The Note

A few days ago I found a note on my roommate’s door.

I frowned instantly when I saw it. By now I’d grown quite annoyed at Tom’s antics. Ever since he started dating Jessica, he’d started doing this. She was the one who gave him the idea, saying it was cute and romantic.

Needless to say, when Tom left notes for me, they were neither cute nor romantic. Half the time they were plain stupid. You can’t imagine how often I found one saying ‘If you read this you’re a dumbass’ or ‘Please throw me away’.

At other times he used them to actually inform me about things. Saying he’d be gone for a day or two, that we were out of toilet paper, or telling me that he’d be working overtime at his dad’s law company.

You never knew which it was though.

When I had a look at this one it said:

‘Meet me at the Lebowski’s at five.’

I was a bit puzzled by that. The Lebowski’s was a bar in town we used to hang out at quite a bit in the past. Why today though? Weren’t we going to Fred’s place to watch the damned soccer game? He’d been going on about it for the past week and begged me to tag along. Why’d he suddenly want to change plans?

In the end, I shrugged and went on my way to work. To be honest, it didn’t matter to me, I wasn’t exactly a soccer fan.

On the tram, I pulled out my phone to call him why he wanted to go to the bar. It went straight to voicemail. So much about those perks at his dad’s company he’d been telling me about. I dropped him a quick message on WhatsApp and put my phone away.

Work was slow that day. I spent most of it sitting in front of my computer, pretending to be busy, while secretly browsing Reddit.

To be honest, I was looking forward to hanging out at the bar. It had been ages. Ever since we’d graduated, we didn’t have much time to hang out and even less since he was with Jessica. It would be nice to chill and have a few beers together again.

The moment my shift ended I was out of the building. Ten minutes later I was at the bar. It was still a quarter before five, but I decided to chat up the barkeeper. The dude was pretty much an old friend.

“Hey there, how’s it going? Been a while, hasn’t it?”

He eyed me for a moment before he recognized me. His face grew dark in an instant.

“Is your friend coming, too?”

“You mean Tom? Yeah, he told me to meet him here at five, been a while since-“

“Okay, listen up, I got no problem with you. Get yourself a beer, take a seat, fine by me. Once your friend arrives, you two get the hell out of here, alright?”

I was dumbfounded.

“What did he do? I mean it’s been a while, but I am pretty damn sure he didn’t do anything.”

“Don’t care, he’s not getting in again. Not after what happened with the girl.”

“What girl? What the hell are you talking about, man?”

“Alright, listen, you want to know what’s up? Get yourself a beer, and I’ll tell you all about it.”

Well, I got myself a beer and let the man talk.

He told me Tom had been here a couple of months ago with some of his old fraternity friends.

Apparently, the guys got quite drunk and started hitting on a group of girls. At first, the barkeeper said, he shrugged it off. As the evening continued though, the guys got a bit too touchy, so he told them to knock it off and leave the girls alone.

The real trouble started when one of the girls went to the toilet. After a couple of minutes, he noticed that her friends wondered where she was. A quick look around revealed that Tom was gone as well. He frowned and making sure nothing was wrong, he went to check up on things.

What he found was Tom pushing the girl against the wall in the hallway. His hand was over her mouth, and her blouse was ripped open.

The barkeeper tackled Tom in an instant, at which the girl started to scream that he’d wanted to rape her. Of course, Tom said it was bullshit and she provoked him, but the barkeeper said he knew what he’d seen.

He told the guys then and there to get the hell out of his bar. He asked the girl if she wanted him to call the cops, but in the end, she shook her head. Wasn’t worth the trouble, she said.

As I listened to that story, I’d no idea what to say. It sounded like complete and utter bullshit. Tom wasn’t the type of guy who’d do shit like that. It must’ve been someone else.

“You sure it was him?”

“Without a doubt. You guys had been regulars for years, no way I’d mistake someone else for him. I’ll probably recognize his face the moment he steps in.”

I didn’t know what to reply, so instead, I decided to wait until Tom would arrive. Hopefully, he’d be able to clear this whole thing up, and we could move past it.

It soon turned five, then ten past and then a quarter past. Where the hell was Tom?

Finally, someone approached me, but it wasn’t Tom. It was some lanky dude who’d entered the bar a while ago.

“Sorry, are you Chris?”

I nodded and before I could even say a word the guy handed me a note.

“I’m supposed to give you that.”

“Wait what’s this now?”

The guy shrugged.

“Don’t know, some random chick told me a guy named Chris would be here today at five. Gave me some money, so why the hell not.”

I looked down at this new note. What was it with notes today, I cursed to myself.

As I scanned it, I saw that there were only two things on it. A tram station and a line telling me to find Anna Schuster.

I sat there, sipping from my beer and looking down at the thing. Was this another one of Tom’s stupid antics?

I looked up trying to find the guy who’d handed it to me, but he was gone already. Instead, I turned to the barkeeper.

“You know what this is all about?”

He gave me an annoyed look. “What do you think I am, twelve? Why the hell would I be passing notes around?”

Sigh, he was right, this was ridiculous.

I finished my beer, paid up and left the bar to make my way home. I couldn’t help but look at the note again. A girl had given it to him, he’d said. Who the hell was it? Had it been this ‘Anna Schuster’?

Nah, don’t think about it.

A minute later I searched for a route to the station on the note. I cursed at myself again, but I was curious what this was all about.

The worst part was that the station was on the other end of the city. It would take me almost half an hour to get there. Well, as they said, curiosity is a bitch.

When I arrived at the station, I found myself in the middle of nowhere. Other than me only one person, an old lady, had left the tram. It couldn’t be her, I concluded.

For a while, I sat around waiting to see if anyone else would arrive.

“Where the hell are you, Anna?” I wondered.

After I grew tired of waiting, I got up and had a look around. There was nothing at the station. No notes, no hint, nothing but advertisement and the timetable for trams.

I googled the name, but all I found were dozens if not hundreds of Facebook Profiles. Great, I thought.

This was getting more and more stupid. What was I supposed to be doing here? There was nothing here! Was this nothing but a silly prank?

I ripped out my phone to call Tom again. It still went straight to voicemail. I looked up at the departure board and saw that the next tram would arrive in about ten minutes.

I looked up and down the street. Nothing. On the other side was this huge, modern factory complex. There was no way I’d go there and search for someone. Other than that though, there was nothing, no other buildings nearby. All there was, was a bounding wall behind me, most likely closing off some private property.

Finally, I opened Maps to see if there really was nothing else around. I realized why there were no buildings on my side of the street. The bounding wall belonged to a cemetery.

Was I supposed to meet this girl at the cemetery or…

I found the gate soon enough and went in. This had to be some fucked up joke, I told myself. With an ominous feeling, I started to make my way around.

I hoped that soon Tom or maybe some of his fraternity friends would jump out from behind a gravestone to scare me.

It didn’t take me long to find something else though, Anna Schuster’s grave.

The date on the gravestone told me she’d died about half a year ago. The engraved text said that the lovely daughter was taken from her family much too early.

What the hell. What’s this all about? Why send me here?

Then I got an idea. I took out my phone and this time I searched not only for her name but also her age and the day she’d died.

At first, I saw nothing of interest until I stumbled upon a long post at a local forum. It talked about a controversial case related to the rape and murder of a young woman.

As I started reading my heart dropped. It described that Anna Schuster had been out with friends, but never made it home that evening.

She was found the next morning, dead and the victim of sexual assault.

The official story was, that no perpetrator was ever found and that the case remained open to this day. The real story though, the poster said, is that it was clear who the perpetrators were. There were witnesses, and there was evidence pointing to a group of young man. They’d been harassing the girl before at a bar.

It couldn’t be I thought, as I read on.

The poster said those things soon changed. Witnesses changed or retracted their testimony, and evidence vanished. It was a full-blown cover-up. The poster mentioned seven names in total. One is the supposed son of the head of the police, another the son of wealthy parents, yet another the nephew of a politician. The list went on. Tom’s name was sixth on the list, the son of a successful and influential local attorney.

I read on and found out that the case was dropped without ever making it to trials.

I felt cold as I read this, very cold. How the hell had I never heard about any of this, but the answer was right in front of me. They’d swept it under the carpet.

Was it true though? Could Tom and his friends really have done that? I had to confront him about this. This was way too serious. On my way back to the station I tried calling him once more. He still didn’t pick up.

Once I was on the tram, I opened up the forum thread again. As I scrolled down, I found pictures of Anna and her family. In one she was posing with her parents, and in another, she was posing with… her sister? At least that’s what the caption said Anna and Karoline Schuster.

This couldn’t be. This girl was the spitting image of Tom’s girlfriend. No, the longer I looked, there was no doubt that this WAS Jessica. My head started to spin. What the hell was going on?

I tried calling Jessica, but I couldn’t reach her either.

The rest of the tram ride I was all pins and needles. I had to get home. I had to figure out what was going on.

As I arrived home, I went straight to Tom’s door and started knocking, but there was no answer. Then I remembered the note. Why this damned note. Don’t tell me…

I called his dad on his office phone. Even though it was almost nine in the evening by now the man answered. Before I could even so much as ask him he ranted to me about his useless son who thought it was okay to not show up to work. I cut him off.

“Tom hasn’t been in today?”

“No, he hasn’t,” the man answered annoyed.

I hung up right away and went back to his room. When I tried the handle, it was locked, as I’d expected.

Shit, what do I do? I was way too confused. I walked back and force before I went to my room.

At that moment I saw another note that was put up on the door to my room. There was only one line on it:

‘The key is in the potted plant in the kitchen.’

I ripped it in an instant. I felt goosebumps on my arm as I stumbled into the kitchen.

In an instant, I found the key and rushed to Tom’s door. As soon as I opened it, the smell hit me. It was the strong, irony smell of blood. With shaking hands I hit the light-switch. I stumbled back in shock and disgust.

When the ambulance arrived, it was clear that Tom was long dead. He’d been gagged, bound to a chair and there were various long cuts on his arms and legs. It was evident that these and the resulting blood loss had been the cause of death.

When the paramedics said he’d died only a couple hours ago, I realized what this whole thing must have been about. If I’d made it home in time, Tom might have still been alive, and if he’d get me to notice him, he’d been saved. Instead, though, I was out trying to figure out what those notes were all about. Now I knew.

The police found something else in the room. It was an audio statement, in which Tom admitted that he and his friends were responsible for the death and rape of Anna Schuster.

The moment I heard this confession, I crumbled up Jessica’s, or better Karoline’s, note in my pocket and hid it.

I said nothing about the things I’d found out at the bar and the cemetery or Jessica’s true identity. No, I stayed quiet and said I had no idea about the whole thing.

Sense of Smell

People never talk about the importance of the sense of smell.

They talk about touch, about hearing and seeing.

People always talk about how meals taste, yet there are only five distinct flavors.

With smell though, there are more than ten thousand different scents to enjoy.

What would life be like without your sense of smell? Think about the smell of freshly cut grass, the first flowers in spring or the salty smell of the ocean waters.

Think of the other sex. How much more attractive can someone be due to the smell of an exotic perfume or a rich aftershave?

My sense of smell was always one of the most important aspects of my life. As a kid, I loved to explore the world by using nothing but my nose. I grew obsessed with it in my early years. Flowers, food, animals, even the weather, I could recognize it all by my nose.

My parents saw a reason for concern and took me to the doctors. It was discovered that I’d been born with a very sensitive nose. It was rare, but no reason for worry. This obsession of mine would go away as I’d grow older, the doctor said.

He was right. Scents should remain an essential part of my life, but they’d not dominate it as they did when I was a kid. As an adult, they’d become an enrichment, something to make life a tad bit more enjoyable. The rich scents of different types of coffee, exotic spices, and various teas always filled my apartment.

As you can imagine, scents also played a part in my dating preferences.

Now I always thought I wasn’t as shallow as to decide my partners by their smell, but that changed when I met Linda.

Her smell was different, unique you could say, almost innocent. She had this fresh, sweet smell of spring around her. Not a hint of perfume surrounded her, nor was there any need for it. She had this pure, natural smell around her.

It floored me. I had noticed her in one of my lectures and had to approach her afterward. We became quick friends, and after another month, we went on our first date.

Things went well, and we soon started dating. She was cute and smart in certain ways, yet naive and innocent in others. It was the perfect mixture, precisely what I’d been looking for.

What was also perfect, was Linda’s apartment. She wanted to be a botanist, specializing in flowers and blossoming plants. It was adorable. Her whole place was filled to the brim with potted plants. The air was always heavy, almost over-saturated, with their fresh and sweet scents.

This would block out every other smell. It didn’t matter what it was, the smell of burned food, of dirty cloth or even that of rotten flesh.

It was important because after a while Linda started to smell quite a bit. Her many blooming flowers though are easily able to cover up those foul odors. And with a nose like mine, it is easy enough to make sure that no one else will notice them either.

At times I wonder if my parents would be happy to know, that I am not obsessed with smell anymore. No, now I am always obsessed with its absence.

Dreameaters

Inspector Brandt and Officer Ziegler were out on a routine night patrol through town. Both of them knew that these patrols were a waste of time. Nothing ever happened in their small town. The worst they’d ever ran into was a few drunk teenagers making a ruckus.

This night it was different.

As the two of them drove down the main street, they suddenly saw a figure standing in the middle of the street. It was a partly naked, long-haired young man. He looked scruffy, dirty and covered in something dark. When the headlight of the car illuminated him entirely, it was clear in an instant that it must be dried blood.

The moment the man noticed the police car he started running. Brandt and Ziegler gave chase, and within a couple of minutes, they caught the man.

As Brandt handcuffed him, he demanded to know where the blood was from. It was evident that it couldn’t be the man’s own. There was way too much of it.

At first, the man stayed quiet. The moment Brandt shoved him in the back of the police car, he gave a simple statement:

“The girls,” he murmured without any noticeable emotion.

The inspector kept asking more questions as they drove back to the station, but the man stayed quiet.

While Ziegler sat down to write a report, Brandt led the man to a cell and soon after decided to question him.

The man was sitting on the bench in the cell when the inspector returned with a chair and sat down in front of him. Before Brandt could even say a word, the man asked him a single question:

“Do you believe in dreameaters?”

“The hell are you talking about? I am not in the mood for any of this crazy shit.”

The man smiled a bit before he continued talking.

“So? Do you believe in them?”

Brandt sighed. Got another crazy one, he thought.

“What did you mean when you said ‘the girls’?”

The man was quiet for a moment as if thinking about something.

“They are evil spirits,” he rambled on, “they enter your dreams, give you nightmares and make you do things while you are asleep. They are small, slimy things, got no arms, no legs, just tentacles. And one, single eye. They use it to stare directly into your dreams… and your soul.”

Brandt couldn’t help but be crept out by what the guy was saying. It took a special kind of crazy to come up with stuff like that.

“What did you do to the girls? Is it their blood?”

The man looked at Brandt with those, empty, emotionless eyes. For a moment his mind seemed to drift off to whatever crazy reality he was living in. Then he spoke again.

“It is theirs?”

It was more a question than a statement. Brandt took a deep breath. This way he’d not get anywhere.

“Okay, asshole,” Brandt started and got up from his chair, “we found you covered in blood, we know it’s not your own, and you were mumbling about ‘the girls’. So how about you fess up?”

The man lifted his head and looked at Brandt’s face.

“I, myself did do nothing. I did lots of shit, but I didn’t kill them, no.”

Kill? Jesus, what had he stumbled upon here, Brand thought. He’d left the city behind to get rid of those types of cases and now that? Freaking hell, he cursed to himself.

“If you didn’t do anything, why are you covered in blood?”

At that moment the man looked down at his own body and seemed to be puzzled. Then he looked up at Brandt again.

“How about I tell you a bit about myself mister inspector? I am sure you’ll understand what I mean afterward.”

Brandt was about to yell at the guy again, but then he yielded and nodded. Might be the only way to get anything out of that guy, he thought and sat down on his chair again.

“Well, as you can guess, I am not from around here. No, I grew up in eastern Germany. Our city was stricken by the reunion. My parents lost their jobs, and we ended up in poverty. Life wasn’t too bad though, we have been poor, but we were happy enough. All that changed during the burglary. Dad was stabbed and mom, well, she got it worse. All the while I was hiding and saw everything.”

“I’m not interested in your damned life story,” Brandt couldn’t help but murmur.

Right as he said this the guys head jerked forward. His eyes were wide open, and he was staring straight at him. Brandt couldn’t help but inch back as far as his chair allowed.

“But this is important, inspector,” the man said with a penetrating voice.

Crazy, Brandt thought, the guy’s a total nutcase. The way he spoke, the way he moved, everything about this guy was unnatural. It was almost as if he wasn’t a real person, but an overdrawn caricature of a man.

“Make it quick, then,” Brandt spat out.

For a moment he thought he saw a grin wash over the man’s face.

“They never found the guys, you know? Put me into an orphanage, but soon enough I ran off. I was driven out into the streets, you could say.”

At that moment the guy paused and looked at Brandt again. It felt to the inspector as if the guy was probing him for… something. Then the guy shook his head and continued talking.

“The shit I saw, you have no idea. The streets can be a terrible place. Had to resort to quite a few fucked up things to get by. Worst was when I joined this one local group or gang. That was a real shit fest. The things I was forced to do during that time. I really don’t wanna think back to it. If I wasn’t insane after my parents were killed in front of me, I was after those years on the street, you know?”

“So you are saying it wasn’t you who ‘killed the girls’, but what your time on the streets made of you? That its societies fault? That all those things you had to go through turned you into a monster? Don’t give me that shit, asshole.”

At this point, Brandt started to laugh. This guy was too much. This story was so cliched, there was no way it could be real.

“You still don’t get it, do you, inspector?”

“What’s there to get?” Brandt asked, now serious again.

“Well, whatever. Things got better though. Did my time, got into the social program and soon enough I had a shitty job, a shitty place and even met a girl. Can’t say it was heaven, but life wasn’t too bad. There was just one thing, the memories and worst of all, the dreams. Every night I was back out there, doing the same thing again, hurting people and cutting them up. Guess that’s what drove me to the bottle eventually.”

“Heh, can’t blame you for that one,” Brandt said with a chuckle.

“Needless to say, things with the girl didn’t work out. I got drunk quite a lot, and she didn’t have any of it. Bitch ranted at me, I got angry. One night, when I was out of it, I beat her half to death without even knowing. I left after that, both for her and my own sake.”

At that Brandt looked up. For a moment this part of the story hit a bit too close to home, and he thought back to his marriage with Sarah. As he looked up at the guy, he thought he noticed a hint of a smile yet again.

“Cut the crap,” Brandt yelled at him, “enough with all that backstory shit. What did you do, tell me!”

“Oh my, getting a bit antsy inspector? Did I say something you didn’t like?”

That was enough for Brandt. He jumped off his chair and swung his fist right at the man’s face. The man’s head jerked back, and when he looked up at the inspector again, his nose was bleeding heavily.

He didn’t make a sound. Instead, he turned and looked at Brandt again, while the blood was dripping from his nose and running down his face.

Brandt slumped down in his chair again. Man, he thought, felt good to hit this bastard.

“Clean yourself up,” he finally said and threw a dirty rag at the guy.

While the man pressed the rag against his nose, Brandt kept questioning him.

“What did you do?”

“Well,” the man started, “I think it’s about time I told you. You know about the dreams, right? Can’t sleep most nights. Today, it was different. The dream was different.”

“So what did you dream about? Did you dream about those girls next door? That what it was?”

The man burst out laughing, and for a moment Brandt had to calm himself down to not hit him again.

“How’d you know inspector?”

For a moment Brandt took the man seriously until he saw his face. The moment he got up, the man rose his hands.

“Now, now, inspector, I am talking, alright? I stayed in a hostel. Real shitty place, real cheap, but after a few nights of hitchhiking and sleeping under the sky a bed is a bed, you know? Fell asleep the moment I entered the room, must have been early evening. In my dream I wasn’t on the street again, this time it was about the night my parents died. There were no burglars though, it was just me and them, no one else.”

Brandt said nothing.

“It was me who was holding the knife and me who did everything. Couldn’t do anything but watch every last, bloody detail. I woke up screaming, but wasn’t in my room anymore. I stood in the middle of a bloodbath. There were two women on the floor, laying in their own blood, mutilated. I didn’t understand what was going on, but then I saw the blood on my hands, on my body, and I felt something else.”

“Was it remorse, was it shock?” Brandt asked with sarcasm.

“No, it was something on my shoulder. I was still stunned, in shock, but when I looked over, I saw it. It was nothing but tentacles and one huge, giant eye that stared straight at me. I screamed and threw the thing aside. For a moment I stood there looking at it in disbelief. Then I remembered a story that an old homeless dude had told me. There are evil spirits out there that influence your sleep and feed on your dreams. What was lying there was what the old man had described as a dreameater. I couldn’t believe that something like this was existing. Soon enough, the thing was gone and had vanished into thin air. At that point, I heard a commotion outside and before the door to the room burst open I jumped out the window and ran.”

Brandt shook his head in utter disbelief. Was this what he’d been waiting for all that time? That’s why he’d listened to the ramblings of this man for half an hour? Demons? Evil spirits? The inspector looked at the guy in front of him and wasn’t sure if he was truly insane or just plain stupid. He couldn’t help but laugh out loud.

“Man, you must be a goddamn idiot if you think I’ll believe something like that. Evil spirits, you got to be kidding me.”

The man shook his head and smiled once more.

“You still don’t get it, do you, inspector?”

“Nothing to ‘get’ here,” Brandt cursed and got up.

The guy was out of his mind, Brandt thought, as he stepped towards the cell door.

“Not so fast inspector, there’s one thing I’ve been burning to ask you.”

When Brandt turned around, the man sat there, a big grin on his face, leaning forward in anticipation.

“You shivered when I talked about certain things. The one about the girl I bet up and when I talked about murdering my parents. Why?”

Brandt didn’t say anything, he couldn’t.

“Did I hit a soft spot? I did, didn’t I? Could it be you are like me? Could it be you beat your wife, too? Did you kill someone as well? That’s all true, isn’t it? We are exactly the same, aren’t we?”

With that, the guy burst into loud laughter. Brandt stood there, shivering. What the hell was going on?

“Was it your parents, too? A relative maybe?”

“Shut the hell up!” Brandt yelled.

The man didn’t react. Instead, he looked away, pretending to think hard.

“No, that’s not it. You killed someone in the line of duty, right? Out ‘in the streets’? An innocent bystander maybe? Now we are getting somewhere, aren’t we? Was it fun to press the trigger? Did you enjoy it, inspector? Did-”

The man didn’t get to finish his sentence, because Brandt hit the guy once again. How did this guy know all that? It had to be random guesses, it had to be.

“Admit it already, you enjoyed it, right?”

And then he kept laughing. Right at that moment, Brandt made his mistake. He lost it and stormed forward, precisely as the man had wanted. He dodged Brandt’s attack and jumped him. Moments later the inspector was out cold.

It was an hour later that he came to. He was outside the station. There were firefighters and police all around him.

When he came to, he heard what had happened. Ziegler had been shot as had been officer Meier, who’d been sorting through papers in the archive. After that, someone had set fire to the station.

Brandt screamed at them and told them it must have been the bloody man. The one he’d questioned, but no one knew anything about that. He was out of it and had to be handcuffed and taken to the police headquarters in the city.

It was there that he told Officer Schneider about the bloody man and what had happened at the station.

It was the next day that Officer Schneider was approached by his colleague, Officer Kuhn.

“Listen to this David,” he said and handed him the recording of Brandt’s questioning.

Once Kuhn had done so, Schneider talked to him again.

“What do you think about it, David?”

“Well, you heard what Brandt said, right?”

“Yeah, but none of it adds up.”

“What do you mean? It’s obvious that the suspect, the bloody man, must have gotten a hold of his gun and-”

“Well, that’s what I thought too,” Schneider cut him off, “but that’s the problem with this whole thing.”

“What do you mean Martin? Come on, talk to me?”

Schneider took a deep breath before he answered.

“There was no bloody man.”

“What the hell are you talking about?”

“There’s no proof of anyone like this existing, nothing, nada. No one else saw the man. There are no fingerprints, no reports, no sign of anyone having been in the back of the police car.”

“Yeah, but-”

“No, listen, that’s not all. The thing about the girls the bloody man talked about? I looked into it right away. There are no reports of anything like that. Also, Brandt’s gun was found at the station. Only his fingerprints are on it.”

“So you’re telling me Brandt’s story is bullshit?”

“You tell me, I’ve got no clue what was going on there. There’s one more thing though. Brandt’s a drinker, a heavy one. Talked to his other colleagues and friends. All told me the same thing. Brandt’s never sober. Drinks at home, drinks on the job and often falls asleep during work. So why not yesterday? Why was he suddenly sober and out with Ziegler? How was he able to catch and question that guy?”

“That’s all great, but what are-” Right at that moment it hit Kuhn.

“You’re saying Brandt is responsible for this whole thing himself? You’re saying he was the one that killed Ziegler and Meier and set fire to the station?”

Schneider shrugged.

“As I said, no clue. Just telling you the facts. All I know is that this whole thing doesn’t add up, not at all.”

Kuhn had no clue what else to say. In the end, he told Schneider he still had some reports to finish and made his way back to his desk.

Later that day, once he was done with all the paperwork, his thoughts drifted back to Brandt’s case.

If Brandt was the perpetrator, then why this convoluted story?

He kept racking his brain for the next couple of minutes, before opening up Brandt’s profile in the police database.

There were quite a few things in there about the inspector. He’d joined the force more than three decades ago, right after he’d finished school.

When Kuhn checked his family information, he found that his father had already been dead at the time. There was a notice that mentioned that the man had been killed by a burglar.

For the longest time, Brandt had worked in the city. A couple of years ago, he relocated to the smaller town where he ended up working with Officer Ziegler.

As he read on, he found out more things about Brandt. The man had a history of violence, and the file talked about him drinking on the job from time to time. There had been multiple charges of domestic violence against Brandt. Worst of all though, was an investigation of a killed teenager.

As Kuhn opened the file, he read that there were rumors that Brandt had it out for the boy. There were some who thought the inspector was involved in something shady. In the end, though, the investigation never came to anything and was closed. It was a couple of months later that the man relocated.

Kuhn thought back to the recording of Brandt’s questioning. He played it once more and listened more carefully now.

Why did Brandt include all those details in his story? There was no reason for it. Why talk about domestic violence, and why bring up the teenager he’d shot? Why not say that the bloody man overpowered him and Ziegler?

Then Kuhn came to the part about the evil spirit again. Those dreameaters that gave you bad dreams and controlled you while you were asleep.

For a moment Kuhn started to wonder. Schneider had said that Brandt was a heavy drinker and often passed out in the office.

What if… He felt the hair on the back of his neck stand up and quickly shook his head. There’s no way.

Finally, he got up, but before he went home, he decided to pay Brandt a visit.

The moment he arrived the old inspector looked up at him. Before Kuhn could say anything or even open up the cell door Brandt asked him one, single question:

“Do you believe in dreameaters?”

The Room of Change

It’s said that once we’re adults, we don’t remember much of our life before the age of ten. The scientific term for this is childhood amnesia.

Some people talk about not remembering certain events in their childhood. They might look at old photo albums of their early years, and get this sad look on their faces. Often they don’t remember certain family gatherings or birthdays.

I’m not one of these people. I pray that many of these early memories stay hidden. You might ask why. It’s because I grew up an orphan. I never got to meet my biological parents. Instead, I was pushed around from family to family and orphanage to orphanage.

The foster system can work great if you’re lucky. I wasn’t. More than once have I been abused by people who’d promised to take care of me. Needless to say, I grew up to be quite the bad child, a troublemaker, really.

That’s why I ended up at Madame Rose’s orphanage.

It was a foster home for bad kids like me. It was a special place, quite popular in the area I was from. An orphan couldn’t find a foster home or had terrible behavior? He’d end up at Madame Rose’s eventually, to iron out all the wrinkles.

Madame Rose was a tall, haggard and stern old lady. I’d guess she was in her late fifties or early sixties when I moved into her orphanage. She valued nothing more than discipline and obedience.

I hated her guts ever since I first met her. When she stepped in front of me, her eyes were hard. She looked down at me with an expressionless face. The only thing she said was: “So, another one, hm?”

Without another word she led me inside and showed me the place that should be my home for the next years.

The orphanage itself was a testament of times long gone. It was an Old Prussian mansion, most likely dating back to the time when Prussia was still governed by kings. The place was huge from the outside and absolutely gigantic inside.

It was clear that the place had been remodeled countless times. All these changes had transformed it into a sprawling mess of hallways. There were endless corridors and hundreds of rooms in this three-storied monstrosity.

I found out that Madame Rose’s orphanage was actually just one wing of the building. It consisted of the dormitories, the common room, the kitchen, and a few other, smaller rooms. In her stern voice, she made it clear to me that my life would be restricted to this part of the building alone. The rest, she said, was off-limits for us kids.

Well, I was a kid, and like all kids, I loved to explore and sneak around. The more something was forbidden, the more attractive and compelling it became to me.

I spent most of my days studying or listening to Madame Rose’s countless lectures on how to be a good kid.

The few unattended hours of free time I had were spent exploring the maze of hallways and rooms. Hidden and secret passages were everywhere. I found my way into the crawl spaces, explored the attic and even the musky basement. At other times, I saw rooms that no one seemed to have entered in years or maybe even decades. They were old, dusty rooms, filled with nothing but old memories.

One such room I stumbled upon was the Room of Change.

My best and only friend at the orphanage was a boy named Tiny Joe. He got this nickname because he was a scrawny little boy, shy, frail and much too small for his age. I never found out what was wrong with him, but looking back, he must’ve suffered from some sort of hereditary disease. While his body was weak, his mind was always active. During my first days of the orphanage, the two of us would talk endlessly. He told me how much he loved animals, farms, fields and most of all tractors. He’d give anything to be a farmer one day and drive his own tractor.

We soon bounded and became brothers in crime. Whenever his health allowed it, we’d sneak out to explore the labyrinthine maze of hallways.

Of course, we weren’t the only kids who did this. It was just that I didn’t get along with most of the other kids.

I was a troublemaker, but I was far from the worst kid at Madame Rose’s, not by a long shot. There was Tony, a boy who suffered from anger problems and who’d beaten more than one foster sibling to a pulp. Stefan, a creepy tall boy, had a knack for animal cruelty.

None of them were as bad as Michael though.

He was one of the older kids. I’d guess he was about twelve when I moved into the place.

Michael was not just another bad kid. No, he was cruel, and what made it even worse, he was smart. There were also those two big guys, Rick and Jerry, who were always by his side. They were as dumb as a rock, but they looked up to Michael as a sort of role model.

The worst thing about Michael was that he always preyed on Tiny Joe. Of course, other kids made fun of him for being tiny and looking a bit strange, but Michael wasn’t satisfied by words alone.

He really struck gold, when I, new in the orphanage, stepped in. From that day on, he’d found himself a new victim, especially one he could beat up. With Joe he had to be careful, a flick against the ear here, a tiny push against a wardrobe there, but he couldn’t do much more. With me, he didn’t have to watch out.

He once even said it to my face, while Rick and Jerry held me up in front of him.

As I said before, Tiny Joe and I explored the rest of the mansion quite a bit. Curiosity was one reason, sure, but sneaking out also meant that we’d be away from Michael for a while.

Week after week, we’d sneak through empty hallways. Nothing was interesting about most of the rooms we found. One day though, by sheer accident, we found something else. It was a playroom filled with all sorts of toys and stuffed animals. The walls were of a bright green color and prop trees made it seem like we’d stepped into a magical forest. There was a low light from above without any discernible source.

I was utterly overwhelmed by it, and I saw how Tiny Joe’s eyes grew wide. His mouth stood open, and he let out a squeak of sheer surprise before he rushed inside. I followed him right away.

The room was amazing, out of this world. It was as colorful and lively as the rest of the mansion was bleak and dull. Everything inside was fitting the forest theme, even the stuffed animals. There was rabbits, foxes, raccoons, squirrels, and many others. I also saw a tent in one corner and a small hut in another.

As the two of us played there we could both see the bright lettering on the wall:

“The Room of Change”

It was written in glowing, magical letters. On another wall to our right was a rule board. There were only two rules on it.

1. Don’t talk about the Room of Change

2. Don’t take anything from the Room of Change

As we played, we were utterly oblivious to the time that passed. It was the loud, reverberating bell of the mansion that announced that it was dinner time.

We both looked at each other with shock on our faces before we rushed back through the mansion. Please, I prayed, don’t let Madame Rose be there, please. I recited this over and over again, but as I stormed into the common room, I almost crashed into her. She stood there, looking at us in pure outrage, tapping her foot. She gave us a stern lecture in front of everyone else. I could see how some of the other kids smiled and grinned at our misfortune.

“We were just playing in-” Tiny Joe started, but I was able to cover his mouth before he said anything.

“You were playing where, Joe?” she asked the little boy before she turned and glared at me.

“And you Mister Reinhardt, take that hand away,” she spat at me, “I want to hear what Joe has to say.”

I lowered my hand and stared at my feet to avoid her probing gaze. Please remember the rules Tiny Joe, I thought, don’t talk about the room.

“In the hallway,” the tiny boy answered Madame Rose in a low voice.

The old lady watched us, but after a few seconds had passed, she nodded and sent us to the dormitory without dinner.

It was almost a week before we were able to sneak out again.

During that time Michael’s antics got even worse. It got so bad that I snapped at one point. Of course Madame Rose was in the room next door when it happened. Michael played the victim, and with Rick and Jerry backing him up, he got away, and I was the one who got in trouble.

During these first months at the orphanage, I hated them all: the mansion, the other kids, the endless lectures and especially Madam Rose herself, who always seemed to single me out.

The only things I liked were Tiny Joe and the Room of Change.

When Joe and I made it to the room a second time, we first thought it was a different room. The walls were bright blue with waves painted on them. Even the floor of the room was a bright blue except for a few carpet islands. There were all sorts of stuffed ocean animals, toy boats and also a huge palm tree. The only thing that told us it was the same room were the glowing magical letters on the wall.

This time we didn’t dare stay as long as before. There was no way we’d risk being late again this time, especially since I couldn’t risk getting in trouble with Madame Rose yet again.

We always kept to the rules. We said nothing about the room and neither of us took anything. We didn’t dare break them. What if the room would vanish or the door would stay closed to us forever.

The room was a magical place. Each time we went there, it was different. Neither Tiny Joe nor I had any idea how something like this was even possible.

It was by sheer accident that the two of us learned that we weren’t the only ones who knew about the room’s existence. One day we entered the room and found someone else inside. It was Rudolph and Martin, two boys about my age. They’d recently become frequent targets of Michael’s as well. At first, we all were surprised to find each other there.

I confronted them right away. It was my and Tiny Joe’s room I said, but the two of them replied that they’d found it a long time ago when hiding from Michael.

In the end, the four of us agreed on a truce. No fighting or anything like that in the room. To my surprise though, we all got along great. We even ended up playing together, and when it was time to go back, we all did so as new friends. As we made our way through the long-winded hallways, we all exchanged whispers. Each one had his own ideas what the Room of Change would be like the next time we went there.

The moment we returned our little group was noticed. Michael had his goons on the lookout for us at all times. I could imagine how furious he was to find out that his punching bags had vanished yet again.

In the next weeks, things started to get a bit better. For the first time, I didn’t hang out with only Tiny Joe, but also with Martin. I even warmed up to Rudolph.

I should find out how wrong I was about him soon enough.

A couple of weeks later Martin wasn’t allowed to play with us. He hadn’t paid attention during the lectures, so Madame Rose forbid him from playing with the rest of us. So that day it was only Tiny Joe, Rudolph and me who set out to find the room once again.

When we arrived, the room had magically transformed into a giant farm. One wall resembled a barn, prop trees rested against another and stuffed farm animals littered the floor. There was even a plastic paddle tractor standing in the room’s center.

The moment Tiny Joe saw the tractor he ignored everything else and raced towards it as fast as his little legs allowed him to. I hadn’t even set foot in the room when I saw him in the tractor’s seat already. He was whooping with joy as he hit the pedals and started driving in a small circle. There wasn’t much room to drive it, but Tiny Joe didn’t seem to mind that at all.

For a moment I watched him before I went to the barn to see if there was any way to enter it.

It was right at this moment that the door sprang open behind us. My eyes grew wide when I saw Michael barge into the room, followed by Rick and Jerry.

“So that’s where you’ve been hiding all that time!” Michael yelled at Tiny Joe and me. “Almost forgot about this stupid place,” he added kicking a small stuffed animal aside.

Rick and Jerry followed him, both grinning and started to make a ruckus right away. They both went straight for the prop apple trees and started breaking them apart.

“Thanks, Rudolph,” Michael said laughing. As I looked to Rudolph, I saw him shuffle around, looking down at his feet.

The bastard, he’d betrayed us!

I stormed forward to punch him, but suddenly Rick jumped in front of me and pushed me to the ground.

Behind him, Jerry picked up some of the stuffed animals. He started tearing them apart while guffawing like an idiot.

“No! Don’t!” I screamed at him, but when I tried to get up, Rick pushed me down again.

From where I was I saw how Michael’s face distorted into a cruel smile. He’d only watched the destruction so far, but now he walked over to Tiny Joe. The tiny boy was still sitting in the tractor, frozen in fear.

“Now what do we have here…” Michael started.

“You know Joe, working a farm can be quite dangerous.”

Tiny Joe nodded, but I could see that he fought hard to hold back his tears.

“I know, Michael,” he said in a low, scared voice.

“Well, then you should know how easy tractors can get into accidents!”

With that, he stepped behind the tractor and pushed it forward with full force. Tiny Joe screamed up in terror and surprise as the tractor hurtled forward and crashed against the wall. The tractor tipped over, and Tiny Joe landed on the floor crying.

“Oh no, what happened, Joe?” Didn’t I tell you to be careful?” Michael said in his most sarcastic voice.

“You know what Joe, I think it’s best if we get rid of this thing!”

With that, he picked up the tractor and threw it to the ground over and over again in front of Joe’s eyes. The little boy was completely out of it. He jumped forward and tried to stop Michael from destroying the tractor. The older boy only laughed, almost giggled at Tiny Joe’s attempts. Again and again, he pushed him to the ground and in the end kicked him away. Soon the tractor shattered.

All the while I couldn’t do a thing. Rick was bigger and stronger than me and had no problem at all to pin me to the ground. Tears of anger streamed down my face as I watched the scene in front of me.

Finally, Michael turned to Rick and Jerry.

“Throw them out!” he yelled at them. Then he focused on Joe and me, “that was the last time you ever came here!”

With that Rick and Jerry pushed first me and then Tiny Joe out of the room. The little boy stumbled a few steps before his legs couldn’t carry him anymore and he fell to the ground. He was still crying.

“It’s so, so, so unfair! Why do they have to do this! Why did they have to destroy everything?”

He was out of it, crying hard, breathing heavily and I could almost hear his heartbeat.

I helped him and led him away from the room and the sounds of the still ongoing destruction behind the door.

The moment we got back to the common, Tony looked up and started to grin when he saw that Tiny Joe was crying.

“What’s wrong crybaby? You sad you’re so tiny?”

At that moment I lost it completely. All the pent-up anger was released as I jumped Tony and started to beat down on him with my fists. I screamed so loud that Madame Rose heard it from the classroom. She came over and dragged me off Tony in an instant.

“What is going on here?” she demanded to know.

Before I could even say anything, she let go of Tony and me and went over to Tiny Joe. He was laying on the floor, not moving.

Madame Rose’s face was serious in an instant. She picked up the tiny boy, trying desperately to find out what was wrong with him. Finally, she carried him over to the infirmary.

“What’s wrong with him, Madame Rose?” I asked trying to follow her.

“Stay were you are, Max! And if you don’t behave this time, I dare, I dare you,” she broke up. When she looked at me, I saw that her lips were quivering and I could have sworn I saw the hint of tears in her eyes. Without another word, she closed the door behind herself.

It was only minutes later that we heard a car arrive outside. Doctor Schmidt entered the room just moments later. Without saying a word, he went straight to the infirmary to take care of Tiny Joe. I’d never been so worried in my entire life.

For the next half hour, everyone in the common room was silent. No one even dared to move.

“Who died?” I heard Michael say as he entered the common room, Rick and Jerry in tow as always.

No one said a thing.

I’d have run over to him, if not for Madame Rose who returned to the common room in that instant. She looked different, tired, anxious and most of all, old.

Her eyes wandered over the room before they came to rest in Michael who was still smiling.

Tiny Joe mentioned his name and told her what Michael had done. When she turned to me, I too, explained to her that Tiny Joe and I’d been playing together. Then Michael and his friends came to beat us up.

Michael tried to wiggle his way out of course, but while he was smart, he was still just a kid. Madame Rose wasn’t stupid either. She’d noticed that Michael had been teasing Tiny Joe, but so far she’d thought it was mostly harmless.

After this whole ordeal, Michael was put into the solitary room for almost two weeks. Sure, he studied with us and got his meal with us in the common room, but he wasn’t allowed to interact with anyone.

He was supposed to learn from his mistakes and even got special lectures and talks by Madame Rose. Many times I could hear her yell at him from behind the door to the classroom.

Tiny Joe was transferred to the hospital after a day or two. He’d over-exhausted himself, and something inside his already broken body had ruptured. After another week though, Madame Rose informed us that Joe was doing much better by now. He’d not return to the orphanage though. While at the hospital one of the nurses had accepted him as a foster child and he’d be staying with her from now on.

I was a kid, so of course, I was sad that I’d lost a friend. For a long while I cried in the corner of the common room. Once I’d calmed down though, I was happy that he’d found a home and that he’d not be stuck in this place anymore.

When Michael was released from the solitary room, he had changed. I’d been terribly afraid as the day approached, but he was quiet and stayed mostly by himself. He talked to Rick and Jerry a few times, but avoided everyone else and, he seemed to be scared.

Things changed from then on. I stayed friends with Martin, and even befriended some of the other boys. It seemed that ever since Michael’s constant rule of terror had come to an end, we all started to get along better.

How dumb of a kid I was to think that things would change so easily.

Ever since Tiny Joe was gone, I’d not entered the Room of Change. It felt wrong to go there without him, and I wasn’t even sure if the room was still there. After all, we had talked about it, and Michael and the rest had made a ruckus inside.

In time though I couldn’t fight my curiosity anymore. I snuck out of the common room one day and made my way through the hallways of the mansion. It felt strange to do this on my own. At times I turned around to see how far behind Tiny Joe was before I remembered he wasn’t with me this time.

I felt a mixture of joy and fear when I found the sturdy wooden door. It was still there! I put my hand on the handle, but somehow I was too scared to open the door. What if the room was gone? What if all that awaited me behind was another empty, dusty room?

I didn’t get to think about it for much longer, because I soon heard footsteps behind me. When I turned around, I saw Michael, Rick, and Jerry.

“What a strange coincidence to find you here,” Michael said.

“What do you want?” I asked annoyed.

“It’s because of you that I got into trouble,” he said in a low, angry voice.

“What do you mean? You were the one who pushed and beat up Tiny Joe!”

Right at this time Rick and Jerry came forward and grabbed me. There was no way I could resist them.

Then Michael opened the door to the Room of Change.

This time the room was held in a darker, almost nightly theme. The walls were covered in stars, moons and other planets. The rest of the room was more mysterious as well. The only stuffed toys were suns and stars.

Rick and Jerry dragged me inside. Michael followed after us and closed the door behind himself.

In his eyes, I could see how angry he was. He hadn’t changed at all, no if anything, he’d gotten worse. He’d been fuming all that time and must have plotted his revenge ever since he got out of the solitary room.

“Hold him down!”

I saw something flash in the low light of the room. Michael was holding one of the knives from lunch in his hand. My eyes grew wide with fear.

“What are you-” but I broke up as he held the knife right in front of my face.

“What do you think I am going to do? I am going to cut you up,” he answered with an evil grin.

“Lift his shirt,” he commanded Rick and Jerry. The two of them did nothing. I saw how they both looked at each other anxiously, not sure what to do.

“Didn’t you hear me? Lift it up!”

When he pointed the knife at them, they looked as scared as me. Without another moment of hesitation, they drew back my shirt to reveal my naked stomach.

Michael grinned and then pressed the knife against my skin. He dragged the knife across my stomach one centimeter at a time. His eyes were glowing with an insane sort of satisfaction as he did it.

At first, there was a tingling sensation, but then I started to feel a stinging pain. I screamed up and tried to get away, but Rick and Jerry held on to me. Michael took the knife away, and I could see a tiny red line on my stomach.

As I saw it, I started to freak out. I twisted and struggled against my captors grasp, but there was no hope.

“Oh, that’s just the beginning…”

“Michael, we really shouldn’t-” Jerry started.

“Shut up fatass! I tell you when to-“

He broke up as all four of us heard a noise erupt from the room around us. Then, the light of the room became a tad bit dimmer.

“WHO DARES TO DEFILE THE ROOM OF CHANGE!” a voice thundered from behind us.

Then everything happened at once. Rick and Jerry both screamed up in surprise and released me. I came to my tumbling feet and was about to rush to the door when Michael grabbed my arm.

I turned around to get free and froze. I saw a big, towering figure, shrouded entirely in darkness behind Michael. All I could see was an emotionless white mask. Before he could even yell or lift the knife again, the figure grabbed onto him.

In surprise, he let go of me as he was dragged backward. The knife fell from his hand and clattered to the ground. The figure pulled him to the back wall. It opened up and before I could say anything the figure, as well as a screaming Michael, had vanished behind it.

It was at this moment that I ran from the room, pushing Rick and Jerry aside. Once outside I didn’t understand what had happened. Had the room punished Michael?

It was only seconds later that the door opened again. Rick and Jerry stormed out, both screaming and crying, their faces white as sheets. For a short moment, my eyes met the mask of the dark figure before the door to the room closed.

As imposing as the figure had been, in that last moment I saw it, it hadn’t seemed scary or evil. No, I felt as if it was the embodiment of the Room of Change itself who’d rescued me.

That night I slept better than ever before. When I got up the next day, everything was back to normal, except for one thing: Michael wasn’t around.

The moment Rick and Jerry saw me, they both hurried away.

It was later that day that Madame Rose told us that Michael wouldn’t be staying with us anymore. He’d left for a different orphanage that morning.

Many of the kids in the room started to smile, and some even laughed up in happiness at the thought of being rid of him. Madame Rose’s stern, angry glare shut them up in an instant.

I was about to say something, but in the end, I stayed quiet. I never mentioned what had happened the day before to anyone.

After Michael was gone, things changed, but not as much as I’d hoped. The orphanage never became a happy or lovely place. It didn’t matter how many friends I made with Madame Rose around. She was as strict and stern as always.

For the year and a half I spent at the place, I never developed an ounce of sympathy for the old lady.

As time passed on, things got better for me. My stay at the orphanage ended when I was adopted by a friendly couple who took care of me ever since. After all that had happened with Tiny Joe and Michael and especially due to the discipline Madame Rose had hammered into me, I had changed. I’d learned how to behave, and in time I grew to love my new foster parents.

It’s now been almost twenty years since I left the place. I am writing this all down because I recently learned what really became of Tiny Joe.

Madame Rose had told us he’d found a foster home, but she’d lied to us. The truth was in an old newspaper I read while doing research for a project at university. An article mentioned the unfortunate death of a tiny orphaned boy, only nine years old. He’d died at the local hospital due to complications. It was during the same year that we’d stayed at the orphanage together.

It was a week later that I paid his grave a visit. I’d brought some flowers, and for a while, I told him about my life.

I suddenly remembered the old orphanage and decided to visit it as well. Once there, I saw that the place had closed down. At the city hall, I was informed that it had been closed after Madame Rose’s death.

The old lady had no relatives, and so the property was transferred to city ownership. In the end, no one knew what to do with the old building. Even twenty years ago, it hadn’t been in great condition, and now it was almost a ruin.

It was during this talk with the city administration that I remembered the Room of Change.

It wasn’t hard to enter the old place. To my surprise, the front door wasn’t even locked.

Nothing remained of the place’s former glory. When I’d been living there, it had been a magnificent place. Now all I could see was dust, dirt and spider webs. The many winding hallways seemed odd and constricting to an adult.

The first thing I found was the old common room. There was none of the furniture left, but I was still flooded by nostalgia.

Then I went on my search for the Room of Change. I must have wandered through the hallways for hours before I stood in front of the door. As I opened it I was greeted by a room that now seemed almost small. It was as old and musky as all the others.

Now, as an adult, I recognized the backdrop on the walls. I smiled as I saw that it was a mountainous theme this time. The carpet on the floor was as white as snow, or at least that’s what it must have been years ago. A few prop stones were positioned against the walls. I found a single stuffed animal, a mountain bird, discarded in one of the corners. As I picked it up, I noticed something else on the wall behind the backdrop.

When I moved the fabric aside, I found a door that was almost perfectly fused with the wall.

The door led to a different room. When I moved my flashlight around, I was confused for a moment. Then I realized what this room was. It was a sort of backroom like in a theater. There were countless backdrops here, a variety of props and an innumerable amount of stuffed animals and toys.

As I paced the room, I noticed another door. When I opened it, I stepped into an old bedroom. A quick glance around told me that this must have been Madame Rose’s former quarters.

At this moment I understood the truth. The Room of Change was right behind Madame Rose’s quarters.

It hadn’t been a magical or supernatural place like we kids had thought. It was something the old lady had created for us.

She was a stern old teacher and caretaker. She taught us bad kids manners, discipline and how to behave. I guess it must have been necessary for her to keep up this facade, so we’d respect and even fear her. It was her own way of teaching us.

This room though proved, how dearly she must have loved us deep inside. She must have created this room, knowing that we kids would find it eventually.

It was a place where we could find the happiness we needed so desperately, and she couldn’t give us openly.

As I walked through the back room, looking at all the backdrop, I could only imagine how hard it must have been for this old lady to change the room herself. I could almost see her now. Long after we’d gone to bed, she was dragging the backdrops and everything else inside. All to change the room yet again into a different, unique nature.

I felt the tears coming to my eyes as I realized what she’d done.

Suddenly I remembered the dark figure I’d seen that day. The figure that had saved me and taken Michael away. Searching through the backroom proved my suspicions to be true. As I held the mask in my hands, it was clear that this figure had been none other than Madam Rose herself.

The Morning After

Mornings after are the worst.

I decided to start this one off with a cool beer from the fridge. It really helps to calm down, keep the hangover at bay and it gets me going in the morning. Take from this whatever you want.

I made my way through the living room, and I can see that John’s still out cold on the couch.

“Guess you had a bit too much, buddy,” I joke to myself.

Janet is sleeping on the floor. Poor girl didn’t even make it to her bed.

I was halfway through the beer when I went to the kitchen and put up some coffee. It always helped Janet to wake up.

I took sips from the beer while grinding up some fresh coffee and a few minutes later I made my way back to the living room.

I held the freshly brewed cup in my hands and try to wake her up.

“Hey there, baby girl, I made you some coffee.”

She is still somewhat dizzy and only half awake. Her tired eyes don’t focus on anything yet.

“Time to freshen up. We got lots of cleaning up to do after last night,” I say and give her a wink.

Man, she’s so cute with her big wide, eyes as she finally focuses on me.

Only moments later she stumbles into the bathroom. I put the cup aside, and as I can hear her retch and vomit, I sigh.

“You alright? Shouldn’t you be used to it by now?”

No answer.

“Need some help? Want me to hold up your hair?”

I find her huddled over the toilet bowl. In an instant I am right behind her, stroking her back, holding up her hair and whispering in her ear.

“It’s alright, baby girl, don’t worry about it.”

She retches again as I say this.

“Come on now, not like you had that much to drink.”

At first, she turns away from me, almost struggles against my help. She only keeps it up for a moment though before she lets me wash off her face.

“See, that’s not so bad after all. I know it’s not easy for you, believe me. I’ve been there before,” I comfort her, “at least kind of.”

A little laugh escapes me as I say this. I take her hand and lead her back to the living room.

“You doing better? It’s time to clean up this whole mess.”

I leave her sitting in the living room as I get the things we need the most now: the trash bags and the hacksaw.

When she sees me holding the saw her eyes grow wide again, her lips quiver, but she’s not able to say a thing.

“Come on now, not like John’s gonna resist anyway.”

“N-no, I can’t,” she starts, but I cut her off right away.

“We’ve done this whole thing before, baby girl. You really should be used to it by now.”

“Oh god now, don’t make me do it, I can’t!”

“Now, now, it’s so easy,” I say and forcefully take her hand into mine. Moments later, our hands close around the handle of the saw.

Together the two of us start the first cut. The blade slowly sinks into John’s flesh. I can feel Janet struggling against me. It’s futile though. I won’t let her go. As we move the saw back and forth she starts to cry and mumbling to herself.

“We all have to do our part. I took care of him last night, and now you have to do your part and get rid of the body. It’s only fair.”

I hug her tenderly and kiss her neck before I get up.

“No goddammit, not again!” she screams the moment I turn my back on her.

She’s having another of her angry fits, I think.

“You crazy freak!”

She tries to come after me with the saw, but I am already a few steps away. The chains between her arms and legs make it impossible for her to be fast enough to close the distance between us. She has no chance of actually hitting me.

The moment her futile attack is over, I hit her square in the face, hard.

She falls backward and curls up into a sobbing and trembling ball.

“Okay bitch, I tried to play nice, I really did,” I yell at her.

I pull her up so that her face is right in front of my own.

“You better get going with this shit right, fucking, now. And maybe, if you do a good enough job, I might not have to do THIS to you again tonight.”

I can see her eyes, I can hear the sharp inhale of breath, and I can almost smell her fear. In an instant, she turns away from me and picks up the saw with shaking hands.

“Good girl,” I praise her.

I watch for a moment as she drives the saw deep into the flesh and finally bone. For a moment I listen to the sound of metal grinding against bone. Then I go back to the computer.

“Now let’s see who’s next,” I wonder out loud as I scroll through her Facebook profile.

“Can’t believe you had something going on with all those guys on here, you little whore. We’ll have to get rid of all them before I can ever truly love you.”

For a few moments, I click through her pictures before I focus on one specific album.

‘Summer Vacation 2016’

I look at the people in the pictures. I find the one I was searching for right away. There’s this blond beach boy, standing next to Janet, his arm around her shoulder in two pictures. I mouseover his face to find out his name. As I read it, I grin.

“Guess Andrew’s next.”

As I say it, I see her cringe.

“Oh did I struck a nerve there? Well, guess I better drop him a message. I am sure he wants to see you again.”

As I work my way through is profile I send him a happy, bouncy message via Janet’s account.

I can’t help but sigh. As Janet’s busying herself with the saw, I go to the fridge to get another beer.

The morning after is really hard, because every time I realize just how much work there’s still to do.

Tram Depot

Did you ever fall asleep on the last subway or tram?

If you did, you know what happens. At the last station an attendant or in some cases the driver will wake you up and tell you to get out. Then you’re left to figure out how to get home on your own.

At times things can get a bit more unlucky, and people are missed.

In my city, those people will end up in one of the three large depots that the trams are returned to.

These are large maintenance halls with enough room for more than a hundred trams.

During the day these depots are buzzing with employees. There are tram drivers who arrive and start on their daily shift. There is the maintenance staff who do regular check-ups on the tram cars and take care of repairs. And then there’s the office staff who takes care of all sorts of logistics.

At night though, when the last trams for the day arrive, there is only one person left at the depot: me.

I am the lucky bastard who has to go through the trams that arrive at the depot in the evening and during the night.

My job consists of checking them for lost items, cleaning up any serious mess and report damages done to the interior.

Occasionally though, I also have to handle those poor people who are forgotten at the last station. It’s by no means a common thing.

As I said, it’s the driver’s job to send everyone out before the trams are returned to the depots. There are some though who are lazy and can’t be bothered to do the checkups, others are plain assholes.

My reaction to these occurrences is a mixture of pity and anger. Pity for the person who ends up at the depot and anger for the driver who didn’t do his damned job. I am especially pissed because I have to walk whoever ended up here to the end of the premise and send them off.

It’s only mildly annoying if it’s some guy who fell asleep after a long day at work.

The real shit fest starts if it’s a drunk or worse a bum.

I once found a guy in a tram who was so drunk, he couldn’t walk anymore. After trying to lead him out of the depot for half an hour, I gave up and put him to rest in one of the trams. I sent him off in the morning with one of the first lines leaving.

The thing about the bum was entirely different. He was the crazy type. The moment I tried to enter the tram, he woke up and threatened to attack me or stab me. For some time I tried to calm him down. Finally though, when he started a ruckus in the tram car itself, I was forced to call the cops. I ended up staying almost two hours longer than I should have that night.

The truth is, the tram depot can be quite creepy at night. Sure, the whole thing is ablaze with lights, but it doesn’t help. The place is absolutely gigantic, the size of many soccer fields.

Try to imagine yourself in a giant hall, consisting of nothing but a small office area and dozens of tracks, on which trams are parked one after another for hundreds of meters.

At night when I am there alone the whole place is in utter solitude. Even the smallest of sounds not coming from yourself can cause a feeling of dread.

“What if?” is a common thing on my mind. I don’t know what I am terrified of though.

In the end, it’s rare that anyone is trapped in the trams and there is no reason for anyone to break in. I mean you can’t steal a tram or a maintenance bay.

And of course, security cameras are surrounding the premise.

What I’m trying to say is that there is no reason to be anxious. None at all. I guess I just can’t help it at times. I blame my obsession with horror movies for this.

Now here’s the thing, on a typical weekday, there aren’t many trams running at night. From around midnight till five in the morning the stations are only served once every hour, if at all. So there’s not much going on at the depots.

On the weekend you’ve trams coming and going at all time during the night, and you’re almost never alone.

On weekdays though, things are different. The last tram of the day arrives at around one in the morning and that’s about it. I often have a short chat or smoke with the driver before he makes his way home. After that I am pretty much on my own, having to handle lights out and all that.

Last Tuesday was one of those nights. That day though I couldn’t help but feel unsettled. After the driver of the last tram had left, I was again all by myself. I don’t know why or where it came from, but I had this strange feeling that someone was watching me. It was the weirdest of sensations.

I looked around and let my gaze slide over all the trams, but of course, there was no one there. A bit apprehensive I entered the last tram and walked through it.

There was an empty beer bottle here, some McDonald’s packaging over there and someone had forgotten a handbag. Thankfully, there was nothing damaged or broken.

I threw away the trash and took the handbag to our small lost-and-found room.

The moment I returned I saw something. Down the line of trams, I saw a figure inside one of the cars. It looked almost as if someone was sitting inside.

It was a tram further down the line, which meant it must’ve arrived a couple hours ago, in the early evening. How could someone be still inside? Had I forgotten to check the tram? This made no sense.

As I made my way towards it, the figure didn’t move at all, almost as if it was frozen up.

“Must be asleep,” I told myself.

I cursed and started walking down the line of trams. I really didn’t want to deal with someone right now. I stepped past the locked doors of the dark tram cars, only for that crawling sense of dread to come back to me. For a moment I stopped as I felt goosebumps on the back of my neck. I jerked around and looked back at where I’d come from. Nothing.

I breathed a sigh of relief and was about to continue on my way when I saw that the figure ahead was gone.

“What in the…” I whispered to myself.

I hastened my pace and the moment I reached the tram I peered inside. There was no one there. I took out my keys, unlocked the door and entered it.

“Anyone in here? Hello?”

I walked through the thing from front to back but found nothing. I started to get a bit unnerved. I’d been strangely on edge all night, so had I imagined things? I’d seen it so clearly though.

In the end, I shook my head and told myself I was getting tired. I should finish things up for tonight and make my way home.

Once I was back at the front of the depot, I heard something again. At first, I told myself my mind must be playing tricks on me still. The more I listened though, the clearer I heard it.

It sounded like shuffling feet. Suddenly I felt very cold.

I told myself again to just finish things up and ignore whatever was going on here. Somehow though I couldn’t do that. I started to walk past the tracks and had a look down the corridors between the lines of trams. Where was it coming from?

I’d only walked past half of the tracks when I could make out something. It was a person. As I stopped, I saw a tiny, old lady. She was wearing a dress and holding a handbag that was swinging back and forth with each of her steps.

What was she doing here at a time like this? Was she the one I’d seen before? Did she leave the tram and made her way over here?

“Ma’am? Excuse me, is everything alright?” I called out to her.

She didn’t react at all. Instead, I could see that she continued to shuffle into my direction. One step at a time, almost dragging herself forward.

I took a few steps in her direction when I heard her speak.

“Oh my, can you help me out? Would you please come over here?”

I stopped right in my tracks. The voice sounded… wrong, almost like a garbled up recording.

“Would you please come over here?” the voice repeated.

It sounded exactly the same as before. The same weird garbled up vocals, the same drawn out words. I felt a shiver running down my spine, and my arms were covered in goosebumps. Something was wrong here.

As I stood there and looked on, she stared at me and did repeat it a third time. I am not sure if I even saw her mouth move at all.

Then, for a moment the whole depot seemed to turn darker as if all the lights above were dimmed out. There was a sort of lurking shadow behind the old lady.

It was a strange, twisted thing, as gigantic as the lady was small. I saw it move forward and stretch into my direction. It reminded me of a bird of prey. It looked almost as if it was reaching out towards me with ghastly dark wings and talons. I inched back a few steps, and the vision was gone again.

I stood there, shaking and sweaty. I shook my head in confusion. This wasn’t real. It was just in my mind. There couldn’t be something like this.

At that moment I saw something else that made me forget the strange vision from before. There was a sticky, dark liquid all below her and down the corridor. It was as if it was running down from her body. What the hell was that? Was she bleeding?

“Wait, hold on a moment, what is-“

But I broke up when she did repeat the sentence once more.

Without being able to think clearly, I ran back to the office area. What was the matter with her? Was she hurt or something? I picked up the emergency phone to dial for an ambulance or help when something else hit me.

Once I’ve finished the checkup of a tram, it is locked. It’s common procedure. Sure, with enough strength you can probably push the doors open and get out. They’re hydraulic after all. You’d need a whole lot of strength to do that though. Not even I’m able to do it, and I am no lightweight. So how would this old lady be able to get out on her own?

If she’d been in one of the trams and I’d missed her before, she’d still be locked in. If she came into the depot to get help, why was she in the back? There’s no back entrance. The only way in is via the front. I’d have seen her before!

This whole thing didn’t add up.

“Would you please come over here?” I heard her voice again.

It was right outside the office now. I froze up when I heard the shuffling feet and when the office door creaked.

She was repeating the same sentence again and again. With each time it was more distorted than before. There was something else resonating within it. It was almost as if a sinister laugh was underlying in it. Some sort of barely hidden anticipation.

Then the door was pushed open, and I saw it again. The lurking, shadowy, vulture-like shade. It forced itself through the office door into my direction, dimming out all the light in the room.

Before I could even think, my flight-response was triggered. I rushed towards the front door of the office area and got out of there.

I didn’t look back, I didn’t lock up or turn off the lights, nothing. I ran from the place for dear life.

Of course, my boss tore me a new one when I came to work the next day. What was I thinking? Why didn’t I lock up? What if something happened?

I didn’t tell him what I’d seen. I mean who’d believe a story like that. Everything was normal, and the place was busy with maintenance staff and drivers as usual.

I finally asked him about the old lady and the trail of blood that I’d seen next to track six.

He told me there was nothing there. No liquid or anything. What was I even talking about?

When I asked him if he’d checked the security footage, he shook his head.

“Didn’t get the time to do that yet,” with that he got up and walked over to his laptop, “hold on.”

He clicked around a few times and then I saw him focus on the screen.

I stood there and watched him. I saw his face go blank and then after a while, all the color vanished from it.

“What is-” I started to ask, but before I could finish, he closed the laptop.

“There’s nothing at all,” he said, the fear audible in his voice.

After that, he told me to go home, have a few days off and come back next week.

I’d hoped that there was nothing and that I’d just imagined the whole thing. As I type this out though, I know that something was there that night.

And even though he said nothing, I know my boss saw it on the tapes as well.

Cat Fights

I moved into my new apartment back in July. I was sick and tired of my small one-room apartment and was on the look-out for a new one.

It was by sheer accident that I stumbled upon a cheap three-room one online. The rent was only a couple hundred Euros, which was almost unbelievable.

It was only half an hour later that I called the landlord to ask for visitation.

When I arrived, it was clear in an instant why the place was so cheap. It was on the second floor of what must have once been an old warehouse.

The first thing I noticed, when the landlord led me to the entry door at the back of the building, were the cats.

There were at least two dozens of them all over the yard. I asked the landlord about them and if they were strays, but he told me they belonged to a neighbor living nearby.

He pointed at an older two-storied family house. The place must have once been nice, but now it looked dated. The front yard was completely overgrown, and it looked like it hadn’t been cared for in years.

Inside the building, the landlord led me through a long hallway until we reached a sturdy metal door. To be honest, I didn’t feel too great about this whole thing anymore. While he fondled with the keys, I was about to make up an excuse to get out of there.

The moment I saw the actual apartment I stopped. The place looked nothing short of amazing. It was huge, nicely renovated and as modern as could be.

I moved in about a week later.

It wasn’t long before the problems started.

At first, I didn’t mind the cats at all. Sure it was a bit creepy that they all eyed me suspiciously whenever I got outside, but that was about it. After a while, some of them even approached me and let me pet them.

I don’t have a problem with animals, it’s the opposite, I adore them. It’s just that these cats were quite the pests at night.

I don’t know what’s going on, but it seems that some of them were fighting during the night. Many times, loud screeching, hissing and growling noises woke me up at night.

It never lasted for a long time. Whenever I got up and made my way to the window to yell at them the fight and the noises were already over.

For the longest time, I tried to ignore it and shrug it off. I mean, it’s just cats, not like they were hurting anyone, right?

The problem was that it happened all the time. I have quite the stressful job, and it’s quite normal for me to work ten or twelve hours a day. If you can’t get a good night’s sleep before a tough day like this, you start to get angry, pissed even.

So a couple of weeks ago, I had enough and approached my neighbor about it.

He was a middle-aged man, late forties I’d say, living all by himself. I don’t know why he owned all those cats. Did he adopt all the strays in the area?

I’d never talked to him yet, but he’d greeted me a few times and seemed friendly enough. When I walked over to his front door, I told myself to stay calm and talk to him like a level-headed person.

I stepped past his many cats and rang the doorbell. It had barely stopped ringing when the man opened the door. He looked surprised when he saw me, almost a bit anxious.

“Hello there, mister…?”

“Schwartz,” I finished his sentence, “I am here because of your cats.”

His eyes grew wide for a moment.

“What do you mean? There’s been no one living here, so they-“

“They are too loud!” I pressed out in anger and told myself once more to calm down.

“What I mean is during the night. Their constant fighting is waking me up all the time. Isn’t there something you can do about it?”

“Oh, so that’s it. I am sorry for that I… well the cats are quite protective of the area. There are these other strays, you know, they are-“

“Okay, I get it, I really do, but I’ve got to get my sleep! Can’t you put them inside or something?”

“I can try, but they don’t like the indoors much, but I’ll see what I can do.”

“Great, I wouldn’t like to take it any further.”

For a quick moment, I saw how shock washed over his face before he nodded. I didn’t say anything else and left.

I felt like a bit of an asshole, but I couldn’t deal with this anymore. Now, of course, I wouldn’t go to the police because of a few cats, but sometimes a hint like this worked wonders.

I don’t know how the guy did it, but from that day onward, there was no more trouble. The cats were still outside, but somehow they weren’t fighting anymore.

After two weeks, I toyed with the idea of going over there and thanking him. I was a bit too early with that one.

One night, about a week ago, I was woken up again by the same noises outside. It was terribly loud as if one of the cats was fighting for dear life.

The moment I was at the window and opened it the noise was fading again. When I looked at the clock, I saw that it was barely two in the morning. I shut the window and went back to bed. I am a light sleeper though, and it took me almost an hour to fall back asleep.

I got an idea the next day. Sure, I could go and yell at the guy again, but what would it help? No, I’d thought of something else. That last night, the noise had come from almost precisely below my window. There were quite a few ways to scare off cats, I thought.

I got myself a bucket of water and put it right next to my window. If I’d hear these cats again, I’d make sure they’d regret it.

Two days later I got my chance. It was long past midnight when the noises started again. It was the weekend, so I was still up at that time. I rushed to the window, ripped it open and took up the bucket. The noise was fading as always, and I cursed to myself, but then I saw movement in the dark below.

In my pure anger, I picked up the bucket and sprayed its content in a long ark over everything below.

What I’d expected was to hear the frightened screams of cats as they rushed off into the night. Instead, I heard something different.

“What in the hell,” I heard my neighbor’s voice curse below me.

Then lower, in what was almost a whisper, he said, “No, don’t you dare!”

I was utterly dumbfounded and didn’t understand. Don’t tell me he was out there fighting the cats himself.

In a second I picked up my phone to illuminate the area below.

What I saw was indeed my neighbor. He wasn’t alone though. He was holding a little girl in his arms who was desperately struggling against his grip trying to get away. I saw that he had his hand over her mouth, but I could still hear the same low, muffled cat-like sounds.

The moment my neighbor realized that I was there, he sprinted back to his house holding the child in his arms. Only moments the two of them had vanished.

What the hell had just happened? I stood there, confused and befuddled.

Only minutes later my confusion was replaced by logic and concern. Who was this girl and what was he doing with her? She tried to get away from him, I remembered. Something was definitely not alright with this whole situation.

I called the cops and told them what I’d seen, and thought was going on.

They arrived soon after. From my window I could see my neighbor yelling at them and then pleading with them, trying to make excuses. The police didn’t have any of it and made their way inside.

It was a couple days later that I learned what had been going on there.

My neighbor hadn’t always lived in this building. Six years ago, he was a married man, living in a different part of the country.

His wife had died during the birth of their daughter due to complications. The man had vowed to take care of the child by himself. He sold most of his belongings and left the life he’d led with his wife behind and moved here, into this old, cheap home.

At first, he’d cared for the child in honest, he admitted in a police interview. Soon enough though, he started to despise her and blamed the child for the death of his wife.

Instead of taking care of the child, he kept her as one of the stray cats that turned up around his place.

That’s why the little girl had sounded like a cat. That’s all she ever knew and ever heard since the man said he’d refused to talk to her at all. She tried her best to mimic the sounds and speech of the only ones around her.

Once she got older though, he realized there was no way he could let her roam freely. Instead, he locked her away in the house’s basement.

As the years went by though, the little child figured out how to sneak away at night, to the frustration of her father.

Looking back I can’t help but blame myself. Each night I stood at my window cursing at what I thought was cat fights below. Instead, it must have been this little girl, trying to escape her father’s clutches.

Dumpster Man

There are many things which can reveal something about ourselves. The way we dress, our behavior, who we associate with and even how we furnish our apartment.

At times it’s the smallest things that reveal the most.

There is one thing though, no one ever thinks about that can reveal quite a bit about us: our trash.

Now, to be honest, I never thought about this myself. The one who came up with the idea was dumpster man.

Dumpster man lived in the same apartment building as me. It was this giant monstrosity that housed hundreds of people.

My apartment was located on the fourth floor. From there I could see the nearby park, the shopping mall down the road and of course the building’s walled in dumpster area.

It’s a common thing in my city. Each apartment building has its own private dumpsters that are walled in and can only be accessed via a key.

Dumpster man first appeared about two months ago. He was this scrawny, young dude with long, unkempt hair and roughed up clothes. The first time I saw him I instantly thought of Jay from the Kevin Smith movies.

He was, as you can probably guess, loitering around the dumpster area. I have no clue what drove him there, but whenever I took a peek outside, I could see him. At times he was sitting on the ground in front of it reading a book, at others, he was leaning against the wall smoking a cigarette.

At first, I thought he was a bum who decided to hang around the apartment building for some reason. I learned from a neighbor that he was actually living here as well. Apparently, he was some type of unemployed stoner dude, living on welfare.

Quite a few people scoffed at him when they threw their trash away or badmouthed him, but I wasn’t bothered by him at all. The dude was just sitting there reading and minding his own business. Hell, after the first week I started to greet him, and by the second we smoked the occasional cigarette together.

Turns out he used to be a student at the local university. He said things had gotten a bit too stressful, so he was taking a break from it. These days he was taking it slow, reading these old Jules Verne books and not doing much else.

He was quite the character, I thought.

As the days passed and I saw him down there, I couldn’t help to think that there was more to him. Why’d he sit next to the dumpsters all day? The weather was nice enough, and the park was only a couple minutes away. Why not go there? Why sit next to the smelly dumpsters?

The more I thought about it, the more I kept referring to him as dumpster man in my mind. I laughed at this stupid nickname, but I had to admit it was quite fitting.

It was a few days later, that I stood at my window, looking outside in the late afternoon. I was sipping from a cup of coffee when I heard an argument from below. And wouldn’t you know it, dumpster man was involved in it.

I didn’t understand what it was about, but there was this huge muscular dude, yelling at him and pushing him against the wall of the dumpster area. It looked as if dumpster man was in for a little beating. Suddenly though, the guy let him go, apologized, nodded and stormed off. I saw dumpster guy grin before he sat down again. What the hell had happened?

From that moment onward I couldn’t help myself but watch the events down there more often. I saw two other people who got into an argument with him, and I was sure it was only them.

What was the guy up to? Were people mad at him for loitering? If so, why had muscle dude apologized to him? There must be more to this.

It was my next door neighbor Miss Meier, who helped me solve dumpster man’s little mystery.

I was about to go grocery shopping when I ran into her in the hallway. She was usually a friendly middle-aged lady, but right now, she seemed to be furious. She almost bumped into me.

The moment she noticed me, she started venting about the creepy guy outside.

“Are you talking about dumpster ma-” I broke up and shook my head, “the guy at the dumpsters?”

“Who else would I be talking about? God, it’s so disgusting!”

“Wait, what is? He is just-”

“The stuff he’s doing! Going through people’s trash, taking notes and pictures and all that! Someone should call the police!”

“He’s what?” I said and couldn’t help but laugh a bit.

This made Miss Meier even angrier. She gave me a hard look before she turned around and vanished behind the door to her apartment. I’d never seen her so mad before.

On my way out, I finally put two and two together. Don’t tell me this weirdo was going through people’s trash to see what he could find out about them. Did he ever find anything on me?

Were the arguments about that? Had people seen him do that? Or was he confronting them about the things he found out?

It was one of the weirdest and especially nastiest things I’d ever heard. But, it was so utterly bizarre that it was almost fascinating. Why was he doing it?

The next time I threw out the trash, I couldn’t help but talk to dumpster man about it. I handed him a cigarette and told him I knew what he was up to. He burst out laughing.

“Yo man, let’s cut a deal. You don’t report me, and I won’t check out your trash anymore, kay?”

“Sure, but I doubt you’d find anything interesting in my trash anyways.”

For a moment he gave me a knowing grin that unnerved me quite a bit. Shortly after he started laughing again.

“I’m joking bro.”

I couldn’t help but laugh as well. To be honest, I hadn’t even thought about reporting him. I found his antics quite exciting and wanted to see how this whole thing played out. Right at that moment, I remembered the muscle dude that was about to beat him up.

“Say, what was the problem with that muscular dude that almost beat you up?” I asked.

“That dude? Wasn’t quite happy that I found his issue of ‘bear magazine’. Simply asked if his chick knew about it. Was all it took to shut him up.”

Man, this guy was such an asshole, yet I couldn’t help but chuckle a bit.

“So, what’s this whole thing about? What are you getting out of it? Money?”

“Nah man, I haven’t found anything that serious yet. It’s mostly awkward shit that’s a bit embarrassing. To be honest with ye, back at university I was a psych major. Thought it might be interesting to see how people react when you find out their secrets. Well, and it’s funny as hell of course.”

There wasn’t anything else I could say.

“Well, if you find anything that’s really interesting, let me know,” I said when I left.

From then on I ended up chatting with dumpster man quite a few times. What can I say, the guy was interesting enough, at least compared to everyone else I’d gotten to know in the building. And I guess there was this weird fascination with the stuff he uncovered.

What I didn’t think about was other people’s reaction. Word about dumpster man and his shenanigans had gotten around. When they saw me hanging out with him, it was only natural that they assumed I was involved in it as well.

Miss Meier, who’d been nothing but friendly to me, wouldn’t even look at me now.

“Can’t believe you’re hanging out with that guy,” she once scoffed at me in the hallway.

She wasn’t the only one though. It was quite a few other people who gave me the stink-eye and talked about me behind my back. Oh well, whatever, not like I cared.

In time dumpster man got into his own set of troubles. There was this elderly couple that ended up screaming at him for almost half an hour. Then there was the time he got beat up by a group of younger dudes. And of course, he got in trouble with the police. They were there more than ones, lecturing him.

When I talked to him though, he was always in high spirits. He struck me almost as the buildings jester or something. When I asked him about the cops, he told me it was nothing serious. As long as he wasn’t in trouble of being locked up, he’d ride this whole thing out as long as he could.

All that high spirit and energy was gone when I saw him again earlier this week. He was sitting against the wall of the dumpster area, holding a cigarette in his shaking hands. He didn’t even look up when I greeted him.

The moment I returned I went over to him. He was furiously going through his small notebook and the pictures on his phone.

“Hey, what’s up?”

The moment he noticed that I stood in front of him, he jerked back and almost hit his head against the wall.

“Fuck man, you scared me!”

“What’s the matter with you? Found something interesting?”

He opened his mouth as if to say something, but he shook his head. He put away his notebook and his phone and made his way back inside.

“Oh come on, I know-” I started.

“It’s nothing, man. Just got tired of the whole trash thing, kay?”

Whit that he hurried up the stairs. I was about to follow him, but realized that I didn’t even know his real name, nor his apartment. Oh well, I thought, he’s going to be back out there soon.

Oh, he was back out there. This time it wasn’t outside the dumpster area though.

It was yesterday evening that the garbage man called the cops. When they’d emptied the dumpsters, they’d found a corpse inside, dumpster man’s.

When the police checked the rest of the dumpsters, they found various other things. There were human teeth, not one or two, but dozens of them. What was even worse though, was a small bag containing nothing but patches of human skin.

I am typing this out now because this has all turned way too weird way too quickly.

I am pretty sure that dumpster man must have found something that day. That’s why he was such a mess, and that’s why he was killed. I am also pretty damn sure that he knew who threw them away.

When I went out today, I still got those disdainful stares.

I can’t help but think that one of them killed dumpster man. What I am worried about now though, is that they think I know their identity as well.

Sounds

Sounds can drive you insane. It can be a dripping tap, the neighbor’s loud music or the constant chatter of co-workers. I was never bothered much by these things. I guess it was easy for me to down them out. Maybe it’s because I grew up in an urban area.

In my new apartment, things were different.

When I had to move because of a new job, I was forced to take the first apartment I could find. It was located in an old, two-story building. It had been written out as a recently renovated, modern place, but this couldn’t have been further from the truth. The place was a relic from the seventies. It was filled with the perpetual odor of old wood, and the musty air inside was almost suffocating. Here and there the wallpaper was faded, the floorboards creaked with every step, and I could’ve sworn I heard the faint drop of an old, leaking pipe somewhere deep within the walls.

The place’s landlord, Mr. Reinhardt, can best be described in three words: uptight, stingy, and condescending. As he led me through the place he went on about all sorts of rules: no loud noise after eight, not more than one visitor at a time, I could paint the living room, but not the kitchen, and god knows what else. It was an endless list, which he recited in an entirely bored and monotonous voice. The only positive thing was that he didn’t mind me bringing my cat, Paws, along.

The moment I’d signed the contract, he told me he’d not be around much, if at all. He preferred a ‘pay rent and leave me alone’ type of relationship. To say I didn’t like him was quite the understatement. He also didn’t seem to care about his tenants at all. He didn’t even bother telling me how many other people lived there, and I’m not sure he even knew.

When I moved in, I only saw two other tenants. One was a young man, smoking a cigarette near the building’s entrance, greeting me with an overly-friendly, overdrawn smile. I gave him a nod, but hurried on, rather unsettled by his smile. The other was Miss Schulz, a friendly older lady living next door. We chit-chatted for a bit. She was such a sweet lady, and I felt bad when I excused myself to finishing moving in.

The sounds started the first night. They came out of nowhere. I was taking care of a few boxes, when sudden sounds made me look up. It was a barely audible humming that reminded me of screeching or wailing, entirely different from the usual sounds of a bustling city. It was an unsettling, almost alien noise that wormed itself deep into my brain.

I first thought something was playing on my phone or laptop, but that wasn’t it. Then I checked the wall to Miss Schulz’s apartment, but everything was quiet. My eyes wandered around the apartment; it was already dark outside, and as the strange hum persisted, I felt goosebumps all over my arms. For the next couple of minutes, I went from room to room, trying to locate the sounds, but then told myself to calm down.

“There’s no such things as ghosts,” I told myself. “Right, Paws?”

The little guy answered me with a happy meow and rubbed against my ankle. Eventually, I just shrugged it off as something in the house. The place was old, the floorboards were creaking, pipes were leaking, so it was probably one of the water boilers.

When I heard the sounds more often though, I got unnerved. I wasn’t the only one, though. Poor Paws was agitated as well. He was scurrying through the apartment in an endless search for their origin. At times, I’d even find him sitting in a corner, simply staring at the walls or the ceiling. It wasn’t long before I began doing the same. I checked the whole place, every nook and cranny, but found nothing.

When I talked to Miss Schulz, she wasn’t much help. She’d heard nothing like it, but said her ears weren’t good anymore. Even with her hearing aids, she could barely make out what was on TV.

After my talk with her, I decided to check up the apartment upstairs. I called myself stupid for not doing so right ahead. God knows, it might be the people upstairs. When I arrived at the door, however, the name plate was gone. I rang the doorbell and knocked a few times, but no one answered. I sighed. Guess I can strike out that possibility. Great.

On my way back to the stairs, I ran into the same young man I’d seen outside when I first moved in.

“There’s no one living there,” he said in a friendly voice. “Are you looking for someone?”

“Oh, it’s nothing,” I answered, “but thanks.”

He nodded.

“I’m Mr. Stein,” he said, his smile all teeth.

Once more, I noticed how overdrawn it was.

“I’m Jenny. Nice to meet you,” I mumbled, slightly taken aback by his demeanor.

He reached out a hand, and when I took it, I couldn’t help but squirm a little. This felt less like a handshake, but more like him caressing my hand, testing it. All the while, his disgustingly sweet smile never wavered.

“Well, good to know you,” I said, freeing my hand, and returning downstairs.

Back in my apartment, I had no clue what to do. If those sounds weren’t coming from above, I was at my wit’s end. The more I suffered through the hum, the more anxious I felt. Sitting alone in the dim light of my laptop, the hum began gnawing at my nerves. At times, I almost jumped up, thinking someone or… something was there, like an invisible presence, stalking me unseen.

“Maybe Mister Reinhardt knows what’s up,” I thought, and dialed his number.

The moment he picked up, I heard the annoyance in his voice.

“Jesus, who the hell’s calling me at this hour? It’s almost ten!”

“It’s Miss Mann. There are these sounds, this humming, and-“

“You’re calling me about what now? A sound?” he cut me off. “Last time I was there, there was no damn sound or anything!”

“It’s not there all the time, only now and then, but I’ve got no idea where it’s coming from or what’s causing it. Can’t you send someone over? Like a maintenance person?”

“Pah, humbug! There’s always sounds in buildings like that. No reason to get so worked up about it! You young people and your-“

“It’s not normal! It’s like-“

“Whatever it is, I want to hear nothing about it! Especially not at this hour of the night!”

“But it’s your building, and-“

“And I’m free to kick you out whenever I want.”

This shut me up. I couldn’t afford to move again.

“See, young lady?” he started in his most condescending voice. “This issue is already over.”

With that, he hung up.

“That bastard! I cursed before I threw myself back on the couch.

Over the next few weeks, I tried my best to ignore the hum, telling myself there had to be a logical explanation. But before long, it was getting to me. One night, while grabbing a glass of water, it scared me so badly, I almost dropped it. Going to the bathroom wasn’t any better. It felt like the hum started the moment I stepped out of my bedroom, as if some unseen apparition was waiting for me, and coming to get me. The worst were the nights when I lay in bed, awake, dreading, half-waiting for the hum’s return. Other times, I thought I heard it, only to realize I was imagining things.

Whatever sleep I got was plagued by terrible nightmares, and I’d wake up covered in cold sweat, only to be greeted by the now ever-present sound. I one dream, I wandered through a twisted version of my apartment, populated by wailing figures. In another, a giant shade crawled towards me on the ceiling, screeching like broken machinery.

At work, I was a mess, and I noticed my boss watching me with concern. I knew I had to move, but no matter how hard I looked, I couldn’t find another affordable apartment. I felt trapped.

One day, after work, Miss Schulz approached me. The moment she put her hand on my arm, I jerked back, dropping my keys.

“Jesus Christ,” I cursed, but when I saw her next to me, I sighed with relief.

“I’m so sorry,” I apologized. “I’m such a mess these days…”

“It’s all right, dear. How about some tea?”

I smiled weakly and was about to decline. But what was I going to do in my apartment, anyway? Sit around all day, on edge, waiting for the hum to start again? Five minutes later, I sat on her couch and told her I thought about moving.

“Well, dear, I can’t blame you. With a place like this, and Mr. Reinhardt as your landlord… If I were younger, I’d find myself a nicer place, too.”

“That man’s the worst,” I said, giving a little laugh.

“Oh believe me, he is! You know those renovations back in the day? He made such a fuzz about them. I thought he’d modernize the entire place, but do you know what he did? A bit of paint here, some new wallpaper there, and a few new tiles in the bathroom. That was it! Oh, and they installed that new exhaust system. I think he was required by law to replace the old ventilation shafts. He’d never done it otherwise.”

“Wait, Miss Schulz. Ventilation shafts? What did they do with them?”

The old lady looked up at me in surprise.

“Those things? They closed them off, and that was it. Knowing Mr. Reinhardt, they probably just put some plaster over the opening.”

I sat there, wide-eyed. Don’t tell me that was where those damned sounds came from.

“What is it dear?” she asked, when she saw me like that.

“Oh, I just remembered something. I got to go!”

She nodded and helped me to the door, but was quite surprised at my sudden reaction.

Back in my apartment, I had no idea where to look. I didn’t know the first thing about ventilation shafts. I walked from room to room, listening intently, but the hum was so low, I couldn’t pinpoint it. After half an hour, I slumped down on the couch in frustration. By then, it was gone again.

“Hey Paws, come here, little guy!”

He didn’t react. Instead, he was sitting in the bathroom, staring at a corner. Then it hit me. Cats have much better ears than humans. Had the little guy figured it out already? A few moments later, I got myself a chair and began checking the bathroom walls. Miss Schulz had said they’d covered the openings with plaster, so I should be able to find them by knocking, right? I didn’t know if it was even working, told myself this was ridiculous, stupid even. I knocked against the wall here and there, furiously, and suddenly the sound changed. It sounded almost as if the wall was reverberating from inside. That’s it! I’d found it! In an instant, I picked up a hammer I’d used to put together my furniture, and went to work. I smashed it against the bathroom tiles with all the strength I could muster, again and again. My arm ached and trembled from the effort, my breath came in short, hard burst, and sweat was dripping down my face. But I didn’t stop, I couldn’t. Finally, a small hole was revealed.

I rushed forward, tearing at the remaining plaster. When I was done, the air was heavy with dust. I stood in front of a small rectangular opening, a shaft stretching upward inside the wall. Yet, wasn’t the apartment above empty? What the hell was going on? As if to answer me, the sounds started again, but this time much louder. Paws began meowing right away. As I stood there on the chair, an icy shiver went down my spine. For the first time, I realized what I’d been hearing these past weeks: the cries of a person.

I called the cops right away. The moment they heard the sounds, they called for backup and broke down the door to the apartment above. What they found was pure chaos. The entire place was trashed. Where the kitchen should’ve been, they found a holding cell. Inside was an older man, chained to the wall and barely alive.

As I answered the police’s questions, I was a mess. I had so many thoughts on my mind, so many questions. When I mentioned Mr. Stein, the overly-friendly young man I’d met, they looked up. They told me the name wasn’t on Mr. Reinhardt’s list of tenants. After I’d given a detailed description of the man, a few of the other tenants recalled seeing him as well. They, too, had assumed he was another tenant, but in reality, he must’ve been a stranger.

What makes this whole thing even weirder is that the apartment above was indeed rented. After a check-up, it was revealed that it was under a fake name. Mr. Reinhardt said it had been a middle-aged man who’d signed the contract, but after he was given Mr. Stein’s description, he state it was a different man. Whoever that man was, however, he always paid rent, and always on time, so there was never a need for questions, Mr. Reinhardt said.

By now, the police have started a manhunt for Mr. Stein, but the trail has gone cold, and the man has simply vanished. Even now, lying in bed at night, I can’t stop thinking about that damned smile, that overdrawn, toothy grin, and the way he held onto my hand.

He’s still out there. Every time I walk past my building, I can’t help but glance over my shoulder, half-expecting to see him lurking nearby, staring at me with that same unnerving grin.

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The First Few Times Always Hurt…

“The first few times always hurt,” mama said, “it’s terrible, I know, but you have to endure. It will get easier.”

That’s what she said once it was over.

I’d turned eighteen in August. There was no big celebration, no party, no friends and no presents. Instead, mama told me, that it was time for me to learn how to provide for myself.

I was terribly afraid.

“Please mama, don’t make me do it, I can’t!” I clung to her pleading as the tears streamed down my cheeks.

“It’s wrong,” I told her over and over again.

Mama ignored it all.

“There is no other way, dear,” she said in her soft and caring voice.

With that, she led me over to the bedroom in which a young man was already waiting for me. He looked nice enough, but I could smell the alcohol on his breath. The moment he saw me, his glassy eyes turned hungry as he measured me up and down. He smiled a bit when he saw me, but it wasn’t friendly. Instead, it was ripe with anticipation of what was to come. It looked almost like a grin of a predator before he devours his prey.

Mama told me it was about time. I started crying again and said there was no way I could do it, but yet again my plea fell on deaf ears.

“You don’t have to worry about a thing my dear. Everything is going to be fine, it will be over quickly. It only hurts the first few times…”

Oh, how right she was. It did hurt. I don’t want to think back at all the screaming, the pain, the way he beat me and hit me. Worst of all though, was the blood. There was so much. I had no idea that so much could come from such a small, little spot.

Once it was all over, I was a shivering, shaking mess. I lay on the bloodied, soiled bed curled up into a ball, crying. I was so ashamed of myself for what had happened. I felt dirty and worthless. I didn’t want to think about it, didn’t want to feel any of it and just wanted to forget.

It must have been hours that I lay there, maybe even days.

Finally, mama came into the room and sat down on the bed next to me. She hugged me whispered into my ear to calm me down.

After a few more minutes, when the tears stopped, she helped me up and led me to the bathroom to clean myself up.

She said nothing about the blood or the state the room was in. There was nothing to worry about, she said.

Mama waited for me to get out of the bath. I was still wearing my bathrobe when she motioned for me to sit down next to her.

“You know, I’ve gotten a bit too old for this,” she started explaining.

“With an old body such as mine, it is hard to find anyone willing to come with me.”

“But mama, you are still pretty and-“

“Not as pretty as you, dear,” she cut me off smiling.

“It’s time for you to learn our trade. You’re in your prime. A young, pretty thing like you. You are even more beautiful than I was in my days.”

That was about a month ago.

By now mama had brought over three young men for me. I hated it every single time. It still hurt. I was still ashamed of myself and disgusted by what I’d become. How could anyone get used to… to this!?

Today though, things were different. I’d been anticipating mama bringing someone over all day, but that didn’t happen. Instead, she told me it was now my turn to go out into the streets.

We picked out an outfit together. I guess this is what prom feels like to other young girls. At least if prom took place out on the streets and every girl dressed like a slut.

Oh, but it wasn’t so bad. It was even kind of fun to dress up and put on all that make-up. Once we were done, I felt pretty, no beautiful. Mama said I was all sex and temptation.

Out on the street, I realized how right she was. I noticed the glances people gave me. The eyes of the man lit up when they saw me. The lust on their faces as their eyes wandered over my body, undressing me with their eyes. I could almost feel their blood boiling.

It wasn’t only the men who eyed me. Some women seemed to lust after me as much as the men. Others didn’t bother to mask their disdain and jealousy. It wasn’t just once that I heard words like whore or slut.

The worst ones were those out on the street with me. I could see their rage and hatred.

I was young and pretty, while most of them looked worse than mama. Old, shriveled up things, with sagging skin and empty eyes, packed tightly into fancy second-rate clothes.

Thankfully, I didn’t have to wait long before a young man approached me. He was quite a bit older than me. I saw the first signs of a receding hairline, the growing gut and the tiny wrinkles on his face. He was shy and awkward, but friendly enough. Before he could even ask me, I walked up to him and whispered those sweet dreams mama had taught me into his ears.

I led him back along the street. On the outside, I was strong and confident, but inside I was as afraid and awkward as he seemed.

It took no more than five minutes before we reached the alleyway that led to the small apartment mama and I lived in. I could hear him inhale and see his smile when I opened the door. He looked almost ecstatic.

The moment we entered, mama looked up from the living room and smiled at the man and me.

“You are back so quickly, dear.”

I smiled at her and nodded.

“It’s fine, don’t worry about it,” I said to our guest.

For a few moments, he looked over towards mama, most likely wondering what was going on. Once his eyes had wandered back to my body, he already seemed to have forgotten about her.

I took his hand and led him to my room. Mama had filled it with flower petals and candles. It was beautiful.

The two of us stepped inside and he sat down on the bed, looking at me.

“So, how are you,” he started but I put a finger on his mouth.

“I am going to freshen up a bit, you wait right here,” I said in my most sensual voice.

I noticed how red his face was as he looked at me. I saw the sweat on his hands, the quivering of his lips and the bulge in his pants. Then he nodded.

In the bathroom, I took off my cloth and carefully put them aside. Then I washed off the smell and dirt of the city outside.

He honestly seemed to be a nice and shy guy, I thought to myself. I knew they were all beasts though. They all changed. They all got wild and angry. All of them scream, hit and beat me.

Once I’d dried off, I stepped back into the room.

The moment he saw my naked body his mouth fell open.

“You are absolutely perfect,” he finally pressed out.

“Take your cloth off,” I commanded him.

Without his clothes, I could see how flabby and hairy he was. I saw his huge gut, his pudgy skin and of course his erection.

For a moment I shuddered before I looked back into his eyes.

I stepped forward, pressing my body against his and putting my arms around him.

“Relax,” I whispered.

Then I drove my fangs into his neck.

I was right. He was the same as all the rest. He started screaming like all the others. He beat me and hit me, trying to get free, but it was futile.

With each passing second, I sucked more of the lifeblood out of his body. After no more than a minute all that remained of him was a withered husk.

He was my fourth victim, my fourth meal.

Mama was right. It only hurt the first few times. By now, I’d gotten used to it. I didn’t feel anything for them anymore, nor did I pity them.

Now I saw them as what they truly were: Nothing but prey.

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