She’s the Reason I Can’t Watch Porn Anymore

It all started a few days ago.

What can I say? When you live in a city under lockdown, life can be lonely. I’m sitting here alone, all by myself.

Books, Netflix, and YouTube can only grab your attention for so long. With no chance of real social interaction, I’ve given into more, let’s say, primal urges.

Before I knew it, I was back on trusty old Pornhub. For a while I clicked around, watching random videos before I was awestruck by a certain pornstar. I will not name her here, since my tastes can be a bit… special.

I scurried all over Pornhub for every single one of her videos. Once I couldn’t find any new clips, I visited some other pages. Still, it didn’t even take half the day before I was out of new material.

Eventually my urges drove me to some less secure pages. As I clicked from Google result to Google result, I felt like I was wading through a morass of degeneracy.

I opened page after page, most likely turning my system into a festering pit of malware and viruses. Well, I didn’t really care; I was hooked on this girl and I wanted to find more of her.

It took me a while, but eventually I found a scene I hadn’t watched before. It wasn’t anything special, pretty much your typical porn scene with cheesy music and even cheesier acting.

As the video started to play, something caught my attention.

Down at the bottom, between other related videos, there was one that looked different. The title was gibberish, the preview the grainy image of an attractive woman that seemed to stare at me. It was unnerving, yet strangely mystifying.

Postponing my immediate pleasure, I decided to investigate and opened this video in a new tab.

When I clicked play I saw a grainy, low saturated view of a room. It reminded me of those old home videos.

The camera was completely still, pointing at the woman from the preview. She was sitting on a chair at the back of the room, wearing nothing but black lingerie that hid almost nothing of her voluptuous body. Her hands played with her long, dark hair in a bored, almost distracted manner. It seemed as if she was unaware of being filmed.

As I continued to watch, the video gave me a strange vibe. There was something wrong about it. Yet, as second after second passed, nothing happened. She just kept playing with her hair. I was about the close the video when the woman suddenly looked up and focused on the camera. Her intent stare startled me and it felt almost as if she was staring directly at me. A sly smile appeared on her face and her eyes grew a tad bit wider.

All right, now we’re on to something, I thought.

For a second she bit her lip, and inhaled deeply, pushing out her heavy breasts.

A moment later, she threw her head to the side and giggled. I looked wrong, somehow. Her head was hanging at an angle that made me think her neck was broken. It lasted only for a few seconds before she was smiling again. No, I realized, she was grinning.

She moved forward to the edge of the chair and slid to the ground. There was something sensual about the way she moved her body, sensual and dangerous, reminding me of the way a snake moved.

She slowly pushed herself up on her elbows, her face still showing that same hungry grin. Then she began crawling forward.

No, not crawling. The way she moved was entirely wrong. It was as if she was slithering forward. Her arms entangled her body, moving over every inch. For a moment she threw herself onto her back, and a strange sound escaped her throat. It was a moan, but at the same time it wasn’t. It started high-pitched and ecstatic, but sizzled off into a sort of hiss.

This was one of the strangest things I’d ever seen, but I couldn’t help but lean forward. I was rock-hard as I watched this strange woman.

“Why don’t you come over here,” she whispered as she stared at the camera.

Again, her voice trailed off into this strange hissing sound.

She was quiet for a moment, unmoving, staring at the camera as if waiting for an answer.

I expected some guy to enter the scene, but instead she continued on, slithering towards the camera.

The closer she got, the more details I noticed about her. There was something about her hands, her fingers. They looked malformed, almost claw-like. When she closed her eyes and reopened them, her blue eyes that had been there before had been replaced by something green and snake-like.

I had to admit, whoever had made this weird fetish video knew what they were doing.

By this point, she’d almost reached the camera. Once more she stopped, again staring at the camera, but this time with such intensity that I could almost feel her stare on me.

“Don’t be shy,” she whispered and for the blink of an eye I thought I saw a snake’s tongue flash between her lips.

She crossed the remaining distance and pushed herself onto her knees in front of the camera. I waited for her to stand up, but at that moment I got a better view of her feet. They looked strange, as malformed as her fingers or… grown together?

A feeling of unease washed over me, but a moment later all I could see was her face. It was right in front of the camera. Her mouth was twisted into the same hungry grin, but with each passing second it grew wider, almost dividing her face. Her eyes blinked once, twice, before she spoke again.

“Well, if you won’t come over here, maybe I should come over there,” she hissed.

With that, her claw-like fingers grabbed a hold of the camera and she began pushing her face against it. At first she was only slightly touching it, but soon she pushed herself hard against the glass. All the while her hungry were staring directly at me.

I sat there, frozen, my erection all but gone, watching the strange spectacle in front of me.

And then it happened. It was a moment before I closed the video, but it looked almost as if my screen was bulging outward.

I cursed, sweating heavily. What the fuck kind of video was that? Who the hell got off to shit like that?

Well, I thought, after the initial shock was over, probably quite a few people.

I laughed at my little freak-out. Man, there’s some weird shit out there on the internet.

I shook my head and went back to the video of my new favorite girl that I’d discovered before. Man, just seeing her lying on the bed like this made me hard again.

When the action in the video started, I got ready for some action of my own. I’d barely started when I noticed something. Back, far back in the room’s corner, I saw a figure. A female one.

At first I thought this might be a threesome, but I quickly realized there was something wrong about this figure and I knew what it was. The same dark long hair, the same weird fingers and the same weird movements.

The snake-woman slithered through the backdrop of the scene, inching closer to the action on the bed. I froze, staring in absolute disbelief at what I was seeing. How in the hell was something like this possible? This made no sense!

Over the cheesy music and the moans of the two actors, I heard her hissing voice again.

“Now, why are you so shy?”

She slithered onto the bed, joining the two people already on it. She moaned and giggled as she entangled the woman, snaking her body around hers. A moment later, she pushed herself up again, twisting her body into an angle that made you think her spine had popped. She got a hold of the man, pushed herself against him and smiled at me.

The two actors continued their scene, oblivious to the giggling intruder that had joined them. All the while, her eyes rested solely on me and all the while her hungry grin remained.

The moment she pushed herself off the bed and up against the camera again, I closed the video. Fuck this! Fuck this site, fuck this video and fuck whatever this thing was!

It had to be some stupid trick. Some dipshit’s idea of a prank. Uploading this strange video of a snake-like woman and then altering all the related videos to fuck with people.

Yeah, it would a ton of work. Hell, it’s probably impossible! I just tried to reason with what I’d seen.

After that, I didn’t watch porn anymore. Instead, I stepped away from the computer altogether and decided to read a book. God knows, maybe sitting in front of the damned computer for a whole week had done something to my brain.

When I got up the next day, however, I was right back on Pornhub. By then, I’d already struck up what had happened at some strange internet mystery and moved on.

The moment I opened the very first video, though, I saw her again. She was lurking in the back of the scene, smiling at me from afar before she slithered towards the camera once more.

I don’t know how many videos I opened or how many pages I visited, but she was always there, always lurking somewhere in the background as if waiting for me.

At first it was only in porn videos, but a day later I discovered her in others. She appeared in YouTube videos and on streaming platforms. Hell, I even noticed her in a freaking Netflix movie.

I tried to reason with myself again. This had to be some super advanced computer virus. Some piece of complicated software that altered videos and replaced segments of it with this weird creature.

While I was scanning my computer, desperately trying to prove to my theory, I saw something from the corner of my eye.

I jerked around, but the moment I looked it was gone. I could’ve sworn there had been something on the ground, something that slithered towards me from the back of the room.

As I’m typing this now, I don’t dare to look anymore; I don’t dare to even move, because I can feel her hungry eyes on the back of my neck. And every so often, I hear a low hissing sound from right behind me.

I know I’m not just by myself anymore. I’m not alone anymore, but dear God, I wish I was.

Silverback, the Wolf King

Do you remember how you saw the world as a child? Wasn’t it a magical place with mysteries and secrets hidden everywhere?

What about imaginary friends? I think we all had them at one point. They might have been the siblings we never had, magical creatures, or characters on TV.

Together with those friends, we’d go on adventures, visit magical places, or entirely different worlds. For many children, it was a way of passing the time, of finding out about themselves or to make a little more sense of things they didn’t understand. For other children, it was a way of coping with the harsh reality surrounding them.

I was one of the latter.

I grew up a poor boy, brought up by a single mother.

The house we lived in could barely be called one. It was a small, flat-roofed building, comprising only a handful of rooms.

Mom tried her best to raise me, but she had a weak body, so holding a job was impossible for her. Instead, our meager meals and other necessities were paid by government support. Life wasn’t easy; I didn’t have many toys. Still, I was happy enough.

Everything changed when Scott came into our life.

I still remember the time I first met him. I was woken by laughter and giggling from the living room, and I found mom on the couch with a man I didn’t know. A heavy smell wafted through the small room that made me cough.

“Go to bed, baby,” she said to me when she noticed me standing in the door. Her voice was almost incoherent and erratic as she gently pushed me back into our small bedroom. She locked the door, and soon I heard more giggling and other, different sounds. I didn’t understand what was going on, but soon I fell asleep again.

When I woke up the next morning, the man was still there, smoking a cigarette and drinking from a heavy glass bottle.

“Yo, little dude, what’s up?” he asked after taking a big sip.

“Who are you? Where’s my mom?” I asked, rubbing the sleep from my eyes.

“I’m Scott. Your moms over there, still asleep,” he said, pointing at the couch. “She’s had a ROUGH night.”

He gave me a little wink that made me laugh, but at my age, I didn’t understand his implication.

I learned that Scott and mom had dated briefly during high school. They’d recently met again and gave their old relationship another go. He was a nice enough guy, for the first couple of weeks at least.

At first, he visited us only every once in a while, but soon he moved in with us. For a while, it was fun. Scott brought a ton of video games, and I enjoyed watching him play and laugh. Whenever I asked to play, though, he shooed me away.

As the weeks passed, Scott drank more often. It wasn’t strange for me to wake up to find him already holding a bottle in his hands. While mom took care of the chores around the house, Scott sat in front of his video games, smoking and drinking all day.

I still remember how hard it was to breathe and how the heavy smoke stung in my eyes. When I cried about it, he either didn’t react or told me to ‘be quiet.’

The first time he beat me was when I asked him for breakfast. Mom had to leave in the early morning to take care of ‘important government business,’ as she called it, and left Scott in charge.

I was hungry, but when I asked Scott for something to eat, he didn’t react, too absorbed in his video games, and too drunk. When I cried, he grew angry and slapped me against the head.

“Will you shut up, you little shit!?”

That day I learned that I shouldn’t talk to Scott when he was playing his video games. Which meant, never.

While he shouted at the screen, I retreated to mom’s closet. I sat there, in the dark, cramped space, crying to myself until mom got home.

She asked me what had happened, but one stare from Scott told me to be quiet. I mumbled something about falling, and that was it.

It wasn’t the last day I fled to the closet.

I guess mom was desperate in a way. For the first time, she was in love again. She didn’t catch on to Scott’s toxic behavior or chose to ignore it.

Scott was never violent when mom was around. Whenever she’d leave the house or even the room, Scott was quick to vent his anger at me.

I found myself inside of the small closet more and more often. At first, I’d only sit in the dark, sobbing to myself, but ever so slowly, it became my own little world. A safe haven from the reality that awaited me outside.

In there, my imagination transformed the mundane surroundings into my first imaginary friends. There was Kitton, the mischievous little kitty thief. He sprang to live from an old poster of a kitten holding on to a rope plastered against the closet’s back wall. The second one was Skyhawk, a giant bird soaring the skies. I conjured up his image from a single, bright feather I found tucked between the floorboards.

Together with them, I’d go on magical adventures. I visited massive castles, flew over boundless plains, and joined Kitton on lavish thieveries.

Many of those adventures were cut short by Scott. When I’d get too excited, yelling and laughing, he’d drag me from the closet, screaming at me to be quiet. More than once, he beat the shit out of me.

It was only a matter of time before mom caught onto things. Scott couldn’t explain the heavy bruises by yet another story about roughhousing.

I still remember her screams. At first, they were directed at Scott, mentioning my name and demanding what he’d done to me. After a while, Scott’s rage replaced them before it was drowned out by mom’s painful wailing. I don’t know how it all lasted, but to my young mind, it seemed had seemed to be forever.

Mom wasn’t the same after that day. She was quiet, timid, and only spoke to me in hushed whispers. Her face looked strange for a while, bloated and discolored.

Eventually, mom took to drinking as well. I guess she searched for an escape like I had, yet no magical worlds were waiting for her. Instead, she clung to a different type of magic. One that would bring sweet release, often as soon as the early hours of the afternoon.

Those days were the worst. Scott had grown unhinged, prone to anger issues. When he couldn’t vent his anger at mom, I was the only target that remained. He wasn’t just yelling at me anymore, not just beating me. By this point, he’d developed a sadistic streak.

He loved putting out his cigarettes on my tiny, white arms.

To this day, scars riddle them. I still remember the searing pain, the blistering skin, and the burned flesh below. When I cried in pain, he’d guffaw like a horse before he threw me back into the cramped closet.

During these days, I should meet a new imaginary friend, a small, stuffed wolf I’d never seen before. I came to call him Silverback, the Wolf King. In my mind, he wasn’t a small toy, but a giant beast and the king of all the animals.

Soon Silverback became my favorite imaginary friend. He’d let me ride on his back and take me to the Great Forest, a magical place with trees towering high into the sky, taller than any building I’d ever seen.

The more Scott drank, the more his behavior escalated. Before long, he took to other things, things a kid like me didn’t understand. I remember wondering if he was sick when he put a needle into his arm and hoped he’d have to go to the hospital. He never went. Instead, he became more unhinged, crazy.

And then, one day, he exploded.

I was in the closet, on another adventure with Silverback and Kitton when I heard screams coming from outside. As a little child, I didn’t understand what I saw, but I knew it was wrong.

Scott was on the couch, on top of mom. She’d been screaming, but by now, she hardly made any sounds. For a moment, I thought she’d fallen asleep, but Scott was doing something with his hands. They were wrapped around her neck.

His face almost made me crawl back. It had become a mask of pure and absolute rage. His eyes were huge and bloodshot, his mouth stretched so wide it almost divided his face.

“How dare you mess with my games, you freaking whore!” he screamed at her, his voice high-pitched and cracking.

“What are you doing to mom?” I blurted out in a low voice, not sure what was happening.

At that moment, Scott’s crazy eyes focused on me, and a sadistic grin showed on his face.

I didn’t know what I was doing. Suddenly, I was running, spurred on by something deep inside my subconscious mind.

In a moment, I was at the front door, then outside, and ran towards the small stretch of forest behind our house.

“Where do you think you’re going, you little shit?” Scott called after me guffawing like he always did.

I didn’t turn around. Fear swallowed me up, and I just ran. Yet, I had no hope of outrunning him. My legs were too short, my steps too small.

“Just wait till I get you little Danny, just you wait!”

His voice was so close by now, and with each passing moment, his heavy steps were getting closer. I could almost feel his disgusting, heavy breath on my neck.

“What the fuck’s that?!” he cursed, followed by a heavy thud.

When I turned around, I saw Scott on the ground. Behind him, a small rope was stretched between two of the trees, and just for a moment, I saw a tiny feline body vanishing between the underbrush.

Had that been…? I didn’t get to wonder, because Scott pushed himself up again. His face was furious, but when he saw me, his grin returned.

I stumbled on, from tree to tree, but I was exhausted, my small legs were heavy, and my chest hurt. Tears came to my eyes when Scott burst through the underbrush behind me.

“Shit, fucking bird, get the hell away from me, shit!” he screamed behind me, but a flutter of massive wings drowned out his voice.

Scott was still screaming and cursing as I pushed myself forward. Step by step, I continued on. My eyes grew wide when I saw a feather similar to the one I’d found in mom’s closet. It glided through the air before it vanished between the trees ahead of me.

I followed it, desperate, hoping for something, hoping to get away. But things are never so easy.

Scott finally got a hold of me and threw me to the ground. He put his twisted face close to mine and stared me down with his red eyes.

“Got you, little Danny,” he laughed, panting heavily.

He pulled me upward, pushing me against the trunk of a huge tree.

I struggled against his grip, tried to get free, and only now noticed how dark it had become. All around us were massive trees. They towered high into the sky, hiding the sun with their dense canopy. Even as a kid, I knew this wasn’t the small forest behind our house. This was a different place. As Scott giggled to himself, I realized where I was, in the Great Forest!

Scott’s big hands closed around my neck as he pressed me against the tree. I struggled, wanted to scream, but no words escaped my throat. All I could see was Scott’s eyes, two massive, red orbs right in front of my face.

For a moment, my vision grew dark, but then Scott released me. Confusion replaced the grin that had been on his face. No, not confusion, fear.

“What the fuck?” he pressed out as he stumbled backward.

That’s when I saw him, Silverback. The giant wolf stood between the towering trees, his eyes resting on Scott. A moment later, he jumped forward.

Scott screamed, but he’d only made it a few steps before Silverback was upon him.

I heard Scott’s cries, high-pitched, and filled with such terror that I pressed my hands over my ears and closed my eyes. I don’t know how long I sat there before I felt something gently nudging me.

When I opened my eyes, Silverback stood in front of me. Once more, he nudged me on with his snout, and I stood up on shaky legs.

For a moment, I glanced over at where Scott lay. He wasn’t moving, and the forest floor below him was wet and sticky. Before I got a closer look, Silverback pushed himself in front of me.

Together, the giant wolf and I made our way through the towering forest. As I walked, I cried again; the emotions bursting out of me like a rushing torrent. I sobbed and cried and clung to Silverback’s mane. The giant wolf didn’t move but waited till I’d calmed down. Then he lowered his snout and licked away the tears that had streamed from my eyes.

Before long, the forest grew smaller, the towering trees were replaced by the birch, so common to the area. When I reached the edge of the forest, standing in a backyard I didn’t know, Silverback had vanished.

“My god, boy, what happened to you?”

An old lady who must’ve seen me come from the forest hurried towards me. I didn’t say a thing; I couldn’t. Instead, I cried and cried and cried, staring back at the tree line behind me.

I was in a terrible state, my tiny legs scratched and cut in too many places to count. The old lady’s husband called an ambulance right away.

With my limited vocabulary, I told them what had happened. Scott had hurt mom, and when I ran, he chased me through the forest.

I didn’t tell them about Silverback, or my other friends who’d been there to help me. Even as a little child, I knew there was something to the events that had unfolded. No, what had happened was meant for me and me alone.

The police found Scott in the middle of the small forest, his throat torn to bits. They were baffled by it, but conclude that he must’ve been attacked by a wild animal.

They could do nothing for mom. She was still on the couch; her face swollen and purple, suffocated to death by Scott.

No one told me about those things back then. No, I only learned about it much later. By then, I was already living with a loving foster family.

My life became happy. There was no need to hide inside a closet and flee to imaginary worlds. And as time passed, there was no more need for imaginary friends.

The years passed, I went to school, then to college, and before long, I entered the workforce.

The only thing that stayed with me from those terrible days of my childhood were the nightmares. For all my life, dreams of that house haunted me. Dreams of Scott, what he did to mom, and what he’d almost done to me.

One day, I decided to pay my old home a visit. I guess I wanted to put those old demons to rest and prove they couldn’t hurt me anymore.

After a five-hour car ride, I arrived in front of the old house. It was even smaller than I remembered. It had been long abandoned, and when I entered, I found it in a state of destitute and chaos.

As I stepped into the living room, I noticed the closet in an instant.

When I opened the door and entered the cramped little space inside, memories came flooding back to me. Memories of the imaginary worlds I’d created and all the friends I’d made.

One look at the back of the closet showed me that the old kitty poster that had become Kitton was long gone. No hint remained of the feather that had conjured up the image of Skyhawk. The only things in here were old, half-rotten clothes and dirty.

Or, so I thought because then I saw him. Discarded in a corner lay a tiny stuffed animal.

He was old now and dirty, but the few silver threads on his back told me who he was in an instant. My very best friend during that terrible time: Silverback, the Wolf King.

When I picked him up, I saw that the fabric was torn in many places; the stuffing pouring out here and there. Even one of his small button eyes was missing.

I hugged the small toy dearly, and as the memories of that day returned, tears came to my eyes.

“What happened to you?” I asked as I held the dirty, old toy in my hands, but of course, I didn’t get an answer.

I was an adult now. The magic that had once resided in this place was gone, pushed aside and replaced by reality.

Still, as I held him in my arms and whispered the words ‘Thank you’ again and again, I could’ve sworn there was a glimmer of that old magic in his one, lonely button eye.

Real Art Always Has a Price

“God, Mathew, you don’t get it, do you? That’s not what real art is about.”

Those had been the words Abigail threw at me during our very first fight.

Sitting here now, writing this, I still wonder what real art is truly about.

The same uncertainty had been the very core of Abigail’s obsession. An obsession that spiraled out of control, and drove me from her apartment three days ago in a state of utter despair.

Ever since I first met Abigail, I knew there was something special about her.

It was about a year ago that a friend of mine dragged me to a concerto at his music school.

I never was a fan of the finer arts or classical music for that matter. As I sat next to him, listening to the performance, I had to fight the urge to take out my phone. Needless to say, I was bored to death.

This boredom evaporated when she started to play. She was a delicate, almost fragile thing, dwarfed by the harp she was playing on.

Her fingers moved over the strings, barely touching them, plucking at them with a subtlety almost too sensitive for the instrument. Yet, the sounds she created, the melody she played, it was so distinct it overshadowed every other instrument on the stage.

I leaned forward, staring at her with wide eyes. Never before had I cared about music performances. Still, in the presence of raw talent and absolute skill, even I was touched. I sat there, completely absorbed by her music.

My friend noticed my stares and smiled.

“That’s Abigail,” he whispered to me.

“She’s,” I started but didn’t find the words for this new feeling inside of me.

“Amazing? Unbelievable? Yeah, she’s by far the most talented student at our school.”

That’s when I first saw Abigail, and that was also the moment when I fell in love with her.

After pestering my friend for weeks, he finally introduced me to her. She was a timid, shy girl and somewhat plain to look at. When I asked her out, she was taken aback, but agreed.

We hit it off instantly, and it wasn’t long before we moved in together. I guess what they say is true: opposites attract. While Abigail was a musician, I was a businessman. Two occupations that couldn’t have been more different.

Abigail was, as I said, a taciturn person, never uttering more than a few words at a time. When she talked about music, though, she was a completely different person. Her eyes lit up, and her voice showed none of her usual timidity. She could go on about it for hours.

I guess it was due to her father’s influence. Abigail never got to know her mother and was brought up by her father. The man had been an eccentric yet vastly talented artist.

“True art is different,” she’d start. “It’s not what you see or hear, it’s about emotions, about feeling. Dad had always said he didn’t want people to simply see what was in his paintings. He wanted them to feel and experience. He wanted them to smell the flowers in his still life and to taste the wine that accompanied them. That’s what true art was like to him. It’s the same with music, Mathew. It’s not about what you hear, it’s about what it does to you.”

I always smiled when she went on like this. Her world was so different from mine, she was different. I guess that’s why I was so drawn to her.

Abigail’s music was beautiful, breathtaking even, yet for some reason, she was never satisfied with herself. She practiced for hours on end, frantically and half-mad at times. It wasn’t strange for me to wake up to her practicing, and often she continued long after I’d gotten home. When she finally stopped, in the late evening, her fingers were often blistered and sticky with sweat.

Our first real fight happened a month after she’d moved in. As I sat on the couch listening to her play, an idea came to my mind.

“Why don’t you start a YouTube channel, Abby? I bet lots of people would love to listen to you play. Maybe it could be your big break?”

Abigail’s fingers froze, and she gave me a look of sheer frustration.

“God, Mathew, you don’t get it, do you? That’s not what real art, real music, is about. That’s not how it works! You need to be there to truly experience it!” she said, her voice cracking.

“Can you feel this?” she asked, plucking at a string. “The vibrations? The change in the air? Oh, I can tell, you don’t. I mean, how could you?” she laughed at that, shaking her head.

“It’s all part of the music, all part of true art, but someone like you-“

“Someone like me?” I demanded. “You know what, Abby, I’m sorry. I’m really sorry I don’t get what real art is about!”

With that, I got up and left the room. I loved this girl, but at times her pretentiousness was hard for me to take. Before long, it had started to take a strain on our relationship.

It wasn’t the only thing it influenced, though. Abigail herself started to spiral out of control as well, and her passion slowly transformed into an obsession.

A few weeks later, I returned from work and found her in a state of utter despair. Tears were streaming from her face as she stared at the shattered remains of a harp.

“Abby! What’s going on!?”

I rushed to her side and put my arms around her. When she stared at me, I almost cringed back. Her eyes were filled with nothing but pure, hard rage.

“Why? Why can’t I do it?!”

“What are you talking about?”

“This!” she screamed and pointed at the broken harp. “This THING, it’s nothing garbage! It’s not real music, none of it is! It’s nothing but a charade, all because of this damned thing!”

With that, she picked up one of the pieces of the harp and hurled it across the room.

“But, you’re amazing!” I said, taking hold of her shaking hand.

She shot me another glare before she freed herself from my embrace.

“You still don’t get it,” she mumbled to herself as she left the room.

Yeah, I don’t, I thought to myself but didn’t dare say the words out loud.

It should only be the first of many similar outbursts, but before long, her obsession took a different nature.

In the weeks to come, Abigail transformed our living room into nothing short of a workshop. Abigail spent her father’s inheritance money lavishly. She purchased stacks of books about musical theory, harps, and their construction. Soon after, she started to buy instruments, exquisite wood, strings, and various tools. It all covered the floor in a chaotic mess. And in the middle of it all sat Abigail, feverishly working.

By that time, we hadn’t talked in days. She’d completely ignored me, too obsessed with her work.

“Abby, babe, what’s all this?” I finally asked one day, when I couldn’t take her behavior anymore.

“An instrument is not just a tool; it’s supposed to be an extension, no, a part of yourself. That’s where I was wrong all along. Of course, I couldn’t play anything worthwhile. I was so stupid.”

“What do you mean?”

She laughed at my question.

“Dad always said the same thing. The brush needs to be an extension of yourself. He always made his own brushes, you know? He picked the materials, bound the bristle. He did it all by himself. Only that way, he said, could he truly create art.”

“So, you’re trying to build your own harp?”

For the first time in a long while, she smiled at me, her eyes alight by the same fire I’d so come to love.

“Yes, Mathew, yes! I need to do it, you see? It’s impossible otherwise! Come here, I show you! You see this? That’s mahogany wood, and this here, its cedar.”

She went on and on, rambling about the different materials, showing me books and sketches.

I didn’t know what to say.

“Aren’t you taking this a bit too far? Building your own instrument? Do you even know how to do it? Why are you going to such extremes just for-?”

“Just for WHAT!?” she screamed at me. She threw the sketches she’d been holding to the ground and glared at me with such intensity that I took a step back. For a moment I was afraid she’d jump me.

“You, you imbecile! How could I’ve thought you’d get it? Oh, how stupid you are, Abigail, of course, he wouldn’t. Right, Mathew? You don’t understand a damned thing of what I’m trying to do!”

I stood there, listened to her outburst, and finally shook my head. This wasn’t the woman I’d fallen in love with. The person who stood in front of me now, who threw these vile words at me, I didn’t know who it was anymore.

“Abby, I don’t think this is working anymore. I can’t deal with this, with the way you’re acting. I’m sorry, but maybe we should take a break.”

She looked at me, and for a moment, a sad smile showed on her face. Then she shrugged and started to gather her things.

“Fine.” One simple word uttered more to herself than to me.

The next day, when I returned from work, I was greeted by an empty living room. There was no trace of Abigail or any of the various things she’d purchased.

The end of a relationship is never smooth. Even after Abigail had changed so much, I still loved her. Yet, however much I tried to contact her or find out where she lived, it seemed futile. For all I knew, she’d completely vanished and cut herself off from society.

That was until three days ago. My phone started ringing, showing me an unknown number. When I answered, I heard a weak, timid voice. It was Abigail.

“I finally figured it out, Mathew,” she said, “what it means to create true art.”

“Abby, my god, we haven’t talked in so long. Are you alright?”

She didn’t answer. Instead, I heard a sound that might very well have been scoffing.

“There’s no time Mathew. I have to show it to someone, please, you’re the only one I can think of! You need to come here!” there was a sudden determination, a sudden urgency to her words that made my skin crawl.

“Where’s here? Where are you?”

After she’d given me her new address, I went on my way to the outskirts of town. Out there, she’d moved into an old, long-abandoned building.

As much as I tried to deny it, I still had feelings for her, even after all that time. Maybe, just maybe we could make this work again…

I rang the doorbell once, twice, and then a third time, but no one answered. When I finally called her on the phone, she told me the location of a spare key she’d hidden outside.

The moment I opened the door to her apartment, I gagged. A disgusting, putrid smell hung heavy in the air. It was a mixture of rotten food, sweat, and something strangely metallic.

“Mathew, come in,” I heard her from inside.

The light in the apartment was dim, but I could tell that it was in an utter mess. Dirty clothes and rotten food covered the floor. Various tools and materials were scattered all over the place. It was almost impossible to breathe in this damp hell, and I had to cover my mouth as I made my way inside.

“Abby, what the hell’s all this?”

Her answer was nothing but a weak smile, and with a shaking hand, she bode me to come closer to her.

Even in the half-dark, I could tell how sick she looked. Her skin was pale, almost ashen, and she seemed to be covered in sweat. She was sitting in a lonely chair, her legs covered by a heavy, stained blanket.

My eyes grew wide when I saw her like this.

“Holy shit, Abby, are you okay? You look terrible!”

I took a few steps towards, but when I saw the instrument by her side, I stopped.

It was a ghastly, bleak harp, different from any instrument I’d ever seen before. It looked raw and unrefined, and no more than half a dozen strings lined it.

“What’s that thing?”

Instead of answering, she smiled at me, and her delicate fingers reached out for the instrument.

She winced, as she plucked one of the strings, and a deep, unnatural sound rose from it. It lingered in the room much longer than it should’ve, and I could almost feel it reverberating inside of me.

My eyes grew wide at the sensation, but before I could say anything, Abigail began to play.

Her eyes were wide, her face twisted in a pained expression, and I could hear her moan as she plucked the strings.

There are no words to describe the music she created with that thing. Notes and tones I’d never heard before, never thought possible with a harp. She combined them into a cacophony, a melody that was as disturbing as it was beautiful.

I couldn’t move. This music, this melody, it was out of this world. Each note reverberated inside of my body, stabbing at my heart, no, my very soul. I felt tears streaming from my eyes as I listened to her otherworldly performance.

And then I saw it. Abigail had been right; I never understood what she’d been talking about. It was her music. I could see it wafting through the air, moving towards me and surrounding me. I felt the sound crawling into my ears, lingering inside of my head. For the first time, I truly experienced her music, and for the first time, I was truly afraid of her.

When Abigail stopped, I felt weak, tired, and exhausted. For a moment, I almost lost my balance and had to lean against the wall, breathing heavily.

“Do you see it now?” she asked in a low voice as she withdrew her fingers from the instrument.

At a loss for words, I could only nod. Once I’d found my voice again, I could only ask a single question.

“How are you able to play like this? How is something like that even possible?”

As an answer, she pulled the dirty blanket away. I screamed when I saw the bloodied, festering stumps of her legs.

“Oh my god, Abby, what did you do!? What the hell did you do?!”

I stared at the ghastly, bleak harp again, and I realized what it was made of. Bones. The bones of Abigail’s legs. Then those strings, sinews, they had to be her… Dear god. My eyes grew wide, and I took a step back in disgust when I saw that they didn’t end at the bottom of the instrument. No, they continued on and vanished inside of the festering flesh of the stumps of her legs.

“Why?” I mumbled as I stumbled backward due to the sheer insanity at play in front of me.

Her face distorted into a wide, manic grin.

“I told you, I finally understood it. You see Mathew, true art has a price. It always has a price.”

Skater Girl

“So, what’s your deal?”

Such simple words, yet they changed the summer break of 1992 forever.

They say you always remember your first love. I’m not sure how true it is for others, but I do. For all the wrong reasons.

I was a lonely kid. After my parents’ death, I’d lived with an uncle and aunt. Now, they weren’t bad people, but they never wanted kids, especially not a teenager in the middle of puberty.

I guess we were all happy in our own ways when I proposed that I’d live on my own a few years later. They provided me with enough money to scrape by, and so I moved into a small apartment complex at the edge of town.

It was Thursday evening, one week into summer break when I first saw her.

Memory is a strange thing. So much of my life is nothing but vague blurs and half-guesses. Yet, I remember this evening as vividly as if it happened yesterday.

For the past few days, I’d wasted away inside my apartment. Eating microwaved meals, watching TV, and reading books. Eventually, the heat and the stuffy air of the small one-room place drove me outside.

I didn’t have a destination in mind; I just wanted to go on a simple walk.

The day had been hot, but now that the sun was setting, the air was comfortably mild. I walked along the small path that led around the complex, and before long, I settled down on a bench.

I leaned back and watched as the deep red sky slowly turned dark.

The sounds of the town had quieted down. The bustle of people and cars was replaced by cicadas and the chirping of a lonely bird nearby.

I inhaled the evening air deeply before I took out my small notebook and scribbled down a few awkward lines.

I had aspirations of becoming a poet one day, but of course, all I wrote was terrible. I was sixteen after all.

I’d just jotted down another pretentious musing about the night sky when I noticed her.

She was riding on a simple, old skateboard, speeding down the path towards me.

She wore dark shorts and an equally dark long-sleeved shirt. It seemed to be far too big for her delicate frame. Her short auburn hair was waving in the slight evening breeze. A hint of a smile played around the corners of her mouth as her big brown eyes stared at the night sky above.

She didn’t talk to me that night, didn’t even acknowledge me. She sped past me, leaving me staring after her, mouth agape.

It felt like I sat there for hours, thinking about her. I guess I secretly hoped she’d return and ride past me once more.

Eventually, I gave up and returned back to my small apartment.

I couldn’t stop thinking about her, much less sleep. Skater Girl, I came to call her. In my mind, I conjured up stories of how the two of us would get to know each other and fall in love, knowing even at my age how silly it all was.

I think when my parents died, something broke inside of me. Some essential part that makes you a normal, functioning human being. Something that could never be fixed, and that drove me away from people and society as a whole.

Skater Girl changed it all. From the first time I’d seen her, I was driven back to that same bench every evening.

She wasn’t there every day, but every other and that was enough for me.

I never mustered up the courage to call out to her, and it was more than a week before she finally acknowledged me.

“So, what’s your deal?” she called out to me from afar and stopped a meter in front of me.

“Oh, eh, I’m writing,” I blurted out, holding up my notebook.

“Well, what are you writing about?”

“N-nothing really, just poems and silly things.”

“Wanna show me?” she asked, pushing herself closer to me.

My eyes grew wide in embarrassment. That whole damned notebook was filled with lines about her auburn hair and her deep brown eyes. In a panic, I tried to quickly close and hide it, but it slipped from my hands, falling to the ground in front of me.

She giggled at that. It was the most beautiful thing I’d ever heard.

“Guess that’s a no,” she said, still laughing, and a moment later, she pushed herself onward.

“Wait,” I wanted to call out, but my voice had all but ceased functioning.

From that day on, the two of us started to talk more often. It was never more than a few lines at a time, but this tad bit of interaction was enough for me.

“Can I read one of your poems?” she asked me one day.

“No way, they are all terrible.” I answered, holding up my hands as if to block her.

“Well, once you write a good one, be sure to let me read it!” she called out over her shoulder as she rode away.

A few days later, she greeted me with the same, warm smile that always made me blush.

“Still terrible?” she asked in a joking manner.

I nodded, and when I looked at her, I saw a huge dark bruise on her thigh.

“Guess I’m not the only one who’s terrible at what they’re doing,” I replied similarly joking, thinking she’d crashed down with her board.

For a moment, she eyed me questioningly before she realized what I was looking at. She quickly put her hand over the bruise as if trying to hide it. There was a hint of something else on her usually happy face. She was quiet for a few seconds staring off into the distance before she smiled at me again.

“Seems like we have something in common then.”

These small interactions soon became the most important part of my lonely summer break.

Nothing ever happened at the apartment complex. It was mostly populated by the old, those forgotten by society and a few more sinister figures.

I’d returned from the library a few days later, borrowing a massive stack of books about poetry, when something actually did happen. There was a commotion in front of the complex.

I hurried over to the group that had gathered and pushed myself to the front. A group of police officers dragged a cursing, middle-aged man to their police car. I’d seen the man before, often lingering around the complex, his eyes wild and dangerous.

The people around me talked and whispered to one another. Between the dozens of voices, I was only able to make out a few bits and pieces: A public disturbance. Her again. Domestic violence.

Someone must’ve called the police, and the man seemed to be furious. He was furious, struggling against the grip of the officers and rambling on incoherently. For a moment his hate filled eyes wandered over the onlookers, and I almost cringed back when they came to rest on me. I caught the word bitch multiple time, but not much more before they threw him into the back of the police car.

I watched the whole ordeal, curious as I was, but a day after I’d already forgotten about it.

It wasn’t important. The only important thing for me was spending time with Skater Girl.

Half a week passed before I saw her again. She was still wearing the same sloppy clothes, and her hair looked as wild as always.

She smiled at me as she approached me.

“Any luck yet?” she asked, giggling.

“None,” I said, shaking my head.

“You know, you spend an awful lot of time on something you aren’t good at.”

I shrugged. “Guess I’m enjoying it.”

Well, I was kind of enjoying, but I was really only out here because of her, something I couldn’t admit, of course.

“Hey,” she interrupted my thoughts, “you wanna to give this a try?” She picked up the board and held it out towards me.

I stared at her, taken aback, but found myself nodding.

I awkwardly got on the board and pushed myself forward.

“Hey, this is pretty-!”

The word easy never left my lips as I lost my balance, fell onto my hands, and propelled the board forward.

I was greeted by bursting laughter from Skater Girl.

“Oh my god,” she pressed out, “you really are terrible!”

I stumbled to my feet and gave her a weak smile before I went to get the board.

She was still laughing when I handed it to her, but she wasn’t mocking me, and soon I started to laugh as well.

“Alright, I’ll teach you,” she said with a big smile.

My face felt hot all of a sudden, and I felt my heart pounding heavily in my chest. “Sure,” was all I could say.

For the next half hour, she tried her best to teach me the basics, but it was futile. I fell down half a dozen times, scraping up my knees in the process. I was content to keep going, but she finally took the board from me.

“This is hopeless,” she giggled, shaking her head.

I sighed and sat down on the bench again, and for the first time, she joined me. For a while, neither of us spoke.

“Do you ever look up at the sky?” she suddenly asked.

“Sure, what are you-?”

“No, I mean, do you ever really look? At the stars! Aren’t they beautiful? You know,” she started in a voice quieter than usual, “sometimes I wonder what it’s like up there. To be a star in the sky, you know?”

For a moment, I looked away from her and up at the sky, at the countless stars above us.

I saw that she, too, was looking up with her wide, deep eyes. There was a sad smile on her face, and she appeared to be deep in thought. For a moment, I thought she’d start to cry.

“Life’s strange, isn’t it?” she finally asked, turning back towards me.

I was too surprised to say anything.

“Maybe you should write about that!”

“What do you mean?”

“Life, the stars, the sky, everything! There’s beauty everywhere, even in all the small things around us.”

I was just staring at her.

“What are you staring at, weirdo?” she asked, now laughing again.

“Oh, sorry, I was,” but I broke up, awkwardly turning away from her.

“I was joking!”

Then she got up and stepped back onto her board. “Come on, follow me!”

With that, she led me down a small path, away from the complex and to a small hill.

“So, why do you sit outside all day writing terrible poems?”

As I sat down next to her, I was quiet for a while. Then I opened up about everything. I told her I was out there because of her. I’d wanted to see her again and even that most of my poems were about her.

She listened without interrupting me, her hands gently caressing the grass.

“You know, you really ARE a weirdo!” she said, looking at me.

Her eyes seemed like endless pools. I gave her a weak, embarrassed smile, but before I could do anything else, she leaned over and kissed me.

It was an awkward, sloppy kiss, but it felt amazing. When our lips parted, I must’ve had the biggest grin on my face. I leaned back on the grass, wishing that this evening would never end.

We kept sitting on that small hill for what must’ve been hours. We didn’t talk much, we just sat there next to each other. I don’t know when, but at one point I found her hand holding onto mine. All the while, she stared up at the stars with her big, brown eyes.

“It’s gotten late,” she finally mumbled and got up. I nodded. It had to be almost midnight.

She put the board down and then slowly pushed herself forward.

“Hey, hold up, Skater-” I started but broke up in an instant, embarrassed.

“Rebecca,” she said.

“Stephen, I live down in apartment 7.05, so if you want to come by,” my voice trailed off.

She giggled and took my hand as she rode on the skateboard next to me.

As we made our way around the complex, I felt her holding onto my hand harder, almost clutching it. The smile had vanished from her face. It was replaced by worry and apprehension.

“What’s wrong?” I asked, but all she did was shake her head.

“Life, I guess.”

Before I could ask her what she meant, she kissed me once more.

“Thanks for tonight, Stephen,” she said before she hurried away.

I was left standing there, speechless. She’d already opened the door when I saw that her board was still on the ground next to me.

“Hey, your board!” I called out, but she’d already vanished.

Once I was inside myself I contemplated hurrying after her, but then I decided that I’d take the board with me and hand it to her tomorrow.

Back in my apartment, I couldn’t sleep. My teenage brain was too active, too confused. Was that what love was like, what it did to you?

My eyes wandered to the board again and again. What should I say to her when I saw her the next time? Should I tell her I was in love with her? What about the board? God, everything had been so perfect tonight, and now it all seemed so complicated.

I tried to sleep, but I was just lying there, throwing myself this and that way as minutes turned to hours. Her face was all I could see in my mind. Rebecca – even her name was beautiful.

Then I heard something. It was quiet, a rattle, a turning of a doorknob, then silence again. It was followed by some sort of… clicking?

I lay in bed and listened. Had to be some neighbor. Probably someone who was out drinking and forgot how their door worked.

Somehow though, it was too close, too audible.

I slid out from under the blanket, got out of bed, and tiptoed through my small apartment. There it was again: click, clack, quiet rustling.

Once I was at the front door, I listened intently. There was another sound, and suddenly my front door popped open.

Standing in front of me was a giant beast of a man. For a second, he was as surprised as I was. Then he grinned.

“You little fucker,” he pressed out in a whisper before he stormed at me. He was holding something big and blunt in his hand. It became a blur as he hurled it at me.

It was pure, dumb luck that whatever he’d been holding missed me and crashed against the wall next to me. Another curse, this one more audible.

Once the initial shock passed, I turned to run. My flight-or-fight response was all flight. I stumbled forward to get away from whoever this madman was.

I’d barely taken a few steps before a large hand reached out and covered my mouth. Another soon followed, taking hold of my body.

“Where do you think you’re going?” the man whispered into my ear.

His voice was deep, yet strangely scrawny. There was a hint of a giggle behind each of his words.

Where. Do. You. Think. You’re. Going.

He was enjoying this.

The hand over my mouth pressed down hard, making it impossible for me to scream. The man’s breath was hot and heavy on my neck, stank of alcohol and tobacco. His massive body was soaked in sweat. I felt a bulging, wet stomach pressed against my back. I’d have gagged if my mouth hadn’t been covered.

“You made a big mistake, you little shit.”

This time there was no joy in his voice; there was nothing but cold, hard rage. Worst of all, I had no freaking clue who this guy was or why he was here.

I was shoved forward. For a moment, he let go of my body, and I was struggling, squirming under the hand covering my mouth. I tried to get away, but he was so much stronger than me. I tried to scream, but all that escaped my mouth was a quiet, inaudible yelp.

Then his hand returned, this time going for my crotch. Pain shot through my whole body as he began to squeeze.

“Was it fun? Did you enjoy touching her?”

What the hell was he talking about? I shuffled my feet, tried to press my legs together to get him off me, but it was futile.

“You shouldn’t have done it, shouldn’t have. Oh, but you won’t ever do it again.”

As his giant paw of a hand closed, I was nothing but pain and panic. Then I felt something hot between my legs. For a moment, I thought he’d ripped and torn something apart before I realized that I must’ve peed myself.

His hand jerked away.

“What the fuck,” the man called out in disgust, and in that short moment, I bit down on his hand as hard as I could.

There was another scream, this one short and strangely high-pitched. A moment later, I was free, stumbling away from the man.

The few meters between me and the front door felt like the longest distance I ever had to cross in my entire life.

“Oh no, you won’t!” he yelled, and I heard his heavy footsteps as he rushed after me.

One more meter. I was outside. The hallway. Down, just go down, I told myself. I opened my mouth to scream, but it was too late. Once more, his giant hand covered my mouth.

“I’m going to enjoy cutting you up!” he laughed into my ear as he dragged me backward.

Someone, please someone, I pleaded as the tears streamed from my eyes.

It was no use. No one was coming. No one.

I struggled once more. It was a last surge of energy before I gave up exhausted.

Futility took over. This was it. This guy, whoever he was, was going to kill me.

And then it happened. Gravity’s hold over me stopped, and I was thrown up into the air. For a blink of an eye, I was entirely weightless. Before I could understand what was happening, I crashed down again.

There was a sickening crunch below me, and a moment later, the hands holding onto me let go.

I pulled the man’s heavy arms off me and crawled away from him.

That’s when I saw it. Skater Girl’s board.

The wondrous coincidence was cut short by a groan from the man behind me.

That’s when I ran. I didn’t get far before I stumbled into one of my neighbors. The old man started to belittle me about the ruckus I was causing at this time of the night, but when he saw the state I was in, he knew something wasn’t right.

It wasn’t long before the police arrived.

The man was still there, still on the floor of my apartment, the skateboard he’d tripped on still next to him.

He was knocked out cold.

It was the next day that I learned who the man was and why he’d come to my apartment. And that day, I also learned a lot more about Skater Girl, about Rebecca.

The man who’d appeared at my doorstep had been the boyfriend of Rebecca’s mother.

Joe, that’s what I think his name was, was an abusive, drug-addicted piece of shit. He was the type who preyed on weak women, precisely like Rebecca’s mom. A woman who had her own share of problems and a habit of taking to the bottle.

It had been too dark that night, but when I saw the picture, I knew that it was the guy who’d been taken in by police half a week ago.

Neighbors had called the police after yet another fight between him and Rebecca’s mom. Scared as she was of him, she refused to give a statement and eventually Joe was released. Once he was out, he wanted revenge. It didn’t matter against whom.

That night, he returned, flipped out, and murdered Rebecca’s mother in cold blood.

After that, he’d waited for Rebecca… That’s when he’d seen me with her, and that’s why he came after me.

Once he was done with Rebecca.

I don’t remember how I made through the weeks and months following her death. Life was nothing but vague blurs, apathy, and depression.

It was later that the statements and rumors of neighbors painted a fuller picture for me. Joe had come after Rebecca’s mother, but soon he’d been more interested in her teenage daughter. No one knew, of course, but many had their suspicions about what happened during those nights when her mom had passed out from drinking.

Rebecca hadn’t been the manic pixie dream girl I came to call Skater Girl. She wasn’t a mysterious and dreamy girl, no, she’d been a troubled, torn and abused soul.

She was so at wonder with the outside world because her own was filled with nothing but terror. I still remember her eyes when she stared at the stars. I’d never realized that it was desperation and hope that filled them.

Those few words she’d said that night, what it would be like to be a star in the sky…

The moment I knew everything, it was so obvious, and I realized how dumb and ignorant I’d been. I never bothered to ask who Rebecca really was or what was going on in her mind.

Instead, I’d made her into Skater Girl. Not a real person, but the cute and mysterious girl of my dreams. A girl who did nothing but ride her board in the evenings, wore but ill-fitting oversized clothes and stared at the night sky.

I often wonder what must’ve happened that night. What Joe must’ve done to her before he came to me.

And sometimes, during those worst nights, when the guilt eats away at me, I wonder what would’ve happened if I’d gone after her. If I’d decided to return her board then and there.

It’s been so long since then, yet I still think about her.

The skateboard, her skateboard; it’s still with me. A memory of this lonely summer break, of things that might have been and an endless number of regrets.

I still sit outside during those mild summer nights. Just a lonely guy sitting on a bench in a park writing his poems. They’re still terrible; rambling messes about life, the sky, the stars, and of course, auburn hair.

With each passing year, though, I feel that they get a little less terrible. I hope that one day, I can finally get one of them right.

After all those years, her words still ring in my ears as if it had been yesterday.

“Well, once you write a good one, be sure to let me read it!”

Sure, Rebecca, I will.

Business Deals

We always think we know who our friends are. Hell, I’d known my best friend Martin for the better part of two decades. After what I saw today, however, I realized that I never knew who he really was, and what he’s capable of.

I began working for his company about a year ago. I was a university dropout who was scraping by as a freelancer, hoping to make it big one day, but none of the things I did ever took off. At age thirty, still stuck in the same shitty one-room apartment, I knew things had to change.

One night, when I was out with Martin, after half a dozen beers, I lamented about my situation. Once I was done, he leaned back and told me a few things himself. Things hadn’t been easy for him either, and after his parents had retired, he was forced to take over the family business. He’d restructured it from scratch, and things were finally looking better. Soon he’d be able to make some real money, but for that, he’d need a few helping hands. I looked up when I heard this, not sure what to say. He was selling canned soup at farmer’s markets and fairs. The fancy kind, sure, but was that what I wanted to do? Then I thought about my situation, and I had to admit, there was no way I could refuse his offer.

Things went pretty well. Stable pay meant I didn’t have to worry about rent anymore, and after I’d proved myself over the course of the first few months, Martin put me in charge of our logistics. It was nothing fancy. I took care of our small warehouse, the monthly trips to our supplier, and handled the occasional delivery, or business deals, as Martin called them. While most of our customers bought directly from our market stall, others ordered our product in bulk. As a sign of goodwill and gratitude, we offered to deliver the product in person. Sometimes it meant a slight detour after the market had ended. At others, the customer would arrive right at the market stall. It was business as usual, and I thought nothing about it.

That’s until today.

Martin had sent me a message instructing me to handle another one of his business deals. The customer would come to pick it up in the late afternoon, around the time the market ended. Attached to the message was an image of a cardboard box standing in the middle of the warehouse.

In the morning, I put the box in the van, and secured it between the parts of our market stall. The market was pretty much dead; only a handful of other traders attended it, and few people arrived to buy any product. I had no idea why Martin had sent me here. There was no way we’d turn a profit. Hell, we’d lose money considering the price of gas these days.

The hours passed slowly, but eventually dusk arrived, and the market ended. I was about to pack up when an expensive-looking station wagon came right to the stop behind my market stall. A well-kept older man stepped outside. He had an aura of self-importance about himself, and his outfit must’ve cost more than I made in a month. He scanned the area for a moment before he hurried toward me. As he approached me, his eyes darted around nervously, and he grew more uneasy with each step.

I watched the man curiously. He wasn’t the first weird customer I’d met; Martin always said such things came with the territory. Rural areas in the middle of nowhere were prone to characters such as this.

“Hey there, can I help you?” I asked in the friendliest voice I could muster.

The man’s expression changed to one of disdain, and I could instantly tell he looked down on me.

“I’m here for the delivery,” he said condescendingly.

“Ah, the box! It’s in the back of the van. Quite the order you got there. Stocking up for the holidays?” I asked, in a jolly manner.

The man said nothing and continued to stare me down. While his eyes rested on me, I shuffled around awkwardly before I led him to the market van. When I opened it, and he saw the cardboard box, his expression changed. His eyes grew wide, and a hungry grin appeared on his face. Martin was right, you met the weirdest characters out here. All this over a few cans of soup?

“All right, let me get it.”

With that, I reached out for the box, but saw a corner had been torn open during transportation. Some of the packaging peanuts had already spilled from the hole.

“Shit, I think the box was damaged during the trip. Let me check if everything-“

“That’s no problem,” the man said, putting his hand on my shoulder. “I’m sure everything’s all right.”

“You sure?” I asked, squirming under the grip of his hand.

“Just carry it over to the car, please.”

He smiled at me, but there was no hint of emotion in it. I nodded, freed myself from his hand, and dragged the box from the van. The man was already at his car, trunk open, waiting for me. With every second, his face changed, and I watched as an annoyed, almost angry expression replaced the smile. Every once in a while, his eyes would dart around, and his hand was tapping against the side of the car as if to urge me to get a move on. I did precisely that. The guy was creeping me out, and by now, I wanted nothing more than to get this entire thing over with. Then the box began slipping from my hands. My steps sped up, and I barely made it to the car before I lost my grip, and it tumbled into the trunk. As it did, the already damaged side of the box tore open. An audible gasp escaped from the man next to me.

“Oh shit, I’m so sorry, I didn’t mean to-“

My voice trailed off. Instead of cans of soup, something else spilled from the box. At first, I didn’t understand what I was seeing. Between the mass of packaging peanuts, I saw something white. It was a small white hand that dangled from the box. What the hell?

Before I could even say a word, or ask what was going on, the man threw the drunk shut. I jerked at the sudden loud noise and focused on the man again. Neither of us said a word, and for a few seconds, we just stared at each other in silence. I was bewildered by what I’d just seen, while his face showed a mixture of fear and anger. I was afraid he’d jump me, but then he just pushed himself past me, jumped into his car, and without another word, drove off.

During the long trip back to the warehouse, I tried to convince myself that my eyes had played a trick on me. There was no way what I’d seen was real. It had been a long day, and that guy had been creepy as hell, so my mind had probably conjured up the image. I shook my head, then began laughing out loud, to convince myself how ridiculous the idea was, but even to my own ears it sounded fake and hollow. I’d turned the heater in the car to the max, but even though I felt cold, and shivered in my seat.

The moment I reached the warehouse, I saw Martin already waiting for me. I almost drove right past it, but his face was as friendly as usual.

“Hey man,” he greeted me when I stepped out of the car. “I was just checking on a few things, so I thought I might help you unload everything. How did the market go? Any good?”

“Nah, it was pretty shit. No customers at all.”

“Well, can’t be helped. How did the… business deal go? Did the guy pick up his delivery?”

“Yeah, everything went well,” I blurted out, almost a bit too fast.

A hint of suspicion showed on his face, but it was gone in an instant.

As we unloaded the van, we talked and joked as usual, but the atmosphere was different, tense even. Something unspoken hung heavy in the air, and every once in a while, I found Martin’s eyes linger on me for a tad bit too long. Neither of us said a word about the packaging peanuts scattered in the back of the van. Instead, we unloaded the parts of the market stall and re-shelved the unsold cans of soup. Once we were done, I gathered my things and was about to head to the nearby bus station.

“Hey man, why the rush? Let’s have a drink!” Martin offered.

I was about to decline and get the hell out of there, but a small voice in the back of my head told me that wouldn’t fly tonight.

“Sure, why not,” I answered in as calm a voice as I could muster.

Whit that, we drove to the nearby grocery store, got ourselves a beer each, and settled back in his car. While I stared at the bottle in my hand, Martin took a big sip of beer before he sighed.

“Sorry man,” he finally said.

“What do you-” I started, but when he looked at me, I knew this was about the box.

“You know, I haven’t been quite honest with you. Things haven’t been going well at all. It’s all about online stores nowadays, and most people don’t even go to the weekly markets anymore.”

I nodded.

“After I took over the company, I barely made any money. With Julie and the kids at home, it just isn’t enough.”

Once more, I nodded, trying my hardest to keep the anxiety at bay.

“There was no way I could tell Julie how bad things really were. We’d just bought the new house, and now I couldn’t even pay the freaking mortgage. I was looking for some serious trouble, so I did some research, went to a few trade shows, and talked to some of dad’s old contacts. Eventually, I stumbled upon a few, well, alternate products.”

“And you decided to sell them on the side, right?”

“Yeah.”

We both were quiet for a long while, drinking our beers in silence.

“Never imagined I’d be selling something like that. Freaking sex dolls.”

“Sex dolls?” I blurted out, instantly regretting it.

Martin, however, sighed, before he explained. He’d gotten in contact with someone from Eastern Europe, Slovakia. It was a company that specialized in anatomically correct sex dolls. They were perfect down to the tiniest detail: smooth soft skin, real hair, the whole deal.

“It’s disgusting how close they are to the real deal, but there are people out there looking for just that.”

I took another sip of my beer.

“You’re telling me there was a sex doll inside that box? Isn’t it way too small for that?”

Martin’s face turned dark.

“Well, they make them in all sizes, you know? There are people out there who are willing to pay quite a bit extra for… that.”

I knew what he was implying. Once more, I looked over at Martin. I thought I knew him, and yet… Then I imagined him going home to his wife, tugging his kids into bed, and I felt sick to my stomach.

“Well, I guess it’s time for me to-“

“Hey, sorry again. I should’ve told you about this whole damned thing right from the start. I know it’s sick. Fuck, it’s disgusting, but we’ve all got bills to pay, you know?”

His eyes rested on me, and he was looking at me pleadingly, almost waiting for me to say something, to ask an unsaid question, but then I noticed something else in his eyes, something darker, more sinister.

“Guess you’re right,” I blurted. “I have to go, though. Got almost another hour on the bus before I’m home.”

“Yeah, sure, night man.”

I gave him a nod, exited the car, and made my way to the bus station. With each step, I could feel Martin’s eyes digging into my back. I forced myself to walk as normally and calmly as I could, yet before long, I felt my steps speeding up. I’d waited for his car to drive off, for him to leave, but I heard nothing, and I knew he was still watching me.

When the bus finally arrived, I nearly leaped inside. I was anxious, scared, and had to clutch the seat in front of me to keep my hands from trembling. I should’ve been calm. Martin had explained everything, after all. It was messed up, sure, and probably illegal, but they were just dolls, right? He was my best friend, and I wanted to believe him. I wanted to believe him so badly. Yet there was one thing that kept coming to my mind: the image of what I had seen just before the man had thrown the trunk shut.

That small hand, those tiny fingers… if it was nothing but a doll, why the hell had they moved?

Cover Image
Loved the Story? Get updates on the full Hidden Truths release.
* indicates required

“Do You Want to Play Again?”

These words hovered in front of me, just a meter above the ground.

Below them were two more words. Yes. No.

I looked around, bewildered, but there was nothing else there. The only thing surrounding me was an endless, blazing white.

What was this? Where was I?

I read the question once more. Then out sheer instinct, not knowing why myself, I reached out and touched the word Yes.

An almost physical sensation made me jerk up in my bed.

Julie stirred next to me and opened her eyes.

“What is it?” she asked sleepily.

“Just some weird dream,” I mumbled.

My eyes wandered to the bedside clock. It was five in the morning and almost time to get up anyway.

I threw the covers off me, prompting another groan from Julie and headed to the bathroom.

I was already down in the kitchen, making breakfast when she entered. She still looked sleepy, eyes half-open, her hair a wild mess.

“Morning, babe,” I greeted her, put my arms around her and kissed her passionately.

“Ugh, I need coffee,” she mumbled, freeing herself from my embrace.

I couldn’t help but laugh. Julie wasn’t a morning person, never had been.

We’d been married for two years by now, but we’d been together forever. We’re one of those couples who grew up together. We started off as friends, then became best friends, and eventually lovers.

I guess we were always destined to be together. Star-crossed lovers, if you forgive me the kitschy expression.

Now I’d like to tell you that we were the perfect couple. One that never fights, and who’s every day is a dream come true. We weren’t. To be frank, I don’t think those couples actually exist. No, we were like every other couple out there. We had good days as well as bad days.

Today should be one of the latter.

As fights so often do, it started with the smallest of things.

“Dammit, James, where’s the milk?” Julie called out to me while frantically rummaging through the fridge.

“Shouldn’t there be some in the fridge?”

The words poured out of me, almost like a rehearsed line from some other fight we’d had before.

“No, there’s nothing. Didn’t you get any yesterday? I told you we were out!”

“Shit, I think I forgot, sorry babe, with the whole restructuring at work I must’ve-“

“Ugh, it’s always work with you these days. Every day you go on about that damn restructuring, god, I’m so sick of it!”

“Jesus, Julie, I’ve got enough on my mind already! Can’t you just give me a break?”

“You know what, James? How about I’ll do exactly that?”

With this, she stormed from the kitchen.

“Shit, babe, I didn’t mean,” I called after her, but she’d already returned to the bedroom, throwing the door behind her.

I sighed and rubbed my temples. Shit, this stupid company restructuring had been going on forever. It really started to take a toll on our relationship.

As I ate my breakfast in silence, I wondered how many times I’d done so these days.

Before I left for work, I tried to reconcile with Julie once more. The moment I set foot into the bedroom, though, I saw that she’d retreated under the covers.

I knew what it meant: Leave me alone, James.

I frowned, mumbled a goodbye and went to work.

Work was hell, like every other day at this damned company. Business process re-engineering they called it. It was supposed to make everything run faster, smoother, and easier. Yeah, right, all it did was to make my life hell.

It was almost eight in the evening when I was finally done with work. Between similarly unlucky office drones, I shuffled towards the bus station in front of the office complex.

The bus ride home was a blur. I was only half awake as the details of the city outside became nothing but a blazing, glistering mush of lights.

Once I was off the bus, I started down the street to our suburban home. Then I remembered the stupid fight with Julie this morning. All over some milk.

I was sure Julie had already forgotten about it. Hell, she’d probably gone and got some milk herself. Either way, I decided to take a small detour to the grocery store. If she’d bought milk already, at least we’d have something to laugh about. God knows, things like this were almost a common theme by now.

It was shortly after nine that I arrived at home.

The house was quiet. Had Julie already gone to bed? That wasn’t like her at all.

I unlocked the front door and stepped inside.

“Babe? I’m home! And guess what, I’ve got milk!”

I got no answer, but I heard something coming from the hallway, no the kitchen.

“Julie? Why do you have the lights turned off?”

There was a disgusting wet sound when I entered the kitchen, and my feet felt strangely warm and sticky. I hit the light switch in an instant.

That’s when time froze. The world around me stopped, and shocked gasp that escaped my throat went on for an eternity. There she was, my beautiful Julie, on the kitchen floor in a pool of her own blood.

The suffocating smell of it reached my nose. I felt its warm stickiness between my feet. I heard the milk jug I’d been carrying hitting the floor.

And I saw the figure dressed in all black that ran into me before it rushed out the front door.

When this long second finally came to an end, I was with her. I called out her name and looked for a reaction. But the only thing was the blood still gushing from the two deep stabs in her abdomen.

Why didn’t I leave work early? Why did I have to get that stupid milk? And why had we fought over something so goddamn meaningless?

With a shivering hand, I reached out for her. The moment I touched her, I felt an almost physical sensation that made me jerk upright.

Images invaded my mind, started pouring in like an endless torrent.

Images of this very same moment. Me standing over her lifeless body in the kitchen. Then other, different ones. Julie’s lifeless body in the passenger seat of my car after an accident. I saw her suffocating, burning to death, run over by a car. So many horrible visions of her death.

No, I realized, not visions, memories. There were dozens of them, hundreds.

It was an endless ocean consisting of nothing but pain and regret.

I fell to the ground into her coagulating blood and wept because my wife had died. Because my wife had died again.

It was only then that I felt the stinging pain on the left side of my body.

I should’ve been surprised about the knife stuck below my ribs, but I wasn’t. This was just how it had happened so many other times before.

I knew I should call for help. There was still time. I took out my phone, but then I remembered the dream from this morning. The blazing white, the question, the options, and I realized I’d had it so many times before, countless times.

And I realized too, that there was another option. Dying right here next to Julie.

Because then, I’d go back to that place and I’d get another chance of saving her.

Yet, I had to change things. There was something I hadn’t done before. My fingers moved over the phone almost by muscle memory as I typed this story out. It wasn’t there. I hadn’t done this before, had I?. Maybe, just maybe, this would help and make me remember when I’d wake up again.

My shirt was wet and sticky. My body was cold, and my vision was starting to get blurry.

But now, as my finger hovered over the post button, I can’t help but chuckle. Of course. Oh, what a farce this all is.

Lying here, dying next to Julie, I remembered. I’ve been posting this same exact story every single day.

It doesn’t matter anymore. It won’t be long. Soon I’ll be back there.

And I know, without a doubt, that I’ll pick the same option did so many times before.

Yes.

The Door

A day ago, reality took a nosedive, and something utterly inexplicable happened.

It was a most mundane thing that should change my life and that of my girlfriend Sue forever.

It was a door.

Not just any door, though, a door that appeared out of nowhere in our apartment.

I’d finished up work for the day and arrived back home to find Sue already back from her trip.

She’d been away for a few days, revisiting her home town and catching up with a couple of her old friends. After her father’s death, reminiscing about old times had become a big part of her life.

I was more than a bit surprised to find her back already, waiting for me in the living room.

“Babe, you’re back already! Holy shit, I missed you so much! Why didn’t you tell me anything, I’d have picked you up-“

“You’re really funny, you know that, Mike?”

“What do you mean?”

“How did you even have the time to do that?”

“Wait, what’s wrong? What are you talking about?”

“Oh come on, don’t play dumb with me,” she said, followed by a short, nervous laugh.

“Alright, Sue, what are you talking about?”

I could see how she eyed me carefully, looking for a reaction. When she didn’t get one, I saw how a mixture of fear and confusion contorted her face.

“That door! You put it there, right?”

“What door? I’ve got no idea what you’re talking-“

Without waiting for me to finish, she grabbed my arm and pulled me from the living room to the hallway.

That’s when I saw it. A wooden door on the wall of our hallway where no door should be. I blinked, closed my eyes, and looked again. It was still there.

“Come on, Mike, tell me you did this!”

Her eyes pleaded with me, wanting me to reveal that I’d put up a new door in our hallway while she was gone. Instead, I could do nothing but stare at the door.

“What the hell?” I finally brought out. Sue didn’t say a thing, she just kept staring at me.

“Seriously, I’ve got no idea what this is. How in the hell is something-“

“Mike, please,” she cut me off, “tell me you did this for whatever stupid reason!”

I shook my head. “No, that’s the first time I’ve seen this thing myself. It wasn’t here when I left for work this morning.”

We both turned to stare at the damned thing. It’s strange how something as mundane and dull as a plain wooden door can send pangs of fear and disbelief through your body.

After what felt like long minutes, I started down the hallway. It looked like any other door in our apartment. There was nothing strange about it. No ornate engravings, no rich details, no words of warning, nothing. Well, apart from the fact that it came out of freaking nowhere, that is.

Once I stood in front of it, I tapped against it with my finger. It felt real enough.

When I reached for the handle, Sue pulled my arm back in an instant.

Her eyes were wide with fear. “Don’t you dare, Mike!” she exclaimed. “We’ve got no idea what this is or where it came from, and you’re just going to open it like that?!”

I shrugged. “Well, shouldn’t it lead to Daren’s place? I mean, his apartment is on the other side of this wall, so…” I trailed off.

Sue’s eyes grew wide. “You think HE did this? Why? And I mean, how?”

I shrugged and made my way to the front door.

Daren was our next-door neighbor. He was friendly enough, but the guy was always hooked on whatever drug he could afford with his measly welfare money.

I had to ring his doorbell a full three times before he opened up.

I was greeted by an unwashed, filthy haired young man who stared at me with empty eyes for a few seconds. Then his bloodshot eyes grew wide when he recognized who I was.

“Yo, Mike, what’s up?”

“Hey, Daren, sorry to bother you, but did you notice anything strange at your place?”

Another few seconds of silence followed in which Daren seemed to think hard what the words ‘anything strange’ could mean.

“Like what, dude?”

“To be honest, I don’t even know how to explain,” I answered.

A minute later, Daren stood right next to me in the middle of the hallway. Sue gave me an annoyed look for dragging Daren into our apartment.

“Yo, so what’s this about?”

“That door! You see it, right?”

“Eh, yeah, a door, what about it?”

I explained to him what was going on, and after the third time, he seemed to finally grasp the situation.

“Yo, and you seriously have no clue where it came from?”

“None at all.”

“Shouldn’t it lead to your apartment?” Sue asked, annoyed.

For a moment, Daren stared at her blankly before he shrugged.

“Yeah, guess, you want me to check?”

Sue gave him a look of frustration that Daren somehow interpreted as a yes and made his way back to his place.

He wasn’t gone for long when we suddenly heard a low thumping from somewhere behind the door. It was soon followed by a quiet voice calling out to us. Sue cringed back in an instant and rushed from the hallway.

A minute later, Daren shuffled back into our place.

“Yo, you guys heard that?”

“Wait, that was YOU?” Sue demanded.

“Well, duh, who else would it have been?”

“What!? I thought-“

“Daren,” I cut off Sue’s outburst, “was there a door on your wall too?”

“What door? Oh, yeah. No door at all, just a wall.”

“It sounded so distant, you sure you hit the right wall? Maybe you went into the wrong room or something!”

For a moment, Daren thought about what Sue had said, then his face turned sour.

“You think I’m too stupid to figure out the right wall?”

“No, shit, man, that’s not what she meant,” I spoke up. “It’s just… this is all too weird.”

He shrugged, then his face lit up. “You wanna take a peek to see what’s behind?”

“No,” Sue exclaimed right away, crossing her arms in front of her body.

Sue’s eyes rested on me. She was so scared, basically begging me to agree with her. I sighed.

“Sorry, Sue, but maybe it’s just a plain old door with nothing but bricks and mortar behind.”

“Mike, you can’t be serious! How in the hell-“

“Yes, Sue, I am serious. Fuck, I’m as worried and scared as you are, but, I don’t know, maybe it’s a prank or something?”

“And by who? The renting company? Some crazed carpenter going around and installing random doors?”

I almost laughed, but then I saw how angry she was.

“Sorry, babe, but what do you want us to do? Put a closet or a curtain in front of it and pretend it doesn’t exist?”

“Yeah, maybe we should do exactly that, Mike! We don’t know what this is or… what might be behind!”

“It’s a damned door, so it should lead to a room, right?”

Sue just stared at Daren.

“You know Daren, why don’t you-“

Before she could even finish her sentence, I was fed up with this whole argument. I reached out for the door handle.

I took a deep breath, put down the handle, and carefully pulled the door open.

Sue shrieked up in surprise. Daren just stood there, staring at nothing.

For a moment, I expected something to happen. I didn’t know what, but I was prepared for almost anything.

Instead, nothing happened. What lay behind was an utterly ordinary room. It was small, square-shaped, and consisted of nothing but white walls and a white, wooden floor. Other than that, it was completely empty, no furniture and no evil entities.

How was there a room here? I should look right into Daren’s apartment, but this room here shouldn’t possibly exist. There was no way.

“You see this, too, right, Daren?” I asked.

“Yeah, sure, man, whatever,” Daren mumbled.

“It’s empty!” I called out to Sue.

“That’s great, no can you please shut it again?”

For a moment, I considered stepping inside, but then I closed it. Sue was right, this was not normal at all. A door on a wall was one thing, even if it came out of nowhere. A room that couldn’t physically exist; however, that was a whole different story.

“Well then,” I started turning to Daren.

For a moment, he didn’t react. Then he seemed to remember that he wasn’t in his own apartment, mumbled a “Goodbye,” and left.

The moment he’d left our apartment, Sue closed the door behind him.

It should’ve been at this point that we’d left the apartment. Hell, we should’ve left the moment we’d found that freaking door.

Yet, we didn’t. Instead, I did precisely what Sue had told me. I pushed a closet in front of it and pretended it didn’t exist.

I don’t know how we could’ve stayed so calm. I guess this whole situation was too absurd, too outlandish for our brains to comprehend. I mean, how could a door be dangerous?

So instead of leaving like we should’ve, we retreated to the living room. We followed our brains’ decision that everything was normal, put on a Netflix movie, and settled down on the couch.

Still, neither of us was able to focus on what was happening in the movie. We didn’t say much, our laughs were fake and hollow, and much too often, we glared anxiously at the door to the hallway.

Once the first movie was over, we continued with whichever Netflix suggest we should watch next. We’d barely started it when I noticed Sue dozing off next to me. It wasn’t long before I felt tired as well.

The movie was at the halfway mark when Sue jerked up. Her eyes were wide, her face a mask of terror.

“Sue? What’s up? Bad dreams?”

I got no answer. Instead, Sue rushed towards the hallway. A moment later, she was gone.

“Sue?” I called after her.

The moment I’d made it to the door, I heard the sound of something heavy being moved. It was Sue, pushing aside the closet I’d placed in front of the strange door.

A second later, she ripped it open. She gasped in shock and put her hands to her mouth.

“Sue, what are you doing? What’s going on?”

She slowly turned towards me. Her eyes were wide open, her hands were still in front of her face, frozen in shock. Tears were running down her cheeks.

“Babe, what-“

“It’s dad,” she said matter-of-factly. “He’s here. I heard him call out to me and, my god, Mike, he’s right here!”

I stared at her face and the open door next to her in bewilderment. I couldn’t comprehend what was going on. The hair on my arms stood up, and a strange feeling took hold of me. No, this was wrong, this was not normal, it was dangerous, a voice screamed at me from inside my head.

In a few quick steps, I closed the distance between us and pulled her from the door. It fell shut the moment Sue let go of the handle, and for a moment, a profound misery flooded her face.

“No, dad’s,” she said, but broke up when she recognized me.

“Mike, how’s any of this even possible?”

That was it. I had no clue what had happened, but this was enough. I got my wallet, got my keys, and told Sue we had to get the hell out of that place. Sue nodded weakly, with the tears were still streaming down her cheeks.

“I swear it, he was there, and he was alive! Inside that room!” Sue explained to me once more.

I didn’t say a thing. I didn’t know what I could even say to anything like that.

It was impossible, completely, and utterly absurd, but so was a door appearing out of nowhere. My hands were clutching on to the steering wheel as I drove on in silence.

“Why don’t you say anything!?” Sue screamed at me.

“And what do you want me to say?!”

At that, Sue was quiet. Staring out the window until we pulled up at a hotel not too far from our apartment.

I explained to the young receptionist that we needed a room for the night. Within minutes Sue and I ended up in a hotel room that was much too small and much too expensive.

Sue was still not really there. I went over to her and kissed her.

“Sue, I’m sorry, but whatever it was, it’s not real. Your father’s dead. There’s no way he could’ve been in that room. Whoever, or whatever it was-“

“And how can you be so sure? How do you know it wasn’t him?”

She started crying again, her small body quivering in my arms.

“Dammit Mike, I know, I know, but, but seeing him again, hearing his voice, I just wanted to talk to him, to tell him how much I loved him and-“

“I know, Sue, I know,” I held on to her as she sobbed quietly.

Sue and her father had been close, very close. Her mother had died young when Sue was still a little girl. Her father was heartbroken, of course, but he gave his all to take care of his daughter. Sue loved the man more than anything.

Her father never told her about the cancer. Sue and I had recently moved into the city, starting our own life together. I think the old man didn’t want his daughter to worry.

She only found out months later, when she was informed about his death.

Sue broke down that day. There was pain, there was regret and worst of all, she never got to tell him how much she loved him.

That day part of her soul irrevocably broke. A wound so deep, it can never be truly healed.

And whatever was in that damned room, whatever she’d seen tonight had torn at it once more, and now it was festering again.

As I held on to her, I hated myself for the part I’d played in all this. If only we’d left the place earlier.

It was an hour before Sue finally settled down and fell asleep. As she lay there, quietly breathing, cradled in my arms, I too drifted off to sleep.

When morning came, I was alone in bed.

I called her name, checked the bathroom, but there was no trace of her.

A creeping panic slowly crawled into my mind. Oh god, Sue, don’t tell me you went back!

Panic turned to realization when I saw that my car keys were missing.

I never knew what a mixture of adrenaline and panic can do to your body. The hotel wasn’t far from our apartment, but it would still take a good twenty minutes on foot to get back there.

I made it in half of that. The whole time I had my phone in my hand, calling Sue over and over again. I screamed at the ringing phone, screamed at the voicemail that answered, but I never reached her.

The moment I made it back to our apartment, I was greeted by nothing but deep and utter silence. You never notice just how quiet a place can actually be when you never truly listen.

“Sue?” I called out once more, her name reverberating through the empty apartment.

The only answer I got was the same, deep silence. I went from one room to the next, but she was nowhere to be seen.

Finally, I tried her phone once more. Her happy ring tone cut through the silence, banishing it.

For me, however, there was nothing happy about it because the place I found her phone was right in front of that disgustingly mundane, wooden door.

For a moment, I was frozen in disbelief and terror. Then I ripped open that damned door prepared to barge into whatever room lay behind.

I almost jumped forward and crashed straight into a wall made of nothing but brick and mortar.

It was at this point that I lost it. I screamed until my throat was sore. I beat and clawed at the wall until my fists were swollen, and my fingers were an almost useless, bloody mess.

Finally, my legs gave way, and I fell to my knees as nothing but a shaking, sobbing mess. I don’t know how long I sat there.

I think Daren was at my door at one point, asking what the hell was wrong, but I didn’t react.

By now, it’s already evening. Not even a day has passed since that door appeared in our apartment, but everything has changed.

I’m still sitting in front of the door. I’ve opened countless times, but there’s nothing behind it.

Not too long ago, I started typing this all out. It’s not because I have to, not because I hope for answers.

No, it’s to kill time until that room will appear once more, and I can see Sue again.

I Catfish a Different Girl Each Night

“You fucking creep!” she screamed.

I just sat there, staring at the glass of water in front of me. I was used to this type of thing by now. Things always ended up like this anyway.

“Ugh, you know how freaking long it will take me to get back home?”

Yes.

“Not even gonna say anything? You play it all nice and smooth with that fake picture of yours, saying you’re going to meet up with me here and now you don’t even have the balls to speak up? You pathetic loser!”

She even grinned for a moment as she threw the insult at me.

Another customer of the small dinner got up. He was an older man. His attire screamed blue-collar.

“Now, now, young lady, what’s going on here?”

“That freak over there pretended to be someone else! He called me all the way out here on a date and, god! How’d I be so stupid?”

His eyes wandered from her to me. They weren’t compassionate anymore, no, now they showed nothing but contempt.

“Well young man, you’ve got some explaining to do!”

I still stared at the glass of water. My throat felt like it was clenched shut.

“Hey, I’m talking to you!” he yelled at me.

By now, the whole place stared at the awkward scene with me right in the center.

“I didn’t,” I started but broke up.

“Too embarrassed to even speak, eh?”

Once more, I couldn’t find the words.

“Yes, sorry mom, it’s gonna be at least another hour. No, I’m fine, just some weirdo. No, I didn’t see Anna today. What? No, it’s alright, I’ll just take the train. Yes, I’m on my way.”

I listened to each of her words and smiled. At least an hour, good, I thought.

“Now what are you smiling about, boy?”

The blue-collar man still didn’t let off. Finally, I pushed myself past him, and awkwardly made my way to the door.

“What was that all about?” I heard a young woman whisper to her friend.

“Guess he catfished her or something?”

“Ewww, that’s so creepy!”

I didn’t listen to their words. They didn’t know a damned thing!


‘Why did you hurt mommy?’

‘What? The hell are you talking about pipsqueak?’

‘I saw it, you hit her, and she was crying.’

‘How the hell would you see something like that?’

I didn’t even see his slap coming. He stared down at me, his eyes furious.

‘Linda, did you tell the boy?’

‘N-no, of course not, why’d I ever-‘

‘Ugh, shut up, bitch!’

I still lay on the floor, my face hot with pain. I listened as dad got up and made his way to the kitchen.


I jerked away in my seat. The old lady opposite me looked over before she mumbled something to herself.

Why’d I remembered something like that now, dammit? Now where am I, I wondered? As I stared outside and read the name of the station, I sighed. It would still be another half hour before I’d be home. I checked the time on my phone again and saw that it was already eleven in the evening. Shit, and I got an early shift tomorrow.

Work was hard that day. I’d barely gotten five hours of sleep, and it was the busiest time of the year. I slumped through the warehouse, sorting shelves and repackaging products with my eyes only half-open.

“Hey, yeah you! There’s some trash over here with your name on it!” one of my older coworkers called out to me.

Laughter from a few of my other colleagues erupted.

I sighed, and without making eye contact, I stumbled to where he was pointing. It really sucked to be the new guy on the job. As I was busy cleaning up the mess that he’d most likely caused by him, I heard them talk behind my back.

“The hell’s wrong with him? Does he ever say a word?” one of them asked in a hushed voice.

“Dunno, think he’s mentally challenged or something,” another voice chimed in.

“Just leave the boy be,” a third one added.

“Why are you so concerned about him?”

“Just don’t want him to snap and shot the place up.”

“Hah, as if that pussy’d be ever able to pull something like that!”

Laughter erupted again. You know, I can hear every single word you’re saying, I thought. Shit, who am I kidding, I bet they knew, too.

After six more hours, my shift finally ended. The bus ride from work took me about half an hour. Day after day, I spent it glued to the screen of my phone.

I opened up the first of the many dating apps I’d installed. I swiped through the countless girls one by one, staring at their pictures. Long hair, short hair, happy smile, confident smile, group of girls, on and on it went.

It took me about five minutes to find one. She was pretty, long blond hair and had a shy, somewhat playful smile.

In a moment I opened the chat window and threw her one of the many one-liners I knew by heart now.

I was already home when she finally replied. The new picture I’d chosen worked wonders. For half an hour, we were joined in mindless chit-chat before I finally asked her if she had plans for the evening.

She was a bit reluctant to answer. It was always the same. I sent her a few more of my rehearsed lines, boosting her confidence, soft-soaping her and pushing more lies down her throat. She was an easy one, it took me no more than a few minutes to get her to agree to the date. I fell back on my bed as relief flooded my face.

I checked the phone once more. It was still a few hours before I’d got to go. Guess I’ll set the alarm and take a nap. Wasn’t like I had to dress up or prepare for the date.


Mom was cryingin the other room while dad’s fist came down on my face once more. Again and again, until he stopped after half a dozen times, panting.

‘That should teach you to not spout those damned lies anymore!’ he screamed at me.

‘But I saw it again,’ I mumbled in a low voice.

‘What was that you little shit?’

I curled up into a ball and said nothing.

‘Thought so.’

Mom was still crying.


I woke up. Why were my dreams always about him? Goddamnit!

On my way to the bus, I thought about dad.

Dad hadn’t always been an asshole. When I was a little kid, he’d genuinely been the best. Then he started to drink. When I found out he was beating mom, I became a target as well.

For years the abuse went on until I learned to be smart enough to keep quiet. No, talking about it wasn’t helping anyone.

When I became a teenager, and after mom’s death, dad and I became close again. It was by necessity if anything. As a teenager, I couldn’t just move out.

Age hadn’t been kind to him, neither had the booze. On the old pictures, he was quite good looking, hell even handsome.

Now, pushing forty, he looked much older. His head was pale, his skin pudgy and grey and his stomach had developed into a bulging beer belly. Whatever he wore, it seemed to always tear at the fabric, trying to free itself.

“See her over there? Now that’s my type of woman, alright,” he said to me, pointing at someone ahead of me.

I stared at the young blond ahead of us. Small frame, a bit too timid and awkward. As I watched her, I saw the bruises on her arms, saw her shift slightly with her feet. I could even see the blue bruises on her hips. Exactly like mom, I thought. Always ending up in an abusive relationship, always another drunk bastard beating her.

“Well hello there young lady, need any help with those bags?” dad approached her and reached out a slimy hand.

The woman stared at him, and I saw her face contort by a mixture of surprise and disgust.

“No, I’m fine,” she mumbled in a low voice.

“Now come on, don’t be like that, babe, why don’t you just let me help you with those, hm?”

He asked, trying to take one of the bags from her. As he did, I saw him put his slimy hand on her back.

“It’s alright, I’m-“

“Now, now, modesty won’t do you any good,” he continued, and I saw his hand move downward.

“Dad!” I called out to him, putting my hand on his shoulder. “It’s late, let’s go home, I’m starving.”

In a moment, the lady tore her bag free from him and hurried down the road as far as she could.

“Damnit, what the hell are you doing, idiot!?”

Another slap in the face.

“Man, I was so close to getting some,” he cursed.

He was always this way. Not wasting any chance, trying to get his way with women. His behavior rude, lecherous and at times downright violent.

I didn’t cry when they buried him in an early grave a few years later.

Once I entered the bus, I had another half-hour ahead of me. I sent my newest date another message. I didn’t like emoticons, hell, I detested them, yet I made sure to sprinkle my messages with them. Somehow, people seemed to enjoy them.

That day I’d chosen a small bar. I’d told her it was a secret tip, but all I cared about was the distance.

The moment I arrived, I chose a seat by the window. I always arrived early, to keep watch and see if they actually came. Bus after bus arrived and finally a bouncy, beaming blond exited. She looked around for a moment before she typed something on her phone. Only a second later mine vibrated.

“I’m here, you already there?’

‘Yeah, window seat, back row!’

I saw her enter, saw her look around. The place was half empty. Her eyes noticed me. At first, she looked away, but then her eyes focused on me again.

‘I don’t see you.’

‘Yes, you do.’

I lifted my face and gave her an awkward smile before I looked away again.

It wasn’t long before I heard the click-clack sound of her heels as she approached me. When I looked up again, the smile on her face had vanished.

“Who are you?”

“I’m Damien,” I mumbled.

“What the hell? No, that can’t be! Your picture, I mean,” she toyed around with her phone, and after a short while, she held it to my face. “That’s not you, is it?”

I said nothing. Instead, I kept my head low. The few other guests were already staring at me.

“Hey! Say something! Is this a freaking joke?”

The rest of the evening played out like the last one. As I stumbled out of the bar, I looked at her picture once more and smiled. In my mind, I saw her sitting on the bus, fuming, hurrying home and falling asleep, still angry about the whole thing. I smiled again.

Work was slow the next day, allowing me to steal away every once in a while. For a few minutes at a time, I scanned profiles.

I noticed her instantly. Short brown hair, cheeky smile, tank top.

We hit things off well enough, but she was a tough one. She was cheeky alright, calling out my lines and bluffs one after another.

Still, the picture I used did the trick, and she finally agreed to meet up with me.

The rest of the shift passed quietly. A few of my coworkers noticed my happy expression, which prompted a few more insults. I couldn’t care less.

Once I arrived at the small restaurant I’d chosen, I decided on a window seat once again. The waiter came again and again, and by the third time, he started to get pushy. In a low voice, I ordered a drink.

I scanned the street, but there was still nothing. I opened my phone and sent her yet another quick message.

‘Hey, where are you?’

‘Sorry Romeo, went out with a few friends today.’

I stared at my phone with a deep frown. Shit, she wasn’t coming, was she? I cursed to myself.

‘Where are you going?’ I asked her.

‘Timbers! It’s great, why don’t you come by later?’

I opened Google Maps in a moment. Timbers, a bar in the freaking center of town.

“Are you ready to order yet,” the waiter asked in a strained voice, “sir?”

“Fuck,” I cursed once more. It was going to be one of ‘those’ nights.

“Sir, if you don’t plan on ordering anything, then-“

Without even looking at him, I got up and left. Once I stood in the open street, I opened the app once more, staring at her picture.

I was antsy when I entered the bus again. I couldn’t let it end like that. This was NOT how things were supposed to go!

It took the bus almost half an hour before it made it to the city center. The whole time I was nervous, shifting in my seat. Every once in a while, I stared at her picture, taking in as much as I could about her.

Before the bus had even rumbled to a stop, I was at the door, hitting the stop button.

Now where the hell is it?

I hurried down the street into the direction Google Maps told me, but there were too many damned clubs and bars around.

Then I saw it. The bright neon sign of the small bar named Timbers was only a hundred meters ahead of me.

I was in a minute later. The bouncer eyed me for a moment before he shrugged. My eyes wandered over the guests. Shit, it was way too damn late already. Would she even still be here? To make things worse, the place was packed! I shuffled through the guests and earned a few angry stares from people, but I went on.

Finally, my eyes grew wide. Short brown hair, cheeky smile, and a tank top like the one in the picture. When I saw the guy sitting next to her, his arm around her shoulder, I frowned.

I pushed my way back to the bar and ordered myself the cheapest cocktail they had. Then I made my way back towards them. I watched him as he whispered in her ear. I saw how he rubbed her upper arm and inched in closer. She giggled, yet when he tried to kiss her, she turned away and whispered something in his ear. She was cheeky. The guy however grinned, and when I saw that, rage exploded in my mind.

That smile, that damned smile. That’s when I knew.

I stumbled forward, shakily and nervous, yet I didn’t take my eyes off the guy. I’d almost reached them when I ran straight into a buff, tall guy.

“Hey, watch out where you’re going!” he yelled at me and pushed me aside.

I stumbled forward and crashed right into the guy sitting next to the short-haired girl.

My hand collided with his face, and I spilled my drink all over his cloth.

Both of them screamed up in surprise. In a moment she retreated to the bench’s end to not be drenched by the rest of the drink.

I pushed myself upwards and mumbled an excuse. Before I’d so much as finished it, the guy’s fist hit me square in the face. There was an explosion of pain, and I could taste blood in my mouth.

“The fuck are you doing you goddamn freak!”

Once more he hit me in the face, then a third time. When I went down, he didn’t leave off, kicking me again and again as he screamed obscenities at me.

“I’m going to fucking kill you, you piece of shit!”

I grinned up at him. He tried to kick me one more time, but right at that moment one of the bouncers tackled the guy.

Another guest was there, kneeling by my side.

“Hey, are you alright? You want me to call an ambulance?”

I shook my head, and then, with a tremendous effort, I tried to get up. Then heavy hands heaved me upwards, and I found myself face to face with the buff guy from before.

“Shit, man, sorry about that,” he said clearly embarrassed about shoving me.

“Didn’t know that guy was a freaking psycho!” he said and pointed at the guy taken away by security.

Soon after the barkeeper approached me, asking if he wanted me to call the police. I nodded.

It didn’t take them long to arrive, and with the help of the buff guy and the bouncers, we gave them a detailed description of the man.

“You need us to take you to a hospital, sir?” one of the officers offered.

I shook my head. “No,” I mumbled, “I’ll be fine.”

Once they were gone, I thanked the security and buff guy. He grinned at me.

“Tell you what, if you’d ruined my date, I might have kicked your ass too.”

I gave him a weak smile. “Yeah, guess she was.” I looked around for a moment.

“She’s gone, booked it the instant that guy went all out on you! Looked mighty scared.”

I nodded, thanked the guy once more, and left the bar behind.

On my way home, I took out my phone once more to look at her picture yet again. For the first time the whole evening, I was able to relax.

I could see her sitting in a taxi on her way home before she went to bed.

Gone were the images of her bloodied and beaten body. Gone was that guys grinning face as he stood above her.

The premonition had changed.

Even though it hurt like hell, I smiled.

She was saved.

The Disappearance of Little Marcus

Old lady in her early sixties searching for her missing son.

That’s what the subject of the email said that arrived in my inbox a couple weeks ago.

It was a job offer sent by the nurse of the said old lady. Her contact data was included.

I’d been working as a private detective for a year and a half by now. Yet I’m still surprised when someone actually contacts me.

To tell you the truth, the job’s not as fancy as it sounds. In movies private detectives are always portrayed as desperate outcasts, going after the cases the police won’t or can’t touch for some reason. Reality though is different and much more mundane. At least half the cases I handle are about missing pets. The rest usually involves people suspecting being cheated on by their significant other. I rarely get any serious work.

As you can imagine, I’m always strapped for money.

Of the few real cases I get, missing person cases are by far my least favorite. You never know if you’ll actually find out anything. Sometimes a missing person is long dead, sometimes they’ve got a reason for hiding from their family, and in other cases, you come up with a big, fat zero. If any of these is the case, it’s always a hassle to get the client to pay up.

When I looked at my empty time table, and of course, my similarly empty bank account, I knew I couldn’t be picky.

I gave the nurse, Stephanie, a call, told her I’d accept the case and arranged for a visit.

It was a few days later that I made the long, three hour trip to the old lady’s distant home. I arrived in front of a huge, old mansion in the middle of nowhere. Looking at the place and thinking about my shitty two-room apartment, I couldn’t help but be jealous.

After I’d rang the bell, Stephane, a friendly, middle-aged nurse greeted me.

“Oh, it’s so nice to finally meet you, mister…”

Her gaze turned upwards, and she furrowed her brow, obviously trying hard to remember my name.

“Siebert,” I helped her out smiling.

“Oh dear, I’m so sorry, I don’t know how-“

“It’s fine, it’s fine. So where’s the old lady?”

“Mrs. Annelies isn’t doing well, unfortunately,” she said as she led me down a long, luxurious hallway.

She opened the door to our right and to my surprise, led me into a small study. Stephanie was quiet for a moment before she sighed audibly.

“To be honest with you, Mister Siebert, I took the liberty of offering you this job before consulting Mrs. Annelies.”

I gave her a questioning look.

“Her son’s disappearance has never been easy on Mrs. Annelies. As the years, no the decades passed, her condition has worsened. By now, she’s almost catatonic,” the nurse said shaking her head.

“We can pay her a visit, but I doubt she’d be in any condition to even talk to you.”

I really didn’t know what to say. I already had a bad feeling about the case as I followed Stephanie to another room. This one was huge and richly furnished as well. Paintings lined the walls, but my attention soon wandered to the old lady at the end of the room. She sat in an expensive arm chair. She didn’t look up when we entered. Instead, her eyes were almost entirely empty as she stared out of one of the mansion’s huge windows.

“Mrs. Annelies?” Stephanie called out, but the old lady gave no sign of hearing her.

While I waited near the door, the nurse approached the old lady. Stephanie whispered something into her ear, but there was no reaction at all. For a moment, the old woman’s head moved, and her tiny, dark eyes focused on me. When our gazes met a strange feeling washed over me. For a few seconds, she stared at me before her head turned back towards the window. She said nothing at all.

Stephanie returned to my side after a few more moments and led me back to the study.

“I’m sorry, Mrs. Annelies has given up hope long ago and,” she broke off shaking her head in pity.”

“Excuse me, Stephanie, but then why this whole investigation?”

“Oh, it’s simple, really. I’ve worked for Mrs. Annelies for the better part of a decade now. She might not talk much anymore, but she’s never mistreated me. You wouldn’t know, but she’s such a good person. When the doctors told me she doesn’t have much longer, I thought I’d be able to give back to her. I know the chances are slim, but maybe her son’s out there. If she could at least see him once, I think it would help her make peace.”

I gave her a weak smile and nodded.

“Now then,” Stephanie started as she picked up a small stack of old photographs.

“That’s her little boy, Marcus,” she started and handed them to me.

I frowned when I saw them. The boy in the picture was young, almost a toddler, no older than three. When I looked back to Stephanie, she looked at me expectantly, but then spoke again.

“He went missing on the seventh of April in 1988.”

“I tried talking to Mrs. Annelies, but it wasn’t much use,” she went on. “This folder here though is where she gathered all her private research over the years. It contains anything she thought could be related to little Marcus’ disappearance. I’m not sure how helpful it will be, but here you go.”

With that, she pushed the folder towards me. I had a quick look at the contents. There were a birth certificate, some old police reports and an almost infinite number of newspaper clippings.

“Thank you, I’ll see what I can do,” I told her as I picked up the folder.

“So, about the payment, I usually get paid by-“

“Oh, don’t worry about that, Mr. Siebert. I already arranged for you to be paid in full.”

I gave her a surprised look but bit my tongue to not speak up. Clients usually paid once a contract was fulfilled, but damn I could really use the money.

“Thank you, I’ll try my best to find out what happened to the boy,” I finally said, even though I was less than enthusiastic about the whole case.

“You can call me any time,” Stephanie said as she led me to the front door. “Or send me one of those emails you young people use these days,” she added laughing.

Back in the car, I thought about the few bits of information I’d gotten so far. That little boy went missing more than thirty years ago. My eyes wandered to the massive folder on my passenger seat. Staring at it, I couldn’t help but frown. I had quite the night ahead of me.

Once I was home it was already early in the evening. I considered having myself something delivered, but then I settled for a quick microwave dinner.

Afterward, I made myself a terribly strong cup of coffee and started to go through the folder of documents.

The birth certificate told me the boy was born in 1985, the same year as me. He’d be in his mid-thirties by now, of Caucasian ethnicity, would have blue eyes and most likely brown or blond hair. Great, I told myself, that description fits pretty much half the guys my age. Hell, even I had blue eyes and dark blond hair.

The first thing I did was to check Social Media. I knew it was most likely futile. There’d been a case that would’ve proven much easier if I’d started with a Facebook search. So by now, it had become pretty much a routine to see if I could find anything on there. Of course, there was nothing, exactly like I’d anticipated.

After Facebook, I checked a few other, public databases. I searched for both the birth date of the child as well as his name. There was nothing again.

It was long past midnight when I finally finished going through all the documents. My hint had proven to be correct, most of it wasn’t helpful at all. It only painted a terribly desperate and sad picture of old Mrs. Annelies.

As I lay in bed, I started to wonder what the boy’s life would be like today. If I ever found him, would he even remember his real mother?

I was adopted myself, and I remembered nothing of my biological parents.

Mom and dad had told me about being adopted when I was still a child. I always respected them deeply for it. Yet I often wondered who my real parents were, at least as a child. I wasn’t unhappy, but my parents and I were so different. They were both driven people, sometimes a bit too driven. Mom had been a toughened businesswoman in her time. Dad had worked his way up to become the chief of the local police station before retiring. Compared to them, I always felt like a bit of a loser.

Would little Marcus even want to get in contact with a woman he’d not even remember? Or was he the type who’d ignore the whole thing?

As memories returned to me, I was reminded that I was the latter type. Years ago, when I was attending university for a few semesters, I’d found a letter in my mailbox. It was supposedly written by my biological mother. It said she wanted to get in contact with me. For days I was an emotional mess, trying to figure out what I should do. Eventually, the letter ended up in the trash. I told myself it was better that way, but even now, I know that I simply wasn’t man enough. For a while, the letters kept coming, but I didn’t even open them anymore.

I wondered how little Marcus would react if he’d get those same letters. How’d he handle it? Would he meet his mother, or would he discard them like I did?

The next day I went on with my work. It was time to get serious about this.

I had a look at the documents again and read through the few that I thought might be helpful. There was that first police report Mrs. Annelies had filed after the child’s disappearance. As much as I searched the folder, I couldn’t find any details about it, or if anything had ever come of it.

Eventually, I decided to pay the station a visit. Quite a few people there knew me. I was the son of the former chief of police, of course, but there was also my failed attempt at joining the force a few years ago. Well, let’s just say I’d become a regular at the station.

It didn’t take long before I found an old acquaintance, Michael, who was happy to help me out.

“New case, Daniel?” he asked when I handed him the copy of the police report.

I nodded. “Going to be a tough one.”

He gave me a questioning look, but when I pointed at the data of the report, I could see his face change to a deep frown.

“1988,” he said, “damn. You think you’re going to find anything?”

I shrugged. “No clue, but that’s why I’m here.”

“Well, I’ll see what I can find.”

With that, he took the report from my hands and went over to his computer.

A few minutes later, he printed a few pages and walked over to me again.

“You really got yourself quite the case,” he said, scratching his head as he handed them to me.

“What do you mean?”

“Just read it, seems you got yourself involved in an old kidnapping.”

Without another word, I started reading the pages he’d printed.

The kidnapping took place on a Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Annelies had picked up her son at a kindergarten in a small town near her mansion. On the way back, a car had stopped next to them in a small street. Before Mrs. Annelies could react, someone jumped out, dragged the boy inside, and drove off.

I looked up and stared at Michael. He gave me a ‘told you so’ look. I cursed to myself. There’d been no mentioning of a kidnapping or anything like it. Why the hell had Stephanie not told me about that? This changed fucking everything! As I read on I learned that the description of the kidnapper was vague at best: Strong, tall, most likely male. That was all. The whole thing had been over in a moment, and there’d been no witnesses at all. Even worse, the man had been wearing a disguise, so she hadn’t even seen his face.

I read on and learned that the car she’d described had been identified soon after. As it turned out though, the vehicle had been reported stolen a few days prior.

One thing was obvious, I thought, as I reread the file. This thing had definitely been planned. A small street, a disguise, and a stolen vehicle. No, this was no random kidnapping. The question was, why? An obvious reason that came to my mind right away was money.

I read the file once again, searching for any mention of a ransom note. There was none, however.

Finally, I thanked Michael and went on my way with the files.

Once I was back in my car, I gave Stephanie a call. She was as friendly as always. After a quick greeting, I cut right to the chase.

“Why didn’t you mention the boy was kidnapped?”

“Kidnapped?” the woman asked.

“Yeah, little Marcus didn’t disappear, he was kidnapped!”

“Goodness no,” she said surprised. “I had no idea. Mrs. Annelies’ notes said nothing about any of that, are you sure?”

“I was just at the station. I got the whole damn report right in front of me. There’s no doubt. So, Stephanie, do you know if Mrs. Annelies and her husband had any enemies?”

She gasped, and for a moment, she was quiet. When she spoke again there was an audible concern in her voice and something else… was it apprehension?

“What do you mean Mister Siebert? I mean, Mrs. Annelies has a lot of money, so I’m sure lots of people are jealous of her, but I’ve never heard that anyone… goodness, I mean I’ve only worked here for a decade or so. I wasn’t around when that terrible thing happened to Mr. James and-“

“Wait, what terrible thing?” I cut her off.

“Oh, maybe I should’ve told you before, but I didn’t think it was important so-“

“What are you talking about Stephanie? Out with it!”

“There was an accident. I think you’ve read that her husband, Mr. James, died years ago, right?”

I had indeed read it, but I never gave it much thought. People sometimes died. I guessed he must’ve been sick. What she told me next, however, changed everything.

“It’s such a terrible story. Mr. James was out for a walk and run over by a car. He only died a year or so after little Marcus was born. Worse even, it was a case of hit-and-run, and they never identified the driver. It’s just terrible…”

“Hold on, are you serious? You never thought any of this might be important or related to the boys kidnapping!?”

“I didn’t know about the kidnapping, Mister Siebert, so I never thought, my god if I-“

She broke off, and I could hear her breathing heavily.

After a few more moments, my anger at the poor woman subsided. She was right, how could she have guessed that any of this was related.

“No, Stephanie, I’m sorry. You couldn’t have known. But, ehm, I got to hang up, alright? I’ve got a whole lot of things to think about. I’ll call you again, in case I got any news or need anything.”

She gave a weak reply and wished me good luck with the investigation before she hung up.

Sitting in my car, I was rubbing my temples. This whole case was getting stranger and stranger. Was this even something I should get myself involved in further? Shit, what was I getting into, I cursed.

Once more I returned to the station. Michael wasn’t exactly psyched to see me again so soon, yet he still handed me the report of Mr. James’ accident. When I read it, I learned another important detail.

They had indeed identified the owner of the hit-and-run vehicle. It was revealed yet again though, that the car had been stolen a few days before the accident.

I started at the paper for a long while. Another stolen car. This was no mere coincidence. No, there was no doubt, this was all related.

For the next days, I tried to uncover more details about the kidnapping as well as the hit-and-run. I found nothing. It had happened much too long ago. Hell, I even tried to find the owners of the stolen vehicles. Even this proved to be futile. I’d hit a total dead-end.

After a while, I decided to approach things from a different perspective. I knew it would most likely not be worth much, but I decided to dig a bit into Mrs. Annelies’ and her husband’s past.

I found quite a bit on the two of them. They’d both been born to wealthy parents and married in their early twenties. An old article described as a match made in heaven.

Their riches didn’t just come from their parents. Mr. James owned at least half a dozen enterprises and was involved in at least twice as many. His reputation though wasn’t the best. There were quite a few rumors about him, I learned.

It didn’t stop the two of them to make a big show about themselves. A public appearance here, a fundraiser there, a big lavish party at their mansion, and so on.

It was after hours of digging through old newspapers that I found something that made me look up.

It was an article about Mrs. Annelies and Mr. James. It was published in a small, shady tabloid that I’d never heard about. The paper seemed to specialize in badmouthing people and spreading rumors. It might very well have been a predecessor of those internet blogs that focused on celebrity scandals and shitstorms.

The title of the piece made me read on.

Drunk rich couple runs over pregnant woman.

As I read it, I learned that the couple had attended one of their disgusting gatherings of the filthy rich. The two of them had supposedly gotten drunk beyond belief and drove their car through my very city. When a woman tried to cross the street, the husband in a drunk stupor didn’t realize what was happening. The car crashed into her.

From the way the article was written, I’d assumed that it was a deadly collision. However, the woman had barely been grazed and only got minor injuries. What made the whole thing much worse, was that she’d been pregnant. While she hadn’t been hurt badly, she lost the child later that night at the hospital.

I read the article once more, but of course, no names were mentioned except those of Mrs. Annelies and her husband.

I dialed the station right away and had them put me through to Michael. By now, he was clearly starting to get annoyed at me. When I asked him yet again to look something up for me, he told me outright that I couldn’t keep pestering him all the time. After a bit of pleading on my end, he obliged. I gave him the names of Mrs. Annelies and her husband, as well as the date mentioned in the article. He told me he’d have a look, but it might take a while. He was quite busy at the moment. Real police work, he added in a condescending voice.

Real police work my ass, I thought. I knew damn well that he’d got jack-shit to do most of the time.

As if to prove me right he called me back not even an hour later. He was quick and to the point. He’d found the report in question and forwarded it to my email. He hung up before I could even thank him, not seeming to care one bit about the whole thing.

When I read the report, I was dumbfounded. It was a completely different story.

It said Mrs. Annelies and her husband had been sober and the woman had crossed the street without any regard for their car. Something was weird, though. The report was sloppy at best. There was no mentioning of pregnancy and neither of the name of the victim. The only information about the woman was that she wanted to stay anonymous.

I reread the last line. She wanted to stay anonymous? It was a freaking police report, right? Could you even ask for something like that? It sounded more than a bit fishy to me. And what about the damned story I’d read in the tabloid? Was it all a smear piece? Why though? Why’d someone turn an unimportant little accident into a tragedy of such magnitude?

I needed answers. All I’d got so far were what-ifs!

It didn’t take long for me to get an idea. If I wanted to know why this article existed, then there was one person who’d definitely be able to help me out.

It wasn’t too hard to get the name of the tabloid’s chief editor. The paper might not have been too popular with the general public, but it was notorious in other circles. It had run for years before it eventually went out of business. The reasons were both monetary and publicity related. Guess you can only write smear pieces for so long before you get into trouble. I was lucky enough, though, to find out that the man was still living in the city. By now, he was reduced to live in an apartment much like my own.

It wouldn’t take long to get to his place, I found out.

Once I was there, I rang the doorbell for long minutes before an angry old man opened the door. He was small, almost withered, but he surprised me with his flaring anger.

“Goddamnit, what in god’s name do you want?”

“Am I talking to Mr. Meier?”

“Ringing the doorbell for ten whole minutes and now you’re asking this? I ought to throw that door right in your ugly face! Either way, I’m not interested in whatever it is you’re trying to-“

“Mr. Meier, hold on, I’m not here to sell anything. I came here because of an article in that newspaper of yours.”

The man’s eyes turned wide, and for a moment, I prepared for another assault of insults. Instead, he broke into bursting laughter.

“Newspaper! Now that’s a good one. Never had anyone calling that piece of shit something like that! Hah! Now then, who was it I smeared? Parents? Grandparents? Come on now, out with it, I haven’t got all day!”

“No, it’s not about that. I’m actually interested in finding out more about a traffic accident you covered.”

For a moment the old was quiet, apparently surprised I wasn’t here for some sort of legal action. When I handed him the article in question, a smirk appeared on his face.

“Heh, now that’s a story alright. Got in some real trouble for that one, almost cost me the paper then and there. That damned rich bitch and her crook of a husband!”

“Well, the things you wrote, are they true?”

“It damn well is! All the articles are true one way or another. This one though, I swear by it! Got themselves drunk and ran her over! Just like that! Those damned rich folks and their-“

“Yeah alright, but I’ve got the police report right here. I can show it to you. It says it was the woman’s own fault and-“

“And you believe it? You are as dumb as they come, aren’t you? Isn’t it clear what happened? They covered the whole thing up! Bought the police, the newspapers, everything! Couldn’t risk a story like that getting out! It would hurt business, wouldn’t it? Why do you think I printed it?”

I was quiet, biting my lip from stating the obvious.

“Oh, I know damn well what you’re thinking! That it’s nothing but dirt, right? Let me tell you something. You might have that internet of yours now, but back in the day, there wasn’t anything like it. Throw the chief a few grand, pay of the reporters and that’s it! Especially those two, god knows what else they were involved in!”

“Alright Mister Meier, do you have any information on the victim? I’d really like to talk to her about all this.”

Once more the small man burst into bouts of laughter.

“Damned if I know! Couldn’t care less about her. Forgot the name the moment I printed the story. Hell, I might not have known it to begin with! Who knows, it’s been thirty damned years!”

A curse escaped my lips. The man noticed it, but he said nothing. Instead, he gave me an expectant look and extended a hand. I was about to take it and thank him, but he cut me right off.

“Now then, mister private detective, I’m sure you’re going to pay me for that information you just got, aren’t you?”

I stared at him for a few moments before I sighed and handed him a twenty. The man frowned before he grabbed the note. He mumbled to himself about me being a cheap bastard before he closed the door without another word.

I was left there, staring at the door. In a way, I thought, as I walked back to my car, this guy was the absolute worst.

Sitting in my car, I massaged my temples. Yet another mystery added to the list.

As I drove back home, I wondered if any of this was even relevant. What was I even trying to figure out at this point? God if I knew.

Once I was home, I wrote down all the things I’d found out so far and put them in the order they’d happened in:

Mrs. Annelies and her husband run over a pregnant lady. She loses her child.

Two years later her husband dies in a car accident. The perpetrator is never caught. The car was stolen.

Another year later, her child is kidnapped. Yet again, a stolen car was used.

Read over the events once more I started to wonder if little Marcus was even alive. What if the kid had been murdered right after being kidnapped? There hadn’t been any mention of a ransom note or anything. Shit, I didn’t even want to think about something like that.

One thing was clear, I needed to find out who that woman was. There was no doubt that she was related to all of it.

Once again I called the station, much to the displeasure of Michael. This time he made it no secret that he wasn’t even supposed to give me all this information. I mumbled an excuse and told him it would be worth his while. The moment he heard those words, he was once more happy to comply.

I approached the topic of the car accident involving the woman once more.

“Don’t you think there’s something fishy about it?”

“What do you mean? It’s a freaking police report.”

“Well duh, but the name of the victim isn’t even in it.”

I heard him sigh before he typed something on his keyboard.

“Tell you what, I hadn’t even taken a look at it, but you’re right. Wants to remain anonymous? It’s a freaking police report, that’s what it is!”

“You think you can find out the name?”

He gave me a short laugh. “No way. First, it happened more than thirty years ago. Second, if there’s no name in here, there’s a damn good reason for it. The whole thing stinks. Wouldn’t be surprised if the whole thing’s nothing but bullshit.”

“So, what are you going to do about it?”

“What do you mean? You think I’m going to start some investigation over something as old as this?”

Once more, he laughed, and I could almost see him shaking his head.

“Yeah, guess you’re right. So there’s no way to find out the victim’s name?”

“Nah, none, nada.”

Well, that was that I thought and hung up. Freaking useless, the whole bunch of them! No clue why dad ever wanted me to join this shithole of a station!

For the rest of the day, I tried desperately to find out who the mysterious woman was. I called hospitals all over town, but no one was able to help me. They either told me it happened way too long ago or they flat out refused to provide any help.

During the night I continued my futile attempts. I coursed the internet, desperate for information. Yet, nothing seemed to exist about the woman. I was at my wit’s end.

The next day my desperation drove me to Mrs. Annelies’ mansion once again. If anyone would know the name of the woman, it was the old lady herself! I knew Stephanie wouldn’t be too pleased about it, but there wasn’t anything I could do.

The moment I turned up at the door, Stephanie was surprised to see me. She invited me in, asking why I’d driven all the way here instead of giving her a phone call.

“Well, Stephanie, to be honest, I don’t even know where to start. This whole thing has turned into something entirely different,” I started.

“Is this about Mister James’ accident and little Marcus’ kidnapping?”

I sighed and shook my head. “I wish, but I guess it’s just another part of the puzzle.”

With that, I started to tell her about the night that Mrs. Annelies and her husband supposedly ran over a pregnant woman. Stephanie listened intently, but I saw her face contort by shock and disbelief.

“There’s no way,” she started. “You think any of this is the truth? That Mrs. Annelies and Mister James did,” she broke up shaking her head.

“Tell you what, Stephanie, I don’t even know anymore. What I know for a fact though is that this police report here’s fishy as hell.”

With that, I showed her the report. She did barely give it any notice and only glanced at it for a few moments.

“Even so, it sounds like there’s no way to figure out who that woman was.”

“That’s exactly why I’m here. There’s one person who should know something about her.”

For a moment she looked at me with a puzzled expression on her face. After a few seconds, she realized what I was implying.

“No, there’s no way we can talk to her about something like that! Being reminded of a thing such as that, no, even being reminded of her husband, good god, no! There’s no way we can do anything like-“

“Damnit Stephanie,” I cursed, “there’s no other way! I tried everything! Every fucking las thing!”

Stephanie didn’t say a thing, but her face turned into a hard mask.

In a moment I stepped past her, and before she could react, I was already out in the hallway.

“Mister Siebert, what do you think you’re doing?” she called out after me, but I didn’t stop.

The moment I’d put my hand on the door handle of the old lady’s room, she made it into the hallway as well.

“Don’t you dare open that door!” the nurse shrieked at me. “If you so much… I’m going to,” she broke up, her voice trembling.

When I turned around, her face was as white as a sheet. “Please, Mister Siebert, if you talk to her about those things, we don’t know what,” she broke up once more.

My hand was still on the door handle, but finally, I took it away. What the hell was I even doing?

Finally, I turned away from the door and faced Stephanie.

“Alright Stephanie, I won’t talk to her. If you truly think it will put her in danger, then there’s nothing I can do.”

When I said this, she finally relaxed, and color slowly returned to her face.

“My god, what were you thinking, you can’t just-“

“I’m sorry, it’s just… I guess this whole thing is getting to me. It’s so freaking complicated, yet I feel that I’m just so damn close to figuring it all out.”

When I said this the hint of a smile showed on Stephanie’s face.

“Oh, I’m so glad to hear that and thank you for being so understanding!”

“Yeah, but what about that woman. If I want to make any progress, I need her name. Could you at least try to talk to her? Or, I don’t know have a look at her documents? God knows, if Mrs. Annelies and her husband really covered something up, then maybe they still have some sort of info on that woman.”

“I can take a look, but I doubt I’ll find anything. I gathered all the things related to little Marcus already, so…”

“Still Stephanie, please give it another try. Every tiny bit of information helps,” I said giving the devoted nurse a warm smile.

Finally, she nodded and agreed to have another look. For a moment, her eyes focused on me, and she mumbled something to herself.

I looked up expectantly, but she shook her head. “Oh dear, it’s nothing, just a lot chores left for the day.”

As I made my way back outside, I chuckled to myself. What chores could she have to do around the place? It was all in pristine condition. Well, what do I know?

The next few days were nothing but one disappointment after another. I spread out in any and all directions, grasping at even the tiniest of straws. I rechecked the information about the stolen vehicles, paid all the hospitals in the city a personal visit and worked my way through stacks upon stacks of old newspapers. There was still absolutely nothing. It was starting to drive me insane.

On the fourth day, after returning from yet another trip to the library, I checked my email. It was more a habit than anything else. Suddenly I looked up. Between spam and newsletters, I found a single email from Stephanie.

When I read the subject, my eyes grew wide.

I found something on the woman.

In a few quick lines, Stephanie explained that she’d rummaged through Mr. James old study. The room was still in the same state after all those years. After hours of searching, she’d found a document on the woman that had been in the accident. There were notes by Mr. James accompanying it, but she didn’t feel comfortable sharing those. Instead, she’d taken a picture of both the document and a photograph of the woman. She’d attached both files to the email.

I quickly downloaded both files. The moment they were finished I opened up the first one, the photograph. When I looked at it, I was confused.

Shit, I was too tired, I must’ve mixed things up somehow. I quickly closed it, went back to my download folder and tried again. I got the same result.

The woman in the photograph open on my screen looked exactly like my mother in younger years. I laughed and shook my head. What the hell? The resemblance was almost uncanny. I leaned in closer and focused my eyes, but there was no doubt. The woman was an exact doppelganger of my mother.

I closed the picture. What a strange coincidence.

When I opened the document and started reading it though, my world began to spin. A thought from a week ago returned to my mind.

This was no mere coincidence.

The name of the pregnant lady that had been hit by Mrs. Annelies was stated as Lisa Siebert, my mother.

I sat in front of the computer, utterly dumbfounded. Then I rechecked the email. I looked at the sender, read it once more, downloaded the files again, and opened them one after another. This had to be a mix-up. There had to be some sort of explanation for it. Hell, shouldn’t she have noticed something about the name? It was the same damned last name as me!

I took out my phone and dialed Stephanie’s number right away. I tried once, twice, and then a few more times, but for some reason, I couldn’t reach her. Fuck, was it that late already? A look at the clock told me it was barely ten in the evening. Was she already asleep at a time like this?

As I sat there, staring at mom’s picture, my thoughts wandered back to the birth certificate of little Marcus. He was born in the same year as me, had the same skin color and the same eye color. It would all check out, I realized with a shudder.

I’d been adopted though. That meant there was an easy way to disprove this strange implication that had started to come to my mind. With shaking hands, I picked up the discarded phone and dialed my mom’s number. It rang for almost half a minute before she answered.

“Daniel? Why are you calling at this time of the night?”

For a moment I almost blurted out what was on my mind, but I bit my tongue in time.

“So I’m investigating this case right now, and it’s about-“

“Again with this? Why can’t you finally get a normal job? You know this sort of work isn’t sustainable! If you’d just ask your father, you might get another chance at the academy. I’m sure he can put in a good word for you. It would be so much better than this, this,” she broke off, scoffing in frustration.

“Mom, that’s not important right now. I can’t tell you the details, of course, but I need the place you adopted me from.”

“What? Why’d you need that? Can’t you look it up on that internet of yours you spend so much time on? Why do you even need that right now? It’s already this late!”

“Mom, I can’t waste any more time. I need it now, please. I think this case is related to one of the people who were working there when I was a kid. There was this middle-aged lady you told me so much about. What was her name again, Schneider?”

“And how’d I remember something like that? Really Daniel…”

It was obviously a lie, but in her annoyance mom didn’t even think twice about the story I’d told her. Instead, she put the phone away. The sounds of her rummaging through shelves and drawers, only interrupted by her annoying mumbling reached my ear. It was minutes before she returned to the phone. She quickly gave me the name of the place, clearly fed up with me.

“Thanks, mom! You really helped me out a lot. Goodnight.”

She mumbled a “Goodnight, Daniel,” in return and hung up.

I checked out the adoption center’s page right away. I was pretty damned sure they didn’t have any sort of public database. Even though I tinkered with the page. Soon after I tried to call them and even thought about writing them an email. When I saw the time, however, I quickly discarded those ideas. There’d be no way anyone would answer me any time soon. So instead, I decided to pay the place a visit first thing in the morning.

I don’t know for how many hours I lay in bed, but sleep simply didn’t come. My mind was too occupied. Could it actually be true? No, I told myself over and over again. Hell, even if mom had been hit by them, it didn’t have to mean a goddamn thing!

It was five in the morning when I gave up trying to sleep. I got up, took a hot shower, and made myself a strong cup of coffee. For the next hour, I made up all sorts of scenarios. Maybe the woman they’d hit really looked like my mother, and they’d mixed things up. Maybe Mister James had accidentally gotten the wrong name. More and more ideas flooded my mind. Yet somehow they all felt contrived, silly or even more unbelievable than what I’d figured out. Eventually, I gave up and went on my way to the adoption center.

When I parked my car, it was almost an hour before the place would open up. I was antsy, shuffling in my seat and tinkering with my phone. It was all I could do to keep my thoughts from lingering on that same topic.

The moment the center opened up I was out of the car and stepped inside. The lady behind the counter looked up in surprise.

“Well, good morning, mister early bird!” she greeted me with a laugh. It was the first pleasant thing in what seemed to be ages. “Are you by any chance interested in finding out more about adoption?”

I tried to return her smile, but from her reaction, I could tell that I hadn’t succeeded.

“Sorry, but no. I’m a private investigator, and I’m here to have a look at your database.”

Once I’d identified myself, she led me to the office of their IT specialist.

“Tell you the truth, I’d be happy to help you out myself. The problem is, everything’s digitized these days and well,” she laughed again, “I’ve never been good with computers. I’m sure Sam can help you out though, he’s really into this whole internet thing.”

She led me up to a small backroom that might well have been a janitor’s closet once. The lady opened the door and introduced me.

It turned out that Sam was an older, balding man. He was stuffed behind a huge desk and sat in front of a computer that might very well have been from the early 2000s.

“Well, this is Mister Siebert, he’s a private investigator here to find some sort of information about a case he’s working on.”

Sam didn’t say a word. Instead, the man just stared at me. For a few painful seconds, there was nothing but silence, then I decided to speak up.

“Alright, Sam. This might sound a bit strange, but I actually was adopted in this very center myself. I need to have a look at the data on it.”

Same gave me a short, puzzled look before he shrugged.

“Sure thing, just hit me up with a name and anything else important and we should find you right away. Let me open this thing up.”

While he opened the database, he started to tell me all about this new system he’d put in place. It made finding information way easier than before. I only listened halfway and quickly told him my full name, the date of my adoption and the name of my parents. It wasn’t long before my entry popped up on the screen.”

“Well, here you are, Mister Siebert,” he said, moving a bit to the side to allow me to have a look.

“Are there any pictures?”

“Sure thing,” he said, and after a few clicks, I stared at a boy that looked almost exactly like little Marcus.

My eyes grew wide, and I felt myself getting sweaty. No freaking way!

The man next to me didn’t seem to notice a thing. Instead, he sat there, scratching his head while he scanned the rest of the file.

“Man, this is weird,” he mumbled to himself.

I looked up. “What’s weird?”

“This entry, I mean, your entry. There’s a good part of it that’s missing. No idea why though.”

He moved the cursor to a few empty lines to show me.

“Probably a mistake,” he said shrugging. “I bet Clara didn’t enter the data correctly again. God knows she’s terrible with computers. Hold on a moment.”

With that, he fought himself out of his chair, pushed past me, and left the room. I looked after him, but he was gone before I got even the chance of asking what was going on.

For a while, I sat there awkwardly and scanned the file. He was right, half of it really was missing.

After a minute or two Sam returned, holding a huge old folder in his hands.

He fell back into his chair, haphazardly created an empty space in front of himself and opened the folder. He started to go through it and after a bit of searching found a copy of my file. This time his frown was serious.

“The hell’s going on,” he said wondering.

“What’s it now?”

“Well, this one here’s just a reproduction, a shoddy one at best. See this?” he asked pointing at the copy. “There’s no information on your biological parents, no real date of birth, nothing at all. See? Just your name, the adoption date and the name of your adoptive parents.”

I stared at him, but before I could even ask him a question he went on.

“Tell you what, bet the original file got lost or someone spilled some coffee over it. God knows it happens to me all the time. Bet someone tried to make a copy but forgot to fill out half of it.”

I gave him a weak nod but didn’t say anything. The word reproduction tied itself around my neck, almost strangling me.

“How about this, I give the old archives a call, ask around a few other places, and once I find the real deal, I give you call? Not like I’ve got anything to do here anyway. Might take a while, but if you’ve been adopted, I’ll make sure to find that file.”

“Great, thank you,” I mumbled in a weak voice. I was about to leave, but then I stopped. “Do you mind printing a copy of that picture?”

“Sure, no problem.”

A few seconds later, I was holding a picture of a three-year-old me in my hands.

During my drive home, I still tried to convince myself I was wrong. You know the truth, a voice in my head said, the evidence is all there. Yet, a part of my brain desperately kept refusing it. As my hands gripped on to the steering wheel hard, I kept laughing and shaking my head.

The moment I was home, I put the picture from the adoption center next to little Marcus’ one. Right then, even this last bastion of refusal broke away. There was no doubt anymore. It was the same child.

I was little Marcus.

I sat there stunned, not able to move or do anything. My whole life, my entire world, had just come tumbling down. Everything was a lie, wasn’t it? There was no alternative for this truth, was there?

If my parents had indeed taken me from Mrs. Annelies and if this was all connected, then what about the murder of her husband?

I thought about dad, about how protective he’d always been about mom. How hard and drive a man he was. No, if anyone would hurt mom, he wouldn’t let it slide.

Dear god, dad, what did you do?

The stolen cars, I remembered. The identity of the driver had never been discovered. There had been no evidence to speak off. And there was this futile police investigation.

Wouldn’t it be easy for a police officer to get rid of all the evidence? Even if anyone had a hunch, without anything to prove… holy shit.

I was already on my way to my parent’s house when my phone started to ring. It was almost by habit than by a conscious decision that I picked up. The moment a male voice reached me I was confused, only now realizing what I’d done.

At first, I had no idea who I was talking to, but then I recognized Sam’s voice. In a few words, he told me he’d checked up the adoption data. He was a bit embarrassed to say it, but there was no entry anywhere else about my adoption. Not in any of the other databases, nor the archives.

“What does it mean?” I asked in a shaken voice, already knowing the answer.

“Well, it means the file I’ve shown you has to be a fake.

“And how the hell’s that possible? You’re telling me someone doctored up a file about me and,” I broke off, not sure what I was even going to say.

“As strange as it sounds, guess there’s no other way.”

“But who’d even be able to do that?” I yelled at the phone.

“Guess someone with connections. Don’t know, our database is connected to some of the hospitals, one or two of the foster homes, well and the police of course, but I’ve got no clue who’d…” as he continued on I didn’t listen anymore. Of course, the police would be able to access their database. That meant anyone there would be able to enter some fake data, wouldn’t it?”

Sam was still going on, but I cut him off.

“Well, thanks, that’s all I needed,” I said, and without waiting for a reply I hung up.

No shock overcame me, no grief, nothing at all. It was just another tiny bit that added on to what I already knew.

The moment I arrived at my parent’s house mom was surprised to see me.

“Daniel, what are you doing here? Don’t tell me it’s about that case of yours?” mom asked.

“Where’s dad? Is he home?”

“He’s in the back,” she said. Without another word, I pushed past her and made my way to the backyard.

“Daniel? What’s going on?” she called out to me before she followed.

The moment dad saw me he got up and walked over to me. Before he could say so much as a word, I spoke up.

“I know about Mrs. Annelies.”

Dad didn’t show any reaction to the name, but I heard mom gasp. I couldn’t hide the sad little smile that appeared on my face.

“Now son, what’s this about a Mrs. Annelies? Can’t you at least give your old man a hug?”

“And who’d that be, you?”

In an instant, his face turned dark.

“I know the adoption documents are fake,” I started.

“Is that why you wanted the name of the place?” mom asked from behind. “We’ve been over this so many times, I don’t even know why-“

“Quiet Lisa,” dad cut her off. “Now what are you trying to say, son?”

“I know all about what happened thirty years ago, about mom’s accident and… everything else.”

With that, I turned to face her. “That rich couple ran you over didn’t they?”

Mom stared at me with wide eyes. “No, there never was an accident,” she started and shuffled around nervously. “I don’t even know what you’re talking about, Daniel!”

Oh, how her eyes betrayed her. Mom was always bad at lying.

“Daniel? Don’t you mean Marcus?”

She cringed back a step as if I’d hit her and put her hand over her mouth. A faint ‘how’ escaped her mouth. I was about to confront her further, but at that moment dad got a hold of my arm and turned me to face him.

“I don’t know what you think you’re talking about, boy, but you better stop,” he said, his face red with anger.

“What about her husband? He was run over, wasn’t he? You remember that little detail, right?” I asked not bothering to hide the accusation in my voice.

He stared me down, but this time, he said nothing.

“It was you wasn’t it? After mom’s accident you-“

“Be quiet, son! You don’t know a damned thing!”

“I know enough,” I spat at him.

“Tell me one thing, mom,” I said turning back to face her. “Why did you kidnap her child, no, I mean, why did you kidnap me?”

Mom stood there as tears filled her eyes. I thought it was shock or sadness, but I saw her face distorted by anger.

“It would’ve been a girl,” she said in a low voice.

“The day she took her from us… and then I learned she had a boy of her own. I wanted she to feel the same thing, I wanted to… oh but you were such a cute little boy, there was no way-“

“Goddamnit, Lisa!” dad screamed and pushed himself between her and me.

“And you! You don’t know anything! Not even in the slightest! There was nothing we could do! She and that husband of hers, they covered it all up. There was no pregnancy, and of course, they put all the blame on Lisa. A bit of money here, a bit of money there and everyone was happy enough to trust them. Even those assholes at the station!”

“And so you decided to take things into your own hands, right dad? Oh, that’s so like you!”

The slap he gave me was hard, but it was nothing compared to the knowledge that all I’d said, all I’d guessed, was true.

The woman behind him, the woman I’d called mom for more than three decades, was shaking and mumbling to herself. Tears streamed down her face as she stared at me, pleading with me.

I looked from her to the man who’d just hit me. His hands were shaking now.

“Son, I didn’t mean-“

“So it’s all true,” I said more to myself than to them. I gave them both a long, hard look.

“Goodbye,” I said, and then, in a sarcastic voice, I added, “mom, dad.”

As I turned to leave, they didn’t follow me. Neither of them said a single word. There was nothing to be said anymore. There was nothing words could do.

Once back outside, I jumped into my seat and drove off. I didn’t get far. I’d barely made it a few blocks before my emotions started pouring out.

I hit the brakes hard, stopped the car and screamed at the top of my lungs. The freak-out lasted for god knows how long. Once it was over, I was panting and utterly exhausted. My hands hurt and I realized I must’ve beaten the inside of the car in sheer outrage.

After it was over, I just sat there, breathing heavily. So it was all true indeed. All of it. I took out my ID and grinned at the name. Daniel Siebert, I read and laughed.

“Just another part of their damned lies,” I said as I threw it out the window.

Then I remembered something. Siebert, my name and of course mom’s name.

That damned email Stephanie had sent me.! The email with my mom’s picture and the document about her. Why had she not said a single word about it being the same name as mine? Wouldn’t she have wondered about that?

Why had she never answered the damned phone?

In a moment I redialed her number and waited for her to pick up. It rang and rang and rang before I was notified that the recipient was not available. I tried again, but the same thing happened. Then once more only to get the same result a third time. She’s not picking up, I realized. I dropped the phone and started up the car again.

The drive to Mrs. Annelies mansion would normally take you about three hours. That day, in the state of rage I was in, I arrived after barely more than two hours. It was pure dumb luck that I wasn’t stopped by the police.

The moment I’d parked the car I was out of it. I rushed to the front door and started switching between beating against it and ringing the doorbell.

I didn’t take long for me to hear something inside. The moment Stephanie saw me, she gave me her usual warm smile. When she saw the state I was in, the hint of a smile showed on her face once more. It was gone in a moment.

“Mister Siebert, are you alright? You look terrible! Is it because of-?”

“You knew didn’t you, Stephanie?”

For a moment her eyes probed me before the same smile from before appeared again. This time it was a mixture of pity and mockery.

“And what might you be referring to Mister Siebert?”

The way she pronounced my last name, the thick sarcasm coating it, made clear that there was no need to even say it.

“When did you figure it out? The moment you saw my mom’s name on that file?”

For a moment she looked at me before she started to laugh.

“Good god, a fine detective you are. Even if there’d been a file like that and if it had contained your last name, it wouldn’t have been enough to give anything away.”

“Even if there’d been a file like… What the hell are you talking about?”

My voice grew louder, and I took an angry step towards her.

She flinched, alarmed at my outburst, but then spoke again.

“I knew right from the start who you were. Long before you even appeared her for the first time!”

“How in the hell did you-“

“You forgot them, didn’t you?”

“Forgot what?”

“The letters,” she said in a voice filled with nothing but disgust.

“What letters,” I started, but right away, the memory returned. The letters that had been sent to me all those years ago. If Mrs. Annelies really was my mother, then she’d been the one to send them to me.

My eyes grew wide with realization as I stared at Stephanie.

“Does she know?” I asked in a broken voice.

Stephanie shook her head.

“No,” she started. “God, it was so long ago. Back then I’d barely started working here. One day I stumbled upon a picture of a little boy. When I asked her if it was her son, she broke into tears. She told me the whole story. The accident, her husband’s murder and the kidnapping of the child. Yet, she’d never found out what had happened to the boy. There were no hints, no evidence, nothing at all. And that’s when I told her we had to look for you.”

“And of course you found me and then she sent me those letters, right?”

The nurse nodded. “You’ve got no idea how happy she was when I told her about you. I’d never seen her like this before and never have since. She cried for hours, but it was tears of pure happiness. I felt for her so dearly that day. And then we waited. With each passing day, she got more excited, but no answer arrived. I told her the letter must’ve been lost, so we sent another one. And then another. And another. I saw her wither away as the days passed. Her happiness turned to grief and eventually to indifference. I told her I’d call you, visit you, drive her to your home, but she’d already given up. That boy, she said, he’s not my little Marcus anymore. He doesn’t want to see me and probably doesn’t even know who I am.”

As she stared at me, throwing those accusations and condemnations at me, I couldn’t face her. I couldn’t face what I done simply because I didn’t care at the time.

“So why now? Why after all those years?” I mumbled, not looking at her.

“Because your mother is dying! That part is the truth! But I knew what would’ve happened if I sent you more letters. You’d ignore them just like before and throw them away. If I were to call you or came to visit you, you’d probably ignore me as well. When I saw your occupation, though, I knew there was a way.”

“If I’d figure it out on my own… if I knew what my parents had done, what I’d done, you thought I’d,” I broke off.

“Can you forgive them for what they did? Can you?”

I said nothing, shaking my head. Then I felt a burning rage growing inside of me.

“And to make me meet her, you had to ruin my life. You had to bring it all crashing down, hadn’t you?! You had to show me all of it, every single, last bit, right? Yet what makes HER so different from THEM? She and her husband were the ones who ran over a woman, killed her unborn child and then covered it all up to save their reputation. They didn’t care one about what they’d done, right? And you really think she’s any better than them?”

“That’s not,” Stephanie started, but I didn’t let her speak.

“She’s the same! They’re all the same! And you, you’re as well!”

“But Marcus, she’s waiting for you! If you’d just speak to her, just told her who you are… Can’t you at least give her that?”

For a while, I looked past her. I stared down the long corridor that led to the room in which my real mother was sitting. Even now, she was most likely staring out that one single window. Then I looked at Stephanie once more before I shook my head and turned to leave.

Stephanie called after me, her words a mixture of pleas and accusations. I gave them no heed.

They were all terrible people, each and every one of them.

I started the car and drove off. I knew I’d never see any of them ever again.

As I left my dying, biological mother, as well as the people who’d raised me as their own behind, I knew, I was as terrible a person as all of them.

The Prisrak Case

This is a story my grandpa told me.

 When he was younger, he worked with the Soviet police, the Militsiya.

He told me many stories about that time. Most of them didn’t have a happy ending. Grandpa admitted he’d done his share of bad things, but he often tried to make people’s life at least somewhat better.

It was a couple of weeks ago that I asked him what his strangest case was.

At the time he told me about a murder case. It was rather tame if you can call a murder tame. I was a bit disappointed since it wasn’t too different from his other stories.

A few days later, however, he approached me. He admitted that he’d lied. It wasn’t long before he told me what the strangest thing he’d ever experienced truly was.

It was something that he called the Prisrak Case.

It all happened in a small town called Krutchshow, in Southern Russia. It was the late fifties, a time of heavy industrialization in the Soviet Union. At the time the Soviets build what grandpa described as factory towns.

I looked up, but grandpa said, most of them are long gone and forgotten.

The principle was simple. First, look for a suitable location for factories or other production facilities. Once these were constructed, cheap living quarters for the workers were built nearby. Krutchshow was one of these towns.

The one thing that was different about Krutchshow was that the region had a history. During the time of the Russian Empire, the area was the estate of a noble family.

The old mansion still stood, but it was vacant and abandoned.

Once the factories were constructed, the old building was renovated and used as makeshift living quarters. They divided up the vast, lavish rooms into small-one room apartments and relocated the future workforce there.

The case started when an old woman arrived at grandpa’s station in Volgograd. She said she was worried about her brother. The man lived in Krutchshow to the south, but she hadn’t heard from him in months. She was too old to visit the small, distant town by herself, so she pleaded the Militsiya to find out more.

Grandpa was the one who talked to her. Krutchshow might have been hours away, but it still fell under their jurisdiction. In the end, he assured her, he’d check it out and made the long trip there.

Grandpa told me he’d heard his share about those factory towns, but he’d never seen any of them for real. Once he arrived, he saw that things were even worse than he’d imagined.

The old mansion was dirty and run-down. People lived in a state of utter poverty. They were either old or migrants from other parts of the Soviet Union that had nowhere else to go. Some weren’t even fluent in Russian.

Needless to say, many were scared when they saw a man of the Militsiya arrive. The Soviet Police had a bad reputation, and there were more than enough reasons for it. People thought grandpa was there to take them away or drive them from their home.

Once grandpa arrived, he found no trace of the man. When he asked around though, no one told him a thing. He actually had to toughen up on them a bit, he admitted with a blank expression on his face.

His first suspicion was that one of the other inhabitants had murdered the old man. He quickly learned, though, how much more there was going on.

It wasn’t just the old man that had gone missing. In the course of the past three years, he learned, more than a dozen inhabitants had vanished.

A person going missing wasn’t strange. The times were hard. People rarely had enough to eat. People running off, going missing, or dying from starvation wasn’t unheard off. A dozen people vanishing without a trace, however, was an entirely different story.

Grandpa informed the local factory overseers as well as his higher-ups in Volgograd, and soon an investigation was started.

They weren’t concerned about the people, of course. All they cared about was their production quota.

For days they questioned the people living in the old mansion, but even now, no one seemed to know a thing. Or they weren’t willing to talk.

An investigation of the building itself revealed nothing. Even consulting the blueprints brought them nowhere. They were old and shoddy.

There was one thing, however, that grandpa had heard from time to time. It was the word prisrak that people mumbled and whispered to one another. Only when they thought he wasn’t listening, though. Prisrak is Russian for ghost or phantom, grandpa said.

Whenever the Militsiya questioned the inhabitants about it, they all pretended they’d never heard about it.

It was clear that something was going on. The Militsiya made plans to move on to some stricter methods of interrogation. Then one of the factory workers finally started talking.

It was an older man, most likely in his late fifties named Dimar.

The man was as scared as anyone else, but he said someone had to talk. He asked the Militsiya for a stiff drink, to which grandpa complied after a moment.

He downed the drink in one go.

Then, cursing, he started to tell the Militsiya about the noises that haunted the building. They’d started years ago. At first, people thought it was someone messing with the other inhabitants? God knows, there’s no shortage of shady characters in the building. Yet, the longer the noises continued and the more often they could be heard, the clearer it became that something else was going on.

The nature of the noises, it was all wrong. At times it sounded like heavy steps, at others like scratching or beating against the walls. Sometimes they echoed from afar at others they seemed to come from right next to you. Occasionally, Dimar said, they originated from rooms long-vacant or empty. It didn’t matter what time of the day it was. You could hear them early in the morning one day, then in the middle of the night.

It was the older woman who first started to talk about the legend of the prisrak, Dimar said.

Whenever the noises start, people freak out. The old women are crying, and even the men are scared. Everyone thinks that the prisrak is going to get someone again.

At this point grandpa, interrupted Dimar, asking what he meant. With a scared expression, he told him that it’s always during the noises that someone vanishes.

Ever since the Militsiya came, the noises happened daily. It’s only a matter of time, the man said, till someone’s taken away again.

When grandpa asked why he didn’t leave, Dimar laughed. Where would he go? He was poor, got no money, and almost nothing to eat. It was the same for everyone else. If they left, where’d they go?

After that the man was quiet. His expression was somber. He said he was never one to believe in ghosts, but with everything that’s happened… Especially now because he talked, he couldn’t help being scared. Grandpa assured the man they’d find out what was really going on there and made sure nothing would happen to him.

It was during the next days that grandpa looked into the story of the so-called prisrak. He didn’t find much. It was nothing but an old urban legend.

The first time the prisrak is mentioned was more than a century ago. Back then, the mansion was still home to a noble family. It was said by many people that the place was haunted. Strange noises could be heard at night, and more than one servant vanished throughout the years. No one could say what the prisrak actually was. Some said it was the ghost of a serf killed by the family, while others say it’s the ghost of a disfigured family member that was locked up in the basement all his life. Yet others say it’s something much older.

It was all nonsense, of course, grandpa said. Nothing but silly ghost stories. The inhabitants, however, believed them to be true.

Grandpa had never been superstitious or religious for that matter. During his years with the Militsiya, he’d learned one thing upon everything else. The darkest and most vile things are always committed by men themselves.

Of course, he didn’t think so without reason. There was one thing that Dimar had said. The noise happened daily, ever since grandpa had arrived. They why had no one of the Militsiya members ever heard anything. It seemed that whatever, or better, whoever, was responsible, made sure none of them were around.

The plan that grandpa hatched was simple. They’d bug the place, storm in when the noises were going on and catch the perpetrator. Of course, that’s not what they told people. Instead, they said they had to do a sweep of the building, to find evidence. Their real aim, however, was to plant a handful of simple listening devices.

It wasn’t anything sophisticated, of course, but it was enough to do the trick.

Once they were done, they only had to wait. The Militsiya divide into two groups. Grandpa and a few others would enter the building, while the rest kept tight surveillance of the outside. The goal was either to catch the perpetrator inside the building or while he tried to flee the scene.

It was only a few hours after they’d installed the devices that the noises started again. They moved out right away.

The inside of the building was in an uproar. People were huddled together in the hallways. Some of the old women were crying and praying. Some of the men even went as far as to accuse the Militsiya of angering the prisrak.

It took grandpa and the rest almost half an hour to restore order. Once everyone was accounted for, they realized that one person was missing, Dimar. Grandpa immediately rushed to the man’s room but found it empty.

A search was conducted right away. Even after checking all the rooms, however, there was no trace of the man. The group outside also attested that they’d seen no one in the area or leaving the building.

For all they knew, the man had vanished into thin air. Just like all the other people who’d gone missing.

At that point, the Militsiya had enough. There was no one someone could vanish without a trace.

They’d checked the place already, but now they planned to do a complete and thorough investigation. There had to be something that could tell them what happened.

The inhabitants were swiftly evicted and put under strict surveillance in a factory warehouse nearby. Some were reluctant, but after a few threats, they fell in the rest.

They went through the building rigorously, from top to bottom. They checked each room, went through everyone’s private belongings, but there were still no hints. Worst of all, Dimar’s room showed no signs of a struggle.

The search took hours. Some started to voice their concerns, questioning if maybe there was more to the story of the prisrak. When the sun dawned, grandpa was about to give up altogether.

That’s when one of the other men noticed something. He’d been in Dimar’s room, rechecking it for what must have been the fifth time. A part of the wallpaper looked a bit strange. It was more darkened than the rest and seemed to hang loosely in front of the brickwork below.

At first, he thought it was due to the buildings lousy condition. When he went closer, though, he noticed something. It wasn’t just the wallpaper that looked a bit strange. The brickwork behind it also didn’t look normal. Part of it looked different from the rest as if it didn’t belong to the wall.

The moment the man touched it, he noticed that he could move it. At that moment he called out to the rest.

They removed the loose part of the wall, and a small entry to the room next door was revealed. At least that’s what they thought they’d found.

When one of them tried to squeeze through, he found himself somewhere else, in a space between the walls.

At this point, another member of the group left the room to compare the inner and outer length of the two rooms. He came to the conclusion that the wall between the rooms had to be almost a meter wide.

They were all equally puzzled and consulted the old blueprints, but the shoddy notes didn’t say anything about the width of the walls. What they learned, however, was that this wall had been part of the original mansion. Sure, a lot of new walls had been added to divide the building, but the old walls were still there.

When they entered the space between the walls, they were even more surprised. It wasn’t a hole, no, it turned out to be a tunnel that continued on for the whole length of the wall. It was easily half a meter wide, which allowed more than enough space for a human being to pass through.

While they explored the tunnel, they found that similar tunnels stretched on through all the walls of the original mansion. There were also more of the secret entryways all over the building. From outside, those were almost invisible and blocked off to make entry impossible.

At this point, it was clear what had caused the noise. It must’ve been someone moving through these tunnels.

When checking out these other, additional tunnels, they found more things. There was an old mattress, stacked between the walls, a chair, and a table and even an improvised cooking area.

It didn’t take them long before they stumbled upon Dimar’s corpse. The cause of death was strangulation, but the man also showed a head wound, caused by a blunt object.

It was clear what must’ve happened. Whoever had been inside the walls must’ve entered Dimar’s room in the middle of the night. Then beat him unconscious, dragged him into the walls, and strangulated him.

Grandpa was quiet for a moment. He’d promised the man they’d make sure he was safe, yet they’d done nothing.

The investigation of the wall tunnels took hours. Ladders connected them to similar tunnels on the second floor, and even entrances to the attic and the basement were found.

Finally, they also stumbled upon a stack of old, rotten clothes and various other items. It didn’t take them long to discern what they’d found. It must’ve been the belongings of the people who’d gone missing throughout the years. They all must’ve suffered a fate similar to that of Dimar. One thing puzzled the Militsiya though, no remains, except those of Dimar, were ever found.

The investigation went on for weeks, but even after harsher methods of… questioning, the perpetrator was never discovered. The only thing they knew was that it must’ve been one of the inhabitants. There were secret entrances to the wall tunnels all over the building, but none of them led outside. So after the perpetrator had murdered Dimar, he must’ve left the tunnels and mixed in with the rest of the inhabitants.

Grandpa said that if they’d more time, they might have figured out who it was. Regrettably, though, the higher-ups didn’t seem to care much about the case. It didn’t matter to them if a handful of workers or migrants died.

In the end, the old mansion was demolished, and people were relocated into a newer, more modern building. Grandpa and the rest left Krutchshow behind and returned to Volgograd.

Grandpa said the case bothered him for years. It wasn’t because people had died, it wasn’t even Dimar’s death, it was something else he’d realized.

There had been a routine to the murders. A person was only killed every few months.

At first, I didn’t know what he was trying to say, but then he reminded me what they’d found in the walls and what they didn’t.

There was a reason for the cooking area, and there was a reason they’d never found any remains.

It was indeed a terrible time, grandpa said, shaking his head and it was indeed an impoverished area.

RehnWriter Newsletter

READ MY BOOKS


Cover of New Haven


Cover of Fuck Monsters


Cover of Miller's Academy


Cover of The First Few Times Always Hurt


Cover of Irradiant Tears