B E G I N T H E S C E N E
"No, no. Ramona, you can't go out there alone. You have to come back! Please."
"No, no. Ramona, you can't go out there alone. You have to come back! Please."
Snap.
Another branch underneath his feet; 'those boots,' he said, 'they're steel toed. I could kick in someone's skull and I wouldn't feel a thing.' Where was he? Pushing from the palms of both hands, a shaggy head of blonde hair ducks forward and circles around to the left side of the tree. Nothing. Fear, with its slow moving chemicals seep deeply into her muscular tissues, filling the microscopic spaces amid the inactive joints. She wants to move, survival instincts beg her to move and yet, poised flesh with the girthy base of a pine Jane Doe is losing this unspoken game of cat-and-mouse.
Snap.
Consciously forcing her breath back, the cadence of breaking kindling dwindles from her immediate earshot. His voice calls, but further in yards and blocked by the thicket of trees, closing in together the further into it a person travels.
"Ramona! I will find you. Have you ever seen flesh fall right off the bone? See it blister, bubble, and rot away? You could help me with the others. I've always wanted to try human."
He's sick. He's sick. He's sick.
His back faces the tree that provided coverage, blocking the dirty wifebeater from the moonlight. Jane Doe doesn't know how well his night vision is compared to hers. The seconds that tick by, watching him scour a search area she's still part of, kill the very hope that lies east between the both of them. There's the eerie glow of a streetlight's rays coming in through the streets, inhibited by the needles giving it the ghostly appearance. It's possibly that paired with a fear that induced nausea and beckoned bile to rise and sting the back of her throat, that the supernatural lighting is just a trick of the eye.
Snap. Snap.
Twin pupils dilate, widening with a rocky pulse. Closer now, the figure's hulking mass passes by her right side and stops an arm's reach short of that very statuesque girl, forming into the tree. Saying that the rhythm of breathing working the chest and shoulders in a predictable, continous motion was haggard hit the nail on the head. Exhaustion makes the mammoth limbs swing with little restraint behind them. The monster couldn't keep up the search any longer but there's a gamble to whether she'd make it to that street before he can. His only goal is to be able to outrun her.
The choice is decided for her when the boots began their pivoting one by one and the grizzly entity turns, the corner of his eye catching the blonde vagabond. Jane almost throws up, right on the very shoes that are going to cave in her skull and smear the insides with disarrayed brain matter. A paw separates its fingers, readying to take ahold of her arm; and it's like throwing gasoline into the remaining embers of a bonfire. Stumbling but steering herself off to the side to miss the hook, the alleged nomad crashes into the Earth a few feet away, cutting open her knees, tearing a chunk out of her forearm.
"Somebody help me! He's trying to kill me. Someone, anyone. Ple-ease!"
Would anyone? Passing beams of light don't stop as they continue onward on the road, the driver oblivious to urgent calls from the woods. Maybe it's the wind blocking out the sounds of pursuance, but he didn't sound like he's following. Her run staggers back to an awkward, lethargic hobble.
"ANYONE, please. Hello? I need the police. Someone!
Thudded footfalls tell her - only too late - that this sprint must be the last dreg of energy and not one that able to be matched from her end. Yet with no other reason not to try, the right foot kicks off the ground and the left swings forward but gingerly lands to the woods uneven floorbed. A traveling sound, a bass rapping against the rickety windows of a beaten SUV. Almost to the clearing, the weight abruptly slams down on her from the back. The sky, the car, the sidewalk, dirt. The taste of it overpowered by the blood filling up the inside of her mouth. Some of it spurts out, creating speckled patterns in the grass just before the pavement.
Jane Doe screams; a high, hair raising kind of scream that hides her words. 'Help,' comes as an unintelligible shriek, animalistic. A last cry from a condemned sheep.
"Hey, hey. Woah. Are you hurt? What's wrong? You're bleeding."
The hefty, faceless form isn't there anymore. Just this man, illuminated by the flashing lights of his vehicle. The same man driving the car she'd been trying to wave down. "Where is he? Did you let him get away? He killed my friends, and tried to kill me." Retreating, the man's hand went to his waistband of his pants and removed a gun from its holster.
"Stay right here, I'll be back. Just going to check."
Only the barely there threads of his shadow stretch across the grass. Enough distance that Jane is confidant when she lifts herself up and edges onto the sidewalk. When it's clear that he's too fixated on whatever's beyond the five or six trees at the clearing, the twenty-three year old gives a last ditch effort and sprints around a corner, bowling over a half broken in door. Old furniture is caked with dust, and her hand print stays behind after she moves a couch in the way of the rotted wooden door.
Tucking into a corner, a weary head rises to the ceiling and both nostrils greedily take in stale, decrepit air. Pulling out the scratched, damaged phone from her pocket, a thumb drives into the power option. The blank screen lights up, startling her and the hand that slams over the blinding square. A paper from the twin pocket; it's an old paper with smudges of cigarette ash and coffee stains on it. The words bled together but the numbers are unmistakable.
Brrrrrr. Brrrrr. Brrrrr.
"I'm here. Where did you say this place was again? Okay. Wish me luck."