It came in the mail.
I didn’t know what it was but it was wrapped in a weathered box and was
marked with words in several foreign languages, including some foreboding
African ones that had their “t’s” crossed with machetes. I was reluctant to let the damn thing in my
home, especially since it was radiating a weird energy and there were bloody footprints
leading away from it. I could only
presume that they came from the mailman, who had limped away after some titanic
struggle with whatever was in this terrible box. But I looked at the return address and saw
the familiar and reassuring name of my good friend, Raven Mack. So despite my misgivings I brought the
package inside and opened it, cutting it open with a chainsaw because that’s
just how I do.
I’ll never forget what I saw. It appeared to be some sort of bejeweled demon
with the hilt of a mighty blade sticking out of it. I pulled on the blade but it would not come
free. I cursed and slapped at the thing
and my palms immediately felt hot, as if they had been burned by the
demon. Afraid that I had angered it, I
threw a towel over its head and retreated to the dark, where I nursed some
banana beer and wondered why Raven had sent me such a thing. And then, I saw it.
In the wreckage of the box lay a shredded note. I staggered over to it, half-drunk on banana
beer and I did my best to reassemble it.
Even then, it wasn’t easy to read, as it appeared that it had been
written in blood and the words were smeared by either tears or old semen. I couldn’t be sure. But I could make out the following:
“ . . . been too much for my family to bear . . . sixteen
deaths . . . mutilated goats . . . I fought for hours but it just kept coming .
. . to you in the hopes that you can figure out how to defeat it . . . look to
the tipi . . . it is coming, it is coming . . . no! NO!!!”
Shaken, I nervously eyed the demon with the towel over its
head. The words seemed like
nonsense. Maybe Raven had taken up
drinking again. Maybe he had finally
lost it at work and was now driving railroad spikes into the sunken eyes of the
decapitated skulls of his coworkers and fortifying his compound with their
bones. Who knows? But I trusted the man. We had simply been through too many Spirit
Wars together not to and so I decided that I had to learn as much about this
bejeweled demon and the blade that it so curiously housed.
I took to my archives, gathered from years of painstaking
research and field work in the darkest corners of both the world and the human
heart. I ran my fingers along my beloved
books containing the myths and legends of that great human protector, The Great
Willie Young, books that took up two whole walls of my makeshift study. I pored through them all night, looking for
answers, but even The Great Willie Young never seemed to encounter this strangely
bejeweled demon. The hairs on my neck
began to stand up as I remembered old legends about aliens come to eviscerate
the local cattle. A man had found his
dog walking bowlegged with a ruptured anus one morning and had blamed it on
shape-shifting greys. No, get a hold of
yourself damn it, I thought, downing what was left of my stock of banana
beer. You’re too drunk and you cannot
figure this out in this state.
That night I couldn’t sleep and I found myself picturing the
face of that monstrous demon. Goddammit,
what was it? Was it really a demon? No, don’t be preposterous. The skull of a fallen grey? No, that would be even more absurd? A turtle perhaps? Yes, a giant turtle. That was it.
That had to be it. I convinced
myself that this was all there was to this fiend and I huddled under my covers
and drifted off into a dreamless sleep.
I awoke with a start.
How long had I been out? An
hour? Two? It was still dark but there was an ominous .
. . presence I suppose is the only word for it, and I crept out of bed with a
monstrous erection. Don’t ask why. These things just happen. I crept out of my room and into the hall
where an eerie glow illuminated the walls.
Bloody handprints reached up and up and up, finally dying near the
ceiling as if some poor creature had been literally climbing the walls in
desperate fear. My pulse quickened and,
in an instinctive crouch, I moved down the hall, naked, eyes wide, my
adrenaline keeping my erection firm and at the ready in case of . . . in case
of . . . god only knows but as the Boy Scouts say, always be prepared.
The glow increased in intensity with each step and when I
emerged from the hallway I discovered the bejeweled demon, glowing with an
intensity that I fear may have permanently damaged my retinae. Whenever I close my eyes, I can still see it,
leering at me from within that awful glow.
Terrible, terrible, terrible . . .
The towel I had thrown over it was smoldering in the corner,
more ash than towel really, and the corpse of a giant elk was crucified on my
wall. I am not one to panic, but in that
moment I am not ashamed to admit that I lost it a bit. I ran from my home, screaming and was
intercepted by a concerned neighbor who said “Neil, you’re naked again. Why don’t you let me get you back to bed.”
I cuffed him with a brutal right hand, shattering his
ear-drums and screamed something unintelligible at him. Poor Doug.
An 89 year old man does not deserve such things. But these were desperate times and I simply
could not tolerate his inanity. There
was a goddamn demon on the loose.
I huddled behind a makeshift shed behind Doug’s house. I could see his wife peering at me from
behind the blinds, phone in hand. The
harridan was calling 911, I was sure of it.
I wanted to stop her but I figured the site of a naked man with a beard
on both his face and his junk would send her into a panic and I didn’t need a
SWAT team chasing me through the night along with that horrible bejeweled demon. But wait, maybe that was exactly what I
needed. If I could turn their firepower
against this vondruke perhaps I could escape this night with my life and my
sanity after all. And so I did the only
thing I could do. I leapt from behind
the shed and ran at the old lady. I feared
for a moment that she would suffer a heart attack. She was 102 years old after all, a lusty
cougar who had seduced young Douglas back when he was on the cusp of retirement
and she a desperate widow who had pissed away her previous husband’s life
insurance and had been . . . indiscreet with her social security money, buying
the finest hams and showering a young Filipino gigolo named Manuel with
gifts. She had targeted Doug and his
union pension, probably for several years, and I know she wished the man dead
so she could collect on his benefits and so I decided that if the shock of
seeing me rushing at her home, naked with crazed fear in my eyes caused her to
drop dead of a heart attack then so be it, at least Douglas would be free. I didn’t feel particularly good about it but
tough decisions had to be made.
When she saw me coming, she dropped the phone. But I knew that eventually she would gather
what was left of her dusty wits and place that call and so I kept on running,
and I ran and I ran and I ran until I could run no more, until finally the
panic had passed and I could think clearly, rationally. I remembered the note. What had Raven said? Something about a tipi? I imagined him sitting inside his own tipi,
hard at work on his zine and then I imagined that bejeweled beast attacking
him, perhaps ruffling his papers around, messing them up so they were out of
order, just to be a dick, and I became angry.
That foul fiend. And so I made
the decision to creep back to my home. I
had to hide in the bushes while a patrol car crept by, shining a flashlight
down my drive. One car. One goddamned car. That was all they could send? I cursed under my breath and knew that I was
on my own. I felt bad for involving Doug
and his old (old as dirt) lady in this affair but it couldn’t be helped. Besides, they had both seen worse. He was a Korean War veteran and even worse they
had been my neighbors for six long terrifying years. The things they had seen, the depravities and
crimes against humanity . . . awful, awful.
Once, Doug told me that he sometimes wished he was back in Korea,
fighting the Slopes. I admonished him
for his appalling racial insensitivity but he told me “Goddammit, Neil, at
least them mongrels have a shred of decency.
They’ll just bayonet you in the balls.
You on the other hand . . . goddammit, son, don’t think me and the wife
haven’t heard the screams coming from your place.” He then shuddered and we never spoke of it
again. Yes, they probably thought this
was just another Tuesday. At least I
wasn’t asking to borrow a shovel and a bag of lime again.
I waited out the patrol car and then I slipped down my
drive. It was freezing out but my adrenaline
kept me safe, kept me moving. The soles
of my feet were raw, bleeding, and I knew that I would be in pain the next day
but goddammit, I had work to do just to see the next day. There were no guarantees, not with this demon
running around, and so I resolved to do anything, destroy anything, myself
included, if it meant preserving the world for just one more day. After all, if nothing else, I am a hero.
My entire home was aglow at this point. In restrospect, the sight was hauntingly
beautiful, eerie like the Northern Lights shining over the fresh kill of a
polar bear and when I think of it I am sometimes brought to tears. But on that night it was just
terrifying. There was no beauty to the
moment and I closed my eyes and barreled right through my front door. Almost immediately I was set upon by tiny
little demons, each with that terrible bejeweled head. They clawed at me and bit my legs. I howled in pain and squashed several of them
but each time I did more sprung up to take their place. I grabbed the giant horns of the crucified
elk and I swung like Tarzan into my kitchen where I tossed a handful of the
horrible miniature demons in the microwave and hit START. The damn thing sparked and then blew up and
yet they did not die. Desperate, I
lunged for the bejeweled statue, knocking it to the floor. It was then that I saw that the hilt of the
blade seemed loose. I reached for it and
I pulled. It still wouldn’t give. Damn it, I thought, how am I supposed to beat
this thing? I pressed myself against a
wall and as I held the swarming miniature demons at bay with desperate kicks
and wild punches, I said a silent prayer to The Great Willie Young. And in that moment, a strange calm came about
me and I knew that if I tried again the blade would come free. I reached out, I pulled and sure enough, the
blade slid free. The air rushed with a
sort of hissing noise and I could hear an awful scream, as if some terrible
fell beast had been wounded in another dimension.
The blade itself appeared to be fairly ordinary, a little
rusted, dull around the edge, but it glowed red with the hot fire of The Great
Willie Young himself and so I felt confident as I began to hack at the terrible
little demons assaulting me in my own home.
And one by one, they died at the edge of this holy relic, this blade
that was infused with the immortal power of The Great Willie Young
himself. And yet, there were too many of
them. I am but a simple man, and it wasn’t
long before my arms tired and the swinging of the blade came slower and slower. And still they came, in the thousands, the
millions. The floor of my home was an
ocean of their dark blood and I swam through it – don’t ask me to recount the
memory of that experience for it is too horrible to even imagine – the holy
blade clutched in my teeth, the demon statue under one arm. I do not know why I grabbed it. I suppose that I knew that if I didn’t find a
way to defeat it that no one would and I would not be responsible for the world
ending. And so I grabbed it and I swam
and I swam and I swam through that viscous muck until I spilled out of my front
door.
It was then that I heard the barking of the police dogs, and
saw the helicopters with their giant lights shining down on me. I saw Doug and his extremely old lady huddled
on their front lawn, a blanket wrapped around them while paramedics saw to
their various maladies and I cursed the old woman. But it was half-hearted. I couldn’t blame her. And besides, I had bigger issues to deal with. And so, naked, covered in the blood and
viscera of countless slain miniature demons, I ran through the woods behind my
home, glowing statue in hand and blood-soaked blade in my mouth. It tasted of . . . death, and with each demon
drop that slid down my throat on that terrible night I could hear the savage
wails of billions of tormented souls.
But still, with tears in my eyes and madness in my heart, I ran on. I
could hear the dogs yapping and snarling as they chased after me, and I could
hear the terrible whir of the helicopters above as they searched and every once
in a while I would hear the crack of a gun and would almost feel the bullet
whiz past me but still I eluded them.
But as I ran, I got the sickening feeling that I wasn’t
alone. I had yet to look back, such was
my desperation to flee that terrible place, but I decided that I had to, if
only to achieve a sense of closure, and when I did I saw the horrifying sight
of countless miniature demons chasing after me.
But they were keeping their distance and when I stopped to look back at
them, they stopped too, and they leered at me with terrible, toothy grins,
devilish grins and I screamed at them “Back, you fell beasts! You unholy monsters! You have plagued me long enough! Long enough!”
But the demons just laughed at me.
Angry, and not knowing what else to do, I held the bejeweled statue in
front of me. And one by one, the demons
knelt. I cried with sudden relief and
held the statue before me. I could hear
the dogs getting closer and I wondered if perhaps I could somehow turn this to
my advantage. It was clear that these
demons worshipped the statue. They
seemed to revere it as some sort of great mother from which they had all
sprung. I had no desire to make deals
with such evil but these were desperate times and hey, fuck the police.
And so I began to scream at the demons, ordering them to set
up a defensive perimeter. But again,
they just laughed at me and it soon became clear that their “fealty” was little
more than a disgusting attempt to mock me.
After all, why would demons revere anything but themselves? And even then, is not a demon merely the
ultimate manifestation of self-loathing?
No, if anything, they hated themselves and their “mother.” Realizing this, I tossed the bejeweled demon
statue to the ground. The little
hellions all screeched with anger and began to chase me again. Oops.
Realizing my error, I turned and ran, blade in hand, and yet
no matter how close they came, the demons never seemed to catch me. I was nearing the river and I realized with
sickening dread that they were penning me in, playing with me, waiting for me
to reach the river where they would no doubt consume both me and my soul.
But still I ran.
After all, what more was there left for me to do? In the absence of Hope man must still find
something to cling to, and the rawest and most basic thing that any of us has
left is the animal instinct to simply survive, even if it is but for an
extended moment, one more moment to think, to feel, to know, to experience the
feel of a blade of grass on the feet, the gentle breath of a cool breeze, the
laughter of a river as it rushes by. I
ran and I lived, without Hope, but with the desire to simply exist for one more
moment compelling me forward, forward, forward . . .
And it was then that I was saved, as a host of River People
sprang from the mud and the reeds surrounding the river and threw themselves at
the tiny demons. I saw the haunting
death in one of their faces, the face of a man who knows he is giving the
ultimate sacrifice for something greater than himself – for life itself and the
possibility that lies at its fragile little heart. I looked at him and he looked at me and just
before he was swarmed by an army of those tiny monsters he said to me “Go! Live!
And never forget that we River People saved you and saved you for a
mighty cause, the cause of Truth! Spread
this Truth to the world and remember us, not as vagrants or mongrels but as
men, the last free men there are!” And
then, the last free man died, swarmed by hundreds, thousands, of the hellions,
who ate his flesh and left him nothing more than a quivering mass of red
bones. I will never forget the sight of
it as long as I live.
But thanks to him and his people I did get to live, as I
dove beneath the frigid waters of the river and swam to the safety of a small
wooded isle. Weeping for the heroic
sacrifice of those brave men and women of the River, I crawled, blade in hand
to a clearing, where I lay sobbing, naked and terrified. Up above, the police helicopters still tried
to track me but the island repelled their efforts and hid me in its
embrace. And yet, after a time, I could
hear the sounds of something – millions of things – swimming. Horrified, I peered out across the waters of
the river only to see in the moonlight those horrible hellions swimming slowly
toward me. A mass of them in the middle
carried on their backs that horrible bejeweled statue, glowing with its hellish
light, and I collapsed on the ground and screamed at the sky, asking what I had
done to deserve such a monstrous fate. I
thought back to my friend Raven and I wondered how he had escaped, how he had
found a way to rid himself of these demons.
Perhaps he hadn’t. Perhaps he had
just bought himself much needed time, or maybe he had found a way after
all. Yes. What did he say? Look to the tipi? Yes, that was it. Perhaps . . . yes! Yes, it made sense. After all, he had often spoken with me of the
sacred nature of his tipi, ranted and raved to me about it being a sanctuary
from the evils of the world. I always
thought he was just being hyperbolic or metaphorical and then we would do
another line of crank and forget about the whole thing while we fought crime using
advanced forms of karate until the sun came up and we shook hands and went back
to our homes. But what if he wasn’t
being metaphorical? What if it were all
true?
I breathlessly asked myself this as I watched them slowly
doggy-paddle across the river. Either
they weren’t very good swimmers or they were toying with me, the bastards. On the other hand, it was possible that the sanctifying
power of the river itself was slowing them down. Who knows?
Whatever the case, their slow approach gave me time. And with this time I used the holy blade,
wrested from the prison of the demon, to fashion for myself a crude tipi. It wasn’t much, but it was enough. Or so I hoped anyway.
When I was finished, I stood naked, still covered in demon
blood, in the middle of the tipi. The
blood sizzled and seemed to scream and although it burned and left me
permanently scarred, a hideous mangled man who will be forever wrecked and
wasted physically, a blight in the eyes of “normal” men, destined to be little
more than a local legend, a folk tale told around campfires to scare children,
I love each and every scar, for it is a reminder that I fought the good fight
and so long as I am alive, the world shall know peace.
And it will know peace because on that night those hellions
stormed the isle, like terrible little soldiers storming Normandy and for a
while I simply watched as they threw themselves against my tipi and were
repelled by its holy powers. But yet
they still kept coming and kept coming and kept coming and it wasn’t long
before I realized that they would never stop, no matter how hopeless their
attempts. I knew that as a mortal man
this would eventually drive me insane and I feared what I would do in that insane
state. Would I give in to these
monsters? The thought was too horrible
to contemplate and so I did what I had to do and I leapt out, blade in hand and
I slew scores of them, hundreds of them, thousands, so that the isle’s ground
was dyed with their black blood. It is
horrible and where they died I fear no new trees will ever grow. But it had to be done. The island and the river that feeds it and
the river people that are its guardians understand. I fought for what had to be hours with the
little demons. The sun rose in the sky
and it fell again. Occasionally, I would
still hear the distant barking of a dog or the whir of a copter’s blades but
they could not find me and so I ignored them as I fought. Seven times the sun rose and seven times it
fell before finally I wrested the bejeweled demon statue from the clutches of
those monsters and dragged it with me, fighting my way back to my tipi, an
effort which itself took another several days.
Finally, exhausted, I collapsed inside of my tipi and as I did the
statue finally ceased to glow and with a terrible shriek I will never forget
all the little demons shriveled and died, crumbled to dust and were blown away
by a cold and merciless wind.
And so now here I sit, inside of my tipi on this deserted
island in the middle of the river, naked and cold. But I am sustained by the solemnity of my
office, by my duty, for I am the guardian of the bejeweled demon statue, like
that old ass knight who guards the Holy Grail, and it has fallen to me to
protect it, to keep it safe and imprisoned in this holy sanctuary. I am just thankful that the island has Wi-Fi.
I didn’t ask for this duty, nor do I take any special pride
in it, and on some nights I weep for my lost humanity, for all the people I
might have known, the things I might have done, the places I might have seen,
but still, I do it because no one else can.
Perhaps this makes me a hero, or perhaps this just makes me a man. Who is to say? All I know is that it’s been a hell of a
month and at least now I don’t have to watch the Lions play.
1 comment:
Oh man, so less than hour after I posted this my entire town lost power. No one knew what the hell was going on and people were walking the streets with flashlights, getting all restless and shit, but I guess the early news was that there was some sort of problem with one of the lines crossing the river. Yes, there was a disturbance on the river only moments after I posted this which plunged the area into cold darkness. As I say, I am a vessel of Truth.
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