Knife
and Tooth
Breaker's
Woods was a desolate place. Buck knew that; he had lived there for
his whole life with Ma and all his siblings. He was out behind their
house, chopping firewood to cook dinner with, when he heard it first;
a rustle in the brush around him. He looked up and squinted into the
dark, but he couldn't make anything out between the trees.
No
more movement, no more crunching of leaves; he walked back inside.
The fire was crackling and the stew above it was bubbling in the pot.
His Ma wasn't in the living room, but he heard her yelling from
somewhere in the house; most likely at his little sister Beth Ann,
who earlier had run around in one of Ma's Sunday dresses through
the woods. She was trying to catch squirrels, and thought they would
like her better if she was more 'purty' as she had said.
Beth
Ann yelled back at Ma. She was really in for it now; Ma drug her to
the living room by her arm, kicking and screaming. "Gonna take this
little lady out to learn a lesson," Ma told Buck, panting. "Watch
the soup, please, and keep your brothers in. Cut that out!" she
growled at Beth Ann, who was trying to bite Ma's tight-gripped
hand. It was no use; Ma was a hunter, and once she had you in her
hands, it was done for.
She
drug Beth Ann out the front door and slammed it shut. The lock
clicked aggressively afterward. A second after, a loud baby's cry
rang out through the house; Lil' Sal must've woken up from his
nap. Buck sighed and walked into his brothers' room, where Lil'
Sal and his other brother, Dusty, slept. Dusty was still peacefully
asleep (he always slept real good), but Lil' Sal was screaming in
his rocking crib.
"Shhhh,
little buddy," Buck whispered, picking up his kid brother in his
arms and holding him close. Lil' Sal grabbed his flannel with a
tiny pink hand, still crying but not as loud. After a few minutes of
rocking in Buck's arms, and getting his soft head rubbed, Lil'
Sal was calm and smiling.
"There
we go," Buck said with a big smile. "All better?" Lil' Sal
giggled, reaching up for Buck's face. He leaned down and let his
kid brother explore his face with those tiny hands. Lil' Sal
giggled again when Buck tapped his button nose.
"Back
to bed with you, Sally man," he whispered softly as he laid Lil'
Sal in the soft blankets Gran had knitted before she passed. As soon
as Buck tucked him in, Lil' Sal's eyes fluttered shut. Before he
could leave, though, those tiny hands grabbed Buck's scarred one
and snuggled up to it. He smiled.
He
stopped smiling, however, when a long BANG
echoed
through the house. He froze, checking on his still sleeping brothers,
before he ran through the hall into the living room. Nothing was out
of place when he got there; the couch wasn't tipped over, the
window was still intact, the mantle had everything still on it. The
soup, however, was boiling. Buck stepped over, still on edge, and
took the pot off the fire. He set it up on the mantle to cool off.
BANG.
Buck
jumped again, whipping his head around in the direction the noises
came from. The front door was open. That's
weird, Buck
thought. Ma had locked the door when she took Beth Ann. He could have
sworn she did. He made his breath soft and shallow, treading very
quietly on the carpet on his floor. The kitchen caught his eye for a
second: the gleaming of a butcher knife. Buck picked it up quietly,
swinging it slowly to get the feel of using it.
He
peeked out into the darkness around him. Thank God Ma had taught him
to hunt, so he knew how to keep quiet. His night vision was real
good, too, so he could see into the darkness they kept trimmed around
their house. But he still couldn't see past that damned tree line.
He
stepped out into the cold of the grass, which was seemingly parting
for his feet to create a silent step. Buck turned his head so much
his neck started to hurt, scouring the small amount of plant life
that surrounded his house until it hit the brush.
Another
skill Ma had helped him develop was his listening. He was attentive
and very good at picking out sounds. He tuned into the sounds around
him, but all he heard was the wind and the occasional owl hoot. He
felt like something was missing, but he couldn't tell what.
As
he turned around to go back inside, he heard a loud, high pitch
scream. It sounded like a little girl... Beth Ann! He whipped around
and frantically sprinted to the back of his house, and what he saw
horrified him beyond words.
To
start, Ma's corpse was lying in the grass next to the stump where
Buck chopped wood. He knew it was a corpse in one painful glance; her
stomach had a massive hole in it, and her organs were on the lawn.
Her face was twisted in a final look of agony, and her house dress
was shredded and coated in her blood. But that wasn't the scary
part.
Beth
Ann was writhing in the air, being held by a long, bony arm, wielded
by a long, bony person-looking figure, maybe eight or nine feet tall.
It was unhuman, had to be, because no person he had ever interacted
with had all their bones stretched out like that. The skin was
taught, and the appendages were stiff, but it moved very fast and
very sure. But the face was... odd. The top half of the face looked
human, but from the upper jaw down, the skin was stretched to the
point of ripping, and the joints were disconnected, like a snake
unhinged its jaw.
The
nose was different though, it was crooked, like someone had punched
it hard one way and snapped it back into place in the other. Whatever
the nose looked like didn't matter, however, when it raised a
screaming Beth Ann higher above its open mouth.
"Bethy!"
Buck cried desperately, making the monster thing look down at him. He
lunged at it with his knife, ripping into its skinny leg. It
shrieked, but didn't drop Beth Ann, who was hysterically sobbing,
crying for her big brother's help. Buck hacked away at it until it
pushed him feet away with a sweep of its foot. He landed hard on the
compact dirt, making him grunt. His ears were ringing, and he felt a
snap in his chest, a rib, maybe? He shut his eyes.
When
he finally looked up, the thing was gone, and all he could see of
Beth Ann was a bloodied shoe.
The
trees were all swaying in a soft breeze. The sunny, summer sky was
hidden by fluffy-looking grey clouds. It was a Tuesday evening, and
while the air was still warm, the sun was nowhere to be seen. Just
gloom. But that gloominess didn't get to Lily; she was smiling and
laughing on a blanket with her adorable boyfriend, Owen. They were
having a picnic date in Breaker's Woods, which was a short distance
from the city they lived in, but still far enough away to not be
bothered.
As
Lily ate her salt and vinegar chips, one of them got stuck in the
spot where a recently lost tooth used to be.
"Do
you know the muffin man, the muffin man, the muffin man! Do you know
the muffin man, the muffin man I know! Do-" Owen sang and sang and
sang.
Lily
threw a roll at him as she tried to pick the chip out of her gums.
"Shut up! You've been singing that song all day!"
"AH!
ABUSE!"
"I'll
show you abuse!" Lily got up. Owen play screamed and ran.
Lily
chased after him. She was laughing at his goofy faces, and he was
making fun of her. Everything was as normal and blissfully sweet as
any other day. Until it wasn't.
Owen
tripped over something sticking out from under a bush. Lily laughed
at him until she looked closer. The thing Owen tripped over was a
shiny black shoe. Not an old one either, no, this Jordan looked
relatively new. But what was it doing here? Owen looked closer at the
bush, squinting at it like he was looking at something. Then he
screamed and twisted away. He was terrified. He tried to crawl past
Lily, but she caught him in her arms and held his shaky frame close.
"What's
wrong?" Lily asked, stroking his hair worriedly.
All
he did was point at the bush with a shaking hand. So, Lily got up and
walked over to it. She noticed that with every step, swarms of flies
and the smell of rotten flesh was getting heavier. She moved the
branches aside and looked down at what was underneath. She shrieked,
jumping away.
She
saw a boy with dark skin under the thick branches. His stomach was
torn up and hollowed, he was obviously missing the bones in his rib
cage and his spine. There was bloody, sticky mud in his chest. His
eyes were frozen in terror, widened in a blank stare of shock. But
his lips.
They
might have been beautiful once, but Lily couldn't tell. The top one
was pulled up in a smile, the flesh skinned and raw, chunks of the
meat missing. And on the bottom jaw, which was barely hanging onto
the rest of his face, there was what looked like a sharp tooth jammed
into it.
Lily
gagged. The smell of blood.... It was just too much for her. The
ground was spinning, the trees were reaching toward her with sharp
claws. Lily pulled out her phone with a trembling hand and dialed
911.
"911,
what's your emergency?" a female voice asked almost mechanically.
"There's...
body...send help...." Lily gasped.
"Okay,
honey, I need you to calm down. Can you identify where you are?"
"I
don't know... Breaker's Woods? I don't know, I don't know, I
don't know...." Lily's breathing was ragged, her heart
pounding, as she caught another glimpse of the boy. And all that
blood.
"Breathe,
honey. I'm tracking your phone. You need to stay calm. I'm
sending an ambulance your way. Can you sit tight for a few minutes
out there?"
No,
Lily thought, I
can't handle all of this blood.
But she said yes anyways, wanting to be calm for Owen, who was still
shaking on the ground. She sat down next to him, letting her emotion
seep out into the orange of his shirt.
The
two sat alone in a pile of limbs. The strong, sure beat of Owen's
heart always seemed to put Lily at ease. But that ease didn't last
long, because it wasn't strong or sure. It was fast and erratic.
Especially when the brush ahead of them started moving, as if someone
was coming.
A
short, muscular man with a butcher's knife came out. Owen and Lily
screamed. The man put up his hands to show that he wasn't going to
hurt them.
"What
are you kids doing out at night?" He waved his knife at them
accusingly and smiled. His voice had a thick southern accent, and he
sounded kind. But when he locked eyes with Lily, his grin was
replaced with a focused look. "Your nose..." his face lost all
color in a flash. "You. It's you."
Owen
stepped in front of Lily, apparently regaining his courage, though he
was still unbalanced, if only a little. He picked up a large-ish
rock. "Back up, dude."
The
man glared at Lily with a cold hatred, more frigid than ice and
darker than black. He didn't even glance at Owen. "You're with
her?" His voice shook.
"Yes,
I am. Now get. Back."
"Filthy
black bloods!" The man's eyes widened with anger but then turned
stony. He took a deep breath, and just when Lily thought he would let
them go, he threw his knife at Lily. Hard. But he missed, so it cut
deep into Owen, right in the shoulder. He let out a sharp cry of
pain, blood spattering the ground, and his arm spasmed. His blood
stained his orange shirt red as he fell to the ground.
At
the smell of Owen's blood, Lily's pupils dilated, her teeth
sharpened. She was so hungry; she just couldn't hold it in anymore.
Her spine lengthened with wet cracking; her vertebrae detached from
each other one by one, pop by sickening pop. When her bones stopped
disconnecting, she loomed over the man. He looked up at her in
terror, but his eyes still held defiance.
"You."
"Me."
Lily
ripped her jaw down so that it was unhinged, hanging down a foot
below the top of her jaw. The man just stood there frozen in fear, so
Lily moved first. She lunged, tackling him to the ground, and took a
bite out of his chest, making him scream with a bloodcurdling voice.
With
a wet slurp, Lily sucked out his ribs and spine, some of his
intestines getting caught on the ribs. She ground all of it in her
teeth, and the butcher man fell almost unconscious. As she swallowed
the sludge of his chewed-up bones and organs, she forced his lolling
head to face her. The butcher man's eyes rolled around until they
landed on her.
"No..."
he moaned in a small voice. Lily grinned, inching his face towards
his. "No... please..." he whispered, trembling. He tried to
resist, but he wasn't strong enough. He never was.
Lily
pounced and took a bite of his still warm lips. And after she watched
the light leave his eyes and the breath leave his lungs, she stepped
away from him as she rehinged her jaw. With a sharp pain, she
realized that some of the man's bone lingered in that space where
her tooth came out. She glanced at the other body with annoyance.
"Awesome," she muttered with disdain.
She
looked at Owen with a longing look. The smell of his blood was too
much. She wasn't sure how much longer she could wait to kill him.
But she had to. She had to let him stew in her affection. Betrayal
was the most delectable human emotion, and there was no finer
betrayal than a loved one who turns on you for nothing.
.
. .
An
hour later, in the police station, Lily waited to be interviewed by
the police about what had happened. She plastered a look of unfocused
sadness when she really wanted to bounce around in a fit of laughter
and contentedness. She hadn't had such a fresh kill in months. She
honestly wasn't sure how the boy hadn't started decomposing under
that bush, as she had killed him about two weeks ago, but she didn't
eat at once. She had to leave him there; the butcher man had tried to
kill her after he saw what happened, so she hid the body. And even
then, she slowly nibbled at him, piece by piece, rib by rib, to make
sure she didn't get caught mid-meal by the butcher man.
The
butcher man. Lily picked his skin out of her teeth with her nail. The
lingering taste of a fresh kill coated her mouth; his flesh was as
salty with fear and hate as the last. It was okay. But, Lily thought
with a glance at her unconscious Owen, this level of betrayal
requires patience to achieve. So Lily had to be patient. But, in the
back of her mind, all she could hear was the beat, scent, and
imagined taste, of Owen's heart. She salivated, allowing herself to
smile for an instant.
"Lily
Chamberlin?" A male voice called. "Detective Hanes would like to
ask you a few questions."
Lily
got up, wiped the grin off her face, and forced a look of
absentmindedness as she walked to the dark room with a woman in it.
The woman smelled like a low-quality wine, much unlike Owen's
sweet, aged perfection.
This
will have to do for now, Lily thought, as she locked the door and
busted the camera to the interrogation room. She unhinged her jaw.
The woman screamed.
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