THE SHADOW GIRL
“Are you sure the other kids won’t notice?” Conner asked as he
looked up to his sister while she smeared the foundation-covered makeup
pad over his cheek. The boy winced and pulled slightly away as it came
in contact with the ugly, purplish bruise that marred his cheek.
You should be OK.” Madeline replied as she did her best to gently pat
the substance onto his skin, trying not to hurt him further in the
process. Conner held his breath as she worked and didn’t make another
sound. He was strong. They both were. Mainly, because they had to be.
Madeline and Conner Shandon did not have it easy. Their early years
consisted of two parents struggling to break away from either a
dysfunctional, and often abusive, family or a family that went out of
their way to ignore the fact their “little girl” had gone off and
married some low-class hoodlum from the wrong side of the tracks. Still,
the Shandons did their best to make it work for themselves and their
two children. They at least managed to put food on the table and a roof
over Madeline and Conner’s heads.
However, that life came to a sudden end as a car crash took the lives
of both senior Shandons. Madeline, who was only eight at the time, was
forced to endure the loss of the two most important people in her life
and become the guardian of her little three-year-old brother. With their
parents gone, the two were given custody to their uncle, who came from
the same abusive family that their father tried to escape. Drunk and
angry, he had a tendency to take out his aggression on the two children.
Neither could speak up to anyone about his abuse, however, under threat
that “if he went down, he’d take the two of them to hell with him.”
Madeline got good at covering up the bruises. And that’s what she was
doing now for her little brother. He had made the mistake of spilling
his soda on the carpet and paid the price with a swift backhand from
their uncle that left him crying on the floor. She hated seeing her
brother in pain. That’s one reason why she helped him. Conner was only
twelve now. He didn’t deserve to have this kind of pain. He was just a
kid and Madeline hated to see that swollen, darkened reminder of what
he’d been through on his face.
“I think I almost got it.” she spoke as she dabbed a bit more of the
makeup. “Yes, there!” A small smile and she pulled away. “Good as new.”
Madeline took a moment to look over her work. The foundation blended
well with the light tan of his face and that was needed. His short
blonde hair couldn’t be used to cover up problem areas like her longer
hair could. Conner lift a hand to poke at the concealed bruise, but she
swiftly pushed it away. “Hey, kid! Don’t do that or you’ll smear it. And
then all the kids at school will find out that you got makeup on.” she
teased with a small chuckle and gave his arm a nudge with her own.
“Yeah, yeah.” he replied with a sigh before he leaned in to look in
the bathroom mirror, eyes taking in every detail of his new look.
“Thanks, sis. I’m glad you’re here.” Conner turned to her with a bright
smile. She couldn’t help but return it with one of her own. That smile.
Even through all this crap, he still found a way to have a genuine
smile. It brightened up every bit of his face and she could swear that
those bright blue eyes of his almost sparkled. It gave her hope that,
maybe, if they hung in a little longer they could escape this. That hope
was the reason why she still got out of bed every morning
* * *
The door swung open slowly as Madeline crept into the house. The
school day finished and it was time to slink back into the household
shadows while she hoped she wasn’t spotted. Uncle Lewis tended to hold
in his angry attitude long enough for him to take it out on the kids
when they got home from school. The best strategy was to just slip away,
hide, and pretend you’re not there. Locking yourself in your room was a
good strategy until he discovered you were home. Or passed out. The
later was obviously the one Madeline always hoped for.
She wasn’t lucky enough today.
“Damn it Madeline!” She heard the growling voice yell from behind her
just before she could slip into the back hallway of the home. She drew
in a quick breath and turned. Uncle Lewis stood behind her, a tall and
bloated man that currently had stuffed himself into a pair of well-worn
sweatpants and a t-shirt of a band that nobody had listened to in over a
decade. A sneer formed on his lips and the redness in his face
indicated that already he was well into a few drinks. For a moment,
Madeline wondered how one could get that drunk in the hour or so between
him getting home from work and her school.
“Y-yes, Uncle Lewis?” Madeline stammered as she turned to him, her
body tense and a hand tightly grasping the strap on her backpack.
“Where the fuck did you hide your brother at?” He stomped forward,
wobbling slightly before leaning in and shoving his face into her own.
The smell of booze was strong and it nearly made her gag as leaned away.
“That little shit was supposed to clean up the house! I told him to
clean the house! And, he’s not cleaning. He’s gone!” The man rambled as
Madeline stepped back, eyes focused on the position of his arms. Conner
was gone? But he should’ve been home from school a half hour ago.
“I don’t know.” Madeline confessed as she tried to ease her way
around him. “I just got home from school. You know he gets out earlier-“
“Bullshit!” Lewis screamed and lunged for her, an arm wildly swinging
down at her. She ducked to the side and spun around him, tears starting
to well in her eyes. She slipped off her backpack and prepared to dodge
again, but the alcohol seemed to work in her favor. Lewis stumbled and
it took him a moment to get his balance back. “You hid him somewhere
from me! Where the fuck is he? Where did you put him!”
Oh god! Conner was missing? She racked her brain then. Uncle Lewis
probably threatened him into cleaning and got out of hand. Conner
could’ve hid though he know that was the worst thing you could do. If
Lewis found you…no amount of makeup would cover up those marks. It was a
series of “sick days” then. He must’ve run! He never did that before
but that had to be it.
“I didn’t do anything with him.” she spoke as she straightened, her
own anger boiling to the surface. “You ran him off! You finally did it!”
Madeline screamed, a well of new-found courage forming within her. If
he ran off her brother…if he let anything bad happen to him…
“Don’t you talk to me that way!” Lewis snarled down. An arm rose,
lifting to position itself into striking position. Madeline lunged
forward, both hands slamming into his chest in a hard shove and the man
stumbled back before falling to the ground with a loud thud.
“If anything happens to him while he’s out there, I swear I’ll kill
you!” She yelled down at the now bewildered drunkard. “You’re the worst!
And I’m done. Done!” And, with those words, she turned to make her way
for the door.
“If…if you say anything, I’ll-“
“-take you both to hell with me.” she shot back without missing a
beat. “Well, then I’ll see you there.” Madeline slammed the door behind
her as she bolted outside to find her brother.
* * *
It wasn’t until evening hit that Madeline decided to check the park.
She found Conner sitting on one of the swings, no longer crying but the
tear stains were still visible on his cheeks. She came forward slowly
toward him and bit back a small cry. The bruise she had covered up the
day before was now visible thanks to a mix of his crying and hand wiping
his eyes. She also found it was joined by a blackened eye that had
swelled up rather large. She held back her own tears, biting back each
one as she approached. Don’t cry. Have to be strong. Have to be strong
for him.
“Conner?” she asked as she came up to him. “Are you OK?” The boy shook his head and tightened his grip on the swing chains.
“I can’t do it anymore Mad.” he spoke, sniffling as the tears
threatened to return. “I can’t take it anymore. I just want it over. I’m
sorry. I’m so sorry.” He spoke.
“No reason to be sorry Conner. It’s not-“ he cut her off by leaping
to her, arms suddenly wrapping about her in a hug as he buried his head
against her.
“No! I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. I…I…” He worked to form words but the
tears resumed and they degraded into the sobs. Madeline gently pet the
back of his head before she whispered down to him.
“Don’t worry. We’re not going home.” she assured him in a gentle
voice. “We’re going to the cops. We should’ve done it a long time ago.
We’ll be OK.” His crying didn’t seem to halt but he did manage to nod
his head. Slowly, she pulled away and took him by his hand. Conner
followed his sister’s lead and let her lead him back to the street. The
police station wasn’t far, at least, and Madeline knew they would
protect them. She felt so stupid. Why hadn’t she done this before? Why
had she waited so long? Maybe it was because of Conner. If she went to
the police, then Conner might feel Uncle Lewis’s wrath before she could
save him. But, now, he was here. Bruised and scared, but safe. They’d be
OK. If they could hold out a bit longer…
The screeching of tires hit her ears first. Madeline turned to see
the twin bulbs of headlights barreling toward them. She didn’t have time
to scream. She barely had time to register what was happening before
the on-coming car bounced over the sidewalk and slammed itself into the
brother and sister.
* * *
Pain. Madeline awoke to her entire body aching. She tried to move but
just the small tightening of her muscles caused shocks of pain to shoot
through her. She let out a small cry and relaxed back onto what felt
like a bed. The world, at first just a darkened blur, began to brighten
and focus in. She was…in a bed in a dull room lit by bright fluorescent
lights. Again, she tried to move but the stabbing feeling shot through
her again and she resigned herself to immobility. At the very least, she
was able to tilt her head down.
She had been wrapped up in a series of bandages and splints,
brownish-red seeping through those bandages all over her form. It took
her a few moments to remember what happened. Uncle Lewis yelling at her,
Conner in the park, the car…the car! They’d be hit! And if she was this
bad, then how was Conner? That made Madeline resume her struggle but,
once again, found the agony too much.
“…you think she’ll make it Doctor Allen?” A faint voice came from the nearby doorway.
“Probably not.” came another calm, yet unnervingly detached voice.
“We might be able to repair some of the damage but it’s a long-shot. Not
much of a point.” Boy? Was he talking about Conner?
“No point? What do you mean no point?”
“I’m not marring my good record with a girl who’s more than likely going to die anyway. I have a reputation to uphold.”
“So you’re going to let her die? Just like the boy?” Die? Conner
was…Madeline squeaked in horror as she tried to push herself up. No! No
no no no! It wasn’t possible.
“It would’ve been nearly pointless for him as well! I have the best
survival rate for my patients in this hospital. And, I’m not going to
jeopardize that-“ The doctor suddenly stopped and then let out what
sounded like a grumble. “Oh, she’s awake. I swear if she heard
anything…”
Each of Madeline’s sobs made her body shake and feel like it was
tearing itself apart. No, it couldn’t be true. She heard it wrong.
Conner wasn’t dead. He was fine. He had to be fine.
“Ah, Madeline Shandon!” The cold voice she heard finally had a form
as he approached. He was tall and older from the look. Short, tightly
slicked back grey hair topped his head and he had an air of…clean about
him. Not a good kind of clean. Like he preferred to stay away from
anything that might mar his perfect image. It was a sick sterilization
that made her squirm nearly as much the fake smile plastered on his
face. “My name is Doctor Allen. I see you’re awake.”
“My, my…” Madeline coughed and a twinge of coppery taste hit her
tongue. She tried to swallow it. “…my brother. He’s OK?” Dr. Allen
halted for a moment, his smile faltering slightly.
“Unfortunately, your brother didn’t make it. He passed before he
arrived here.” Bullshit! She just heard him! He had a chance to save him
but the heartless asshole wouldn’t touch him if he wasn’t a “sure
save”. Madeline clenched her fists, despite the pain that nearly made
her black out again. Her mouth opened and she coughed once again.
“L-lie…you…lie…” She sputtered to him as she shut her eyes. The tears
began to stream down her face. She didn’t hear what he replied with
through those tears. It didn’t matter what he said or did. Her brother
was gone. Madeline was going to die soon too. And, even if she lived,
Uncle Lewis would get even and that would probably finish her off.
Madeline didn’t know how long she cried for. Hours? Maybe. Nothing
mattered to her. She didn’t see the doctor leave. Or when the nurse
dropped off her food and tried to apologize. She just laid there,
sobbing and waiting for either death or her uncle to take her.
However, neither would approach her first. Instead, a sudden chill
swept through the room. It was a deep cold, one that pierced her
blankets, her blood, and even felt like…it went deeper. Through her into
something far inside her being. Her tears suddenly stopped and she
looked about the room.
The room was dark. Night seemed to have fallen and the lights had
been turned off in her room. Only the faint glow from cracks in the door
and the room’s equipment illuminated the area. There was just enough
light to allow her to look about the room and notice the particular
shapes of the machines and visitor’s chairs. An eerie feeling swept over
her. Something was wrong though. Something was very wrong.
Her eyes darted among the shadows, looking over each one and
analyzing it for anything that could lay within. However, it wasn’t what
was within the shadows that caught her eye. It was the shadow itself,
particularly one that seemed to slink along the visitor’s chairs. It
crawled tendril-like arms that pulled a blackened mass up and onto the
nearby wall. The darkened shape stretched out and pulled along a vaguely
human-like form that traversed the side of the wall like a spider.
Madeline’s eyes widened and a scream caught in her throat. Her arm
shift, fingers moving to try and find the remote with the nurse
call-button. The creature seemed to halt on the wall, just feet away
from her bed and stared. Or did what she thought was stare as she
couldn’t see any eyes on that blackened mass.
And then, it spoke. Its voice slithered from it, clawing at her ears
and making her blood freeze. It sounded like a series of hisses and
wheezing breathes but each seemed to form part of a coherent word. It
didn’t feel like she should be able to understand those piercing noises
but each seemed to cling too cling to a particular word in her mind.
“Do not fear me young one.” it spoke. Or hissed. Or whatever it was
this thing did. “I am not here to hurt you.” Madeline swallowed and her
body tensed. Tears of fear began to well in her eyes as she focused on
the thing.
“Wh-what are you?” she stammered through the fear, asking the first question that came to her mind.
“That does not matter.” it to whisper back to her as it inched
closer. A large protrusion pulled forward from the wall and hung down
toward her, looking like a round ball of shadow that Madeline soon
realized was a head. “What does matter is that I can help you.”
“Help me?” Madeline asked as she drew back from the shadowy head. A strange series of sharp wheezes escaped it. It was…laughing?
“Yes, girl. I know what you want.” It crawled closer then shift off
the wall before a slithery hand placed itself on the side of the bed.
“The loss you feel. The pain you feel. You want them to feel it.”
Madeline swallowed as she listened. Her gaze narrowed slightly and
she thought. Yes, she did want that. Her brother was gone. Taken from
her by people who could care less about their lives. She wanted them to
know what they did. To take responsibility. They needed to pay for
taking her brother from her.
“Yes.” she answered simply, her eyes focusing on where she assumed its own eyes would be if it had any.
“Good.” Another sick-sounding laugh before it pulled itself onto the
bed. It lingered on the side, standing there before it inched around the
perimeter. “I can give that to you. You will make others feel that
loss. And they will pay the ultimate price.”
Madeline gasped at those words, a pained sputter following before she
winced and laid back. The ultimate price? It meant death. It wanted her
to kill them!
“I-I can’t…kill someone.” she whispered, afraid someone nearby might hear the strange conversation.
“The ones that hurt you deserve it, do they not?” it asked with a
cant of its head. Those shadowy arms soon found themselves slipping
further onto the bed, crawling up the length toward her. Madeline
grimaced and shivered as the cold it carried enveloped her further.
“Allow me to aid you girl.”
It was tempting. Very tempting. But there had to be a catch. There
had to be! Madeline leaned back, suspicious of the dark thing before
her.
“And what do you want in exchange?” she questioned, waiting for the string that was attached to its offer.
“My dear, you already will be providing a service for me.” it spoke
as it approached her chest, climbing into it without pressure but only
with that strange cold it carried. Madeline breathed out, discovering
she could now see her breath before her. “I seek to show the world pain
and loss. For everyone to understand those feelings. Your vengeance
aligns with my goals as well.”
That sounded like bad news. This thing was a dark creature. Evil, she was sure. It seemed to sense her turmoil and continued.
“It is a dark purpose, but justified in your case. It is a suitable
punishment for those that have wronged you. You can avenge your
brother’s death. Was he not important to you?” it hissed to her, almost
accusingly. Madeline turned away, eyes focusing away from that shadowy
thing. “Will you not do everything in your power to see justice dealt?
Please, young one,” It leaned closer and those shadowy tendrils rose and
extended to her, as if reaching for her. Or offering her a hand “help
yourself by helping me.”
Madeline’s gaze turned back to him and she hesitated a long moment.
If it spoke true to her, then she could get revenge on everyone who hurt
her brother. That bastard doctor for letting him die, Uncle Lewis for
making their lives hell, and the driver that ended everything for Conner
too soon. She…she did want them hurt. She wanted them dead. Madeline
couldn’t have Conner back. Death was final and nothing they could give
would make it better. Except their lives. Madeline did want blood.
“All right. I’ll help you. Just…follow through with your word.” She
hesitated in giving him demands though the creature seemed to let it go.
She worked to lift a hand up toward him, the movement sending pain
through her body. The pain from her wounds tore through her as she let
out a small cry but still carried her hand toward it. When her fingers
touched the wisps of its shadowy fingers, a swift and cold numbness
spread through her. It shot down her arm and spread out throughout her
body, feeling like it was freezing even vein within her. The pain soon
ebbed away to a cold, numb feeling. And then the pain was gone.
Completely. Madeline glanced down along her body and tightened her
muscles. Yes, the pain was gone. She didn’t feel anything wrong. She
felt…fine. It was an unnerving feeling. She should be in pain. She
should be screaming. But she was fine.
“I took the liberty to make your body useful to you again.” The
creature whispered as it turned away and began to slink down off of the
bed, slithering down the side and toward the floor out of her sight. “No
pain will make you lose sight. You best be ready girl.” The hiss grew
quieter as it disappeared, Madeline assuming it hid itself under her
hospital bed. “Your first chance comes. He is here for you…”
He? What did it mean? Suddenly, a bright light nearly blinded
Madeline. She lift a hand to cover her face, thankful that the pain no
longer held her back, to see the door to the brightly lit hallway had
opened. And, in it, was the silhouette of a man. A big, imposing man
that marched forward and quietly closed the door behind him.
“Madeline,” Uncle Lewis spoke as he loomed toward the bed. “Look what
you got yourself into.” Madeline gasped and drew back on the bed. Lewis
was here! And she was sure he was going to make sure she regretted
defying him and running out. “What did you say?”
“I didn’t say anything.” Madeline replied quickly. Of course, with
her brother dead and herself injured, the only thing he cared about was
whether or not she spoke about the abuse. Lewis growled and grabbed the
side of the bed before giving it a hard shake.
“Bullshit!” He snarled to her as she let out a small cry from the
shake. He was going to hurt her. Hell, he might kill her! She was
supposed to have the power to punish him. Why didn’t she? That thing
tricked her. It had to be a trick!
“Uncle Lewis!” She whispered through gritted teeth as she steadied herself. “People are outside! They’ll hear you.”
“Feh, nobody gives a shit about a girl who made her doctor look
stupid. You’re dying anyway, right?” And he actually chuckled before he
shook his head. “Just going to help that along before you get mouthy.”
Lewis strode along toward the head of the bed, his thick arms lifting so
he could crack his knuckles.
Madeline trembled, fear filling her body as Lewis, once again, found
himself in the position of power over the girl. However, it was then
that she felt something shift under her blanket. Something solid grew in
her grip, coming to form within her hand and hidden from view. It felt
cold and metallic, probably some type of handle. She clenched it
tightly, feeling the weight of it under the sheet.
“Do not hesitate girl.” That hissing speech hit her ears, making her
cringe. Uncle Lewis didn’t seem to react to it. Could he not hear it?
Maybe that thing was…just for her… “He means to end your life. Do not
let that happen.” Lewis reached out toward her, taking his time as he
let his stubby fingers wrap about her neck. He must’ve figured her
injuries still held her back. Those fingers squeezed about her tender
throat and she let out a muffled cry as he tightened his grip. Her
oxygen supply suddenly cut off and her body nearly threw itself into a
panic.
Until she tightened her grip on that object.
She had no idea what it was, but it was now or never. With a sudden
jerk, she whipped her arm out from under the sheet and swung it toward
Lewis’s head. A sickening crunch resounded and his grip swiftly
loosened. Madeline stared up to see she was holding a single-handed
scythe, the black handle tightly grasped in her fingers. The curved
blade stuck straight into Lewis’s temple, shoved deep into him. Blood
dribbled down from the wound, dripping toward the bed sheet below as he
wheezed. Lewis wobbled back, a look of shock on his face. He barely
seemed to register what happened to him before the large man, the man
who abused her and her brother for most of their years, got what was
coming to him. He slumped down to the ground, the weight of his fall
wrenching the weapon from her head as he fell over dead.
Madeline just stared down at the corpse, gasping for breath as she
rubbed at her neck. She…she killed him. Lewis was dead. There was a
moment of panic in her heart at that. She killed another human being!
She murdered him.
That wasn’t quite right though. He was trying to kill her. It was
self-defense. Completely! Kill or be killed. Her gaze narrowed down
toward that body. Lewis, that son of a bitch, got what was coming to
him! He deserved it! For everything he did that drove Conner to run. To
put him in that situation where a stray car took his life.
Madeline rose from the bed, pushing herself over it as she moved
toward his corpse, the paper-like hospital gown shifting lightly on her
form. She didn’t notice she was no-longer bandaged or hooked to any of
the machines. That shadow must’ve deemed them unnecessary. She carried
herself toward him, her bare feet falling into the slowly forming puddle
of blood about his head. He didn’t look as tough now. Not with that
look of surprise and fear on his face. Or with all the life gone from
his eyes. Madeline glowered down, looking from his face to that dark
weapon still protruding from his skull. She leaned over, reaching out a
hand to clasp the cold handle. With a sharp yank, she pulled it free, a
bit of blood leaking from the wound afterward.
“An appropriate weapon for my angel of death.” the creature spoke as
it revealed itself. It slunk out from the shadows under the bed, using
its long dark appendages to pull itself on top of Lewis. It seemed to
look down with that bulb she assumed was its head before it continued.
“My gift to you.” The scythe felt good in her grip. It almost seemed to
meld to her fingers. Like it was made for her. An unnatural chill came
from the weapon, giving her the feeling that it would remain ice cold
even if she left it in a raging fire. Its color was a deep black, nearly
matching the darkness around it. It seemed darker though, even more so
than the shadows in the room. She drew in a breath and let it out
slowly. Madeline was in this now. There was no going back.
“Now what?” She asked the creature. It reared its “head” up to her
and she heard that strange hissing laugh once again. “Now, time to visit
the doctor.”
* * *
Doctor Allen was finally able to slip away from the hospital and head
home. He had to spend most of the night coddling a particularly wealthy
patient with a stomach-ache which, annoying as it was, was necessary to
make sure he continued donating. It was important to keep their wallets
full after all. At the moment, he was gathering his belongings in his
office. With his attention drawn away, he did not notice as the darkened
corner by his bookcase seemed to peel away, dark tendrils of shadows
pulling thin and taunt before snapping away to reveal Madeline’s form
beneath them. Madeline shook lightly and wavered. It was a new feeling
to move in such a way and quite disorientating. However, when her eyes
locked with the doctor, she quickly found her focus.
“Doctor Allen,” she spoke in a tone much darker than she intended.
Her fingers gripped her scythe tightly as she stepped away from the
shadows and the creature she knew lay within, watching her. Dr. Allen
let out a start and swiftly turned toward the girl. He quickly found his
composure and drew in a breath.
“Ah, yes, Miss…Shandon was it?” he said, eliminating any previous
unnerve he had. Until his eyes fell upon that scythe. Madeline noted how
his eyes widened and he took a step back. “What are you doing in here?”
he asked, trying to keep his usual cold composure though a wavering of
fear trickled into his voice.
“You were going to leave me to die.” Madeline glared at him as she
advanced, her bare feet carrying her purposefully toward him. “You left
my brother to die.” Her voice was cold, focused, and made the doctor
swallow. Madeline felt a bit of a rush roll through her. He was…afraid
of her. He feared her! The small girl that was once a drunk’s punching
bag actually made him scared. Her lips curled into a smirk.
“Now, now Miss Shandon. Let’s be realistic.” He lift both hands as he
back further away, soon bumping into another bookshelf. A glance back
and then to her, focusing on her as she approached. “You and your
brother were in bad shape. Any operation might’ve simply made things
worse. You’re lucky-“
“Lucky?” she spat back at him as she pushed forward, standing right
in front of the trembling doctor. “Lucky, you were here to tell us to
fuck off? Lucky, for what? My brother is dead! I was going to die! Tell
me doctor, why the hell should I be lucky!?!” Doctor Allen let out a cry
of fear as he raised his hands higher, head tilting away from her.
“Please, it’s not like that! It’s much more complicated! You don’t understand!”
“No, doctor,” Madeline shook her head, hand lifting to bring her
scythe up into the air. Dr. Allen gasped at the sight and cowered
downward. The girl before him looked nothing like the girl that was
brought it. There was a darkness about her. And she should not be
walking around! Madeline should be on her death bed! “you don’t
understand. Though, I’ll make you.” He wasn’t going to give her the
chance though. Dr. Allen pushed away suddenly, running to the side to
attempt to run around her. He barely made it past his desk before she
struck.
Madeline’s scythe fell down upon his back, tearing into his coat and
skin, making the doctor cry out in pain. He stumbled down to his knees,
hands reaching back behind him to try and feel for the large gash that
gushed blood down his back. Madeline came forward, scythe rising before
slicing down on his back again. Another slash followed. And another.
Repeatedly, she stabbed at him, each cut echoing with a sickening, meaty
sound that rang in her head. Blood splashed about her, soaking into her
hospital gown and skin as she relentlessly slashed. Every bit of
aggression she held in over her life came out here. Every time Lewis hit
her, every time life seemed useless, every time she wanted to just let
it all end…it came out in the form of a relentless swing of that scythe
into Dr. Allen.
Finally, she slowed when the doctor was a mess of gore and cloth on
the ground. The stench of blood was thick in the air and it covered much
of her skin and gown. A few long breaths escaped her as she pant. Her
high ebbed away and back to reality she went. This wasn’t self-defense.
This was murder. But so was letting Conner die. So was leaving her to
die. He deserved it.
Madeline felt it before she turned to see the creature peering over
her shoulder. Its “hand” had fallen to her shoulder, holding it in its
icy grip as it surveyed her work.
“He was a terrible man. Status before well-being. He will be missed
by few.” It regarded before drawing away from her. Madeline turned
toward him, her darkened gaze focusing on that shadowy beast.
“You said I would have my revenge on all of them.” She told it as she
mustered up more of her new-found courage. “What about the driver?” A
piercing chuckle came from it before it turned back to her, blank and
black head seeming to stare in her direction.
“I will fulfill our bargain. Do not fret. Come, girl.” And the
creature crawled with spider-like limbs toward the same darkened corner
they had appeared from. It slipped into the shadows, vanishing as if it
had never been there. Madeline swallowed and looked back down to the
mess that had once been Dr. Allen. One more. One more and Conner will
have justice. For a moment, she questioned herself as she eyed the
bloody remains before her. This wasn’t right. Even if the world was
better without Dr. Allen or Uncle Lewis, murder was still murder, right?
She shook those thoughts from her mind and focused on Conner. She’d
never see those bright eyes again. His smile. He’d never grow up. He
would never have a chance for a better life.
And for that, there was hell to pay.
* * *
Ryan Gallard lived on the other side of town and the bastard was out
on bail as they figured out the details about the accident. Getting to
his home was easy thanks to the ability of Madeline’s dark, new
companion. Traveling through the shadows was a strange thing. It was
like being slowly stretched and pulled thin, so thin that it seemed
implausible to survive. Skin should snap, organs burst, and blood forced
out of her body. However, there was no pain. Just a weird,
uncomfortable pressure that constantly pushed upon her. Then, she would
be moving. It felt like being sucked through a tunnel, pulled along
against your will until you pushed through the very shadows themselves
as if you were walking through particularly thick spider webs. Madeline
felt a mixture of both wonder and terror as she was pulled along to the
final living reminder of Conner’s death.
She formed behind what looked to be the couch set in his living room.
The lights were out, save for the playing television that cast a
bright, moving light throughout the room while still leaving much in
darkness. Madeline pulled herself up to her knees, her free hand lifting
to grasp the back of the couch before she rose. Her other hand readied
the black scythe as she peered over to see nothing. He wasn’t in the
room. A concerned look came across her face as she looked about for him.
She finally spied him sitting in the connecting kitchen, bent over the
large and round table.
She first noticed how skinny he was. He was a rather thin man and the
t-shirt and jeans he wore hung loosely on him. His short, black hair
was already developing a bald spot right on the top that was sure to
spread in the coming years. He looked tired and sat silently, just
staring off into the wood of the table with dark circles around his
eyes.
Madeline’s grip tightened on her weapon as she pressed forward, her
newly-found confidence and rage made her care little for stealth. He
noticed her when she approached the kitchen opening, tired eyes lifting
to look toward her. He took a moment, just looking upon her before it
suddenly registered in his head what was before him. Ryan let out a cry
and hopped up from his chair, the fixture falling over to the floor with
a loud clatter.
“W-what do you want?” he asked her as he stepped back. “Why are you
in my house?” She could see fear welling in him. The same sweet fear
Doctor Allen felt. Madeline lift her scythe slightly, letting her thumb
toy with the tip as footsteps carried her around the table toward him
like a stalking predator.
“You don’t know who I am?” she began, her voice dark and low.
Somewhere, deep inside, Madeline must’ve realized how much her actions
changed her but the idea of vengeance clouded her thoughts. It clogged
every rational nerve in her brain and forced her to focus on one thing:
the pain she was about to bring on the man before her. “I know you. I
know what you did.” Ryan stared at her in a mix of fear and curiosity.
Then, it hit him.
“Oh, oh god!” He spouted as his hands rose to grasp the sides of his
head. “You’re the girl. M-Madeline, right?” He recognized her? Good.
Then he will understand the consequence of his actions. “I’m so sorry!”
Ryan apologized. Madeline scoffed and tilted her head.
“You’re sorry? Of course you’re sorry now.” She wasn’t surprised at
his apology after death stared into his gaze. It would take much more
than that to save his life.
“No, I’m sorry!” he yelled again at her as tears welled in his eyes.
His look turned more oddly frustrated as he continued. “It was an
accident! I didn’t mean to hurt you or your brother!”
“But you did!” Madeline screamed as she heft up the scythe. “You
killed him! And you almost killed me! You’re gonna pay!” And she brought
the scythe down upon him. Ryan raised his arms, lifting them to protect
his body as the cold steel bit into the flesh of a limb. He cried out
and stumbled back, hand moving to hold the now bleeding wound. His eyes
never left her though, even as he fell to a knee and she loomed over
him, scythe once again rising to striking position.
“No, I-I-I…” he stammered as she glowered down to him. Just one
moment away and Conner will be at rest. Justice will have been served.
“It was an accident! I have insomnia!” Ryan quickly explained as he
began to pull himself back, inching his body backward with kicking legs.
“I hadn’t slept in two days! I needed to go to work. I thought I could
handle it. I…god, Madeline, I am so sorry.”
Insomnia? Madeline paused as she repeated the word in her head. He
blamed this on insomnia? She lost the one person that mattered to her
and this guy said it was because he was too tired to drive? A side
glance about the kitchen made her muscles loosen. Madeline had been so
focused on her prey that she didn’t notice the medicine bottles on
table. Sleep aids? And the tired look in his eyes…his incredibly skinny
body stature…
She suddenly found herself picturing it in her head. Ryan, driving to
work to make ends meet after not having slept for 48 hours. Finally,
the lack of sleep caught up to him while he was driving. And then, he
just happened to drive in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Madeline once again looked down to him, her cold eyes staring into
his own pleading ones. Ryan was terrified, but, there was something
else. Regret? Guilt? Madeline, lowered the weapon and stepped back, a
shocking gasp filling her lungs.
It was an accident.
Ryan didn’t mean to hit them. He was a victim of circumstance, just
as she and Conner were. The poor man was just trying to keep his life
going but his sickness got the better of him. His death wasn’t
self-defense or justified.
It would be murder.
“Oh god,” Madeline started as she looked down to his trembling form. “I’m so sorry. I didn’t know. I didn’t-“
“He killed your brother girl!” A screeching voice rang in her ears,
making her stiffen where she stood. Madeline felt the creature behind
her, felt its icy tendrils grasp her shoulders, her waist, her legs. Oh,
it was crawling on her! “He deserves to die. He will feel the pain. You
will give it to him!”
“N-no!” Madeline shook her head as she took another step back, away
from the teary man on the ground. “It wasn’t his fault. It wasn’t!”
“Girl, we made a bargain and you will fulfill your end of it.” It
tightened its grip on her and she cried out, feeling its tendrils stab
in and through her skin. A shocking, cold pain ran through her veins and
she struggled to keep her body straight. “You will honor it by your own
choice or not!” Those tendrils of shadows stabbed deeply into the flesh
of her hand and took hold of it by what felt like the very bones inside
her body. She screamed in pain and shut her eyes. Madeline had no idea
if Ryan could see the thing attached to her or mot but his expression
still held a look of growing terror.
The creature’s body forced her own forward, marching her on like a
puppet as her hand yanked itself up in the air despite her attempts to
hold it down. This thing was going to make her kill him! She didn’t want
to! This was wrong! Everything was wrong!
“No, no please!” Madeline begged as another step carried her once
again over the fallen man. She opened her eyes to look down and see
Ryan, sobbing on the floor as he raised his wounded arm up in a vain
attempt to shield himself from the coming onslaught. “Run! You have to
run! Get away from me!” Madeline yelled to him, but the man’s fear had
gotten the best of him. He was frozen in his spot, sobbing as death
loomed closer. Madeline felt the shadows jerk downward, tearing her arm
down with it.
The scythe fell upon him.
Ryan screamed as the first slash stabbed into his arm again. Another
tore more flesh away from the appendage. A third knocked it aside, blood
spurting along the kitchen cabinets. The next series found their way
into his torso, tearing flesh and scraping along bone. Madeline screamed
along with him as she was forced to carry out her deal to the end.
Soon, only her own screams and cries echoed in the house. His faded away
along with his life.
Madeline soon found herself released of that icy grasp and slumped
down over him. The girl sobbed as she fell forward and her hands landed
in the warm, yet rapidly cooling blood that pooled around Ryan’s corpse.
“I’m sorry.” she whispered through her tears. “I’m so sorry. I was
wrong. I was wrong.” Madeline repeated, vainly attempting to resurrect
him with her words. That creature tricked her! It made her do all this!
Her thoughts were suddenly cut-off by another voice shouting in the
room!
“Freeze!” a deep, authoritative voice resounded through the room.
Madeline lift her tear-stained voice toward it to see a uniformed police
officer standing in the kitchen entrance-way. His gun was out and
pointed right at her, his face a mixture of disgust and anger. “Slowly,
step away from the body miss. And put your hands in the air!” Madeline
hung her head for a moment and drew in a long breath, enough to calm
what few nerves she still had in her. This was justice. She’d be
punished for her crimes. It was what she deserved. Resigned to her fate,
she went to lift herself up.
Her body didn’t move.
A terrified squeak emitted from her as, once again, those cold talons
of shadow latched themselves into her skin. She felt a numbingly cold
breath in her ear, followed by a screeching of words right up against
it.
“Our deal does not end with your revenge. You will bring pain to the
world far beyond that.” It wrapped itself around her fingers and
tightened, causing her to close her hand about the demon’s scythe.
“Don’t you dare! Drop it!” the cop commanded as she took a step
closer, gun still pointed directly at her. “Let it go and step away!”
The creature held her there a moment longer before Madeline let out a
loud yelp of pain. Threads of shadow stabbed through her limbs and her
body. It jerked her up to her feet and threw up her scythe-wielding arm.
She shook her head, trying to fight it but she could do nothing to step
it from sending her lunging forward at the officer.
The first shot rang out and made her lurch back with a new pain that
stabbed into her chest. Another blast resounded and made her stumble in
her uncontrolled attack while the bullet pierced her stomach. The third
hit her chest again and forced her back. Each shot that hit her was like
a truck slamming into her body. She felt pain but this was different.
It was a hot lance of pain that shot from her chest out to the rest of
her body. It hurt. Oh, did it hurt! But it was a welcome relief from the
cold, unnatural pain that shadow inflicted on her.
Madeline fell backwards, her body slumping to the ground on her back.
Her eyes fluttered and slowly shut as she drew in what she thought to
be her last breath while blood trickled from her wounds. Death. It was
appropriate. A life for the lives she took. Maybe, something on the
other side would have pity on her and let her see her brother again.
“Foolish girl.” The freezing hiss blew against her ear, making her
shudder even as life ebbed away from her. “Death will not break you from
this contract.” The world once again came into focus as the shadowy
creature crawled on top of her. She trembled, her body freezing cold as
it enveloped her. A small, weak cry and she watched it lift a shadowy
hand into the air before it plunged right into the bullet hole in her
stomach. Madeline yelled and squirmed where she lay, feeling the inky
beast bury that appendage into her.
The peace of death left her swiftly only to be replaced by freezing
pain. It started in her stomach and spread out, inching to the rest of
her body. She could feel it move, feel that blackened shadow running
through each of her veins as it entered and spread like a disease
through her. She cried. She cried and squirmed as it invaded her,
filling her with ice-cold darkness. It sank inward, running through her
organs and making them feel rotten within her before extending out to
even the tips of her fingers and toes, corrupting every inch of her in a
slow and thorough manner. As she felt it slide up along her face, she
grit her teeth tightly and didn’t realize that she bit her tongue. She
didn’t taste blood however but a foul, thick substance that swiftly
congealed along the muscle. That darkness rose, reaching upward toward
her tightly shut eyes filling them to a point where she thought they
would burst from her skull. The creature allowed, at least, one bit of
mercy for when it felt like the shadows finally took her, Madeline’s
consciousness faded away to black.
* * *
Madeline awoke, gasping for air and her muscles tight and aching. She
lift a hand, reaching up to find herself grasping the back of the couch
in Ryan’s living room. Her entire body hurt. Even worse, she
felt…strange. More accurately, violated. It felt like someone had
reached inside of her and molested something deep within her, beyond
anything she could comprehend. She was cold as well, even freezing. Each
breath she released turned swiftly to visible vapor in the air before
her. Slowly, she rose to her feet. One foot found itself stepping into
something warm and wet, making her pause to look down to see what it
was.
Blood.
A loud yelp and she stumbled back from it, pulling herself along the
couch as she looked about in horror. Blood had been splattered all
around the room. And not just blood. She could see, in the dim light
from the TV, chunks of flesh mixed with the crimson liquid. Her eyes
wandered around the room in searching horror until she found the source.
The police officer lay on the coffee table in the middle of the room.
He had been completely eviscerated with is body mutilated almost beyond
recognition. She could still make out enough details though, like:
parts of his torn up uniform, his face locked in an expression of
absolute horror and pain, and the gun that was still grasped in his
hands. Madeline lift a finger toward the bullet wound in her own
stomach. She found the hole in her hospital gown and pressed in to feel
the wound. It didn’t hurt. Not anymore but she felt something wet
trickle from it. Assuming it was blood, Madeline lift her finger up to
look at the substance.
A black ooze trickled down her finger, dark and ebon in color. This
wasn’t blood! It looked like ink. And it was coming from her? A
terrified yell and she scrambled back, as if trying to escape herself.
Madeline turned and was going to make a bolt for the door when something
caught her attention. Ryan had a large mirror set on the wall behind
the couch and the reflection she glanced it caught her drew her gaze.
Madeline saw herself, though more accurately, what she had become.
She saw a girl with long, blackened strands of hair hanging down to pale
white shoulders. A hospital gown covered that white skin and was
stained with the drying blood of the people whose lives she stole. The
bullet holes in it were still visible and leaked a viscous, inky fluid
that could only be what now pulsed through her veins. She could see
those sickly black veins pumping that ink through her body, contrasting
with her pale skin and branching out like a dying tree. Her eyes were
fully blackened, leaving no trace of white within them and seemed to
swirl and shift like the shadows in the room. Something lay beyond them,
hiding and waiting to take over. And, finally, grasped still tightly in
one hand was the symbol of everything that had turned her toward this
thing before her: the scythe.
It still seemed darker than the world around it and even the fluid
that ran through her body. Its cold felt even colder than she and it
radiated a harsh, unholy feeling in her hand. Newly spilled blood coated
the blade and dripped to the ground to join the puddles that now
covered the floor.
Madeline screamed and the creature in the mirror screamed back with
her. Blackened tears began to stream down her pale cheeks, furthering
her more away from her previous humanity. And, as she cried, she heard
that same hissing voice. No longer did it whisper into her ear however.
She heard it in the swirling of her own thoughts, loud, clear, and
inescapable.
“My sweet angel of death,” it whispered followed by a deep, coughing
laugh. “you have performed well. There is much to be done still. Our
bargain does not end here.”
* * *
“You’ve never heard of the Shadow Girl?” Alex asked his date as the
two strode through the darkened buildings of the city. The movie had
gotten out later than expected and the young college student wasn’t
expecting to walk home this late, but it was nice to get to spend some
quiet time with Lisa without the noise of the city getting in the way.
“Ah, no I haven’t. Why? Should I?” Lisa giggled as she looked to Alex
with a raised brow. He chuckled and wrapped an arm about her to draw
her closer, his voice dropping in pitch to begin his tale.
“Oh, well she came from near here. The murders at the Brooksfield Hospital? Rumor has it, she was the one who killed them!”
“Really?” A skeptical look came across Lisa’s face.
“You know they never did catch that killer.” He retorted, before
leaning into her. He whispered right into her ear as he dropped his
pitch to a deep, sinister tone. “And it’s said she still preys on
people, slinking from the shadows as she cuts them down! All while
pleading with you to run from her! She doesn’t want to kill, but the
dark desires in her make her!” He ended it with a small but sudden shake
to her shoulders, making Lisa jump a bit before smacking him in his
arm.
“Oh yeah! So scary!” She mussed as she stuck up her chin. “It’s really childish to believe in those things.”
“Childish, yeah. But still entertaining!” Alex chuckled, rubbing his
shoulder for a moment before catching up to walk next to her.
The two chatted for a block or two longer before the quiet sounds of
city night life were broken by what sounded like shuffling and…crying?
Lisa was the first to hear it and stepped forward to peer down a
darkened alley they soon were to pass. What she saw made her gasp and
her skin crawl, but she tried her best to swallow it down with
rationalization.
A girl stepped down the alleyway her head tilted down to the ground
and, soon, she had moved close enough that the street lights were able
to reveal her sickly form. She wore what looked to be a ruined and dirty
hospital gown and her pale skin was covered in diseased-looking black
veins. Was she sick? Could she be contagious? Oh, she had to be in
pain…Lisa’s fear turned to a mix of unease and concern as Alex stepped
up to her. He approached and, upon seeing her, tensed up immediately.
This girl looked like hell but she gave off a sense of danger. Her look
also reminded him of the story he just recounted.
“Lisa,” he began as he took her by her elbow. “We need to go.”
“No, we can’t go!” she shook her arm free from his grasp. “She looks hurt! We can’t just leave her.”
“Lisa, that’s not-“ she cut him off by moving toward the shambling girl.
“Hey!” Lisa called out, timid but determined to play the Good Samaritan. “Are you OK? Do you need help?”
“Go away.” The girl responded in a raspy, quiet voice. “Run away.
Don’t ever come back here.” This made a chill run down Alex’s spine. The
story rang in his head once again and he moved forward to Lisa’s side.
“OK, that’s it! We’re going!” He spoke quickly as he took her by the
arm. Lisa, however, came to a different conclusion. The story he just
told her and the fact that he liked to joke around made this all seem a
little too convenient. Creepy girl appearing right after he talked about
some shadow girl murdering people? Yeah, sure. She glared at him and
shoved him back harshly.
“Oh, I see what this is!” Lisa yelled angrily to him. “You just tell
me that story and now you’re trying to scare me? Some date you turned
out to be! Asshole.” She glared at him before turning back to the girl.
Her fear now replaced with bitter anger and annoyance, she stepped right
up to the strange woman and placed her hands on her hips. “Alex really
put you up to this? You got some nerve pulling a stupid prank! Don’t you
have better things to do?”
The girl stopped as Lisa approached her and she tilted her head up.
Despite thinking this was a prank, those swirling black eyes that seemed
to dance in their sockets caused her to take a single step back in
unease. Lisa swallowed but held her ground as her fists clenched. A sad
look seemed to slip upon the girl’s face before a shifting of movement
caught Lisa’s eyes. She looked down to see the girl’s hand slip out from
behind her back…and find that it was clasping tightly to a blackened,
metallic scythe.
“You should have run from me.” she whispered as she lift the weapon
into the air. Lisa screamed and moved to step back. The sudden movement,
however, was uncoordinated and her foot came down at an angle, making
her stumble then fall backward to the ground. The Shadow Girl loomed
over her, scythe high in the air. “I told you to run!” She yelled before
the scythe fell downward upon the girl before her, hacking into her as
Lisa’s cries of fear turned into screams of pain. It tore once into her
chest, the sound of ripping cloth and skin echoing in the alley. Alex
yelled something and burst forward, slamming into the Shadow Girl as his
date bled below her, the poor girl coughing and clutching at the gash
in her chest. He slammed her up against the side of a building.
“You get away from her!” he yelled down to the Shadow Girl as he held
her against that well. His eyes locked with hers and widened at the
swirling mass of black that lay within them. Something stirred in those
eyes. Something evil and alive. For a small moment, he almost thought he
heard something from them. A kind of cackling hiss before that
something soon burst from her hues, inky black tendrils of shadow
reaching from her sockets and wrapping themselves around his skull. Alex
screamed in agony as those tendrils of darkness dug into his skin and
bone, spikes of icy cold hitting his nerves wherever they touched. She
leaned in and, for a moment, he thought he could see a blackened tear
stream down one of her cheeks.
“Please, why didn’t you run?” she asked in a sad, raspy voice that
almost made him feel sorrow for the creature before him. Until those
tendrils of blackness ripped outward, tearing his skull apart from where
they dug in. Blood and bone flew from his head and Alex slumped to her
feet, his head nothing more than a bloody, gory mess.
Lisa, bleeding from her previous stab on the ground, cried out in
terror as her date fell at the creature’s feet. The Shadow Girl stepped
slowly over him and returned to approach the bleeding girl on the
ground. Lisa tried to pull away, but the mix of terror and pain allowed
her little room to move. She sobbed uncontrollably as she saw the Shadow
Girl lean over her, those inky black eyes staring into her own.
“Please, forgive me.” she whispered to her as she raised her scythe
into the air. Lisa’s scream was cut short as the blade fell and tore
into the flesh of her neck, silencing her. With her work down, Madeline
rose to her feet and turned back toward the darkened alley. Some
listened, some didn’t and every death made her heart wretch in pain. She
wanted to just collapse. To cry for the two mercilessly cut down by her
hand. But the Shadow Girl would not. She, instead, was forced forward
and stepped toward the darkest place in the alley where the lights of
the city were cut off by a presence of a long forgotten and disused
dumpster. As she entered, the darkness pulled itself around her tightly
and, soon, she vanished to the next hell her captor would force her to.
There would be no rest or peace for her. The Shadow Girl had a bargain
to fulfill.
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