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MY CAMERA - YOUR HORROR (standard:mystery, 7099 words) | |||
Author: Trina.... | Added: Sep 21 2001 | Views/Reads: 3570/2587 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
A young woman's camera disappears mysteriously, then shows up at her door steps with some horrible revelations. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story Jimmy get Kasey back on her feet, “we thought you were dead!” “We sure did,” Nicolette added. “And what the hell were you people gonna to do with me?” Kasey asked, still laughing and staggering over to the cooler for either a beer or soda. Knowing Kasey it was probably the beer. “I would have opted to throw your ass in the pond!” Devon blurted out, showing those pearly whites as she laughed. Tired and relieved, Peppy took a few sips from her thermos...suddenly she had an idea, “Don’t move you guys!” And having said that, she rushed back to her bag a little farther down to grab her camera. “No more pictures!” She heard Nicolette scream behind her. ”I look terrible.” Everybody laughed, even though they all knew like Peppy knew that Nikki was dead serious. Ignoring her, Peppy dove into her bag. A few seconds later, a puzzled look spread across her face. She searched again, “What the...” she said out loud, ”where the hell...hey who took my camera?!” Grabbing the whole bag, she walked over to where the others sat. All looked as confused as she did. “You can’t find it?” Brenda asked, a beer in hand. “Good.” Nikki added off handedly. “Like you all don’t know that already. Stop playing around, who took it?” They all only smiled and shook their sweaty faces. “Seriously Pep, none of us took it.” Jimmy finally said. Jimmy wasn’t a practical joker, if he said no one had it...that probably meant no one did. Unless of course the guilty party hadn’t let him in on the joke, which they probably wouldn’t since Jimmy wasn’t a good liar. A good lawyer, but not a good liar, that was another one of their inside jokes. Frustrated, Peppy went back to the spot where they had been playing and searched the area. No camera. “Is your wallet still there?” Devon asked from somewhere behind her. “Yeah, its here...I just don’t understand.” Peppy turned around to see if anybody was secretly laughing, no one was. “I could have sworn, I put it in the freaking bag!” Kasey, chuckled and took a gulp of her beer, ”Why would someone steal a cheap disposable camera, yet not take any money?” Peppy, had had it, she had taken some damn good pictures with that cheap camera, now some pervert had stolen it right from under their noses. She huffed and puffed as she searched, then finally...seeing the fatigue in everybody else’s eyes said, ”The hell with it...lets go home.” Later, Peppy, Jimmy, Devon and Kasey sat in Peppy’s hot, small, living room playing an even hotter game of spades. There was a slight dizziness in Peppy’s head; she wasn’t quite feeling herself. Too much time in the sun, maybe? Across the table she eyed her partner and ex-boyfriend secretly. Every now and then, his dark eyes would drift towards hers and she would look away. He had came in late one night into the ‘The Lounge,’ looking rather depressed, disheveled and out of place. Always attracted to the ‘preppy’ type, Peppy had spotted him immediately, and slyly made her way over to his end of the bar to serve him. Three hours and a lot of coke with rums later, she knew practically everything about him. Everything, except for why he had came in looking the way he did. He ‘didn’t want to talk about that.’ So she never mentioned it again, after all she was a total stranger. They were ‘friends’ at first, and then started seriously dating a very short while after that. Four months later, he was always so ‘busy’ that she could never get in touch with him. In the end, they decided it would be better if they just remained ‘friends’. Yeah, friends who slept together every now and then. He looked up at her, their eye’s met, and as usual he seemed to know what she was thinking. He smiled at her, a dark mysterious smile, as dark as his huge liquid, brown eyes. She smiled back slyly and threw a spade out on the table. Devon threw her an evil look; Kasey only smiled obviously plotting her next move. Peppy looked back at Jimmy... oh yes, he would be spending the night. Early the next morning, around 2 a.m., Jimmy kissed her gently on the cheek and promised to call later. She rolled over, happy with their new little arrangement, and went back to sleep. Three apartments down, Mr. Ligget heard a door open and close. He crept over to his door and with the chain still latched on, ignorantly opened it. The tall, dark, well built man was leaving once again in the middle of the night. He turned to look at Mr. Ligget who fearlessly stared back at him with old yellow eyes that had seen plenty. The young man smiled at Mr. Ligget. Mr. Ligget slammed the door and locked all locks. Around 2pm, Peppy finally willed herself out of bed. Jimmy had called sometime around dawn, waking her from a hilarious dream. “Are you okay?” He had asked. “Of course,” she had answered. “Why wouldn’t I be?” “Just checking,” he had answered sharply before hanging up. Peppy had only shook her head, before hanging up and falling back asleep. Now she was fully up, her shift started in exactly five hours, and the time she had planned to develop her film would now have to be spent doing other things. So...she took a shower, made some afternoon pancakes, rolled a joint and sat down to watch ‘The Matrix’ for like the thousandth time. About half way through the movie, she dozed off. A sharp knock at the door woke her up. In a purple haze, she drifted to the door, turned the tarnished copper knob and pulled the door open. The door way was empty. She blinked twice, and then moved up into the doorway. She leaned over to the right...empty. She leaned over to the left...empty. She stood there in the doorway in a stupor for what seemed to be the longest time. Still in a glorious fog, she was about to close the door when a tiny voice whispered in her ear, “The floor.” Stupidly, she scratched her head and mumbled something even she couldn’t understand. “The floor.” The voice said again. That’s when she looked down and saw it there. So silent, so small...so yellow. Just sitting there on the old crusty, red and gold carpet that hadn’t been cleaned in years, waiting to be let in. A door creaked open, she looked over. An old familiar eye was peering at her. The old weirdo, Mr. Ligget, who never seemed to leave his apartment. She snatched the camera and shut the door. Sometime later, Peppy was fully dressed. In the room were Brenda, Devon, and Kasey. They sat in a circle, elbows on their knees, balled up fists underneath their chins. The object of their scrutiny lay silent and defenseless on Peppy’s over used coffee table dead smack in the middle. “What sick bastard would do such a thing?” Brenda wondered out loud, her bright red hair clashing terribly with everything she had on. Peppy eyed the camera. “If this is a joke—“ “It’s not us Pep!” Devon swore. “I didn’t say it was.” “You think maybe Jimmy might have—“ “If Jimmy did this, I’m gonna kill him,” Peppy interrupted, abruptly cutting Kasey off. Kasey started to nibble on her nails; Devon got up and lit a cigarette. Brenda got up and began to raid the refrigerator. “What’s the big deal anyway,” she said from within the cave of the fridge. “So what some psycho knows where you live.” “This isn’t funny Brenda.” The room suddenly went silent, all eyes turned to Kasey. Her eyes were still on the camera. “The fact is, some psycho does know where she lives.” She paused and lifted her light eyes to look at Peppy. “I think you should just toss it...throw it away.” “Hold your horses okay,” Devon interrupted, ”You are taking this wwway too seriously.” She put out her cigarette and went to grab the camera—“Don’t touch it!” Kasey screamed. “Why the hell not?” A stunned Devon asked. “We don’t know who had that camera...or what they did with it.” “Well I already touched it,” Peppy said picking it up. “So, send it in,” Brenda said, rejoining the group with a dry ham sand which. “What?” “If you want to figure out who took the camera and why...send the thing in, develop it, and see whether or not some psycho’s ass crack shows up in some picture you know that you did not take!” It sounded simply enough, but why was there such dread on Kasey’s pale face. And why did Peppy feel that same dread creeping up her spine. “Toss it.” Kasey mumbled. Devon spoke up, ”Look, I’m tired of sitting around looking at this damn camera!” She reached deep in her pocket and pulled out a shiny lonely penny. “Heads, you develop it, tails you toss it.” She was handing the penny to Peppy who didn’t except it. “C’mon, C’mon, we don’t have all night. Make a decision!” The unwelcome silence was in the room again. Ignoring Peppy’s indecision, Devon started to toss the coin---Peppy snatched it and did the deed herself. It landed with a thick ‘smack’ sound in the middle of her sweaty palm. All leaned in to see the final result, and as fate would have it, it was of course ‘heads’. The film was dropped off on their way to work. Peppy didn’t think about it again until the door buzzer rang annoyingly early the next Monday morning. “Hello?” “Ms. Peppy Marshall?” Inquired a deep male voice. “Yes.” “This is the police. We need to come up...I’d like to talk to you.” Moment’s later Peppy was still in her robe staring into the bloodshot eyes of a huge bald man. Sweat poured down from his forehead into his eyes. Gently, like a magician, he produced a sparkling white handkerchief and made tiny beads of sweat disappear. Two anxious looking uniformed cops stood behind him. “Ms. Marshall?” the huge man asked. “Y-yes.” Peppy’s throat was extremely dry all of a sudden. “My name is Detective Powell,” he said off handedly, flashing his shiny badge. “Ms. Marshall, I need you to get dressed and come with me. You have a lot of questions to answer for me--” “This is about my camera isn’t it?” Peppy asked somewhat reluctantly. The bald man cocked his big round head to the side and smiled, “Please...get dressed Ms. Marshall.” At the station Peppy sat anxiously in a small gray room. She was alone, but not for long. When the door swung open, Detective Powell was behind it. Behind him was a female officer with an arm full of audio equipment. As she hooked it up, the Detective laid a small manila envelope on the table that stood between them. Though the room was air conditioned, he seemed immune to it. When he lifted up his arms Peppy saw huge circles of sweat underneath the arms, glistening beads of it decorated the top of his hairless head. With a long absent, minded finger, he tapped the envelope. “Ready chief,” the other officer said. There was a quick tap at the door, a well-dressed man with Mel Gibson features and eyes as blue as Detective Powell’s shirt entered the room. The female officer vacated as he came in. “Ms. Marshall,” Powell said,” this is Detective Santucci; he’ll be joining us. Santucci only nodded towards her and plopped his well-portioned butt on the right edge of the square imitation wood table. He placed a well-manicured finger on the ‘play’ button and started the recording. He then leaned close to it...slightly and said the time, the day and the date. It was Detective Powell who started the questioning: ”Ms. Marshall, I’m gonna ask you once again. Do you have an attorney you’d like to have present?” Peppy thought about Jimmy, Jimmy was probably busy. “No.” She answered dryly. The Detective shrugged and continued, ”Ms. Powell, did you or did you not own a Kodak Disposable ‘Flash’ Camera, series LS-455?” “Yes?” “You don’t sound so sure.” Santucci said. Powell main while wiped sweat from his brow for the thousandth time. Peppy stuttered, ”I mean I know it was a k-Kodak and disposable and all that...b-but I’m not sure about the serial number.” Santucci glared down at her with a smile. Out of nowhere Powell produced a clear bag with the small camera lying quietly inside. “Is this your camera?” “Oh,” she said, ”Yes, i-it is.” “Ms. Marshall, you were the one that dropped off this camera at the Drakes pharmacy at 5:45pm Saturday?” “Yes.” Peppy was getting anxious. Get to the point, she wanted to say. “And about how many pictures would you say you took?” asked Santucci. “Um, I’m not sure...maybe about ten...maybe less.” She tapped her fingers nervously on the table. When Powell seemed annoyed by it, she abruptly stopped. “You see, my camera was stolen—“ Powell held up a long finger. “We’ll get to your story in a minute Ms. Marshall.” “Do you smoke Ms. Marshall?” She looked up; Santucci held a fresh pack of Marlboros towards her face. She had never had Marlboros, but she sure wanted one now. “Thanks.” She said as he lit one for her, and took one for him-self. “Relax.” He said with a sly smile and a wink. “Can you tell us, where you took your pictures, Ms. Marshall?” He asked. She inhaled some poisonous smoke, ”Umm, I took some of the people at my job. T-Then some more at a little get together we had in the park on Friday.” Both Detectives just sat and stared. In a few minutes Peppy feared her armpits would look just like Detective Powell’s. “You said your camera was stolen?” Powell started to say, ”When did this happen?” That’s when she told them—the whole story. Including a lot of things she was sure they felt was irrelevant to whatever was in that manila envelope. From the football game, to the mini meeting that took place in her apartment. Not once did they interrupt, they only nodded every now and then. She even thought at one point she actually saw a small smile on Detective Powell’s priestly face. When she finally stopped, they simply looked at each other, then back at her. “So you thought this was all a prank.” Santucci asked, puffing on another cigarette. “Well yeah at first.” She giggled. “But umm, w-when the camera just showed up like that I started to panic—a little.” “Why?” She was stunned by the question for the minute...then, ”We’ll it was spooky! It’s not everyday that a camera just disappears then shows up at your door like that!” “If you were so spooked, why didn’t you call the police?” “I thought that would be a little extreme, don’t you think?” She was starting to get annoyed. “It’s only a camera! What the hell was I suppose to say to the 911 operator?” She felt the tears coming, she wished she wasn’t alone. Quietly she caught a hold of her self and lowered her voice. “I thought it was a joke.” Santucci slid off the table and began to pace. Handcuffs dangled behind him. Powell reached for the dreaded manila envelope, he handed it to her. “Open it. I want you to put all the pictures you took on your left, any others will go on your right.” Peppy’s moist fingers crawled over the latch. Once she reached inside, she felt a plastic bag; she pulled that out and took out the stack of pictures. In the first one, Brenda and Kasey stood frozen in time, laughing at her. Brenda had two fingers behind Kasey’s head. Peppy placed it on the left. The next one was similar, so was the next. When she came to one that had been taken by Devon, she got confused. “I’m in this one...my friend took it.” “Then, it goes on your right,” Santucci answered in a sort of condescending tone. For the first time since he arrived he looked slightly uncomfortable. Loosening his tie, he took an empty chair in front of the tape recorder. Peppy didn’t recognize the next picture. A young woman, about her age, lay across an unfamiliar scarlet bed on her side. Her smile was bright, beautiful actually. Her long jet-black hair was strategically combed to the side, so that it came down cascading in dark licorice waves. “I don’t know who this is,” Peppy commented out loud, but really to no one but her self. The next picture was familiar again. Peter, Jimmy and the rest of the gang had posed for her before the start of their doomed football game. Then the woman appeared again. Sitting up this time on that scarlet bed, everything in the background was too dark to decipher. Peppy saw that the woman’s red silk shirt was long, very elegant. It had ruffles at the neck and at the cuffs. The black jeans she wore were skintight. However, she wore nothing on her pale feet but bright red nail polish. Her pose was very sexually suggestive; legs wide apart, a seductive smile with a finger hooked in her scarlet mouth. The lush black hair fell in her face. Peppy quickly put it to her right. Thankfully, more familiar pictures followed. Then...just like Peppy feared the black haired woman was there again. She was in bed this time. Whoever took the picture must have been in bed with her because her smiling face was awfully close. With sheets covering her bare chest, she had leaned into the camera; her smeared lips were puckered up in a mock kiss, frozen in time forever. The next picture was too dark to make out anything, though Peppy swore she could almost see the young woman’s profile tilted away from the camera, her mouth open, as if she had been laughing. The next one drained all the blood from Peppy’s face. The picture was blurred, but Peppy’s keen eyes could see the woman’s distorted face, looking anguished as if she was fighting something that could not be seen. The view of the picture was taken from somewhere above her. As if the photographer had been on top of her, causing her some painful affliction that had caused the camera to shake violently. Peppy looked up at the two Detectives. Cool as cumbers they seemed, as they watched her with almost no emotion. Only Santucci’s sky blue’s seemed slightly troubled as her eyes met his. With trembling hands she laid the blurred photograph to the side. It took her a minute to look at the next one. When she finally did, she saw the woman again. Naked, huddled in a dark corner like a frightened animal. Her knees were drawn up; her long pale arms were wrapped tightly around her legs. There were marks on her arms; circular half moons that resembled bite marks. Once again the predator had taken the picture from somewhere up high. Standing over the frightened woman, it seemed, as she looked up into Peppy’s camera with a battered face that was flushed from excessive crying. There was a huge unmistakable bite mark on her cheek Peppy dropped the remaining pictures and backed her chair away. “I can’t...I won’t!” She screamed. “I can’t look at anymore!” Her eyes were blurred as she looked at the stone, faced Powell who picked up the remaining pictures. Peppy wiped the tears that were threatening to roll down her cheeks, she didn’t want to let strangers see her cry, but the woman’s paranoia was affecting her. She felt trapped suddenly and she wanted out. “Ms. Marshall,” Santucci said, “you don’t have to look at all the remaining pictures if you don’t want to...” She breathed a sign of relief but was sure there was more...”But,” said Powell picking up where Santucci had left off. “There is one you should see.” He picked a lone picture out of the remaining few and slid it towards her. A face of death looked up at her with lamented dead eyes. Long streams of blood were making their way towards the dead open mouth from a deep slash in her throat. The picture had been taken at an angle, upside down; the woman’s head was hanging from the scarlet bed. The image was horrifically close, capturing the dead woman’s pasty face and sliced neck vividly. Luckily, her face was turned slightly away so that Peppy couldn’t see that bite mark. The rest, the photographer had left to the imagination. When Peppy turned away from the picture she heard Powell speak, ”Still think it’s a joke?” “I didn’t do this!” She fired back with clenched teeth. “Why would I do something like this, then send in the evidence!” “Nobody has accused you of doing anything.” He said calmer then a monk. “Then why the hell am I here?” No body answered. One glance at the silent camera and Peppy had the answer to her own question. She brought her hands to her face and started to cry. Moments later, she felt a cold hand touch hers. She looked up and saw a stark white tissue with Powell’s hand on the other side of it. Thankfully, she took it and blew her runny nose. Finally, she was able to stop crying, the trembling, however, was another matter. Crazy thoughts of her being sentenced to death stomped through her mind. Would the real killer be at the execution...disguised as a friend? She thought of Kasey. She didn’t know whether or not to cry or laugh...so she did both. “Are you okay, Ms. Marshall?” Santucci asked. “Do I look okay, Mr. Santucci?” He smiled, “Something to drink maybe?” “No,” she said, “I just want to get out of here.” “I’m afraid that’s not going to be possible just yet, Ms. Marshall.” “Why not! I haven’t done anything!” They both only looked at her. “Ms. Marshall,” Powell said in that now familiar monotone, “this may not mean anything to you, but I do believe that you are innocent. But...that doesn’t mean that you are. You may either be the boldest, coldest murderer I’ve ever met or the most stupid. But the fact of the matter remains! Either you or someone you know murdered that woman in cold blood! And I’m going to find out who.” His eyes had grown wide with those last words, Peppy lost in the heat of his words, could only stare. “What if that person knows me, but I don’t know them?” she suggested. “What do you mean?” Santucci asked. “I work in a bar. Once in a while we get guys that don’t know how to take no for an answer...” “Has this happened to you?” He asked again, puffing on a new cigarette. Peppy stuttered, “W-well no...but I did see it happen to a girl I worked with.” Both Detectives only shook their heads. “Pushy guys do not equal murdering psychopaths, Ms. Marshall.” Powell stated. “No, no,” she said, “this guy wasn’t just pushy, he was a stalker! The girl had to leave the job!” Both men seemed totally unmoved. “The question is this Ms. Marshall,” the bald headed Detective said, “has-- this happened--to--you?” Defeated, she quietly answered, ”No.” Santucci stood up, putting out his cigarette, he said, ”Ms. Marshall, you said your camera was in your bag when it was stolen, correct?” “Yes.” “Did you have money or any other important items in your bag like your license maybe, or credit cards—“ “Yes, I had money and two credit cards I’ve never used. No license though, I don’t drive.” “I see. So why would you leave a bag carrying such important things unattended in a crowded park.” He demanded. More and more he was starting to sound like Powell, who had taken a back seat and was nonchalantly still wiping sweat away. “I never said it was unattended!” Peppy snapped. “You never said it was attended either,” Powell stated, rejoining the interrogation. Peppy was losing patience, “I told you guys that while we were playing football my friend Kasey was on the sidelines taking score—“ “Oh yes, the coward.” Santucci interrupted. Peppy could almost see the old charm coming back, but right about now she didn’t give a damn. “You didn’t tell us that she was suppose to have been watching your bag.” He added. “Well, she was keeping an eye on a few things. But once we started playing tag,” she shrugged, “of course all those things were neglected for a few minutes.” “Uh huh, and how long do you suppose that was?” Powell asked. Peppy shrugged again, “I’m not sure, m-maybe ten, fifteen minutes.” The Detectives looked at each other. “But we didn’t run far, “Peppy continued, “If anybody had been over there, near our stuff...we would have saw them.” She thought about the scare that Kasey had given them, how occupied they had all been, so she added, “I think.” “Everybody was playing this time, correct?” asked Santucci. “There was no one on the sidelines keeping track of who was ‘it’ or anything right?” Peppy nodded. Still not appreciating his sarcasm or any jokes for that matter. There was a silent exchange between the two Detectives. Then Powell turned a great blood shot eye towards Peppy’s worried face and said, “Book her.” “What?!” Peppy shrieked, ”What the hell for?” “Calm down Ms. Marshall,” Powell warned. “But why?” she shrieked again. The thought of staying in a cell no bigger then the room they were currently in running through her sensitive mind. Powell was going to speak again when a knock interrupted. Santucci opened it; a female officer mumbled some words that Peppy couldn’t quite make out. Though she thought she heard her name mentioned. “Powell,” Santucci said, “seems this young lady does have a lawyer after all.” He said looking straight at Peppy instead of Powell. “You’d better get out there, he knows we’re keeping her and seems to be causing some raucous.” The bulky Detective sighed; looking at Peppy he gave her malicious ‘I’m not finished with you yet’ look before taking his heavy frame out the door. Santucci stood facing her, hands in his pockets. Without warning he glided to the tape recorder and turned it off. Then he sat at the edge of the table, in that masculine way of his, and said, “He doesn’t think you did it...but he does think you know who did. “In other words, he thinks I’m an accessory,” Peppy said looking down, away from those pictures. “Oh sorry,” he said noticing her aversion. “Let me collect those.” He was silent for a while...then, ”Don’t protect who ever did this.” Startled by the unexpected words she looked up sharply and caught his stern look. Not knowing what to say...she looked away. “I hate to admit it,” he went on as he picked the pictures up, putting the different piles in separate envelopes, “but you get use to it...after a while.” Peppy didn’t answer, she was still thinking about the dead woman. Wondering how anyone, in their right mind, could ever get use to such a thing. Lost in morbid thoughts of her ‘pending execution,’ a rap at the door brought her back to static reality. No words can describe the relief she felt when she saw Jimmy walk through that door. Even with Powell on his heels, the sight of him in his elegant shirt and tie was enough to bring her to her feet. She hugged him tightly with closed eyes as he whispered words of relief in her ear. “What are you doing here?” she asked tearfully after she finally let him go. “How did you even know I was here?” “We’ll discuss that later,” he said sternly, though his face was quite tender. “Till then, I need you stay here...quietly, while I go and take care of some things...okay? I know you’re scared but can you do that for me?” She looked at Santucci whose blazing eyes were on the back of Jimmy’s neatly cut hair, she thought about what he had said to her. She looked at Powell and saw that he was looking at her. A well-earned chill went up her back. “Yeah,” she sighed,” I really don’t have a choice do I.” About an hour later, he was driving her home. “But how did you do it?” she asked, “how did you get me out of this mess?” He didn’t seem happy with the question. “You’re not out of the woods yet, Pep. You’re still a suspect. You should have called me earlier. Trust me, those two detectives will be back...soon. And with search warrants, they’re gonna question everyone who was at that park.“ She let out an exaggerated sigh. “God Jimmy, you should have seen those pictures—“ “I saw them,” he said quietly, “I can’t believe you had to go through that alone. With two male detectives breathing down your neck!” “What I’m going through is nothing compared to what ‘she’ went through.” Peppy said, her eyes watering again. “And with my freakin camera! Why? Why me? Why her!? Why any of us!” frustrated, she tugged at her dark hair. “Don’t do that, you’ll go bald.” Her lawyer said. “Where’s the body?” She asked. “Was she raped? Did anybody claim her yet?” “They don’t know that hon?” Jimmy answered, almost smiling. “What do you mean they don’t know? How could they not know?” She thought for a moment. “Unless...” “Unless they haven’t found a body. Which they haven’t.” Jimmy pulled up at a red light. She felt his warm hand go over hers, so different from Powell’s touch. “And that’s why they had to let you go. They still haven’t found her.” “Do they even know who she is?” Peppy asked. “No, but I have a feeling they will know soon. Either way you’re still a suspect, so you haven’t seen the last of Detective Powell and Santucci. They’ll be back, they’ve got only your prints on the---“ “What? But Devon took one or two pictures...how come?” He pulled off, getting closer and closer to her home. He seemed angry now. “Pep, who ever did this wiped that camera clean when they dropped it off at your place. And when you picked it up with out thinking...” “I know, I know. I was smoking...I wasn’t thinking straight.” She let go of his hand. “So I guess it’s between me and photo shop guy huh?” “Very funny.” Jimmy said, not even cracking a smile. “You need to leave that stuff alone.” He insisted on walking her to her apartment after she refused once again to stay at his place. When they reached the door she placed a hand on his chest, “You don’t have to come in...I know you have another ‘friend.’ I don’t want to be a burden.” A look of denial flared in his eyes. “And who told you this?” She didn’t answer. He and Peter had been friends long before she arrived. She wasn’t about to ruin their friendship by spilling the truth. Though she suspected Pete only told her in hopes of getting into her pants—which was not happening. “It doesn’t matter who told me,” she finally said. “In fact it doesn’t matter how I found out at all. What does matter is how the hell am I gonna pay you?” He laughed, good heartedly. “If you don’t already know the answer to that... then I’m not going to tell you.” She smiled, ”Seriously though...when they find this girl’s body, I’m gonna need a good defense attorney. Defending ax-murderous such as my self is time consuming...not to mention dangerous. Are you sure you want to do all this for free?” His expression grew serious, “You worry too much.” He said smoothly, consuming her with those dark sensuous eyes. “I’ll take care of you. Besides, I have faith that they won’t find that body.” Peppy was asking him why, when they both heard a chain rattle and a door open. From where she stood she could see half of Mister Ligget’s wrinkled profile in his door way. “Why are you always looking at us you stupid old man!?” She went off, headed for his door, which he slammed shut. Doubly enraged, she banged on it with both fists. “Why are you always hiding behind that fucking door?" Strong hands settled on her shoulders. “Pep, calm down!” Jimmy said, dragging her towards her own door. “He’s always looking!” she shouted, “He freaks me out!” Jimmy had to place a strong hand over her mouth to shut her up. “Calm down,” he whispered this time. “He’s just a crazy old man.” She pried his hand away from her mouth, “I know...I know.” She said in a much lower tone. “It’s just that—“ “I know, you’re stressed out and you’re scared and the last thing you need now is some weird old man peeking at you.” Leave it to Jimmy to always know what she was thinking. “That’s why I told you not to stay here.” He added. She reached in her bag and drew out her keys. “It’s a generous offer Jimmy...but I have to pass.” He sucked in his breathe and gave her his dark eyed father look, “Why do you have to be so hard headed?” “If it’ll help you feel better, I’ll ask one of the girl’s if I can stay with one of them when I get in okay?” “You promise?” “Cross my heart and hope to die.” “Don’t do anything stupid Pep.” He warned, his voice dropping to a low whisper. “Of course not,” she replied, practically pushing him out of her door. Finally, with the apartment to her-self, she looked at the phone. She had no plans of calling any of the girls, she didn’t trust them. Jimmy had proven himself to be the most worthy out of the bunch. Jimmy was a friend. She stretched out on the bed and yawned. All she wanted to do next was go to sleep. And that was exactly what she did, with the elusive Mr. Ligget on her mind. In the dead of night, a woman’s eyes snapped open. They were filled with lust. Lust for something very familiar. She was like a werewolf, awaking to a full moon. Only tonight there was no full moon and she was no werewolf. With a watering mouth, she crawled out of bed and slithered into the kitchen. No need to turn on any light, her night vision was excellent. She opened the cabinet door under the sink and reached way back to grab a tall bottle of gin. Her eyes grew wide at the sight of the half full bottle with the clear liquid swishing around in it. The alcoholic in her wanted it badly, but the vampire in her would want blood once the alcoholic was through. It was always the same, the two monsters living inside her for as long as she could remember. She opened the gin and took her first sip...straight. After that, she took another one...then another. Then she got up and flopped herself down at the kitchen table. A crooked smile distorted her pretty features. Since she was a teenager she’d known it was best for her to stay away from alcohol. But alcohol was irresistible to her, like the blood lust that came afterwards. Living things disappeared whenever Peppy drank. Like Puffy, the family dog. Then later, Ms. Fleetman, the neighborhood ‘witch’ who was eventually found strangled, practically drained of blood a month later. There were others, but of course Peppy had no memories of doing any of those horrible things...at first. Then later, she saw fragments of her misadventures in her dreams. Such as chopping little Puffy into little pieces and burying him in the back yard, or holding Ms. Fleetman's scrawny little neck in her own small hands until the old witch turned purple. She would have brief flashes of memories too, where she saw her self through her own eyes doing horrible things. Like when she slid out of bed after Jimmy had left and drank a pint of rum. Coming home in the wee hours of the morning she had saw her own hand place the yellow camera in front of the door. After all, the camera was never really missing. It’s funny what a thermos full of beer instead of water can make a person do. In Peppy’s case, it had made her think of the perfect joke. And that was all it was at first...but some how her alters had turned it all around. She took another gulp from the bottle. The hot liquid, oozed down her throat and into her burning stomach, the blood lust would come soon enough. Yes, she thought, bad things did happen when she drank. Very, very bad things. But she didn’t remember laying a finger on the young woman from the pictures. No, not at all! She shook her head furiously, no, no, no! Not at all! Finally, she stopped this delusional display of denial and began to laugh. Well maybe she did kill the woman, what was her name...’Rebecca’ or something. Such a beautiful name, she had picked her because of her long dark hair. Didn’t Jimmy show up after it was all over? She had been sitting on the floor, her mouth tasting bloody, staring into to the dead woman’s face and when she looked up he was there. In a daze, he had cleaned her up, sat her in a chair and told her not to move. As he was trying to get rid of the body, she had wandered out and escaped. Hours later her alter egos had left the one thing that could incriminate her right in front of her door...and to her surprise; no body had even bothered to really steal it! She laughed out loud, and then covered her mouth when she realized she was getting too loud. Oh well, Jimmy would take care of it...he always did. She smiled, taking another sip. She was thinking of someone. Mr. Ligget. A little old, probably rubbery...but tasty she bet. She grinned wickedly. She would visit Mr. Brittle... tonight...perhaps? Tweet
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