The SCP Experience - The Demon's Paw | SCP-4996
Episode Date: January 19, 2026A botched ritual drops a scared kid into SCP custody with a demon who grants wishes wrong—horrifically wrong. Trapped between an abusive father, a merciless Foundation, and power that always demands... a price, he must choose who finally pays for his freedom. Listen ad-free + bonus stories with a 7-day FREE trial of SCP Premium. Cancel anytime. No commitment. This story is derived from The SCP Foundation Database and is released under Creative Commons Sharealike 3.0. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ Author: Matt Doggett Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/MatthewDoggettAuthor/ Website/Newsletter sign up: matthewdoggettauthor.com New Book Releases: https://www.amazon.com/Matthew-G-Doggett/e/B08FD5378Z * * * CONTENT DISCLAIMER: This episode contains explicit content not limited to intense themes, strong language, and depictions of violence intended for adults. Parental guidance is strongly advised for children under the age of 18. Listener discretion is advised. #thescpexperience #scp #scpfoundation #scpencounters #securecontainprotect #scpstories Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Lazang sur-gillet,
Puisance-Moyerned
15 minutes.
Oh, you'd say that's the
Dojo.
Prere to play?
Vive the pleasure
with Leo Jo.
The casino in-line
that proposes the
most recent machine
to sue and the
games to
buy-bass Bonanza.
Without exigance
of misgene,
and with the payments
instantane.
Hey, I've gained.
Woohoo!
Sonture the pleasure
Play-Ojo
18 and plus,
1,1,
first depots only depots
in Ontario.
50 tours
on the machine
to buyonzob
$10 dollars.
Veighed to pay
The conditions apply.
My eyes grow misty as I picture my dad smiling and pulling me into a hug.
I love you, son, you'll say.
And I'll say, I love you, Dad.
It will be beautiful, the best thing ever.
Roger clears his throat next to me, pulling me from my fantasy.
I wipe my eyes with one baggy sleeve of the velvet robe and focus on the task at hand.
I need to get this right.
I've been memorizing the words all week.
I got this.
I freaking got this.
Straightening my back, I peer at the hood-shrouted faces of the eight other men in the circle.
Doing my best impression of my dad, I say,
Our sacred summoning can now commence, my brethren.
The response is beautifully orchestrated, as all eight men say,
And such is our path.
Let his power guide us to our salvation.
I look down at the painstakingly crafted seal on the stone floor.
My back is still stiff from the air.
hours spent on hands and knees, drawing the seal onto the floor with a specific and carefully
measured mixture of goat blood, raven feathers, volcanic ash, powdered sulfur, and adrenochrome.
The last ingredient necessitated a hefty bribe to a coroner, emptying my bank account,
but it will soon all be worth it. Dad will be so happy, so proud, he will reward me for my
accomplishment when he sees what I've done. He's beyond rich. He has a lot of rich. He has a
a freaking dungeon after all. He should be back in under an hour. And when he does, the great
deliverer will be here waiting. I clear my throat before speaking again. I, brother Simon, welcome you
here as we embark on this journey. Have you prepared the tools? In unison, we all pull ornate
daggers from our baggy sleeves, pointing the curved blades toward the center of the seal.
Now comes the hard part.
I begin reciting the incantation.
The other men in the circle hum a prolonged bass note
as I work my way through the words that mean nothing to me.
They're in a language older than human civilization,
and despite all my practice,
it takes much effort to pronounce them all correctly.
They're not easy on the English-speaking tongue.
Two minutes later, I finish speaking the incantation.
I'm exhausted, which is a lot of the English-speaking tongue.
means it's working.
Excitement opens the adrenaline floodgates as I shift my blade,
pressing it to the palm of my left hand.
The others do the same.
Let the sacrifice begin.
In my mind, I say,
Ow, ow, ouch, ouch, owie!
As I cut a gash in my palm.
I make a fist and turn the hand so blood drips onto the seal.
Nine men, nine cuts, nine streams of unique blood.
Immediately, the edge of the edge of,
of the seal begin to glow orange-red.
It's working.
The seal turns from a two-dimensional drawing on the stone floor
to a three-dimensional image that seems to emerge from the rock.
A wave of heat erupts from within the seal,
and I have to force myself not to step back.
These damn robes are already hot,
but now I have immediate swamp ass to deal with.
Maybe I can get a quick shower in before Dad gets home.
I turn my head away and shut my eyes,
as the glow grows to a blinding orange-white illumination.
A cacophony of screams emit from the seal.
Like a hundred thousand people are all screeching in utter agony.
With a sudden wound, it all stops.
The screams cut off.
The heat disappears.
The blinding illumination falls away,
leaving after images dancing in my vision as I face forward again,
blinking.
Before I can make out the finer details of the hideous creature standing
before me. The thing lets loose a horrific, blood-curdling howl that is somehow worse than
the screaming I've just heard. This time, I can't help but step back two paces. Still howling,
the creature lurches for Roger, standing to my left in the circle. With one claw-tipped hand,
the creature grabs Roger's saggy old man face and rips it off. Connective tissue stretches between
skin and muscle before snapping. The bloody-beard musculature of Roger's face jolts and jerks as
he screams in agony. He stumbles away from the circle. The creature, standing nearly eight feet
tall on black, hairy goat legs whirls around, throwing Roger's face from one massive hand.
Air catches the torn-off face, spreading it out like a parachute before it lands on Joe Little's
face, the eye and mouth holes lining up perfectly over Joe's eyes and mouth. Despite the overall
horror of the situation, this strange occurrence causes us all to pause. Even the creature ceases its howling
a look at Joe Little, wearing Roger's face like a mask.
A rushing silence fills Dad's dungeon for several long moments
before Joe Little screams and rips the face from his face.
Chaos resumes.
The creature, who has a naked, humanoid torso and a man's head with large curved horns
renews its howling and flailing.
As it spins around, I catch a glimpse of its face,
which is a broad slab with wide-set yellow eyes,
a naturally flat nose and lips that see.
sneer over sharp teeth. Its skin is a bumpy inflamed mixture of what looks like scales, scabs,
and weeping postules. This makes it appear a mottled pinkish red. This isn't how it was supposed to go.
I barely have time to think these words when the giant thing grabs Percy by his arms as he tries to
run away. It spins the old man around and holds him up in front of its hideous face,
screaming at Percy as if the creature is the terrified one. Percy screams back and
not only out of fear.
As the demon screams, spit flies out of its mouth, landing on Percy's face.
The liquid sizzles, eating through the old man's skin, slowly melting his face.
His legs flail under his billowing robe as he tries to get free.
This isn't how it was supposed to go, I think again, taking several more steps back.
Dad is going to be so pissed.
As I turn to run, Dad's voice pipes up in my head.
This is your mess. You clean it up.
But I ignore what I call my dad thoughts in favor of what I think is a better solution.
If I can get away before dad gets home, I can just pretend like I was never here.
Maybe the demon will kill all the old farts who are a part of my dad's stupid cult, leaving no witnesses.
I'm supposed to be away at school right now anyway.
I can just pretend that's where I was all along.
Yeah, it's the perfect plan.
No holes in it whatsoever.
I make it as far as the dungeon stairs when the two ornate wooden doors at the
The top of the stone stairwell burst open.
Half a dozen men dressed in SWAT gear rushed through.
I raised my hands, realizing that I'm still holding the ornate knife.
I dropped the knife, but one of the SWAT guys fires his gun at me anyway.
A sharp stab erupts in my chest.
My muscles tense.
I go stiff as a board and topple to the cold stone floor,
whacking my head pretty good.
As I lie on the floor, electricity paralyzing me.
I watch as the SWAT guys attack.
the demon I've summoned from the underworld. Black roses blossom in my vision, erupting from the
side of my skull that connected with the stone floor. But it's the strangest thing before my vision is
fully obscured, and with the last bits of consciousness I managed to cling to. I swear I hear the
demon say the words. Don't taste me, bro! I awake in a bright room, sitting in an uncomfortable
chair. Groaning, I turned my head away from the light, hug myself, and try to go back to
sleep. I was having a nice dream where I was fishing with my dad, but also not my dad, in that
weird dream way, mostly because my dad would never take me fishing, so it had to be someone else.
But there was something different about this dream, Dad, something strange. A female voice
calls from somewhere nearby, but there's something staticy about her voice.
Like she's talking through an intercom.
No, I mutter, adjusting in my seat,
trying to go back to that serene scene,
fishing with Dad for the first time ever.
Still trying to ignore the voice,
I suddenly remember what was different about my dad in the dream.
He had goat legs and big horns coming out of his head.
It all comes rushing back to me.
The face ripping, face wearing, face melting,
so much face stuff.
I jolt up, nearly toppling.
pulling out of the wheelchair as I blink in the bright light.
The first thing I see is a large window, the kind with metal mesh inside the glass to reinforce
it.
Through the window, I can see the vague shape of a woman in a white lab coat.
She's holding a microphone to her mouth.
I'm still trying to figure out where the hell I am.
Her words don't immediately register.
Not until I turn the other way and look at the large piece of padding on the floor in one
corner of the furnitureless room.
Gah!
I exclaim, jerking to my feet.
and stumbling backward, bumping into the window.
The demon is lying on the batting, seemingly asleep.
Its fingers, tipped with sharp black claws, are intertwined over its stomach.
Its chest rises and falls slowly.
Eyes dart around under closed eyelids, as if it's in REM sleep, I whisper, looking over my
shoulder at the woman.
The name is Dr. Nyevus, and I need you too.
I look over to see that the demon is sitting up, looking at me with me with a woman.
those yellow lizard eyes.
Let me out of here! I scream,
running over to the only door in the room
and trying to yank it open. It doesn't budge.
It's thick and metal and locked tight.
Behind me, the demon stands.
Its horns nearly touching the ceiling.
It raises its hands, stepping toward me.
I dart forward, grabbing the wheelchair by its handles
and shoving the thing toward the demon.
One of the metal footrests hits the demon in its goat shin.
Ow!
It cries in a bassy voice,
tinged with a high-pitched squeak.
What the hell, bro?
I wasn't going to do anything.
I was trying to apologize for the mix-up earlier.
It rubs its shin as it speaks to me.
I stand, mouth agape.
Huh?
I don't really think you can blame me, though, dude.
The demon continues.
One minute, I'm sitting in class at Satan University,
and the next I'm standing in front of a bunch of old white humans holding knives,
except you, I guess.
You're not old.
But you were holding a knife.
I'll admit it.
I panicked.
I shouldn't have ripped that guy's face off.
And the other guy?
I forgot that my bodily fluents are like acid to you guys.
I shake my head.
You're not what I expected.
The demon chuckles.
Yeah, well, you're no prize yourself.
No, I mean, don't you grant wishes and stuff?
I was trying to...
No, the demon says.
An edge to his voice for the first time.
You're thinking of my dad.
He's the one who does all that stuff.
I'm not up to the task yet.
The demon says this with a mocking tone,
as if he's quoting someone, his dad presumably.
But how did...
Apparently, according to these people,
he gestures at the woman behind the window.
You messed up when drawing the seal.
Instead of summoning my old man, you got me.
Oh, I say, hanging my head.
Why can't you do anything right?
My dad thoughts say.
That's it?
The demon says.
Oh, that's all I get?
Man, you people are really something,
and I'm not on some racist shit.
I mean humans.
I know some of you people actually think skin color and culture matters,
but I think the whole human race is rotten to the core.
You can't even apologize for messing a guy's day up.
What a pathetic.
I'm sorry, I blurt out.
Tears threatening to escape
as I think about my father's reaction to this cluster.
Fuck. Really, I am. I'm just, I can't do anything right. Oh boy, here they come. I start blubbering,
yapping about how my dad is going to be mad, and how I wanted to do this for him, and how I can't
even summon a demon correctly. Before I know what's happening, the demon is hugging me, batting my
back gently with one massive hand. You'd think I would find it gross, but I don't. I wrap my
arms around his waist and press my face against his chest, even though his skin is rough and scabby
in some spots. There has been a serious hug deficiency in my life, so I take what I can get.
When I'm all cried out, the demon and I separate. I look up into his hideous, sneering face.
Thanks. I really needed that. He drags a hand across his eyes, wiping tears away.
No problem. I'm Simon.
I say, extending a hand.
You won't be able to say my name with your human tongue.
Just call me Doug.
I would shake your hand,
but I'm afraid the tears I just wiped away will burn your skin.
Oh, right, I put my hand down.
Well, it's nice to meet you, Doug.
All right.
I jerk at the woman's voice,
having all but forgotten she was watching this interaction.
My face heats with embarrassment as I looked through the window at her.
What did she say her name was?
Dr. Nyevis?
Now that the introductions are out of the way, permission to grant wishes.
I look at Doug the demon, hope, inflating in my chest.
You can grant wishes?
Doug backs away a few steps, waving his hands.
No, I told you I can't do that. I won't. I'm not ready.
You will do it.
Dr. Niavis says.
Or we will be forced to take drastic action.
We're sending in the first test subject now.
Simon, you will command Doug to grant this man's wish. Do you understand? I think of why I wanted to
summon Doug's dad in the first place, as I look into his yellow eyes. What if he can help my dad? Wouldn't
that make up for all the trouble I've caused? But it's clear he doesn't want to do it. He shakes his
head, crouching in the corner. Please, bad things happen when I try to grant wishes. Don't make me do it.
The door to the chamber opens and a couple of swat-d-dict.
dudes and heavy gear, escorted a guy wearing an orange jumpsuit inside.
Then they retreat, locking the door again, leaving only the three of us.
We're starting with something easy.
Dr. Nyevus says.
The guy in the jumpsuit, Mr. Cowan, stares at Doug for a long moment, eyes wide in disbelief.
Nyavis clears her throat.
Any time now.
Cowan shuffles his feet and brings a Snickers bar out of one pocket.
I want this candy bar to regenerate.
A never-ending candy bar.
Nope, Doug says, shaking his horned head.
No way, I won't do it.
I haven't even finished school yet.
I'm only a sophomore.
They don't teach you stuff like this until you're a junior year.
Simon, please command Doug to grant this man's wish.
Doug looks at me with frightened lizard eyes,
reminding me of a cute baby alligator I once held when visiting Florida.
He doesn't want to do it.
It's just leave him alone.
There's no immediate answer from Niavese, so I turned to the window.
She has her back to it, and she's speaking to someone else in the observation room.
The man she spoke to opens the door and steps out into the hallway.
A moment later, he returns with a newcomer.
My throat seems to freeze, and it feels as if my lungs have just shrunk to the size of deflated balloons.
I can't seem to get a full breath.
Panic sets in.
Through the window, I see my father.
The illness has taken a toll on him,
and he looks much worse than he did the last time I saw him a few months ago.
His sun-leathered skin has lost its dark hue,
leaving behind only shades of gray.
His head of hair, once full and gray-white, is now sparse.
He's hunched over, shrunken by disease.
He totters up to the window and fixes his gaze on me.
I want to see some sign of softness,
some indication that he's not furious with me.
I don't get it.
His eyes are stony,
seemingly the only parts of him that haven't been made weak
and feeble by the sickness destroying his body,
trembling and still trying to dry in a full breath.
I turn back to Doug.
Grant his wish.
I command you to grant his wish.
Doug stares at me for a long moment.
In his eyes I see empathy,
understanding, and sad resignation.
He stands to his full height,
swallows and looks at Cowan.
The way this works is, I need a payment.
What are you willing to give to have a regenerating candy bar?
Calwin shuffles again, looking down at the wrapped snickers in one hand.
How about a piece of the candy bar?
Fine, Doug says.
Give me a piece of it.
Cowan does, unwrapping the thing and tearing a piece off.
But he refuses to get close enough to Doug to hand it off.
Instead, he gives it to me, and I give it to Doug.
I glance over my shoulder at the window and my dad beyond.
He goes out of his way to keep his gaze on Doug.
I shut my eyes and concentrate on my breathing,
feeling like I'm five years old again,
and I've just made a mess in the kitchen.
Doug holds the piece of candy bar in one hand.
He stares at it, his lips moving.
Suddenly, the piece disappears in a puff of smoke.
Okay, he says.
It is done.
Eat the rest of the candy bar.
Put the wrapper in your pocket.
It will regenerate soon after.
Cowan grins, revealing two rows of rotting teeth.
The guy must really like candy bars and hate toothbrushes.
Look, Air Canada,
does a sold world.
Super, an offer for the assort.
Station thermal, volcano.
You've seen the price for the Japan?
Epargne and sushi.
Wow, the solds are good for Mayork also.
We could go to the beach and do you
have a run-donough?
Or, it would say a long
march on the border of the
sea-sile.
Mm, I adore, the canolies.
Wait, there's another...
Decide, Vit.
This sold is denduris limited.
Reserved to air canada.com
or at your agent of voyage.
The conditions
can't apply.
He scarfs the remainder
of the caramel
peanut chocolate treat
and shoves the wrapper
into his pocket.
He's still chewing
when his face transforms
into a rictus of pain.
Ah!
He doubles over.
Chocolate-tinged,
drool spilling out of his mouth as he grips his belly.
Oh no! Doug whines.
I knew it. I told you something like this would happen.
Still in pain, Calwin straightens and tears at the buttons on his jumpsuit.
Blood spreads over the orange material.
He finally gets the buttons ripped off, revealing the injury in the fleshy bulbous area just below his belly button.
There's a chunk of flesh missing, the exact size and shape of a Snickers bar.
Take it back!
I told Doug.
Take it back!
He shakes his head, face and agony.
I can't. It's not possible.
Help me!
Cowan says, tenderly cupping the injury with one hand as he rushes to the door he came through.
Simon, please inspect his pocket for the regenerated candy bar.
Naevese commands.
Get him a fucking doctor!
I shout, turning to the window.
As soon as I see my father there, all strength leaves my voice.
Do what she says, son.
I move over and dig into the man's pocket.
pocket, pulling out the candy bar. He barely notices, too busy crying in pain and shouting for help.
I hold the Snickers bar up for Niavese and my father to see.
Good, the doctor says. Now eat it. What? No fucking way.
Do you want us to help your father? Nayavis asks. Because we can. Isn't that what this is all
about? We can make him healthy again. But you need to do what we ask. Eat the candy bar.
I say, already close to gagging.
I opened the wrapper, half expecting to find that the bar is just a chunk of bloody flesh.
But it's not.
It looks like a legit snickers.
I take a bite.
Thankfully, it tastes normal, too.
It takes me a few minutes to eat the whole thing.
But when I'm done, Niavis commands me to put it back in Cowan's pocket.
By now, Cowan is sitting against the wall next to the door, weeping as he holds the sleeve of his
jumpsuit to his wound.
No!
He says as I approach.
No!
He kicks at me, but I jump back.
He won't let me, I say to the window.
Make him let you.
Dad says.
Can you help me?
I asked Doug, who sits morosely in the corner.
He shakes his head and doesn't answer.
I move closer to Cowan.
This time, when he kicks at me, I grab his leg and drag him away from the wall,
leaving streaks of blood in his wake.
He screams and flings.
I drop his leg, dart around, and kick him in the head.
It's not enough to knock him out, but he stops fighting long enough,
allowing me to shove the wrapper into his pocket.
Now that his jumpsuit has been pulled open to reveal his bare torso,
I see that just below the first wound, another identical one appears.
For a moment, I can see into the wound, roughly four inches long, an inch wide, and an inch deep.
The yellow fatty tissue, the inflaming nerves, the blood,
vessels that begin to fill the cavity. Cowan screams in pain, slaps a hand over the new wound,
and screams again as he rolls over. The door suddenly opens. I look up to see a SWAT guy pointing
a gun in my face. Back up! I do. The guy covers me while another points his gun at Doug. Two others
rush in, grab Cowan and drag him out. It's a smooth operation that takes 15 seconds.
Cowan's screams are muffled as they shut and lock the hefty door, as he's
dragged down the hall, hopefully to see a goddamn doctor.
For a long time, I stare at the blood on the floor.
The sounds of sobbing draw my attention.
I turned to see Doug on his furry knees on the corner, head hanging, chest heaving as he cries.
A glance at the window reveals that the observation room is empty.
No doctor, Nyavis, no dad.
He didn't even say goodbye.
I don't know why I'm surprised.
That's kind of his thing.
I can only hope they're fulfilling their end of the bargain now, making him better, making him healthy again.
A father-sized pit of sadness opens underneath my feet, and I tumble in, wondering if Dad will ever even talk to me again.
I just want to fall to my knees at his feet and beg for forgiveness.
Tell him I'm sorry I messed up the summoning.
Tell him that I'll do whatever it takes to ensure he gets healthy again.
Then he gets to live longer than his 68 years.
Even in the depths of my own despair, I can't help but feel bad about what I've forced Doug to do.
I stumbled toward him on rubbery legs, not sure whether I'll beg for his forgiveness or simply try to comfort him.
Even as I move toward Doug the demon, I realize that he has every right to be pissed at me,
to tell me to screw off. But he doesn't, and I'm forever grateful,
because I'm not sure I could handle his rejection in this state.
I wrap an arm around his scaly, scabby back and say,
I'm sorry.
As I move to wrap my other arm around him in an awkward embrace,
one of his tears falls and lands on my arm.
It sizzles as it eats into my skin.
I scratch absently at the edge of the bandage on my arm,
while the SWAT guys, who I now realize aren't police at all,
but are guards of some kind, escort, a one-legged man into the room.
It has been many hours since I hugged the,
dug the demon and got a nasty surprise for my trouble.
I don't know how many hours, because I have no way to tell time.
But after a doctor tended to my wound,
I was taken to a cell with a twin bed and a platter of cold food.
After eating the bologna and cheese sandwich,
slurping down the container of jello and drinking the carton of milk,
I fell into a shallow, restless sleep.
I awoke to guards in the cell.
They forced me to get up.
They escorted me here.
Now, I stand next to Doug the demon as the guards leave.
The room has been cleaned of Cowan's blood.
I wonder what happened to the man as I study the newcomer.
The one-legged guy, wearing an orange jumpsuit, sits in a wheelchair.
I wonder if it's the same wheelchair from yesterday.
The one, I awoke in after the whole summoning snafu.
Whereas Cowan was a slight mousy guy, this dude nearly spills over the handles of the wheelchair.
It looks like they gave him a chair two sizes too small for his bulk.
He stares past me at Doug with steely eyes, not a hint of surprise in them.
His gray stubbled face is broad and flabby and so large, it makes it seem like he doesn't have a neck.
Thick, airy forearms rest lightly on the armrests.
Naivis says from the other side of the window.
Grant Lieberman's wish.
One of the first things I did when I came in here was look through the window.
My dad is in there, sitting in a chair, watching with disinterest.
I want to ask if they made him healthy again, but from the glimpse I got of him, I'm sure they haven't.
And I'm sure they won't until they're done with these experiments.
It's the only leverage they have over me, and it's damn good leverage.
Give me my leg back, Lieberman says, gesturing at the empty flap of jumpsuit below his left knee.
I want my leg back.
I turned to look pleadingly at Doug.
You don't have to do this, he whispers.
You really don't.
Yes, I do.
I whisper back.
I expect more of a fight, but Doug sighs and moves toward Lieberman.
I need something in exchange.
Like what?
Like, how about a high-five?
I've always wanted to high-five someone.
It's not a thing where I come from.
I've tried to make it a thing.
The demons and tortured souls aren't into it.
The one-legged man shrugs.
Fine!
The two of them high five.
A flash of flames erupts from their hands as they meet.
The slap of palms echoing unnaturally throughout the room far longer than it should.
Doug backs away, moving past me, as if scared of what he's just done.
Lieberman winces and shakes his hand out, but he stops as something leg-shaped appears in the previously flaccid pant leg.
All three of us look at the thing.
But even before my eyes fall on that foot sticking out of the cuff,
I can tell it doesn't match his other leg.
The foot of this new leg is shriveled, rotting, and putrid.
The flesh squirms with maggots.
Bits of sickly yellow bone are visible through holes
that seem to have been put there by small animals.
Rats, maybe.
Lieberman gasps.
His huge chest expanding and contracting as he reaches down to pull the pant leg up over the shin.
The stench reaches me, a foul bouquet of decaying, diseased flesh that invades the back of my throat, threatening to expel the contents of my stomach.
A high-pitched wine escapes Lieberman as he pulls the pant leg up, revealing the entirety of the leg.
Frightened by the movement, a rat burrows out of a flesh hole in the meaty calf muscle and leaps to the floor, darting away.
It's only when I see where the putrid flesh connects to the healthy flesh that I realize the implication of his wish.
He can feel it.
I think in mute horror, he can feel the leg.
Lieberman screams in agony.
Get it off me! Get it off!
Fuck, it hurts! Someone get it off!
Doug suddenly rushes past me, falling to his knees in front of Lieberman.
He grips the rotten leg at the ankle and puts his other hand on the healthy part of the leg
just above the knee. His back muscles undulate under his scaly,
pink red skin as he yanks, ripping the rotten portion away. Blood pours from the
from the wound, Lieberman continues to scream in agony.
Guards rush in, pointing their weapons at us as they wheel the man out,
once again leaving a trail of blood behind.
When they're gone, and Lieberman's screams are fading down the hall,
I look over at Doug.
He's still holding the rotten leg.
He follows my gaze and jerks, tossing the leg away as if he forgot he was holding it.
It lands in the corner.
The rat that missed its chance to escape the room when the guards came in,
Scurries across the floor and burrows back into the leg.
Home sweet home.
I turned just in time to see Dr. Niaves and my dad heading toward the door.
I did what you asked. I made him do what you wanted.
Now cure him.
Please, cure him!
Niavus glances over her shoulder but doesn't answer.
Dad stops at the door and looks at me.
Dad, I'm sorry.
I was just trying to help. I love you.
My father's face twists into a sneer.
his mouth and cheeks move for a moment before he pauses.
Then, with calm precision, he spits on the floor at his feet,
showing me what he thinks of my words.
A jolt of recognition sounds in my head,
like the first discordant note of a heavy metal song.
Something so familiar about what he just did,
spitting on the floor like that.
Dad turns and walks out into the hall.
Naivas follows and shuts the door.
I stare through the window, thinking,
He'll forgive me when he's healthy again.
When all this is over, I know he will.
I let the fantasy take me,
because it's easier than thinking about Dad's reaction right now,
or about that strange jolt of recognition
that wants to open up a dark box in my mind.
But as I think about how it will be to have the old Dad back,
the non-febable energetic dad,
I can't keep the dark box from opening.
And as it opens, it releases another note,
as if it's a music box programmed to play metal.
The third note plays another jolt,
and then another and another.
Soon, a mosh pit of memories careens through my head.
The bit starts off somewhat slow,
the memories crashing into each other with mild violence.
Every time I said goodbye to my father
and never got a response back,
as an infant just learning to speak,
as a child, as a teenager, as an adult,
the mosh bit goes a little faster
as the swirling memories change.
Every time he looked at me with disgust and disappointment.
Once again, these memories go back to my days as an infant.
Some of my earliest memories are of disappointing my dad in some way or another.
Then things get really bad in my head,
like a thrash metal band is playing,
and the memories are all wearing spiked bracelets and steel-toe boots.
Dad's shaking me as an infant to get me to stop crying.
Dad, backhanding me when I forgot to put a toy.
up in the playroom, Dad slamming me against the wall by the neck when I challenged his authority
as a teenager. And the last one, the worst one, back before I left for college. Dad punching me
in the face, breaking my nose when I finally came clean to him about my sexual orientation.
The broken nose hurt plenty. But when I was on the floor, he stood over me, snorted and hawked
until he had a huge loogie gathered in his mouth. With the same calm precision I saw just now,
He positioned his mouth over top of my face and spit that lugy onto my shattered, bleeding nose.
I could have moved.
I was dazed, but not that dazed.
It would have been easy to shift my head out of the way.
But I didn't.
Because even then, in some fucked up way, I knew that moving to dodge the lugy would disappoint dad.
And God forbid I ever do that.
The retrieval of these memories I had somehow locked away, has me punch drunk.
Legs rubbery, head reeling with the mental mosh pit, I stumble over to Doug.
Stay away from me, he says.
I speak in a voice so strong it takes me a moment to recognize it as my own.
I can stop this. I will stop this.
But you just have to grant one more wish, just one more for me.
Doug the demon has his back to me, facing the corner like a petulant child.
But as I tell him what I want, he slowly turns to face me.
And by the time I'm done, his face is slack with surprise.
More than an hour has passed when they bring the next prisoner in.
In the interim, they have cleaned up the blood on the floor,
probably so they don't freak out the next person.
It's bad enough seeing the huge demons sulking in the corner.
Blood on the floor might be a little too much to handle.
The time has also given me an opportunity to carefully consider my plan.
I've discussed it with Doug in low whisper.
and I've gone back and forth in my own mind about it.
Doug the demon is right.
I don't know what will happen, not really.
Neither does he.
It's clear Doug has good intentions,
but he's not very good at the whole wish-granting thing.
Or maybe it's supposed to work this way.
That's what I'm counting on, actually.
That doesn't mean I'm not sick to my stomach.
As they escort the newcomer in,
a haggard, middle-aged woman in an orange jumpsuit and a shaved head,
I have to steal myself for what comes next.
Niaves and Dad move into the observation room moments later.
While the woman is staring slack-jawed at Doug the demon,
I share a look with him.
I read in his expression a question,
Are you sure?
I nod once, I'm sure.
As I approach the reinforced window, I keep my eyes down.
My dad's form is there in my peripheral vision,
but the thought of looking him in the eye makes me queasy.
As I stop, my face inches from the window.
My leg muscles begin to twitch, like they're preparing to give out.
But I have to do this.
I promised myself that if I didn't do this part, then I wouldn't do the next part either.
Tell the entity what you want.
Nyivus says from the other side of the glass.
Wait!
I say.
Wait just a minute.
As I raised my head to look at my father,
My eyes close as if on their own.
I've confronted my father a handful of times in my life,
and I've always come away feeling small, humiliated, and weak.
The memories are so potent.
They threaten to make me collapse to my knees and beg for forgiveness.
But a sudden realization keeps me standing.
Those interactions aren't just memories.
They were also training sessions.
My dad was training me to be small.
He was training me to be humiliated and weak.
He's been training me my whole life.
Not teaching me how to be my own person,
how to be kind and fair and stand up for myself.
He's been training me like he would train a fucking dog.
I open my eyes and stare through the window at my father.
He meets my gaze, and the side of his lip twitches in a familiar sneer.
This has been a long time coming, Dad, I say.
The window between us helps.
It will keep him from hitting me.
And that's a big help.
I just wanted to say that I love you,
but I'm no longer your fucking dog.
A rotten smile spreads across my father's sickly features.
I spin around and march over to Doug
as my dad bellows from the observation room.
He keeps going, but I tune it out as I whisper my wish to Doug.
He's sitting in the corner,
so I don't even have to crouch to speak into his ear.
When I'm done, I offer my right pinky finger,
holding it in front of his face.
Are you sure?
He asks for the hundredth time.
I'm sure.
It seems like the price I should pay,
and it's all I'm willing to give up for that asshole.
Dad is still yelling, but his voice is growing hoarse.
I realize with the jolt of excitement that I've gotten to him.
For the first time in my life, I've knocked him a little off balance.
Doug opens his mouth.
I slide my pinky into his maw.
I never realized just how sharp all his teeth are.
I tell myself it's a good thing.
Dull teeth would make this hurt more.
He gently closes his mouth, teeth clamping my finger at the middle knuckle.
Now Niavesse is shouting too, shouting for the guards to stop me.
The door to the chamber opens.
I look over to see several guards rushing in.
Turning back to Doug, I shout.
Do it!
He bites down.
There's a crunch like a rotissary chicken bone breaking.
The pain makes me spasm.
But the pain is nothing compared to what my father has inflicted on me through the years.
I spin around and look through the window.
Dad suddenly stops his tirade,
his eyes going down to my injured hand
as it leaks blood all over the floor.
For a moment, I think I see a flicker of concern on his face.
And for that briefest of moments,
it feels like I have the kind of dad
who would actually care if his son got hurt.
But the moment passes,
and Dad smiles a greasy smile.
He's enjoying my misfortune.
The guards reach me, grabbing hold of my arms.
As they drag me toward the door, I keep my eyes fixed on dad.
His gaze follows me, still smiling.
And just before I lose sight of him, his contented expression morphs into a mask of torment.
But his eyes never leave mine.
They go wide with understanding, even as his facial muscles jerk and twitch in response to whatever is happening inside him.
He collapses to the floor in the observation room.
The guards drag me out of the chamber, past the wide-eyed woman.
Before they can shut the door, I meet Doug's gaze with a huge smile.
Thank you.
Naevese steps into the cell as I'm lounging on the twin bed,
gazing at my bandaged pinky nub.
She's with a guard who closes the door behind them.
I sit up, expectant.
He's dead, she says.
I don't have to ask who she's talking about.
I say nothing.
You wished for your own father's death?
She asks, not trying to hide the disgust.
I chuckle.
No, I couldn't do that.
I wouldn't.
I'm not an asshole.
Okay, so what did you wish for?
I'll tell you if you let Doug go.
Something flashes across the good doctor's face.
Anger?
I can make you tell me, she says after a moment.
I'm sure you can.
We stare at each other.
She makes no move.
Finally, she sighs.
Doug is gone.
I sit up more.
What?
You let him go?
Niavas clears her throat.
No, he disappeared.
Presumably back to where he came from.
Hell, as I'm sure you'd call it.
Almost as if he had planned all of this.
Like the whole thing was just to teach you some kind of lesson,
or to kill your dad.
I can't help but smile.
So, what did you wish for?
I wished for my dad to finally be content and happy.
Not with me, but with life in general.
Niavese choose on that for a moment.
And he died.
I guess so.
You would know better than me.
You knew that would happen?
Not really, no.
But I knew Dad would never be content, never be happy, not while he was alive.
So I had a feeling.
I would have much preferred he stayed alive and enjoyed whatever time he had left,
but I also wasn't holding my breath.
So you wished for your own father.
There's death. Disgusting. Says the woman who was holding him hostage to manipulate me and Doug,
I don't think you have any room to talk. Nayevez snorts derisively.
You're never getting out of here. You know that right? This time tomorrow, you'll be in an
orange jumpsuit, a guinea pig in the most heinous experiment I can think of. Whatever your dad
put you through will seem like a walk in the park compared to what's coming.
I try and fail to keep the dismay from my face. I guess I have to have to be.
hadn't thought far enough ahead. I had been hoping that with my dad gone, they would just let us go.
But that was dumb. I can be such an idiot sometimes. Maybe dad was right. Maybe. No! I shut those thoughts
down, but Naivas has already seen my reaction. She grins. Her expression reminding me of my
father's greasy smile. She and the guard leave, locking me in the cell again.
Shit, I say, getting off the bed to pace in the small, windowless room.
Shit, how the hell will I get?
Smoke suddenly fills the room, causing me to cough.
I can't see even a few feet in front of me, but I feel a presence in the cell.
Shit, dude, a familiar voice says.
Sorry.
Doug steps toward me, waving a massive hand in front of him to clear the smoke.
A fire alarm starts blaring.
What?
The demon smiles.
What do you say we get out of here?
I nod, still not quite believing what I'm seeing.
Then my face falls.
Doug notices.
What's wrong?
Naivas said that this whole thing was planned,
that you wanted to kill my dad or teach me a lesson or something.
Is that true?
Doug scoffs.
What?
No way, man.
I wish.
That would have been pretty cool.
Then how did you get free?
Oh, my dad came and got me.
He was pissed that I had been granting wish.
and shit, but he was even more pissed at the SCP Foundation.
Doug gestures around as he names our tormentors.
So yeah, he got really madded me.
But you taught me something, my friend.
You taught me to stand up to my old man.
When I did, he actually stood down.
Although he didn't say it, I had gained some respect in his eyes.
And when I told him I needed to come back and get you,
he granted me the power to do it.
So yeah, that's why I'm here.
can take you home. Looking up at Doug's hideous face through the smoke, I grin.
He pulls me into a hug. I hug him back. Just don't cry on me. He laughs, and we disappear
from the cell just as guards rush in. SCP 4996 is a Tartarian-class demonic entity
that will attempt to orchestrate deals with any person who comes near to them. Any deals will be
interpreted by the meaning of the request, often resulting in a beneficial outcome for the other party,
but this is accompanied by an unintended side effect.
These effects seem to be largely unrelated to the terms of the original deal,
though the effect's severity will often scale with the deal's complexity.
