Page 43
Story: The Library at Hellebore
“Then again, maybe you can. It must be such a weight knowing your only hope for supplanting your bastard status is bringing about the end of the world. Nothing else. You’re nothing but an implement, and I’m nothing but a thing to possess.
” I clasped both hands around the bone of his upper right arm and pulled, ignoring how the fire ate through the skin of my palm, how it glued the fat paddings to his raw tendons.
It didn’t hurt. You’d think it would but it didn’t.
“Actually, now that I think about it. Maybe you’re right.
We are the same kind of monster. All we’ve ever wanted was control. ”
I could hear the faculty coming down the hall to the library, the oily noise of their flesh thudding over the floorboards, the procession of their many feet, their gnarled hands.
Nails clicking. Not too long ago, that cacophony had made me shudder.
But now it was banal, mundane. I pressed my shoulder to the doors, these too gory with our past days, and pushed; the heavy wood screeched over the tiles and splintered.
An eager murmur rose on the other side: the faculty must have seen me.
Like us, they must also relish the perfect joy of absolute control.
Especially now that they were nothing but a wet mess of sinew and skin, threaded through one another like cords tangled in the bottom of a drawer.
I couldn’t imagine happiness in such a mélange.
But they’d smiled, hadn’t they? As they’d expunged every fluid from Sullivan’s body, as they drank him down.
And laughed. Some inflection of memory told me that they laughed, and it’d been in the timbre of good-natured grandparents, loud enough even to be heard over our valedictorian’s screams. I think I remember those things, at least. Trauma has a knack for macerating the past so all that remains are the sharp edges of the agony you sustained.
It was hard work, maneuvering Adam’s body through the four-inch crack I’d opened.
I let the skin slough from my torso, what cushions of fat I still possessed; my hair, which loosened in rivulets along with the soft tissue of my scalp.
Anything that wasn’t immediately necessary, I surrendered, and I was glad I’d never really exalted vanity.
Though both Adam and I were rotting by degrees, rotting with such speed that we smelled sweetly of what was coming, the air outside the library still cut through the putrefaction: it smelled like rain, like ice, like frost come too early to a world still dizzy with life.
And I could have wept from my loneliness for the uninterrupted sky if not for the fact I was, well, dying.
There in the vestibule, the floor utterly eradicated of stains, was the cancerously lumpy silhouette of the faculty.
They stood, I suppose, for lack of better terminology (because really how else do you describe that clamor of appendages seething under their mass?) in silence as I staggered toward them, burning and decaying in turn.
Upon seeing them, I thought there’d be some last confrontation, an opportunity for an exchange, for them to declaim their villainy and for me to tell them to go fuck themselves.
Instead: the tense quiet of a hospital waiting room.
Starlight flecked what little of the night I could see.
For some reason, that and nothing else I’d experienced in my time at Hellebore had me wanting to sob for a father long deceased and a mother who might as well be the same, but doing so would require resources I no longer had: lungs that weren’t mostly sludge, eyes that weren’t losing their sight.
“All yours,” I said when Adam’s seizure had dwindled to a rabbiting pulse. The world grayed to a promise of sleep. Timing was going to be everything. “We’re all yours.”
I don’t know if they heard or if they took their cue from my posture, my crumpling over Adam’s body, the two of us now just wounds with faces.
I closed my eyes, the trembling animal folded into my brain stem screaming.
An atavistic terror nearly had me pissing myself as I bent over Adam, steepled hands pressed to my mouth like I was praying. But truth was I was counting instead.
One. The faculty reared up in preparation of the feast and I smelled them then: a greasy pungency like the windowless interior of an airless retirement home, sweat, and the stink of leftover student decaying away.
Two. They were so fast. I’d seen them come for us, of course, that first terrible night but somehow, I had since shed the memory of the specifics. That or my mind looked at the image scarified onto it and hid itself away, whispering, We will process this later if we are ever safe again.
Three. Of all the things I’d expected, tenderness wasn’t one of them.
Their fingers trailed softly over the back of my neck, nails grazing skin, worshipful in their movements.
Their mouths traced the cord of my spine and if their lips were dry, their touch was at least ephemeral and I could almost pretend it didn’t make me want to scream.
I cradled Adam closer to me nonetheless, his poor heart, so recently re-formed, straining against its failing prison.
There is a much misused, much misattributed line from the Bible that talks about how the spirit might be willing but the flesh is weak.
With Adam, I suspect that was entirely literal.
Whatever numinosity he’d inherited from his father would burn even at the end of the end of everything, but the rest of him would molder with everyone else.
I pressed my cheek to his forehead, felt the bone soften, break.
Teeth sank into my back. I almost didn’t notice, focused instead on what I had to do next.
What remained of my ribs bloomed ecstatically into a maw, into arms of shining bone.
I enfolded Adam, covered him as the faculty covered us, held him to my bared organs, pulled him close until he was entombed in me, and briefly, I thought I could hear Rowan’s shrill laughter brush my ear.
He would have found this whole tableau hilarious.
The pain worsened, keening through me, until it became the whole of me and it was difficult to imagine there’d ever been a me undefiled by this agony, this sensation of fingers burrowing through me like I was no more substantial than water, of being opened up and hollowed out.
And gods, it hurt. I’m not ashamed to say I screamed.
Still, with the furnace of Adam’s soul and the poison of Rowan’s existence both interred in me, it’d have been a waste to give up there.
I comforted myself with the thought that if there was an after, if some purgatory existed for little boy devils and brokenhearted girls, I’d find everyone who’d left me behind and I could go to them reciting the way Adam sobbed for reprieve.
Maybe I’d find Kevin there too and be able to tell them how sorry I was I couldn’t keep Gracelynn from watching them die.
But that was for later. Now was for holding on.
Here’s the thing: eaten without the intermediary of my flesh, Rowan would have simply been absorbed, disassembled too quickly for the malignancy of his nature to take effect.
But allowed to incubate, to fester, to spread while the faculty was distracted with, say, an infinitely regenerating feast, a screaming thing they could gorge on in a thousand ways and know there’d always be more to eat?
Well, that would change everything. With what I’d stolen from Adam, I made myself into a fucking horn of plenty, plying them with muscle, with marrow, with the myriad offerings of liver and lung, brain and bone.
Whatever they slavered for, I fed them. And death grew in them like every cancer does, slowly and by degrees, until finally…
“Wait,” came the headmistress’s voice, scraped of its usual bubbling secret humor.
“Don’t you love it?” I said with what I had left of a throat. “When the wrong person wins?”
Table of Contents
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- Page 43 (Reading here)
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