Horror Story

The Bermuda Sky [A Horror Story] Part 3

“Just kill it already!!!!! Can’t you see it?” Out of a corner, someone was standing behind the monster, a shadowy figure holding a long scythe with effervescent, glowing stones. There was an inscription on the scythe. Weirdly, I knew the scythe was friendly. What was that? Who’s there? I felt the perpetual glow push me out of my drowning state, a gentle strength skipping the deadly precipice. Something or someone was waiting for me to do something. Who? The wispy arachnid had its separated hairy child wrap itself around my neck, raising me four floors up into the air, dangling and stuck. From above, I could vaguely see a roofless room that had yellow chalks at the chalkboard. A basketball. There were scribbles on the tables. It was time, and I was fading out.. what was the point in struggling. And bending to breathe. And growing up. Let go, the mountains are beyond deers.

“Are you kidding me?! KILLLL. IT. Are you REALLYY DUMB OR STUPID???” There was this tiny girl in bangs, mad kid racing in a few feet away from the creature, just breaking in to my death scene, rude impudence fueling the all-knowing to taunt and batter by shouting. Worst, not the least helping. Again, reminding me why bold caffeinated Emma Chamberlain social media chatterboxes had produced daredevil good-for-nothings chowing down breakfast eggs and hash from their mother’s pan. JUST as I was about to die and nearing brain dead to do anything. Tight at the neck already. What the fuck! The monster was clamping the daylights out of me, not affected by the little bitch. Big monster didn’t even see or recognised that there was another annoying midget, conveniently prepared for succulent monster grub.

The glow was warming up to me now. There was a kind of rousing wickedness coming forth from inside my head. My right hand unbelievably started moving on its own, fighting the chokehold, the internal strength impervious and masculine, twisting and gorging out from the squeeze. The aggressive reflex shifted the tipping balance to an active influence and was answering fear in return. A thrust of wind, icy with a force and carrying a flow from a source within my right palm, blew and tore wide open the chest of the beast, grabbing the giant beating heart and bursting its core through the grip of my hand. From the chilly blast, flesh deformed till all the blood insides spilled out, dripping on the broken tiles. Complete, like I had done the act before, the confidence from a prior knowing. The heat inside me sent out clear signs again gesturing that I should have done so, and not fail cower away to the toilet hole I wanted to mark as my grave.

I fell to the ground first, one leg hitting a cement beam, letting out a scream and recoiling into a fetus. Gasping away, I saw my brother collapsed beside me. He had fainted, and he saw the whole deal of monster and my hand killing it. I brought my hand up to my mouth, not touching, merely plain searching for the innermost soul to gather the course of my hand. What happened? I’ve done something I didn’t think of doing. But it was familiar and sure by the hand. Am I an Avenger now? My knees felt rather jelly, and it was despicable to be an Avenger. I might be evil, just as I’ve felt myself wanting evil earlier. I burrowed out the throbbing heart, not even half wincing.

I managed on my feet, and looked around. That crazy kid, about 10 I believe, stood in front of my brother, a meter ahead. Her eyes were scanning and patronising. Leaping inwards, she sat on one of the fallen broken sinks, her cherubic cheeks got up close to mine, smelling of sandalwood. “Is this your first?” she began her inspection of my physique.

“What are you talking about??” I yelled back, alarmed at the girl, pain shooting upwards at the leg. Finding bruises and cuts amid the possible fractured ankle on my starving, heavily sleep-deprived body throws daunting tolerance and niceties out of the window. Snorting, she let out a sigh to confirm her disappointment, mouthing the words unwaveringly. “You’re a Seer Actinium. YOU ARE supposed to be able to kill hoards of these Numens. They are once humans though.” She dipped her finger into a blood puddle, wiped the finger with her handkerchief and continued.

“Some humans turned to Numens, some didn’t when Bermuda came. Some like you, became a Seer and had powers. Mortimer sent me. You’re a level 9 and we don’t see them often. We’ll be seeing you soon. You will be needing us.” She took a piece of mirror shard, going around in a slow, careful examination of her face at her reflection, absorbing her appearance upon angles, fair that nothing fazed her and bored she had to find ways to amuse herself.

I had to ask because this sounded now a ridiculous conspiracy. “Are you saying that I’m the Avenger now and the monster, the monster that I’ve just killed is called a Numen? Numen used to be normal people?” Sweat was still slick on my face and there was fresh blood on my clothes and across my body. “Uh, if you could say so, pretty much yeah. ” Little crazy girl was checking her scythe now, the stones had stopped radiating red, quietened to a black, the scythe inscription also an insipid grey. The heat I felt from the scythe had dispersed from back then, and it was just this petite girl extraordinarily holding up the adult, oversized weapon to her level. She tucked the scythe behind her back on a mount. I propped up my little brother against a knackered wall and felt my own tears brimming over Ken’s pale face. He became lighter and was now bone thin where he used to be a little overweight. Mom and Dad used to tell him to run laps outside instead of playing computer games and snacking on chips.

“Oh. I’m just like you but I have a scythe, and I’m only the keeper.” She retorted back, sardonic to affirm the importance of doing one’s job as the whatever slayer, and to imply I only had one job to do right. “Why do you know nothing at all? You don’t even know how to land.” The insult revealed, insinuating a response. Ken did not wake. He was lifeless, but breathing I could tell. He might need proper treatment and help. “Fuck, how old are you? You seem to know a lot of things. Are you from an organisation? Do you have any medicine or know first aid or a doctor?” I started crying and hollering out in panic, murmuring too, and shaking. “Please, my brother might be dying.” Breathe, I had to. Think, think, think. What, I was so enraged, at the girl’s lack of emotional regard, knowing we were both hurt and Ken might be seriously hurt.

“He’ll be fine. Just leave him be. You’ll need to treat his wounds though.” Scythe girl lashed out impatiently, her pitch higher than it was. What’s with her?

“Here, give him this.” She threw over an envelope reluctantly and I bent forward to pick it up, opening it to see that there were a bunch of dried brown leaves. “They are healing leaves, you will make him eat.” She was walking away from us. “You don’t need water for hours when he has taken the leaves….”, Then all at once her presence was diminishing from the corporeal in a turbulent whirlwind, dissolving her talk and babyfaced features along with her scythe till it was out of sight. What remained was a light breeze. There was the sound of her scythe with the bowed, irregular contours hitting on the cement spot where she left.

I had a lot to process. I stared at the toilet divider, now already damaged and exposed, for awhile. I stared at my hands for that moment of truth again. A long while, and nothing. I waited. I rummaged my bag and did the bandages for our injuries, which fortunately did not require surgery or emergency aid. There was some water at the sink so I did my best to clean us up, wobbly limping on the side. I did have to walk slower than usual since my ankle twisted. There were several neck bruises and small cuts on my arms and Ken’s but they were minor.

An hour later, I heard Ken stirred and he had kicked against a hose getting up. I ran over to check on him and he hugged me in relief, both of us in pain, wildly afraid and in tears again. Jitterbug, I stuffed the healing leaves into Ken’s mouth, forcibly had him swallow it down which he did. I utter to him in that sweet tone Mom had always, deliberating the new might. “Ken, I’m a Seer. Watch me.”

To be continued.

- Vander

The Bermuda Sky [A Horror Story] Part 2

“You sure there ain’t anything or anyone in the building?” Ken warned, looking on suspiciously with his sweat dripping from his head. We walked and ran for miles before finding this school, a possible safe place now decrepit and dreadful against a familiar backdrop. Walls still standing up and strong, roof from the front looks fine although yet to be examined. It’s the school that we pass always, on the way home from the Jupiter mall in Mom’s car and on our bikes. Signboard missing, but sure about the Maple International School with the fancy courts that Mom would say on repeat, school for the rich children and their mollycoddling maids. Our 23rd day alive since Bermuda happened, vile giant creatures had arrived and took the towns, animals, families, my parents.. everything sped by fast and gone. We don’t know the nature of these lifeforms, their actual names or where they came from, at least the both of us. All the TVs and radios had wires fried when the circle moon broke into a triangle, its center still moon-like but different and diabolical this time. The neighbour who died saving us a meal and a shelter on our 10th day, only said it was the Bermuda calling out monsters. There must be an explanation somehow on Bermuda. What martian sick shit Bermuda could tear us all apart?

Ken and I saw them black wispy figures with smoky dark hands taking away Mom and Dad when we ran for cover and our fearless and protective parents had thrown us into the sewers, so we were able to make it out. How they died flabbergasted, not gonna say further, or think about it anymore, or overthink and weep silly again. Ken in denial blamed Christ, cried 2 weeks in and still had more grief to settle for grievance. Seeing as I was older, I had to be collected, firm and decisive to act on behalf of us. There’s no way we could ever mend the loss. Taking care of my messy brother after all that we’ve been through is the code I live for now. I’ve kicked his bullies and jailed their gangs before, but this IS the ultimate. Surviving the future ahead without adults, little food, sleeping in turns, the stench, clueless. We didn’t have enough on us on several occasions so both of us passed out walking and hiding and then woke up walking again, a long shot away from home.

“We have to enter, to get food. There might be showers working too.” I told Ken while pushing away barricades blocking the institution’s front porch, some broken and some not, but all the same stained in blood. “We could go in, might be a fortress.” The school’s perimeter fences had a part of it toppled over for us to sneak in so we just needed to push through the main entry where the lock broke but wouldn’t open.

Something was holding those double doors fast behind, so we took a severed section of a barricade and pushed against it. The attempt failed and the door wouldn’t budge. “Go harder and faster, it might work.” Ken murmured, hurrying to grab another long, heavy clunk of steel. Nodding, I held up both hands on the other end to support it at the back. “OK, let’s push it a few times, it might give”. For two kids not even 18 years of age I admit, we were clumsy teens, uncoordinated and cared far less. After the 5th try, our clonk worked a wonder and one door collapsed behind its entrance, the other still standing but splintered. We backed away, puffs of dust and dirt hazing at a distance till we could see the opening at the doorway, clear to get in. Funny, we dashed in like kids. It was a decent sized building, larger than the houses we found earlier, and it had many rooms. Classrooms.

“Hey, should we seal the entry?” I called out to Ken. “Oh yeah, good idea.” Then he took the hammer and some nails we had in our bag (we were lucky to have found them in the home we sought refuge before we got here days ago, packed them in our large backpacks meant for backpacking). Ken rummaged a tiny pouch for the nails, pulled the hammer out, taking out pieces of broken wood he found and lifted them to board it up nicely.

I ran fast to the canteen, Ken ploddingly trailed behind. Pulling the knob and going in, my consciousness sank. I stood wobbly, shaken by damages I couldn’t believe. Dining tables were wrecked, lights fell onto severed floor tiles with pieces of glass shattered all over the left of its side entrance. The ceiling seemed to be ripped at its edges apart, leaving daylight casted over the floors below. I swung open the kitchen doors and the refrigerator was lying horizontal over broken tiles and a pile of debris. “Supplies” was written on one inner door I found. Going through it had bags of flour on a metal shelf. One bag had spilled out its contents over the floor with dirt and slime.

“Don’t touch that opened one”. My brother cautioned to me. “Contaminated yes?” I dragged the spilled flour bag over to one corner. Then I found something else there. At first, I didn’t think it was what it was, when I saw a torn box that had a sticker flipped upside down with handwritten random numbers on it. Didn’t seem like it had anything within. Still, any box could mean stuff we could use, so why not? I flung the box wide open and saw another smaller box in it. That was a box containing 12 smaller packs of Chocolate biscuits, 3 in a pack. 12! Expires a year later, which must be new. Now this was more practical than flour, we might not have water and salt to make bread or an edible. It should taste averagely good and weigh us down on the road.

I gestured over to Ken and pointed to the biscuit box. “Take these, not the flour. We don’t need extra baggage.” As though Ken could read my mind and knew what I was talking about, he rushed over to peek into the box. Right away, he slipped out a lopsided IKEA bag from his backpack and gathered the biscuits for us. I went ahead and pulled open the refrigerator door but it had nothing in it. We sighed together when our eyes met, empty and disheartened. There wasn’t anything else handy we could find there, after all the food cabinets and storage shelves have been checked. Ken popped into a classroom and got out, shaking his head. He did that for the classroom next door too.

Most of the stuff we saw and went through stunk pretty bad, mixed together with our terrible body odour craving to be treated. Not wanting to waste further time, we made our way to the toilets at the hallway and found ourselves a shower stall that still had some clean water coming through, though no heating. The flow of water stopped almost as soon as we had finished washing up, Ken fully dressed while tying his shoelaces. An immediate thump followed, quaking the floors and there was a loud crash coming from the hallway.

“OMG quuick! Get dressed!! Something’s coming!” Ken cried out, grabbing all our things. Loud, accelerated thuds from what seem like colossal footsteps sent shockwaves through the air and our actions hastened with the approach. My head was spinning. Putting on my pants, and reaching for the shirt, a blast came through, ripping walls and toilet bowls and the impact flew us to the back of the room. We huddled against each other, bracing silent and petrified. Tears were flooding away our senses and our bodies were at this moment pinned down by nerves. The black wispy ones appeared, this time raging and bigger than we saw, a monstrous arachnid organism scuttling its limps, rapid prods striking massive holes into the grounds of the toilet, smaller holes around caving in. We clung to the remaining walls, rolling about opposite directions to get away but it was lurching at us. The hairy legs compress a beckoning of dark lingering wisps, separating itself from parent to child, sandy string curling into and wrapping taut around our necks. The choke was impetuous and intense. All struggling and screaming had dissolved into a mute, my windpipe about to explode, body turning blue. I knew I was dying, my brother too.

I love you Ken.. An illuminating bright flash, keen to a sun ray exposure blurred my vision and, a second shot back to reality brought it closer to a sight like it was calling out to me. There I saw the pounding heart of the Bermuda beast.

To be continued.

- Vander

Wall Of Hands Part 2 [A Horror Story]

Part 2 written by Vander of Lifebly (All references and descriptions are fictional.)

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“Mom, Dad!!!” I shouted at the top of my lungs as I noticed their full figures appearing in the distance, soon fading into the smoky horizon. Tears rolled down my cheeks and I couldn’t hold in the longing within me. I heard Mom’s voice saying as she sauntered away with Dad, “Baby, listen to your heart and your fears will go.” What fears? How did she know I was afraid? I was getting confused at her words. Then a beep in my head followed, and I awake to white light, blinding track lights that casted shadows at a direction. I looked at the cool daylight bulb on the ceiling lights. Taking in the macro view around, I found myself back in my bedroom. Prompt to retracing my prior steps and situation when I was at the library, I raised a palm over my forehead to check if I was running a fever. Right, I’m neither too hot nor cold to warrant a fever. So why was I lightheaded and tripped out? Suddenly, my stepmother (not the first of my concerns) peered into my door and hollered “You weren't eating at all, were you? School gave me a call, alerted on your knockout. Doc had you checked and you’re fine though.”

As if nothing happened, stepmom disappeared from the doorway, leaving her trail of steps heard going down the stairs. Ain’t surprising, considering I wasn’t really her child. Like always, I got up and changed into my old pajamas to rest in bed. My body still felt weak and dehydrated, so I took a long chug of water from the bottle at my nightstand. There at once, feeling grave and unnerving, it was there. In the water bottle. Several dead white tiny hands swirled around the water, clocking a sudden few spins of water spirals with intricate fingers lifting off every hand. In sync with every other pair of hands, basked in a trance ritual. About seven pairs of these little hands, possibly a centimetre each moving in synchronisation to the circulating water coil in reactive state. Blinking and looking at it again, this time holding it up to my huge eyes up-close, they were quickly gone. Have I gone batshit nuts? Please, allow me to retreat. I dipped back to bed and retired into a nap.

I knew the taste of hurt. Hurt is heavy, drowning your hopes out as it tucks away mind reasoning, body ready to consume more soul. Hurt had an unwelcoming familiarity begetting demise to bare ends. After getting called to dinner, in a huge sweat, I hurried out of bed and turned off the room lights. As the air got cooler, I’ve changed into a pair of fresh jumper and joggers, scuttling along and heading downstairs. I hated dinnertime at home. It was always the same routine of discussing bad news in town on modest Chinese meals. Today, like days before, the main talk at the table was still the coronavirus out up to speed spreading to cities worldwide, and life was not so normal with panic buys, frantic hoarders, and business closures. People were anxious about a pandemic, which the WHO has yet to admit. Stepmom and dad were speaking at disbelief, trying to rationalise the decisions of the authorities and sympathising by folks’ intentions. In between, they reached for the plates in front to grab a piece of chicken and broccoli, distraught at the occurrence of the sweeping health catastrophe. Visualising those hands again in the water glass on the dinner table, I course to remember the water spirals mediated by their cryptic movements. For reasons I know not of, I’m not spooked as I should be. My exhaustion might have nullified the sensing creeps. Hands, what are those hands?

The next day after school, I swung by the ice cream store for work. The new manager, a friendly, burly potbelly middle-aged guy was happy to see me. Being polite, I smile wryly, not so much to be liked but to reciprocate in return. Above the register on the wall attached the arranged schedule for this week, spotting my name on specific days after school hours for duty. Mr. Manager (I’ve nicknamed him Pots) instructed a tour downstairs to a basement where stocks and supplies were kept for the store, so I would be informed of inventory and store administration. At the end, there is a silver door opened, leading to a generously empty cellar set in white bricks on all four walls. Now this got to be a pretty excuse to keep an excellent stash of wines, smooth thinking, in my head. Cursory, my eyes glanced over the spacious cellar and something at the back ensnared my eye. On one side of the walls, rested several pairs of white hands hooked on securely to the brick. Porcelain-coated, some with minor chips and cracks but in the entirety retained its pristine. Not so midget in the water bottle, this time now. Pots intervened at once saying, “Oh those. Decorative indeed. Owner left behind. Quite the taste actually, a bit the sinister. Props for a show probably?” Those hands however, appeared like they had once, twice or more, moved. As I continue staring on as though struck to the ground by lightning at the multiple sets of white hands hanging almost camouflaged to the walls, Pots gave a smack on my shoulder in an abrupt mention, “Get over here and help me with these boxes!” shutting the cellar door behind us. God forbid, certainly, that one of the hands were jiggling on the brick as we ascended the basement.

Disclaimer: All poetry and fiction here are original material written by Vander. Please note that all text references, descriptions and indications are purely fictional (make-believe if you didn’t know what fiction is!) and is in no relation to any actual entities.

Wall Of Hands Part 1 [A Horror Story]

Part 1  written by Vander of Lifebly (All references and descriptions are fictional.)

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At 4 am, I saw a ghost of the past on a chair. It had the slightest grey tint of a shadow with white hands resting on the armrest. Completely still, it bore an air of ill displacement and sad misfortune. It’s frayed old attire suggested someone from the 1930s or 40s period, but I couldn’t even tell for what decade the dress code was as a person dropping out and having flung history lessons. I narrowed my eyes, fixated but drew it back as I got tired identifying the clothing’s era on that apparition. Learning and remembering history was mundane pain in class even as a college freshman who bothered to pen notes on paper on the side. Yes, call me dumb in my head, but truthfully honest and innocent at heart. You may perceive me as pure, I don’t know. And oh, by the way. I hate ghosts. Not because I fear them, but I see them all the time. Most days, they just have a little unfinished business and keep a distance. This one though, had a grieving darkness I could not quite grapple and understand. Something like a thicker fog, which never clears the path but grows heavier till it wolfs down everything. It had an overwhelming tenacious weight that could suck you in instantly, like a magnet being pulled into the unknown which likely kills in a second without warning, if one may imagine. 

Now, you may ask me. Why the hell am I looking at this ghost right now? Well, I was, working on my term assignment. It was homework at the ungodly hour, burning the midnight oil away. I had troubles sleeping so I got up to work on it two days before the deadline was due. I needed to get it done now, so I could use the extra time for a new part-time job at the ice cream store that just opened two weeks ago. I’ve nailed the interview for that, and it starts tomorrow, after class. Jolly great. Saving more money to move out of my step-parents’ home. Right, my current mom and dad are not my real parents. Just my parents’ friends who had indulged in collective sympathy, adopting me home into their household one day after the car accident that left everyone in my family dead, including my baby brother, here I solely survived. I was not at the scene, and I wasn’t really crying my balls out even then. Staring at the ceiling for almost a year and remaining practically mute throughout wherever I went was all I did, basically, for mourning. 

Gawd, this ghost looked a gruesome dead. It reeked of a peculiar sour stench, like a decayed dumpster of overexpired carcasses and all foul things in a morose. As I sniffed and unassumingly let out a leaky outlet of nasal sounding, the ghostly figure turned its face at me as though it heard. That thing revealed its eyes in a split second, parts of its eyelids exposed in convulsing flesh while registering my presence. Stunned to the bone in sobriety, I let out a scream. Bolting across the living area, tripping over my sleeping dog (this one’s absolutely too stoney for it’s own good) albeit balancing my fall with sturdy arms aligned to a pivot crawl up the stairs, I darted straight to my room, ducking right away into the covers of my bed. Trembling and fumbling at any pillow to hide my head properly well, to brace contact if it arises. That…….that, that, tttthhhh, that…that was a hideous, Machiavellian face of resentment and rancorous destruction which lost the whole damn darn way, possibly a hell’s league from anything quite remotely good. Or should I say already tarnished the sacred? I panicked, heart racing in action for a fight or flight. The whole night I quivered in fear and did not shut either eye for an hour. By morning, my drained energy drove me quite insane but I picked myself up for school anyway. Shit, I’ve actually hustled to school on time. On both numb, jellied feet.

The event of a ghastly encounter last night kept me awake all the way till lunch. It made me irrationally pacing back and forth, destabilised and frightened than ever at the mere thought of it where our eyes met, discharging a repulsive terror none the least anticipated or preferred. My lunch tray which was a sandwich and a milk carton was left untouched as I huddled alone in a corner at the noisy canteen. That memory of a creepy insidious face compelled my turtle-shell life to end ruptured in chaos to confront and vouch if whatever that entity was in any, anyyy bit normal. Sure didn’t look like Halloween rehearsal! Hours later, when classes ended, I rang up the ice cream store with the best excuse of being sick in period pains, scoring the day’s off successfully, the smartsy bailed part-timer. I must investigate that nightmare of a figure I saw. Now, my curiosity is leading the madness in my head. Going towards the school hallway and into the library doors, I removed my laptop from my tote swiftly turning it on and sweatily start looking up on that evil with monstrous white hands. Mentally hungry for clues, I banged in the keywords that came to my mind and a pool of related search results appeared. A linked article caught my eye instinctively at interest, insinuating me to select a news headline which said, “Scientist, dead in hill’s house found with collection of murdered hands”. As I begin to read on hastily, an intense wave of fatigue caught on, snapped me off and before long, my body caved in as I collapsed on the floor of the library.

Disclaimer: All poetry and fiction here are original material written by Vander. Please note that all text references, descriptions and indications are purely fictional (make-believe if you didn’t know what fiction is!) and is in no relation to any actual entities.