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climb too high - part 1 (standard:drama, 5637 words) [1/4] show all parts | |||
Author: snyrt | Added: Dec 27 2001 | Views/Reads: 3288/2296 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
the first part of a bit of auto-fiction about a sociopath who takes a wrong turn into drugs after seeking treatment. | |||
Part One -------------------- As I descend the endless flights of stairs, I take note of the beautifully polished banisters in the otherwise untouched house. "How far can these stairs go?" I ask myself. I feel compelled to explore this decrepit structure though I don't know exactly what draws me down these steps. Though I must be at least a hundred feet underground, there are still windows on all sides of the nearly identical, high ceilinged rooms through which I pass. These windows allow filtered light to shine through their dust-stained panes. I look down the next flight of stairs and see the end. The next hall is clean and well lit, but there are no windows. Here I see a middle aged man ascending the stairs. I know the man's name, but it has just slipped my mind. He has dark hair with streaks of gray running back above his ears. He is wearing a dull, red cardigan with a light blue dress shirt underneath. I do not take note of his pants. He is walking with an unusually large, black dog. Its coat shines with a glimmer only seen in show dogs, but the dog is old and slow. The man is carrying a yellow legal pad in his right hand. I know it is his book. I meet him on the stairs. "Where are you headed?" he asks kindly. "Classes," I say. I do not know why I said that. The building suddenly seems like an old schoolhouse and this man seems to be stuck in the past. "What classes? English?" he inquires. I nod. "Good classes," he replies in a remarkably authoritative figure trying to be young again kind of way. "Where are you going?" I ask trying not to be too nosy. "Not to classes," he says. For some reason I accept this as a perfectly valid answer though I usually would have asked again. I look at the legal pad. "Is that your book?" I ask. "Yes, indeed it is." I pick the pad out of his hands and flip through the pages. I notice that the first page is chapter eleven. Somehow I know that the book, if left intact, will ruin my life. I tear the pages out and throw them off the stairs to the floor below. The man says nothing. I look back at him and see pleading eyes staring back at me. "Please, please, I would rather die than endure this fate." I decide to help him fulfill his wish as a sudden surge of rage rushes through me. I draw my sword and try to strike him down. Wherever I strike him, a red spot momentarily appears, then vanishes. The man never flinches. Suddenly, the old dog begins to attack me with energy it probably has not experienced in years. I try to kill him, but he stays alive as well. I flip my blade to the viciously serrated edge. I rip the dog's throat open and he collapses to the floor. The man walks down the stairs unfazed and I follow him into a large, green office. He makes his way to the desk. I stand there a while as the man flips through papers aimlessly. I hear a dog. There are hunting dogs emerging from all four corners of the central room. For fear that they too will attack me, I run out and begin to slash wildly at the dogs with my serrated blade. The man seems angry when he sees his dead dogs sprawled on the floor. He signals to a door and two women emerge. One, a short, heavyset, Asian woman with short hair takes a karate-like stance to fight me. I lift my sword and cleanly slice off her head. I look back at the man and the other woman standing serenely on the other side of the room. I look at the Asian woman again. She is again fully intact and readies to fight. I then attempt to cleave her body only to see it heal immediately. I look down and see gashes in my body. How they had originated, I do not know. The man says: "That is enough, we must take him in to heal." I follow him into a brightly-lit bedroom. As I enter, directly in front of me, past a waist-high bookcase, is a collection of large, stuffed animals. I turn Click here to read the rest of this story (569 more lines)
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