connect the pieces for you. You want me to…to connect with him… You want me find out what happened. But even if you do know, what I know, you couldn't arrest the killer, because there’s no evidence to support your case. You are floundering in the fucking dark with no means of support. But you want this case because of what it will mean for your reputation. What you don’t know, or seem to care about, the collateral. How I feel when I do this. I’ll tell you something else for free. I was born here. I lived here, in this house , with my family and I know, to a fine holy fuck that if I do this for you, you wouldn't want to know the answer, because the answer will break your soul.’
I kneel by the cadaver, shake my head, and rest my hand just above the undulating chest.
The world begins to spin. Memories collide, explode into half seen images. The four of us in patchwork images of burnt film. Their names Tommy, Steve, Glen. I. Smiles, laughter. I skip in circles in the farm garden, Mum smiling, Dad smiling. A light in the sky, a light so bright that it almost blinds. Mum screaming. My Dad, his face all bloody his eyes wild with fear and hate. Tommy, Glenn Steve lying in a pile. My legs running, running, running in the dark. Cars, I fall. Cars driving almost over me. Lights burning bright and then: laughter, cold, cruel laughter. A hand …scarred…nails like hooks, skin like wet leather, black, black swollen lidless eyes, millions of teeth in drooling lips Snapping. Coming out at me grasping, scraping. A hot foetid hungry breath longing for my flesh. I feel myself scream.
I open my eyes, and roughly wipe the tears that are smarting my vision with the arm of my jacket. A heavy sad sigh fills the air. ‘His name... his name was...was Terrance Brannigan... he was forty five years old; he was a father of three girls and a step father to one boy… he was in love with his wife, but he was bored an’ looking elsewhere for sexual excitement. He cheated in his mind, but not with his body, he was depressed because his mother died in January, and he had just lost his job at the tannery in Fulworth twenty miles away… he had no other means to support his family…he, he was a, a sad, lonely man, that didn't know the good he was doing… was enough to please the God he feared.' That’s the body here.
Dianna looks at me. Her eyes were open wide.
‘I know what you want...you want to do your duty and catch this monster. But you can't, you simply can't. You can’t... He’s going to trap you here, in this place with me, for all eternity… You laugh? You don’t know time… twenty years ago, something came here…. it took my mum, dad and brother’s…. It made me run…. The police thought my dad went mad, and he did, sort-of… But what that… thing left me with, was a gift. And what a gift… The gift of being able to see the last thoughts of the dead. It’s not a blessing… it’s a curse… and the thing that gave it to me is here…in the barn…. But you have to understand, its too late.’
I feel a sad smile curl on my lips. I hear the thumping sound from the barn. It’s getting louder and lounder. I hear steps upon veranda. Hard low hollow breathing. I don’t bother to turn. To stare. I stand immobile. Smiling. I see Dianna pull out her gun. She fires twice. She screams. I feel a cold gnarled hard hand upon my shoulder and begin to laugh hysterically, as I return to the broken porch on this wild October evening… The old farmhouse, with its grey peeling wooden walls and its crumbing out-buildings, looks alien to me. Yet, the memories of this place haunt my soul. I look away from the congealed litter, stuffed in the corners by the wind. I look between cracked wooden floorboards, to see the dirt beneath. I stare up and look through the blistered and buckled ceiling of the veranda, up into the house, Into the dark of the attic. I seek sanity. It is an act of desperation; an over tried method, that has never really worked. The ghost riddled memories crowd upon me in a cycle of terrifying repetition again and again and agian
(c) adh 2015
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Comments
A chilling read indeed. You
A chilling read indeed. You gave such a good description of the surroundings, I felt I was there.
Jenny.
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I really like this - very
I really like this - very descriptive and I like the circular construction. Genuine feeling of malice and the pacing works really well.
I think it needs a bit of proof reading - there are some bits I had to read over a couple of times to make sense of it, and it wasn't clear at times whether repeated words were there for effect or by accident. It would be a shame if that distracted readers from a very evocative and very creepy story.
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Reads much smoother and if
Reads much smoother and if anything even creepier! Absorbing and disturbing.
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