The door turned to splinters under the force of the Hunter's boot. The termite riddled, rotten wood blew forward to reveal the oddity inside, exploding with more force than he had meant. The remains of the door ripped from its hinges and slid across the floor.
Despite the decrepit exterior, the inside of the church had been decorated.
White streamers lined the walls of the abandoned building. Great baskets of flowers ran the length of long forgotten pews and a single red carpet had been rolled out along the aisle. Rice was scattered about the ground, leading up to the altar. At the far end, a double set of candles burned dimly in the dusty darkness.
Their lights highlighted it.
It was disguised as the same young woman he'd seen so many times looking through her windows. She was dressed in a long, flowing white wedding dress and had her back to him. In any other instance, he might have approached her; maybe attempted to help her or even check why this seemingly innocent young lady was standing in the middle of this hall of horrors.
He knew better.
Pulling the hammer back on the revolver in his hand, a satisfying click echoed the derelict church.
The slight twitch of her head told him it had heard.
She turned around to face him, a soft smile playing along her lips. She had been beautiful before it had gotten to her. Blue eyes, rosy cheeks, blonde hair, and a slender figure. Now, staring at that same visage, he knew it was just a facade.
"Hello, Father." it said with a growling voice that surprised him.
There was no pretense here. Despite wearing its victim's face, it knew that he wasn't going to be fooled.
"Hello, Demon." he responded in turn.
"Demon? Now is that anyway to talk to a lady?" it asked with a smile far too big and viscous for girl's dainty mouth. "Especially on her wedding day."
The Hunter glanced around briefly at the macabre display. His thoughts drifting to the poor young man who would begin desperately searching for his lost love; if he hadn't already.
"You haven't killed him yet." he said.
"No." it confirmed. "But it won't be long. I want to let it set in first."
"Set in?"
"The loneliness." it said with a smile that now cracked the edges of her mouth, splitting it into a hideous clown-esque appearance. "I can't help but enjoy all of those lonely people."
"You're a monster."
"AND YOU'RE A FOOL!" it snapped with sudden force.
He brought the revolver up to bare; focused dead on the creature before him.
"After all," it continued, bleeding back into its softer tone, "This wedding is for us."
The creature extended his hand and he felt himself tighten. Felt his strength drain away as he was lifted from the ground as if by an invisible force. It wrapped around his body, held him still, and dragged him forward towards the altar not a foot from the creature.
"Tsk tsk. And what groom forgets to wear a suit?" it said with hideous intent.
This close to the creature, he could smell its rank breath. The scent was heavy with rot and decay and he could plainly see every needle point little tooth in her mouth.
With tender, gentle hands, it reached up to start unbuttoning his collar.
"I should tell you," it began. "I'm often quite accommodating."
The next few buttons.
"I often kill them quick."
A few more.
"Clean."
The coat came off.
"It's no fun to let them die screaming. It ruins the flavor of the meat."
It reached for his shirt.
"I don't think I'll afford you the same luxury." it said with a hiss.
Peeling away the first button of his shirt revealed the silver cross he wore around his neck. The result was an instantaneous roar as the creature dove backward. It was a defiant, sickened noise that matched the hideous sight as the creature bent backwards in a fashion that would have broken a human's spine and leaped against the nearest wall.
But his hands were free.
The gun came to bare a second time and he had emptied the revolver into its chest even before he could feel his fingers again.
With a heavy thud, the creature hit the ground.
It did not get back up.
As he went about burying the creature in the graveyard behind the church. The Hunter considered removing its damaged visage, but decided against it. While the face it had stolen was cracked and broken, he had no interest in seeing what it really looked like now. Plus, he didn't think the dead cared much one way or another if her face was buried with it.
He gave it its last rights all the same.
With a sigh, he wiped the dirt from his hands as he walked from the grave. With the exception of the fresh mound, Father McKenzie had left nothing to signify that the graveyard had a new, unaccounted corpse.
He would call in the death in the morning to the local police department. An anonymous tip, like always. There was no point in letting the poor boy, or the police, continue their search. Eleanor Rigby was dead and she had been for weeks; she just finally had a grave to go with it.
Showing posts with label all the lonely people. Show all posts
Showing posts with label all the lonely people. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 7, 2017
All the Lonely People - Part 2
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Sunday, March 5, 2017
All the Lonely People - Part 1
Like him, the satchel was old, worn, and dirty but stronger for it. Built for another purpose, but molded to its new life with surprising capability. It was filled with hard things, pointy things, and enough destructive power to rain death with the force of a hurricane. Still, hope existed within its folds.
Setting aside the stained bible that rested atop his instruments of death, the Hunter drew out a long and slender knife. It found its sheathe with a ring of the blade.
Soon, another.
And another.
Knives, blades, flechettes, guns, ammo, explosives, trinkets of all shapes and size, and even a good old silver cross. Each one found its pocket, its holster, or its home. Each one was snug and secure, able to withstand a beating should the need arise, but ready to be drawn at a moment's notice.
Many of his kind found the weight of the weapons cumbersome and restrictive. He didn't agree. If anything, if made him feel more centered then any other time. He felt bald and exposed otherwise. Cold.
The satchel was back into his trunk. A moment later, a newspaper clipping fell to the street below. He quickly gathered it up and tucked it into his pocket before closing up.
He didn't need to read what was in the clipping. The Hunter could probably recite the first lines from memory.
BRUTAL MURDERS CONTINUE!
After months of searching, police still have no leads for the terrible
serial killer that has terrorized Maple Brook county since early October.
While police assure residents that they are hot on the trail, one off duty
officer revealed that they have yet to find anything substantial. The victims,
three separate young women,all engaged, were each found with their faces
removed with surgical precision. While leaving the muscle and bone beneath...
Staring up from his parking space on the abandoned road, the old church before him appeared empty. He knew better.
Its windows were cracked and broken in many places. Several shutters hung loosely. Some local jokers had spray painted a number of foul words across one side. Chunks of wood had split here or there, giving him the impression that the building could collapse at any moment. Not far behind, the old graveyard sat as dead still as the corpses it housed.
The Hunter's boots made loud thunks as he walked up the rotting steps. He didn't care. It knew he was coming anyway.
He'd watched the thing for the last several weeks. It wasn't until the day before that he realized it had been watching him back.
Disguised as a young girl in her early twenties, the Hunter had started watching her under the presumption that she was the thing's next target. While he didn't introduce himself, he also didn't make a point to hide either. Every now and again he'd see her sitting at the large bay windows of her apartment, watching the world go by. Or, as he discovered, watching him.
It wasn't until the girl hadn't come home that he decided to look a bit closer.
Breaking in was easy enough. Her apartment didn't even have a deadbolt.
At first glance, it hadn't been anything out of the ordinary. He found everything he would have expected to. The kitchen was stocked but not overly. There was some dirty laundry but there was a basket of clean ones needed to be folded. Glasses on the night stand, TV in the bedroom...nothing strange.
It wasn't until he was on his way out that he noticed the small bookcase in the landing.
There was no seam between the bookcase and the wall.
The Hunter gingerly touched it and tried to move the bookcase forward slightly. No give. He tried harder, not overly worried if he knocked the whole thing over. Still, it didn't move. Now, glancing inside, he could see the notch in the back that indicated the false backing.
Tearing away the books, the backing was removed easily. Behind it lay three jars.
Even with years of monsters and mayhem under his belt, it was hard not to grimace at what was inside.
Each jar was mostly empty. A clear fluid filled them but the Hunter was confident that it probably wasn't water. Floating inside the jar was a skinned human face. They would bunch up and stretch out as if flowing with some unseen current, but every now again they'd take shape.
And that shape would be a silent, soundless scream of pain and horror.
He'd kept the jars.
With them hidden in his trunk near the satchel, he pushed the thought of the tortured souls in order to steel himself for the monster to come.
Drawing an old revolver, he lifted his foot and caved in the front door. What he found inside was far from expectation...
[Read more in Part 2! Coming Soon.]
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