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A serial killer see's hell, but is sent somewhere much worse. |
Faces flashed before him. Screaming, pleading, agonized portraits enveloped his vision, and for a moment, Henry Rowe forgot who he was. Then he remembered. He was the person that the Santiago police had tried for twenty years to capture but to no avail. He was the person that had gotten away with some of the worst serial torture cases in history, and he was also the fifteenth person to be executed in the state of California since the death penalty was reinstated in 1978. This, in a strange way, gave him a demented sense of pride. But not now. Now, plummeting down this endless spiral of darkness and terror, there was no pleasure or emotion. Only the strange and familiar anguished faces of his past subjects he mercilessly tormented. "Packages" he liked to call them. He hated to refer to them as nothing more than objects. "Toys" of his amusement. Oh, the power he felt! He was god... Was. As he felt himself land on hard, dry, ground. This power he felt, for the first time in his existence, seemed to have reversed itself. Now he felt at the mercy of the power that had a hold of him now. He gazed out over a barren wasteland, in which the landscape was dry and sandy. The land seemed cloaked in a dark red shadow that looked sinister and filled him with dread and hopelessness. The very air seemed to have a kind of pressure, or weight, and he felt like an egg ready to crack. He realized, finally, were he was. Throughout his years, Henry never believed in hell. He never expected any kind of supernatural punishment for his horrible acts of barbarism. He always assumed any kind of religious belief was for people that could not handle the fact of eternal expiration. That death is the end. Saps, all of them. That's why he did what he did. He had all the power over a person's existence. He chose if death was the end for them. Which it usually was. It seemed now he was in hell, and who knows what punishment he will receive for his wickedness on earth. Just as he began to realize his fate, something else happened that added to the strangeness. He shut his eyes, opened them, and saw he was now in a dark room. The weird smell of gasoline and alcohol flooded his nostrils. He tried to move his arms, only to discover they were bound. His entire body was bound, he realized, to a dentist style chair. Straining his eyes, he tried to shift through the darkness for any kind of light. Maybe the crack of a door. Suddenly, a set of fluorescent lights clicked on, Temporarily blinding him. They revealed a small clean chamber, almost like a doctor's office. A desk was seated in a corner, on which were books of anatomy, pencils, paper, and an assortment of other office supplies. The only thing out of the ordinary in the room was gray skull setting atop a shelf. It seemed to have been converted into a morbid candle holder. Strange. The room seemed awfully familiar! What about it was striking his nerves? Realization flicked on as suddenly as the lights. This was the room he had always brought his "packages," his dolls back to. This is were he committed the crimes that etched him in history. Only this time, he was seeing it from another perspective. His victim's? What was this? A noise echoed out into the room. Static. The sound tickled his ears, and his eyes drew to the source. A small tape recorder rested between his thighs. An aristocratic voice issued from it, his own. *** When Henry would acquire a subject, usually female between the ages of 25 and 30, he would play a tape recorder while they were bound and blindfolded. This tape recording was used to, he figured, to strike fear into the person. Making them easier and more enjoyable prey. Now, listening to his own voice emit from the device, he couldn't help but notice the irony. "Good evening," It said, "Obviously you have been brought here against your will. I'd imagine your scared. Please don't try to struggle, it makes my job so much easier...." It went on and on. Taunting him. His own voice taunting him! Filling his head with hopelessness and doing what it was created to do. ".....it would be best for you to let go. Just give in to what's to come, there is no hope for you. These walls are totally sound proof....." As it continued to play, Henry finally realized, they were never ever really deprived of hope. They always had it. Deep in their souls they always had a glimmering star of hope, even if that hope burst out into a supernova. He had it to, once. However, now was different. His hope had expired long ago. It was to late. The recording came to an end. For the first time since his childhood, Henry's eyes weld up with tears. Not entirely out of fear, but sadness. He bowed his head. All those souls. Now he knew how they must have felt. After collecting himself, he noticed a man in the center of the room. He was tall, pale, and had smooth black hair. His eyes shown an amber tint, and he was dressed in a plane black robe. Arms crossed, he looked impatient with Henrys tears, but he didn't look surprised with them. "What is this," Henry gasped, "Where am I?" The mans eyes widened as if Henry should know. "This is hell Henry Rowe." The mans voice was powerful, like a king declaring war to his kingdom. "Now, you will be punished for your wickedness according to your crimes." He said this in a strictly formal manner, it sounded as if this was a routine. Henry watched as the man walked to a drawer, pulled it open, drawing out a cordless power drill. Henry remembered it. It was is favorite instrument. The hooded figure approached him. His amber eyes never changing expression. "You may try to resist if you wish." Henry closed his teary eyes, knowing there was no use. The man sighed with relief. "Good, makes my job so much easier." The man grabbed Henry's head and placed the drill bit to his temple, clicked of the safety and mashed the button. *** Henry woke up stretched out over his notes. Drool was leaking from his mouth soaking the segment of his report on the anatomical structure of the brain. The remains of his latest experiment sat bound and gagged in the chair behind him. He looked over at the clock and saw that it read eleven fifty. Man, he must have dozed off, and that dream! What was that? He rubbed his eyes. His shoulders had begun to ache, and his damn knees. How long had that segment lasted? This package had been particularly arousing. She could fight, and it took a lot to break her. He smiled to himself as he slid his glasses on and walked across the room past the chair with her in it, gingerly dodging the blood splattered on the linoleum. He skimmed her cold, dead arm with his fingertip as he did so, that smile still etched on his thin lips. Whenever he reached for the door, his mind now set on a glass of red wine, he heard the sound. It wasn't something your average man would probably notice, especially an exhausted man who ached all over. But, you see, if you've ever had a vivid dream of going to hell, you just might notice small sounds like this. Sssssssssssppppp. He froze, hand outstretched, inches from the door knob. Maybe if he'd just dismissed it, went on, had his glass of wine, and went to bed, maybe Henry Rowe could have escaped his castigation. But, as it was, he didn't. Instead, he turned slowly on his heels and faced the room. Sssssssssssppppp. He was just in time to see it. The freezer lid, slapping shut. To his horror, his feet began to move on their own. Sssssssssssppppp. He tried to scream, couldn't. His feet slid across the blood, but he never fell down. It wasn't his body anymore, it seemed. His toes bumped into the base of the freezer and he stopped. Looking down at the lid, he began to cry. Just like in his dream. He heard a whisper in his ear. "There are worse places than hell, Henry." At first, looking down into the freezer, all Henry could see was darkness. Then as his vision adjusted, he could see something just as blank as darkness. In fact, I don't see how anyone can describe what humans cannot imagine. Pure chaos. Is that it? The space between spaces maybe? Whatever it is, it's terrible. Oh, God... Terrible. And Henry, who will live there. Alone, naked, insane... Does anyone really deserve such a fate? Then again, did any one of Henry's victims? "Oh yes, Henry. Hell is of human imagining, but not this place... this place was built by alien gods and immortals. Henry tried to scream again, but couldn't. He watched, eyes wide, as a squid like tentacle crept up his chest and wrapped around his throat. It phased in and out, as if his brain couldn't exactly register it, so this is a close as it could get. "The Trench, Henry. You'll be there forever, with me and my pals..." The tentacle yanked him in, right out of his shoes. The freezer closed. Sssssssssssppppp. *** The police arrived two weeks later. The body of the missing woman had become so foul that the forensic team had to wear special filtering masks to even breath the air safely. Under the floor, they found countless bodies, almost a quarter of the missing persons report was under that room. Though morbid, this was not the oddest thing the police found. Once they saw this odd sight, the officers on the scene would later go home with a new ghost story to tell their children. Those children would tell their friends, and by the time they were teenagers, interloping in abandoned warehouses, or under bridges, or at a dam, they would say, "Yea, I've already heard that one a thousand times. The police walk in and see a pool of blood or something that someone's stepped through. The bloody footprints lead to freezer and there they stop, with the shoes still on the floor. They open the freezer and find among the frozen body parts a bloody apron, a business suit, and a broken pair of eyeglasses... Oooohh, I'm so scared." If they knew exactly what had happened to Henry Rowe, they would be. |