A dark tale of cults and despair. How far would you go to save the one you loved? |
Frontier Creek, Wyoming 1968 His heart pounded as he stepped up to the stand, cold sweat dripping down his neck. His stark white robe swished against the ground when he turned to face the group of curious onlookers. He was uncertain of his decision to give his life to the Sin Eater, did he really want to give his life away just to be reborn again? He concluded that, yes, he needed to be saved from the life that had held him in his problematic rut. The crowd hushed and leaned closer, for this was the first man to agree to be inducted. The dark cavern glowed with the small inkling of light breaking through the round ceiling. Behind the young man with the long blonde curls and ice blue eyes were the ways of rebirth that the Sin Eater offered. They were cast in shadows, the befouled men and women hadn’t seen what would happen in the end. When they agreed to save themselves, they’d banish their blood red robes for the pure white gown that they would awake in, to symbolize their innocence as a new person, one of higher virtues. “Do you, Lewis Hartwell, agree to abide by the rules and government of the Suicide Society, resting your misfortunes into the hands of the Sin Eater, allowing him to free you of your troubled times for you to be reborn in the ways of our heavenly savior?” He gulped and watched the once quiet crowd begin to mumble and shuffle their feet, expressing their thoughts without breaking the heavy silence upon them. What did the oath mean? And who was this Sin Eater? He shook the curls away from his eyes and loudly declared, “Yes, I, Lewis Hartwell, shall abolish my wrong-doings and let the Sin Eater cure me of my troubles. I shall not challenge the rules set in the stone by the Sin Eater to help us learn to live in peace and harmony. I shall be the first, but not the last, to lend my soul to the Sin Eater for safekeeping while I travel through the Waters of Tranquility and cleanse myself of the horrors my old body has done without my approval.” He nodded at the man in the black who presented the chalice. The black obsidian glimmered as the silent man passed it to Lewis. He dipped his hand into the clear paint and pressed it to the low ceiling. When he removed his hand, he snapped his fingers and the assistant provided him with a black light. He moved the light over his handprint, making the mark glow a bright blue. Above it the Sin Eater had written earlier, “We Are the Suicide Society, We Shall Never Fear Death in the Eyes of Our Savior.” He signed his name next to his handprint and turned towards the crowd. He looked into every set of fearful eyes and the confidence of his path started to set in. He held his head high as he strode to the raised platform again. “Lewis Hartwell, you have darkened your soul by leading yourself down the tarnished road and tempting yourself with Wrath. The sudden fury has destroyed your house and family, leaving behind only carcasses of what you could’ve had. You murdered your kin and neighbors, sloshing their combined blood across your bedroom. You drank it, bathed in it, and laughed while it drowned your youngest daughter at the age of three. Is this your sin?” “Yes, Sin Eater. I fell from my high values to wallow in the Seven Deadly Sins’ arms. Please, Sin Eater, rid me of my transgressions.” The cloaked man threw back his hood to show his white hair and bellowed out, “Are you ready to be washed of your sins and to become a better man for the world around you?” Lewis nodded frantically, his blonde curls bouncing by his ears. The Sin Eater pulled off his black gloves and showed his calloused and worn hands. “From these broken hands I shall relieve you of your troubles and send you to cleanse yourself in the waters. Come back when you wish, but only when you are ready to begin your life free of temptation and wrong-doings.” He placed his cold fingers to Lewis’s damp brow and made a circle on his forehead, “Be calm when you pass through the waters, for if you are not, they shall clog your peacefulness and never let you go.” He reached for another cup on the small table and brought it in front of the young man. “Drink, let it fill your mind and strip away any fears or disorder.” Lewis touched the cup to his lips, watching the Sin Eater drop back into the shadows. He threw back the concoction, the bitter liquid burning his throat. He coughed, trying to clear his airways. The colchicine had started its descent into Lewis’s system and the Sin Eater smiled. The world would be cleared of this man for at least a week, the world could be safe from another wrath-driven waste of space. He took the cup back and addressed the crowd, “Now,” he declared, “Lewis has broken the seal that God has made to keep us from being born anew. Lewis is the first to become pure, the second to understand why, and never the last to yearn for the peaceful glow of a halo above one’s head. Young man of the Lord, how do you want to meet your renewed self? The choice is yours, only yours to make.” He wiped the sweat from his face and rubbed the back of his neck in thought. “I choose,” he whispered, then cleared his throat, “I choose to be resurrected by the waters.” The Sin Eater led him over to the wading pool behind the platform. Blue lights glowed from beneath the still water and Lewis stared down at his reflection. The crowd stood slightly, trying to see what the amazing Sin Eater would do next. The Sin Eater gently pushed Lewis down to his knees, then moved his long sleeves up past his elbows. He rested his hands on both sides of Lewis’s neck and hummed, trying to receive the energy that Lewis’s soul would offer. He then lowered the man’s head into the water, the wet curls floating along the surface. “Be still and allow yourself to be changed into a better man,” the Sin Eater whispered, calmly petting the wet curls. Lewis began to thrash, the last of his air supply releasing from his lungs. He screamed, air bubbles racing for the surface of the holy water. “I’m just trying to save you!” the Sin Eater cried, shoving Lewis’s head in farther while his arms were trying to push himself out, “This is your sin trying to remove itself from the holy water, blessed by the rosary. Let it out, don’t allow the sin to possess you!” Lewis struggled against the older man, but the wrinkled hands were persistent and slowly Lewis stopped his flailing. The Sin Eater released the man’s shoulders and murmured, “He’s in the arms of God now. He’ll come back a better man.” Two of the Suicide Society followers shouldered the empty vessel’s weight and laid him down in the next room. They closed his eyes and muttered a few prayers before drizzling the body with gasoline. The single wood match lit the dark room and caught quickly onto the corpse’s clothes. The room engulfed in flames while the men walked out, thinking that they had done the right thing. The Sin Eater grinned in the shadows; Lewis wouldn’t be coming back anytime soon. He had rid the world of a terrible soul and there were more out there. Everyone wanted to be saved, one way or another. Frontier Creek, Wyoming 1979 The team scoured the area, searching for the light-show that the neighbors had reported for the last few months. With the land as flat as a roadkill squirrel, the complaining citizens saw the blue light as if they were a few hundred feet away. Mrs. Robinson, the last neighbor to report the mysterious light, said that the glow originated from the inside of the cave in the middle of the abandoned area. Frontier Creek was a small town, a home for 671 quiet townsfolk. When someone reported anything at all, the small police crew was on it. It was either that or sitting in the hot office, waiting for Ol’ Jim to play his cards in a dragged out game of poker. The Frontier Creek Police Department consisted of six officers, seven if you counted Ol’ Jim who sat in a rocker on the front porch with a shotgun, swearing up and down that a pair of cowboy robbers would take the bank from across the street if he even batted an eye. The chief had told the man many a time that Pete and Mary Bloon were rotting six feet under, but he couldn’t convince the ninety year-old man to give up his gun. So he hired Ol’ Jim as security. Their flashlight beams pierced the dark cave, searching the corners for snakes and other aggravated wildlife. The five men shook their heads when the cave lit up like a Christmas tree, revealing nothing that would harm them. They trudged in with their steel-toed clodhoppers. The cave was small and there were no holes in the walls that could hide the equipment needed to create such a powerful light. Officer Marshall Sanders breathed a quick sigh of relief and swiveled to sound the “all-clear” when he stumbled, stepping back to catch himself. The ground gave around his foot and he tumbled down a vertical shaft. The other men scrambled down the metal ladder that was unearthed in the opening. “You all right?” the gruff voice of the chief echoed against the tunnel walls, showing that it wasn’t a dead end. Sanders nodded, moving to stand up. The men aimed their flashlights down the hallway, where it turned into the deep dark underbelly of Frontier Creek. They slowly shuffled down, turning the corner into an open area. Small mats lined the floor in rows of twenty with seven columns behind them. In front of the lines of dark blue mats was a raised platform that had a small light raining down on it. One of the crew moved closer, and saw that there was a crack in the ceiling, allowing the natural light to filter in. “Wow,” they breathed as they took in the eccentric carvings on the walls. The policemen split up to check for abnormal light sources. Officer Sanders ran his hand across the wall, feeling the engravings as deep as a few inches slide into ones that barely breeched the surface. The swirls connected with ghastly eyes that watched the men sweep the auditorium like room. The newest member of the group, Officer Seth Flanchez, walked over to the farthest corner and flashed his light around. This was only his third outing as a part of the police force and he was still full of the “newbie rockets” as his colleagues called them and he bounced on the balls of his feet and whistled a happy tune while peering around the corner of a rock formation. He looked around at the other men and slid behind the stalagmite. He quietly whistled the tune for Mission Impossible and jumped from behind the rock, holding his flashlight like he would his gun. “Seth, what in the blazing fires are you doing?” the chief bellowed from across the room, startling the amateur. He mumbled his apologies and turned back to the wall. Flanchez moved closer to the corner and saw a shadow covering a small section of it. When he inched closer he noticed that it wasn’t a shadow but an opening. He walked through, flicking his flashlight over the uneven floor. After stepping down a few stairs, he sank knee deep in the pile of ashes. They filled the floor, moving up the walls until they brushed the second step where he had stepped off. “Uh, guys?” he stumbled back up the steps and motioned for them to move his way, “I think you should see this.” They gasped at the amount of ashes in the small room. “Are those...” Officer Sanders started, covering his mouth as the chief lightly stepped into the gray mass. “Yeah,” the chief answered quietly as he sifted his fingers through, bringing a small pile to his nose to sniff. He dropped his hand, letting them spin towards the floor, “Yeah they are. Those are human. There are no remains of wood anywhere. This is just sick.” They all solemnly watched their boss climb out of the remains of dozens of people. “I think we have a mass murderer on our hands boys.” They ransacked the caves, dusting for fingerprints and moving every rock for clues. The ultraviolet light cast a blue glow across the cracked walls and engravings. They found hair and skin follicles on all the seats and the platform too. Seth moved the light back and forth over the wooden planks of the platform, a fixed grimace etched in his young face. Shoe prints glowed in the blue illumination. His long chestnut hair flopped in his face as he scrutinized the pattern of one print. It was only on the farthest corner from the sunlight. Officer Flanchez stood up, cracking his back as he went. His black light briefly lit up the ceiling and he slowly passed it over the section of the ceiling again. “Uh Chief?” Seth called, looking over his shoulder, “I don’t think that it’s a mass murder. We’re dealing with a cult.” He had found the symbol of loyalty to the Suicide Society. Raven’s Cliff, Maine 1982 The Sin Eater had fled Frontier Creek, searching for another godforsaken town where evil ran through the waters, filling every soul with a black sludge that would twist and corrupt their minds. His wanderings led him across the Midwest and toward the Northeast. He stopped in Maine, as far as he could go without crossing into Canada. A final stop for gas etched his destiny in stone. The daily newspaper showed that a man and his daughter had slain five women who resembled the mother. Evil was in this area, he could feel it in his withered bones. Yes, this place will do just fine. He travelled down the dirt road, passing houses that turned into farms and then into trees. He parked his beaten pickup truck on the side of the road and began to walk. He headed straight for the trees, searching for another hideaway to begin his next chapter of the Suicide Society. He stumbled over fallen trees and sidestepped small streams until he reached a small meadow. The lush trees overhead blocked out any light trying to filter through. Over in at the edge of the field, was a broken tree, the roots were sticking up in the air. He moved closer, dragging his black shoes through the wet grass. Underneath the cover of roots, was a large hole that sank at least five feet into the wet earth. He crouched down and patted the walls of the hole and found that it was packed hard. The Sin Eater jumped into the deep opening, his black cloak billowing out above his head. The dirt beneath his feet shifted, revealing that the shaft could be opened further. Oh yes, this will do quite nicely. He worked during the night, quietly stealing small construction equipment and lights to dig more of the hole. Underneath four feet of dirt was solid rock and his stolen jackhammer let him delve deeper into his new chambers. Even with the noise, the trees embraced it, silencing the sounds of rock giving way, keeping the Sin Eater a secret. ** Raven’s Cliff, Maine Present Day He had finally finished. Underneath the fallen tree was a long tunnel that ended with an auditorium, a large sleeping quarter for his guests, and two small rooms off to the side, his own bedroom and the Room of Ashes. Now he needed his followers. He sent out flyers, broadcasting a seminar where people could be saved from the Seven Deadly Sins. With the murders still fresh in their minds, people flocked to the meadow where he chose an elite few to become his aides and a few others to spread the word around the small county. With the others, he led them down the metal ladder, through the dark tunnel and into the fire-lit room. They took their seats and he moved to the platform. The people gasped and looked wary when he told them of his ways to be purified. He reminded them of the murders and asked them if they wanted to become the same. One man stood up, dressed in the black robes that the aides had handed out. He walked to the stand, changing into the white robe that the Sin Eater held out for him and approached the platform. “Do you, Lucas Stratler, agree to abide by the rules and government of the Suicide Society, resting your misfortunes into the hands of the Sin Eater, allowing him to free you of your troubled times for you to be reborn in the ways of our heavenly savior?” He nodded his agreement and the Sin Eater presented him with the cup of paint. The tall man wet his hand and pressed it to the ceiling above his head. He then drank the red liquid, letting it burn his throat as he held it for as long as he could. He passed the goblet off and coughed to clear his throat. “Lucas has broken the seal that God has made to keep us from being born anew. Lucas is the first to become pure, the second to understand why, and never the last to yearn for the peaceful glow of a halo above one’s head. Young man of the Lord, how do you want to meet your renewed self? The choice is yours, only yours to make.” “I I,” he stammered, “I don’t want to do this anymore.” He walked off the stage and back to his seat. The Sin Eater watched him with a small smile behind his mask. He had drank the colchicine, and in a few hours, he would be dead. He released the crowd, allowing them to go to their sleeping rooms. His bedroom was filled with the glow of a small lantern in the center by his bed. He sat on the rough sheets, ripping his mask off his face in the process. He swiped at his eyes, feeling the long scar tearing his face into two halves. He picked up a small frame that was next to the light. Inside of it was a note, the paper starting to yellow with age. “Why did I take that deal, Crowley?” he whispered as he smudged the glass incasing his blood signed contract. “Because you had nothing else to do, except to let your son die,” the man appeared behind the Sin Eater in a flash of light. “Oops, he already did. Guess that didn’t exactly work out in your case did it, Jonah Phoenix?” He walked around and grabbed the frame, “Aw, you still have it after all these years? And I was the one that thought you hated me.” “I’ve been trying to use it to get out of your dirty work. As King of the Crossroads, you should be nicer,” Jonah growled and lunged to get the contract back. “Yes, but I’m a demon, and you really can’t expect anything nice out of me, right? And it’s not that bad, look at your arm.” The Sin Eater pulled up his long sleeve and saw his pain and suffering engraved on his flesh. As part of the deal he had made with Crowley, he had to bear the words of God across his body and bleed when a human committed one of the Deadly Sins. He watched as the words on his wrist disappeared without a trace. Lucas was dead. “After sixty years of this you would think that you’d get used to this. You’ll never be able to break the link we have, you know. Just live with it and relieve this world of the disgusting humans that live on it.” Crowley disappeared, his brown trench coat the last to go. The Sin Eater screamed as his open wounds bled profusely, the Bible cutting deep into his very soul. Another human had twisted his soul by giving in to the temptation of the seven Deadly Sins. The Sin Eater had to endure the pain as the words that had just been erased were rewritten. He had to walk the Earth, killing the people who had evil in their souls before he could take his last breath. He pulled his knife from underneath the mattress and sucked in a large amount of air. He thrust the knife into his chest, right where his heart was. The pain made him double over and gasp quick breaths to save his racing heart. Crowley’s voice came back to him as he moved to lay down. A phoenix may rise from the ashes again and again, but you will never die until the last man who kills his bond with God is gone from every planet in the universe. It was in the fine print. Sorry. |