Creepy - Day 26 - Greenskin
Episode Date: October 26, 2020Just one more door...***Written by Michael Whitehouse***See your donation rewards at patreon.com/creepypod***You can also subscribe to us on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQ3SrH_3fsROXFAjom...KcUtw***Produced by Steve Blizin***Title music by Alex Aldea***Intro/Outro Narration by Joe Stofko Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Creepy presents the 31 days of horror.
Day 26.
Green skin.
Written by Michael Whitehouse
and produced by Steve Blizzin.
It started three days before Halloween.
An unrelenting torn array
The likes of which I'd never seen in all of my at the time.
14 years.
Of those years, I could remember, I had always spent the October weeks preparing for the 31st.
By the time the word teen was subverting everything, including our outlook, dress sense, age, and hopes.
My friends and I were almost being ironic by still going trick-or-treating.
Almost, but not quite.
In fact, we used a particular excuse that year to justify dressing up and wandering the streets in search of sweets.
That excuse was the timid figure of my little brother, Max.
He was six years old and needed a chaperone to accompany him,
peeking out from a mess of brown curls and a kind smile.
He was a shy little boy, and, as a result, did not have many friends.
Certainly none who lived close enough to accompany him that night.
He had replaced the need to be around children of his own age with hero worship,
following me no matter where I went.
I often joke that if we were ever lost, the police could find him using a sniffer dog.
I look back now and grow increasingly disappointed at myself for being frustrated at him always being in tow.
Alongside us that night were my two friends, Zeta and Robert.
The three of us had grown up on the same street, playing, arguing, and then playing again for most of our lives.
Robert still lived three doors down from my house, and while Zita had moved to another part of our suburb a year earlier,
She always returned to the street where she felt most at home.
They were both happy to help Max go knocking on doors,
especially since it gave them the opportunity to celebrate Halloween without feeling embarrassed.
In our neighborhood, at least, a lot of kids our age had already stopped dressing up
and would have made fun of us if we had let them.
Zeta, however, was not easy to push around.
With a flick of her tongue or black hair,
she could reduce anyone to half their size in a moment.
Robert was no slouch either and often had been given a hard time for his bright red hair.
He'd learned early in life to meet fire with fire.
It was only later that I found out he was beaten by his father at home.
That explained a lot.
And I still regret not knowing about it until my mother told me years later.
Someone should have intervened.
But as is the way, too many people were concerned about causing a stir than doing what was right.
Of the three of us, I was a quiet one, shying away from confronting anything around me.
That trait ran in the family.
I was a nervous kid, though little Mac seemed more hesitant.
If Robert had learned to answer the derision of his peers with his fists,
I had learned to avoid it with submission.
I preferred to keep my head low, absorbing the pain subjected by the bullets in our lives,
and then, bravely, making fun of them in return.
Of course, this was always done one out of earshot, and so ultimately, my cutting retorts
were a series of meaningless protests.
But they did make me feel better.
That Halloween, Max dressed up as a gruffalo.
The gruffalo is his favorite book, and he thought all monsters were big cuddling messes
with brown fur who were securely frightened to the world.
I have suspected that this was the reason he liked to keep his own hair at tangle of curls.
Max loved monsters, and I think he took comfort in the simple honesty of their appearance and their strength.
He was an innocent sort, even for his age.
However, we are cursed to have our innocence shattered.
And in the Torrid reign of that Halloween night, we all earned our scars.
My parents made me promise to keep an eye on Max at all times,
as if I would leave him on a street corner waiting to be abducted.
And I could feel the curtains twitch from three streets away as I imagined my dad looking for us to return on time as he'd instructed.
I think part of his nervousness was the weather.
The rain had battered the city for days and there had been serious flooding closer to the center where a river burst its banks.
The previous day I thought there was little chance of going out on Halloween as water cascaded down hills and into drains.
Many of the latter clogging up with fallen leaves.
The swirling wind made the outside world that more inhospitable.
And so, with disappointment, I was sure we'd miss out on all those trees hiding behind nameless, weather-beaten doors.
When Halloween night did arrive, our fortunes had turned.
While it was still raining, it was not nearly as torrential as previous days.
Things had calmed down quite a bit.
But our dad told us in no uncertain terms that we had to come home immediately if the weather grew worse.
As usual, I thought he was overreacting.
Dad offered to come with us, and, while Max was keen on it,
that was less so.
As I said, teen had subverted everything, including my desire to be around my parents.
I promised they could care of Max and left the safety of our home,
pulling my little brother behind me by one of his furry claws,
often with a dark and wet night.
Zeta and Robber addressed as Thing One and Thing Two from Dr.
The Cat in the Hat, though even with their bright red and white striped jumpers, the rainy night
made them difficult to see if they wandered far.
I was the eponymous cat in the hat, and wore on top of my head an old top hat my mother had
found at a charity shop a few weeks earlier.
I'd also been drawn to an old dark gray sports jacket hanging at the back of the shop.
Something about it called to me, but my mother was insistent that we had something at home
which would do the job.
The outfit then was finished off with a long black coat and whiskers drawn on my face over white face paint.
Max observed that Halloween should be scary.
You should dress up as a monster like me.
In return, I informed Max that the cat in the hat was perhaps the most dangerous monster in all fiction.
Did you see the mess he made of the house when the boy and girl's mom was out?
This made him giggle.
While Zita and Robert were running around us at times,
playing their characters annoyingly too well.
Though Zeta's efforts at speaking in rhymes were a little darker than Roberts,
he had the nervous energy of thing too down pat.
I occasionally reprimanded them in my best cat-in-the-hat voice.
But as the wind blustered and the rain drizzled,
I deeply desired the warmth of a house rather than being drenched in the bleakness of my neighborhood,
a neighborhood which had taken on a more ominous atmosphere as the night wore on.
The streets around us were populated by the occasional group of trick-or-treaters trudging through the increasingly waterlogged streets
As clouds above opened up and the rain fell in greater volume
It became clear that many of the children had given up the ghosts and returned to the comfort of their homes
We, on the other hand, were navigating puddles
Lots and lots of puddles
The small islands of water rippled in the cold wind which, while not quite a gale yet,
promised ferocity.
If I had my way, we would have visited every door in one or two streets,
captured a decent hall of suites,
and then headed back home out of the rain as quickly as possible.
But Max insisted otherwise.
Some houses looked too scary in the stormy night,
especially those with glow-in-the-dark skulls plastered on the windows
or headless skeletons hanging from the doors swaying in the wind.
I grew frustrated with Max.
The rain was now heavier and the wind had an uncomfortable, icy chill to it.
I just wanted to get back home and watch some horror movies with my friends.
Not that one, Max said, pointing to a house with a bloody hand sticker on its door.
Oh, come on, Max.
I thought you said Halloween should be scary.
I said, sighing.
That one, he said, pointing to another house across the street with no decorations.
I tried to inform Max that the houses
those decorations were less likely to have sweets
or even owners willing to answer a knox.
Yeah, Max insisted on picking homes
which did not impress fear on his mind.
He held on to my arm in the growing wind
and continued to guide us,
more often than not, away from houses
which clearly reveled in Halloween.
This timidity despite his monster obsession.
Monsters aren't afraid, I would say.
When Max looked at the night's skies, the black clouds above swirled and held on tight to me regardless.
We wandered from door to door, and, as we did so, I could see that the rain was pooling significantly in places.
The flooding was growing. So, too, was the looting, trick-or-treaters had enough sacks.
Twice I suggested to my friends that we should go back home to count everything and watch a great horror film.
John Carpenter's The Fog was a particular favorite of it.
mine around that time.
I hope this tactic would work, and that collectively we could persuade Max their peer pressure.
But it seemed to I was alone in that thought.
Robert enjoyed winding Max up against me and seemed to take glee when he started calling me
and my brother held back a giggle.
One of the only times when Max treated me as fallible.
Zeta laughed, of course.
But I will quickly put Robert in his place with some name calling of Rhone if you got too big
for himself.
A strong gust of wind pushed against us.
We really need to get back.
We promised Dad, I reminded everyone.
Just a wee bit longer, please, said Max, his brown-furred, yellow-eyed Gruffalo hood slipping down over his face.
Remembering the Halloweens when I had been Max's age and the magic of the night once a year,
I fixed the hood and laughed at the yellow eyes and smiling Gruffalo face now on top of his head.
Okay, I'll tell you what.
One more street than home.
That's at least a few houses.
Agreed?
Max nodded happily.
And that was when we turned on to Greer Street.
It was like most of our suburb that night.
Puddles are rained to be negotiated carefully.
Didn't we let windows occasionally populated with Halloween decorations.
But there was something that set it apart from the others.
As we moved along Greer Street trying to find a house
was acceptable to Max.
I noticed the smell.
It was a rotten scent,
like leaves that had been left to decay in the damp,
and though the rain held the scent back to a degree,
it was still a horrible odor.
I assume that a drain nearby had blocked
and backed up somewhere in the street.
With water gathering in many places,
there were several candidates for the source.
Across the previous three days,
blockages like that had happened with regularity.
But this time the smell was different.
It was a type of stench that hits you instinctively.
Where a deep primal party recognizes that,
whatever the source, it must be avoided for fear, disease, or danger.
Still, I tried to at least keep the mood light.
Did you fart?
I asked Zita.
She laughed as usual.
I was the only person she'd let talk to her like that.
You must be smelling yourself.
She replied.
Seriously, what is that?
Smells like your mom's cooking, Zeta.
Robert clotted his nose as if hoping to smell would rub off.
We stood still for a moment in this street.
I could feel the hesitancy of us all because of the rotten scent.
It's just a drain.
Sewage, probably.
Ew, came Max's reply.
You want to go home?
I asked, hopefully.
Max looked up at me, his gruffalo head slipping over his eyes again.
One more, he said, pulling the hood back so you could see.
Then we go home and see what we got.
He held up his bag of goodies and then dashed through the garden gate to the left.
It was the bravest he'd been all night.
In fact, it may have been the bravest he had ever been in his life.
What brought on this change?
I do not know.
In my darker moments, I consider that he was being reeled in by something.
Robert Zeta and I gave chase up a straight garden path, our feet clipping concrete slabs that were bad native alignment.
The house before us was much like most of the houses in her neighborhood.
There were no mansions, no sprawling estates, just four in a block cottage houses one after the other which looked innocuous.
Before I could get to Max, I could already see that something was wrong.
He was standing at the door at the side of the house which accessed the bottom level
and charred the dim light from the orange streetlights nearby.
I could see that his face was paler than usual.
Nearing the front door and grabbing Max, I reprimanded him immediately.
Dad said I have to look after you.
Do you know what would happen to me if you ran off like that and had an accident?
We both knew what would happen.
Nothing.
Dad was a big softy, and if Max fell over and cracked his arm,
he would have given me a stern talking to about responsibility and looking out for my little brother.
But a little more than that, Max did not respond.
He looked up at me and his expression was a wary one.
I was used to my brother being timid, but this was more than shyness, more than caution.
This was fear.
What's wrong?
asked Zeta, catching up.
to us with Robert.
Max got carried away, I said, and my brother still said nothing.
Max?
Max?
said Robert, wiping rain from his eyes.
What's got you so spooked?
Again, my little brother did not reply.
He just looked scared.
My patience was wearing thin.
When I was about to drag him by the arm out of the garden and back,
Back home, we all heard it.
The door next was opened, almost inaudibly against a thick patter of rain on the ground.
The chill ran through me and as I still held Max's shoulders in front of me.
I turned my head to look inside.
I expected to see someone at the door waiting to hand out treats to us.
But instead all I saw was the blackness of an unlit hallway.
Hello?
Zeta asked loudly.
No reply was given.
Robert stepped forward towards the door and then recoil it instantly holding his nose.
Holy crap, that smells bad.
He was right.
Coming from the darkness within was the same stench we'd encountered when first walking down Greer Street.
Zita pushed past Robert, her hand resting on the doorframe.
It smells like it's coming from in there.
Being the bravest of the brave, I offered my usual suggestion when confronted with fear.
Let's go home.
Max said nothing in response, but he slipped his hand into mine and cowered under my arm.
It's just a door, Max, I said, trying to sound reassuring.
Nothing to be scared of?
I peered into the darkness.
Someone probably just forgot to lock the door and they went out and the wind blew it open.
It smells like Zeta when she doesn't take a bath,
joked Roberts still holding his nose.
Zeta turned to us.
Instead of her usual retort, she looked anxious.
Are you okay, Zita?
It unnerved me to see her so uncomfortable with the situation.
Look, she sat pointing to the doorframe.
My blood ran cold.
The lock had been smashed open,
digging a large chunk of wood out of the frame for good measure.
Someone had broken into the house.
Let's go home.
Max finally said, breaking his silence while tugging at my arm and sounding more like me by the minute.
I wanted to, but Zeta, as usual, wanted to do the right thing.
We should call the police or something.
Someone might be hurt in there.
I don't have any credit in mine.
Robert was always tight with money.
You don't need money in your phone to call the police, idiot.
Zeta started dialing from her own phone.
Call Dad, Max said.
I did not want to call anyone.
All I wanted was get the hell out of there.
The darkness of the hallway made me nervous.
I could not quite see all the way in,
and an unsettling feeling of being watched from inside soon pervaded my mind.
Zeta was now in a line to an operator.
Hello?
I think there's been a break-in.
186 Greer Street.
I don't know if someone's hurt inside.
Robert wiped more rain from his forehead.
Right, I'm getting soaked.
What now?
Maybe we should go inside and see if anyone's hurt,
suggested Zita, hanging up the phone.
Robert wore an expression of incredulity.
And is that what the play?
Police said we should do?
No, they said we should walk up the street and wait for the police.
But I think we should see if anyone needs our help in there.
By the time the police arrive, it might be too late.
No, we have Max with us, I said forcefully.
Even if we didn't, we're kids ourselves, let the police deal with it.
I thought I heard Max say, let's go quietly.
But another noise took my attention from those words.
It was a groan from insane.
the house.
One loud enough to pierce the increasing pattern of rain around us.
Someone is hurt, see?
Zeta almost sounded proud that she was right.
It could be whoever broke in.
We need to get Max out of here.
Just as I said this, we collectively recoiled in horror as something crawled along the floor of the hall at speed towards us.
Robert let out a gasp of sorts and ran.
ran. I fell over, pulling Max down on top of him, and then...
Zeta was gone.
No!
The door slammed shut.
But because the lock was broken, the doorframe rebuffed a violent bang, the door
rattled on its hinges and then shut it open again.
Max was crying, holding on to me for dear life.
I struggled to my feet, hauling him and his wet fur up with me.
Panic throttled through my vein, then I found myself shouting the word Zeta and
Robert, hoping that my braver friends would somehow make it all right, that they'd be able
to laugh and joke and make me feel better like they always had.
The only answer I received, however, was the rain from above, shattering on the ground at my feet
and dripping into my eyes with icy precision.
Robert was fast, and was by the time probably halfway down the street.
Whatever he had seen had caused one of the bravest kids I knew to run for dear life, and I did not
blame them, I would have done the same if not for having my little brother with me.
My head was spinning from the fall, as I righted myself, the mouth of the open doorway
standing before me, an image of what had crawled along the floor towards us from the darkness
entered my mind. A broken shard of memory almost too horrible to consider. It was something
dark, and with arms, yet how many, returning to my usual, though now magnified, well of caution and
fear, I grabbed Max and pulled him down the garden path towards a pavement of Greer Street.
The rain clattered around as like thunder, and my gaze darted around me looking for Robert,
but panic had driven him far away, and far away was a place I too desired to be.
More than anything, it pushed me on.
I almost lifted my brother off his feet by his costumes and moved quickly against the rain,
up the street, away from that gaping doorway and whatever lay inside.
Just as the corner and end of Groer Street came into view, I heard another sound.
It was like cold water thrown over me, waking me from my cowardice.
I had never heard Zeta scream before, but on that dreadful Halloween night,
The cutting sound of her cries stretched out through the wall of rain, across the garden path,
and up the street towards me.
It struck at my heart.
And yet I could not face it.
Running across the street with Max and toe, I knocked on doors one after the other, desperate
to find an adult to relieve me the burden of action.
Yet no one, what they probably heard underneath the now deafening rain if they heard me at all,
where the Knox's simple trick-or-treaters who they wish to avoid.
No one was going to help us.
Zeta's cries penetrated the rain once more.
My mind was now as torrential as the world around me.
My instinct was to leave that place and find safety.
But just as I was about to abandon my friend,
it was my brother who saved me from that pit of shame.
As if sensing my desire to run home, he tugged on my arm,
looked up at me with his shy brown eyes and said,
Mazita is our friend.
Something happened to me in those words.
A sense of duty, I suppose.
Perhaps I did not want to be the coward I truly was,
at least in my brother's eyes.
He had always looked up to me.
And in that moment, I think I knew how important it truly was to feel that love
and belief.
I would not
shatter that.
Of course I wanted to help Zeta,
but that was the moment
that transformed inaction
into action.
Mealing down, I looked at Max's face-to-face.
His grufflow outfit
was soaked through and a fake brown fur
dripped with rain.
I pulled back the yellow-eyed hood
and wiped his face with my hands,
affectionately pinching his cheeks.
He squirmed and smiled.
Even in the darkest moment,
He found time to be a kid.
See that tree over there, Max?
I said, pointing to a solitary evergreen, which had long ago been planted on the corner of the street.
Max nodded.
I want you to go and stand under it, okay?
Get out of the rain, and as soon as you see the police, you go and you tell them what happened at the door.
Show them the house.
See the uncertainty in Max's eyes.
He did not want to leave me or for me to leave him.
What are you going to do?
A shaking scream once more met my ears from the darkness of that house across the street.
I'm going to save our friend.
Rushing across the street, I glanced over my shoulder to see Mack standing safely beneath the balls of the tree.
They would not catch all the rain, but at least the thick pines would keep them partially dry.
When I came to the gate of the house, I hesitated momentarily.
The rink smelled from inside fingered its way down the path towards me.
And yet I pushed on.
Soon I stood once more in front of the open doorway.
It's darkness still gaping and hollow.
Straining my ears, I hope to hear what would have been the comforting sound of police sirens coming to save the day.
That was not to be.
It was not the time for being saved.
I opened my mouth to show Zeta's name,
but then realized I'd be revealing my presence to whoever or whatever had taken her.
Instead, I pulled out my phone.
and switched the flashlight feature on,
which at least allowed me to see a few feet ahead,
like a lonely candle.
As I crossed the threshold into the house,
the light made something immediately apparent.
The floor was covered in what I can only describe as a putrid black slime.
It reminded me that trails garden slugs sometimes leave behind.
In my mind, I imagined the underbelly of whatever
had crawled along the hall towards us and snatched Zeta.
its festering body smearing the wooden floor with its vile lubricant.
But the glimpse I had already had of it gave the suggestion of a human-like figure, at least in part, crawling with its hands in front of it.
The rain behind me now seemed to comfort compared to the damp interior of the hall.
From what I could see with my phone, the house was well kept.
I'd half expected to see cobwebs covering furniture and photographs like a haunted house from an old Vincent Pricewater.
movie. But though there were photographs on the wall showing a man with a happy smile standing
with what looked like his family, the hall itself was decorated neatly, and yet it had been
corrupted by what was on the floor. Taking a deep breath and moving forward, the floor
had dulled the sound of my feet somewhat, even though it was wooden. With each footstep, resistance
came. Whatever residue was on the floor, it was particularly sticky. And the stairs,
The stench was nearly unbearable, like a drain blocked with something dead.
My mind returned to the police.
Again, I thought I could run, that I could turn and wait with my little brother outside by the
Evergreen Tree, wait for the flashing lights and grown-ups to deal with whatever horrors lay in the house.
As it responding to my uncertainty, I heard something from another room.
It sounded like someone moving around, whispering,
I said my friend's name.
Zeta.
This was answered by a loud noise.
Like something blindly fumbling around.
Beneath the moving sound,
I was certain that I heard a momentary gasping breath.
Closing my eyes, I thought of Zeta before opening them again and moving forward.
Carefully, I approached the doorway at the end of the hall where the noise had come from.
Unsure of what I was about to encounter.
I pushed the door open.
It did not creak.
I was glad for that.
I thought I wished to save my friend from whatever had taken her.
I did not want to face whatever had crawled toward us.
I was now standing in a bedroom.
Outside I could see an orange hue from a street lamp peeking in towards me through a gap in the curtains.
At first I thought there was nothing unusual about the room,
seeing only a double bed and some bedroom furniture around me.
But then I noticed what looked like the same slimy residue on the bed sheets.
This dark, sticky substance covered something on top of the bed.
Lading down, I looked closer, not daring to touch it.
It was a piece of torn cloth.
Red cloth, to be precise.
I did not need to be a detective to know where I came from.
It had been torn from Zeta's Halloween costume.
My heart sank.
A bead of rainwater, which had been nestled, no doubt in my hair trickled down my forehead.
So I wiped it away with my hand.
A gasping figure then sat up from behind the other side of the bat, previously hidden on the floor.
The thing reached out and grabbed my wrist squeezing intensely.
I wasn't really sick at the sight of it.
There was no face, the speaker dripped from then.
Part of the grasping hand, I thought I saw what looked like fingernails.
Green tinged and digging into the skin on my wrist.
The skin was swollen in place and warped to the touch.
The figure clambered up on the side of the bed, pushing me onto my back.
I fought bad, but the thing was too strong.
Dark gun dripped from its head into my eyes, as I felt the weight of its body on top of me.
It was then that something struck it violently on the head.
The creature let out a horrible gasp, and as it did so relinquished its grip on my wrist.
Instinctively, I wriggled out from underhead and fell onto the floor nearest the door.
Looking up, I saw another figure leaning over me, covered and dripping dark goose.
But before I could identify the feature, the girl grabbed me by the hand and said,
Let's get out of here.
I knew that it was Zeta.
Her voice filled with fear.
She was covered head to toe in the horrible substance had seen on the floor.
But she seemed to be unharmed other than this,
and so quickly led me out of the room and down the hallway, dragging itself behind as we heard
the figure by the bed stumbling out from the room and letting out a horrible, curgling noise.
With its hands slamming against the floor, it pushed itself towards us in alarming speed.
Just as we made it out into the rain, we slammed the front door shut.
The creature grabbed the door handle on the other side and tried to pull it to get at us.
All we could do is hold onto the outside handle for dear life.
We yanked back with all our might.
There was no door lock.
There was nothing else we could do.
The door shook and strained and a shutter.
Each time it gave slightly, it pulled away from us,
beginning to open into the darkness.
Before Zeta and I were able to pull it towards us again,
it clattered against the door frame.
The rain blinded us,
as it was now as torrential as it had ever been in a moment.
my life. The countless drops of water beat down against my face. I could hardly see, but I didn't
let go of the door handle, not even to wipe my eyes. Behind the door, a hoar had groans and garbled
noises came. And then, finally, nothing. Zeta and I looked at each other. We were breathless.
The rain had mixed with a viscous slime which covered Zeta's hair and face revealing some of her to me.
though her eyes were wide and white with terror.
I was just glad to see her in one piece.
We waited for a few moments.
Then came a loud sound of broken glass.
Still holding on to the handle, I turned to my right only to see a dark, hulking shape leaving the garden on its belly and clambering out into the street.
Max!
I shouted.
Where is he?
Zeta said anxiously.
He's out in the street across the road.
been crashing around our ears like the waves of a ferocious sea.
I'd never ran so fast in my life.
My feet pounded the silk concrete of the street,
and as a rain and wind reached a crescendo,
I thought I heard another scream.
The cry of a helpless six-year-old,
reaching where Max one stood beneath the evergreen.
We saw that he was gone.
Inches of water lay in the ground,
erasing any evidence of what had happened
under any hope attracting the creature.
It must have taken him!
Zeta screamed above the torrid roar.
At that moment, a greater fear than anything
I had previously experienced who visited itself upon me.
The fear of losing my brother, we looked all over,
behind garden fences and hedges, under cars, anywhere we could think of,
but the rain had covered the thing's tracks completely.
His hope began to abandon.
to me. I saw something moving at the other end of the street. It was hard to see through the black
sheets of rain, but enough streetlight caught its shadow. The rain cascaded along the street
towards it. Something was hunched over a manhole cover, and a body lay next to it. We ran towards
the thing screaming and yelling, trying to get it to chase us and leave Matt alone. But her cries were
dimmed and suffocated by the storm, which now took dominion over all.
hall. As we drew closer, the glistening hunt shape was pushing itself down through the manhole
of the sewer beneath. Its body squeezed and rised as well it was too big to enter the opening.
The rainwater cascaded down the street now with increasing force, reaching over my shoes
and above my ankles. As a creature pulled itself down under the street, the water flooded
down on top of it.
And we were now a few anxious steps away.
The water warped the beam of the street lights, and I saw for the first time as the creature's
flesh had a dark green tinge to it, like black moulds spread on rotten grass and leaves.
As the shape disappeared into the darkness, its many-fingered hand reached back out to grab
with Max's body, which was now all but covered by the torrential water, a motionless brown-fired
shape, which in the blackness of the night only suggested the outline of my dear sweet brother.
I cried out at the thing in the sword to leave what was left of my brother.
Sludgeoned black-green hand pulled Max inside the hole.
Zeta and I were finally close enough to act.
We fell to the ground with the open and reached down.
The water splashed over was threatening to pull us under.
I flailed blindly.
And then saw one of the yellow eyes of Max's costume in the dim light.
I plunged my hand towards it and quickly grabbed hold of him.
Then I reached down further and grasped below the Max's arm.
Oh, forehead stench filled the air.
His costume!
I yelled.
The floodwater filling my mouth.
Zed didn't instinctively know what I meant.
She reached down with me pulling at Max's Halloween costume.
The fur was wet and heavy.
As we pulled my brother's head and then shoulders out of the costume.
The thing down in the dark.
must have realized it was losing its grip.
Three long-fingered hands were reached up through the flowing water
and wrapped around Max's upper body.
Then they squeezed.
A terrible crack came from the sewer,
and the thing then dug its long fingers into its prey.
It was stronger than us, but the slime and water gave us just one chance.
As I gasped for air and grew certain I would drown.
I stuck one of my hands down between his long, warm, covered fingers.
Pull!
I screamed through the water.
Zeta must have heard me.
She grabbed my legs and poured all her might.
It was enough.
You wrenched Max's legs out of his costume.
I felt a sharp pain and marched backwards as Max slipped upward to the manhole with us.
Back onto the flooded street.
The three of us lay in a crumpled heap for a moment, gasping for us.
air. The road was now obscured by half a foot of water, and I saw a face momentarily emerged
from beneath it, up through the manhole. The water warped its appearance, but it now had eyes,
and they stared at me. Blue flashing lights came. The sound of sirens. Water filled my mouth.
I saw Max standing, alive and shivering almost naked. I felt so.
sore leave to see my brother in one piece.
Yet he and Zita
looked at me with shock and horror in their
eyes. I tried
to pull myself up.
But something was wrong.
The damn thing I cut off my hand.
You might think that losing the
hand would be traumatic enough.
But there was more to it than that.
It took several weeks and
three surgeries to save as much of my
shredded wrist and arm as they could.
But the hand was gone.
taken his food or a momento or perhaps even just cast aside as meaningless garbage by the creature living down there in the drains and sewers.
Zeta and Robert visited me regularly.
Max barely left my side.
The four of us knew what had happened.
But the police and our parents seemed resistant to the idea that something hideous lived beneath our neighborhood, despite the evidence.
The surgeon who operated on me stated that my wounds were inconsistent.
I said my injuries reminded him of a patient years ago who caught his hand in a threshing machine.
Robert apparently ran to our house to get my dad that night.
At least he had not totally abandoned us.
I told him not to blame himself for running.
Fear does strange things to people.
I don't think he ever fully forgave himself, though.
In some way I think being around me, missing hand in all, reminded him too much of in his eyes, letting us down.
We drifted apart eventually.
Of course Zeta and I are still friends.
We talk once a month and she comes to visit a few times a year.
She either cannot or chooses not to remember what happened to her in the house when she was taken by the creature.
I don't press her on this.
We all have the right to forget if it saves us from sleepless nights.
As for Max, he fully recovered.
I guess after that I really was a hero to him.
Even now that he's at college and I have kids of my own,
he still treats me like him something special.
We're close.
We talk about everything.
Well, almost everything.
That night's a blind spot which we rarely visit.
and though I'm glad that I saved my brother.
I can never feel worthy of being a hero,
because what we encountered in the bedroom of that house
was not the creature from the sewers.
It was the owner of the house.
And he died of brutal death that night,
for we had held the door too tightly,
blocking his escape.
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