Authors: Gord Rollo
Tags: #Suspense, #Horror, #Fiction, #Occult & Supernatural, #Thrillers, #Organ donors
again to head for the ground and make good my es¬
cape.
"Wait," the old man cried out, sounding panicked
that I was leaving. "You can't leave me here. N o t like
thisV
"I'm sorry Lucas, but there's no way I can take you
with me. I'll be lucky if I make it on my own, never
mind trying to carry—"
"I don't wanna go with you," he whispered, and when
I saw the pleading look in his eyes, I finally understood
what he wanted me to do.
"Oh no! No way, Lucas. I can't do that."
"Sure you can. Use my pillow, it'll only take a m i n
ute. Look, I know you don't know me, or know n o t h i n g
about me, but I used to be a proud man, Mike. That
bastard Marshall stole more than my limbs, he stole my
life, my humanity, my soul. I can't live like this any¬
more. You're my only way out. Please Mike, I'm begging
you."
Son of a bitch. How did I get myself into this mess?
The sad part was, I agreed with him. No man should
have to live like that, existing j u s t to supplement a crazy
man's depraved obsessions. I couldn't imagine what Lu¬
cas's life must be like, having his life fluids drained on a
continuous basis, with no hope of relief until his body
was spent, or his mind snapped like his companions.
He didn't deserve this cruel rate, and I felt a need to help
him. I j u s t wasn't sure I had the strength to go through
with it. Regardless of whether he was giving me his
blessing, mercy-killing this poor man would still be
murder. Wouldn't it?
I walked to the side of Lucas's bed and slowly wiggled
his pillow out from under his shaven head. In doing so,
an IV line that had been cruelly inserted into a vein
above his left ear popped out, spilling fresh blood onto
the white bedsheets. The blood, which appeared black
in the moonlight, startled me but it wasn't gushing
out—merely dripping—so I ignored it, not even both¬
ering to mention it to Lucas. Why bother?
"You sure about this, Lucas?" I asked, hoping with
all my heart he'd changed his mind.
"I've never been so sure of anything in my whole life.
Bless you, Mike. I'm ready."
There were tears in his eyes as I lowered the pillow
down onto his face, but he was smiling and nodding his
head the whole time. I felt like a total bastard, but, at
the same time, I knew I was doing the right thing, giv¬
ing him the peace he deserved. He'd suffered enough.
Never having done anything like this, I wasn't sure
how much pressure I should apply to the pillow. I wanted
to get this over with as quickly and painlessly as possi¬
ble. Trusting my instincts, I pressed down until Lucas's
torso began to shake. He was struggling for air, but
without any limbs he wasn't able to put up much of a
fight. I turned my head away, hoping it would be over
soon, unable to watch as his body continued to fight
beneath me.
W i t h everything going on, I failed to realize the
snoring coming from the other side of the room had
stopped. It wasn't until the man Lucas had identified as
Charlie began screaming at the top of his lungs that I
clued in someone was watching everything I was doing.
"Get off him," Charlie screamed, his frightened
voice as high-pitched and ear-shattering as a y o u n g
girl's. "Leave Lucas alone you cocksucker. He's my
only friend."
I tried to talk to him, tried to reason that I wasn't
hurting Lucas and this was what he'd wanted, but Char¬
lie was having none of it. His mind wasn't altogether
there anymore, and all he could see was a man h u r t i n g
the only companion he had left in this world. He kept
screaming, "Leave him alone, leave him alone," beating
his head against his pillow every time he said it.
"Calm down," I yelled, but then I saw the red light
flash on above his bed and understood immediately
that Charlie wasn't as out of it as I'd thought. He hadn't
been thrashing his head against the pillow; he'd been
t r y i n g to activate the call button strapped to his bed,
desperate to get help for his friend. Unaware he'd al¬
ready succeeded, he continued to pound his head in ca¬
dence with his screams until the flashing red light went
solid and a deep angry-sounding voice came through a
small speaker mounted above his bed.
"What's going on in there? Charlie, is that you?
W h a t the hell do you want at this time of night?"
"You gotta help us. Someone's trying to kill Lucas.
Get in here, quick!" Charlie wailed, his voice shrill,
hitching with sobs, borderline hysterical.
W h o e v e r was listening on the other end didn't
bother replying to Charlie's rant. All I heard was some¬
one curse as he fumbled for his walkie-talkie, keying
the mike four or five times before shouting, "Carl? Are
you there, Carl? Get y o u r ass up t o — "
The red light above Charlie's bed blinked out, dis¬
connecting me from hearing the rest of the message. I
had no trouble imagining every walkie-talkie in the
medical complex beginning to squawk, and every guard
r u n n i n g as fast as they could to get to this room.
Ob shit! This is trouble, Mike. Big, big trouble. Get the
hell out, fast.
I lifted the pillow from Lucas' face, h o p i n g he'd
passed on, but it wasn't meant to be. He was uncon¬
scious, possibly near death's door, but I could clearly
see his chest still rising and falling as his defiant body
labored to breathe. N o t knowing how much time I had
before this r o o m filled with angry guards, I couldn't
risk taking the time to try smothering him again.
"Sorry, Lucas," I whispered in his ear, then quickly
headed for the open window.
Stopping at my room to pick up my stuff was out of
the question now. I'd j u s t take the trellis right to the
ground and make a run for the surrounding woods.
Hopefully I'd be able to outrun anyone they sent after
m e , or at least find a hiding spot to lay low until they
went away.
I was j u s t about to step out onto the metal trellis,
when a noise below nearly caused me to fall off the
ledge. One floor down, a guard with blond hair and
glasses stuck his head out the open window of my room
and spotted me right away.
"I see him," the guard calmly spoke into his radio.
**He's still on level four. R e p e a t . . . suspect is still on
four."
This must have been the guy standing outside my
door earlier. W h e n the shit had hit the fan the first
t h i n g he'd have done was check on me, and found
n o t h i n g but an open window. After reporting my cur¬
rent position, he tucked his radio away in his jacket
and started climbing up the trellis toward me. My
escape route effectively gone, I had no choice but to
step back into the Bleeders' room and lock the window
behind me.
W i t h i n seconds, the guard's face pressed up against
the glass inches away from me, and he tried his best to
talk me into opening the window.
"Unlock it, Mr. Fox. You're in enough trouble as it is.
Don't make it worse. Open up."
Screw you, buddy.
Instead, I pulled the curtains closed, hoping he'd
shut up so I could think for a minute. Unfortunately, I
didn't have that long. The door to the Bleeders' room
burst open, the overhead lights blazed on, and four
large bodies walked into the room. All of them had a
gun pointed at me.
"Hold it, right there," the man closest to the light
switch said. "Take it easy and nobody gets hurt."
The guard beside him lifted his walkie-talkie to his
m o u t h and said, "No worries, Drake. We've got him."
"Good," Drake's smug voice filled the air. "Just hold
him there. Fm on my way."
Guards in front of me and a guard behind, and the
chief screw approaching fast. Things weren't looking
goodi I didn't like my chances. I was starting to look
around for some sort of weapon to defend myself with,
when my eyes spotted a possible way out. Directly to
my left, between two of the beds, was a white metal
plate with hinges on the top, fastening it four feet up
on the wall. Written on the rectangular plate were the
words:
W A S T E DISPOSAL CHUTE.
My mind started to spin. Could I dive into this gar¬
bage chute, ride it to the bottom, then still make a run
for it? It couldn't be that easy. The opening looked
more than big enough for me to fit inside, but what
scared me was not knowing where the chute went. Was
it an angled slide, or a straight drop? Seeing as I was
standing on the fourth floor, the chute likely went all
the way to the first floor, or even down to the basement.
That meant I'd have at least a four-story drop, maybe
five. If the Dumpster at the bottom was full of garbage,
I might be okay—sort of like a movie stuntman landing
on one of those airbag thingies—but if it was empty—
W h i l e I contemplated and weighed the pros and cons
of my possible suicidal plunge, Drake finally appeared
at the doorway, huffing and puffing and looking larger
and more dangerous than I'd ever seen him. He was
mad as hell. His eyes had that "I'm gonna lay a world of
hurt on you" look to them that scared me more than
the guns the men flanking him had. I decided there was
no way I was letting that psycho muscle head get his
hands on m e , so as soon as he took his first menacing
stride in my direction, I threw caution to the wind and
ran for the garbage chute.
Drake was fast, but not fast enough. By the time the
chief of security realized what I was going to do, it was
too late. Like an Olympic diver, I thrust my hands to¬
gether in front of me, tucked my head down in be¬
tween them, and launched myself through the hinged
gate. My marks for style wouldn't have been too im¬
pressive, but I made it into the chute nonetheless.
And immediately started dropping like a rock.
"Ob shhhhiimiiut!"
I screamed, terrified of the dark
u n k n o w n void below me, but still enjoying the adrena¬
line rush of my crafty James Bond-ish escape from Drake
and his goons' clutches.
It was too dark to see anything, but I could sense I
was picking up too much speed. If I hit bottom going
this fast, my head would splatter like a rotten mush
melon run over by a truck. The chute was only a little
larger than my body width, so I tried spreading my arms
and legs against the smooth metal sides and pressed out
with all my strength, hoping that would do the trick. It
definitely slowed me down, but not a lot. N o t nearly
enough to save me if the Dumpster below wasn't full of
nice soft garbage bags. I closed my eyes and prepared
to die.
Just before I hit bottom, the chute must have angled
or tilted off in another direction because I found myself
not free-falling anymore, but rather sliding on my stom¬
ach. W h e n I hit, I hit hard, but someone in heaven
must like me because whatever I landed and rolled on,
it was soft and spongy. It hurt like hell, knocking the
wind out of me and nearly breaking my left wrist, but
when my head cleared and I finally got my breath back,
I was still alive and relatively intact.
W h e n I stood u p , my back was hurting pretty badly
too, up near my shoulders, but I didn't have time to
worry about my aches and pains. There'd be plenty of
time for that, once I was far away from here. W i t h that
end in mind, I started searching for the lid to this
Dumpster, the horrible stench j u s t starting to register
in my brain.
I hadn't expected it to be so dark. I couldn't see any¬
thing, so I was forced to grope around using my hands.
No matter where I searched, high or low, I couldn't lo¬
cate the exit. There were several entrance chutes like
the one I'd fallen through, but no doors or hatches any¬
where. I was confused and getting worried. It didn't
help I kept stepping in and tripping over waist-deep
piles of stinking goo.
God, what a stink!
I'd lived in and around trash for years, but I'd never
smelled such an overpowering odor before. It was mak¬
ing me seriously nauseous. If I didn't get out of here
s o o n , ! was going to puke. Worse still, the clock was
ticking. I didn't have time to be fucking around like
this.
Outside, I heard the heavy clamor of men approach¬
ing on the run. With a sinking feeling in my gut, I
cursed myself for taking so long. The opportunity I'd
had to escape was gone. I'd senselessly risked my life and
I was still trapped, no better off than I'd been in the
Bleeders' room upstairs. I couldn't see the guards clos¬
ing in on m e , but I easily recognized Drake's booming
voice as he started yelling something. N o , wait, Drake
wasn't yelling, he was laughing. Loud, gut-churning