Read Ann Marie's Asylum (Master and Apprentice Book 1) Online
Authors: Christopher Rankin
His sleeping words got Ann Marie’s attention but she quickly focused back to the green crystals. It was almost as if the crystals themselves were speaking to her or beaming some kind of important message into her brain. Dade had warned her several times, in a manner even more serious than his usual, that the green crystals were totally off limits to her. She wasn’t allowed to put her hands under the hood because of Dade’s fear that she might expose herself. The material was so potent that the crystals had to be submerged in liquid to ensure that not even so much as a nanoparticle could drift off where it could be inhaled.
Dade was still recovering in a deep trance when Ann Marie couldn’t contain her urge any longer. She pushed open the clear door to the fume hood and picked up a set of long tweezers. Getting as close as she could, she watched the green crystals glow and flicker.
She stuck the long tweezers into the opening of the flask, pinched one of the green needles and started to slowly draw it out of the flask. As the tiny shard broke the surface of the solution and hit the air, the glow got brighter immediately. She lifted the crystal up to her face to get a better look at it. There was something strange about the glow, a slow undulation in the light like the slow blink of a lightning bug.
Ann Marie was captivated and didn’t notice that the crystal was starting to change shape. It was starting to form a long dendrite, a needle much tinier than the crystal itself. It was on its way down the tweezers, toward the soft skin of her hand.
When she noticed the pinpoint of green light reaching down and touching her hand, she cried out, “Oh shit!” Then she grabbed for a bottle of laboratory water and started to dump the contents onto her hand. She hurried to the sink, where she scrubbed at her skin in the start of a severe panic. She thought that she could feel the green molecules slipping between the skin cells on her fingers.
Dade quickly came out of his trance when he heard the commotion. When he asked her what happened, she just kept scrubbing her hand. “What did you do?” He asked in a foreboding tone.
“It just grazed my finger!” she shouted. “What’s going to happen to me?”
“Calm down,” said Dade, who was paying a great deal of attention to her eyes. Her black pupils started to swallow up her brown irises. “Just sit down over her,” he said in the careful manner of a nurse helping someone bleeding from the neck. Dade rolled over a chair and Ann Marie collapsed into it.
“What’s happening to me?” She asked, hearing her own voice sounding like it was running away from her down a tunnel. “It feels like gravity is getting stronger.”
“That’s normal,” Dade said. “Stay calm. Keep breathing. A small dose shouldn’t last long.”
Dade’s hair, which was damp with tank fluid, started to shimmer like extremely fine glitter. “You’re shining,” she said as she reached to touch his face. A smile, almost drunken, spread across her mouth and her eyelids began to fall under their own weight. “Your face,” she said touching it like a blind girl, “it’s shining.” Her expression took on a different, graver, character and her body stiffened up in the chair. “It’s getting darker. It’s getting hard to see.”
“It’s OK, Ann Marie,” Dade Harkenrider told her. The sound of his words brought a warm blanket of comfort over her body. It seemed to quiet the sense of alarm in her heart. The laboratory started to feel farther away with each heartbeat in her chest. “Don’t fight it,” he went on. “Whatever you see isn’t going to hurt you.”
She felt like she was falling backwards. Her eyes were closed and her eyeballs spun around under the lids. “Oh no,” she said. “I’m falling. I can’t stop falling.”
“That won’t last long,” Dade told as he checked her accelerating pulse at her neck. Her eyes were clenched tight.
When the falling stopped and the darkness stopped spinning, she felt a warm buzzing start in her chest by her heart. Rainbows and white flashes, light that had its own textures, started to flow out from her abdomen like a broken fire hydrant. The light filled the darkness around her until she was looking down on the Asylum Laboratory from perhaps three hundred feet in the air.
She could see the tops of the palm trees swaying in the breeze and a few seabirds sitting on Dade Harkenrider’s personal deck. When she looked hard enough at the lab below, its walls became transparent.
She could see an x-ray of all the floors, pipes and machines and after a moment, the x-ray turned into a clearer image than she could have gathered with her own eyes. Her mind could penetrate the surfaces and move effortlessly over every detail.
Floating above Palos Verdes, Ann Marie felt a loud hum like the cross between a trumpet and an air raid siren. The sound, inaudible at that moment to anyone but Ann Marie, seemed to shake the entire sleeping hill below. It made her deeply afraid and she immediately wished for something to make sense again. The sound coalesced in front of her into a black fluid like crude oil. The sound shook her body like the driver on a speaker and she started to cry.
The crude oil finish of the thing began to turn to untextured blackness like a shadow. The shape of the thing contorted until it became hundreds of different human shadows. The living silhouettes started to fight, fornicate and argue in an incomprehensible language. Then all the shadows stopped and faced Ann Marie like they had only just noticed her.
In the outside world, Dade Harkenrider applied a cool wet cloth to her head as her body flexed and jerked. It looked as though her mind was in the grips of the most profound nightmare. “Don’t worry about them,” Dade whispered to her. “They’re mostly just curious. The other side doesn’t get many visitors from here. You probably look very strange to them.” Ann Marie didn’t show any sign that she had heard him but Dade acted as though he was getting through.
Still bobbing on what seemed to her to be an invisible fluid, Ann Marie hovered over Palos Verdes, watching the orgy of shadow people in front of her. She heard the horn again.
This time it was louder and it hit her like the shockwave of a nuclear blast. The shadow apparitions scattered and disappeared into the dark nooks and crannies in the landscape below. It seemed to Ann Marie that they were fleeing in terror.
A soupy mist began to develop around her as though she were a passenger jet passing into a cloud. The grey vapor started to collect, then coalesce into something solid. The nebulous thing started to suck in all the mist as it seemed to gather mass. Ann Marie felt some pressure drawing her toward whatever it was. Suddenly, two crevices opened up in the shape and became eyes. Black smoke swarmed into lines on its surface.
Ann Marie was staring at the monstrous tattooed boy’s face. With nothing else perceivable in the mist, the face had become the entire universe. It studied her with a mixture of fascination and lust. She tried not to panic, finally hearing in her mind Dade’s message from a few minutes earlier, telling her that she was safe.
While the thing stared at her, she realized she couldn’t feel her heart beating. Her heart, along with the rest of her entire body, was gone. When the face started to lick its lips at her, she screamed so hard that it woke her up and she was back on the steel table.
“You’re back,” said Dade, looking down on her tenderly.
Her eyes darted around the room, taking in everything to prove to herself that she was indeed back in the lab. Then she threw her arms around his neck and squeezed him like a python. “That was incredible!” she shouted while she held on tight. “I should have listened to you but that was amazing!”
“Damn right you should have listened to me. But I suppose this was inevitable.”
She suddenly remembered the face she saw. “A child,” she said. “A child with a tattooed face. The same one I saw on my first day of work. MoneySexPower! That’s him. It’s the face of the tattooed boy.”
“It’s very old.”
“Is it the devil?”
“I don’t believe in such concepts,” said Dade. “MoneySexPower is an intelligence, something that has been part of the Earth for a long time. It works through humans, usually just by influencing their desires and actions. However, in some cases, it can form a kind of symbiosis with a group.”
“Or a child?”
“The child is the victim,” Dade said, “which is nearly always the case. The coven is helping that parasite latch itself to the boy.”
...
Ann Marie left the laboratory that night and continued to feel strange. She felt lightheaded starting up the car. She thought she saw a shadowy figure in the parking lot on her way out. The thing seemed to disappear when it touched her headlight beam. As she circled her way down the hill, the moonlight felt brighter and warmer than it should. The green ferns and bushes looked especially alive, almost as though they were pulsating or breathing.
She made it to the bottom of the hill and entered the freeway. She thought she saw people waving to her from behind one of the streetlights. They were insistently pointing down the road like they wanted to show her something important. As she drove, she saw more black figures, something like silhouettes, everywhere along the road. Shadows without any apparent substance were waving at her and trying to get her attention. If she looked at any one of them too long, it seemed to just disappear.
The shadow people all seemed to be directing her somewhere.
...
At the same time, across the city, the coven stood around an empty indoor swimming pool at an abandoned LA high school. They were all robed in black and one of them, the albino nurse, was holding hands with a small boy. Behind them, filling the small stack of bleachers around the pool, dozens of homeless recruits watched with great anticipation.
“This place smells,” the little boy complained to the nurse. “I want you to take me home!”
“Stop it!” The albino nurse said as she grabbed the boy by the collar. “I told you your parents were already mad at you. That’s why they sent me to pick you up. They’re tired of you and they’ve had enough.”
“I don’t believe you.”
“Believe it,” she scolded, before taking on a more tender tone with the boy. “I didn’t want to have to tell you this. But, the reason your mom and dad starting having me look after you, the reason they made me your babysitter, is that they wanted to give you to me. Your mom called me herself and said that she couldn’t stand being your mother anymore.”
The little boy looked very upset. Just as she was about to say something else, her phone rang and she picked it up right away.
“Hello my king,” the nurse said. “I have the boy right here. Just like I promised.”
“Are the animals there yet?” Bernard asked.
“They’re in the cage and ready to go.”
“Well done,” said Bernard through the phone. “The rest of the equipment should be arriving shortly.” Just before Bernard hung up, he told the albino nurse, “Don’t you dare scare that boy too much before it’s time.”
“OK,” she said. “Fine.”
“Don’t use that exasperated tone with me. Didn’t I tell you how important it was to do everything
exactly
as I’ve laid out?”
“I guess.”
“Didn’t I tell you that this is a very specific ritual and the boy must feel happy and content for this all to work?”
“You told me.”
“The same thing goes for the animals. I know they’re in a cage but I want them treated humanely before it happens.”
“Understood,” the freckled nurse answered.
At that moment, one of the other members of the coven burst into the pool room, shouting, “The trucks are here! The trucks are here!”
“Good,” she said. “Now get the cables set up over the pool so we can get the animals in position.”
Four members of the group started to put the finishing touches on some sort of steel cable system to hang over the empty pool. The series of pulleys and lines ended at a large metal cage. The steel box looked like it could have held several man-eating lions.
The cage was packed with pet dogs, perhaps twenty or twenty-five in total. They formed a huddling, shaking mess in one corner of the cage. All the animals seemed terrified.
“You idiots! They aren’t supposed to be scared shitless!” The albino shouted when she saw them. “I don’t even know if the ritual will work now!” She was suddenly hit with an idea and looked down at the little boy she had by the wrist. Crouching down so she was eye-level with the boy, she asked him, “Do you like doggies?”
The boy smiled and nodded with force.
“Do doggies like you?”
“Doggies like me.”
“Well,” she said, “I was going to let you meet all the doggies later. Hmm. Since you like doggies so much, do you think you might be able to cheer some doggies up right now?”
“Why are they sad?” The boy asked.
“Because they’re lonely and they want to see you real bad.”
“OK,” said the little boy. “I’ll do it.”
“Very good,” The albino beamed. “I’m gonna tell your parents how good you were and maybe they won’t be mad at you anymore. Maybe they’ll want you to come home again.” She directed one of the coven members to take the boy by the hand and bring him over to the cage. “Go ahead,” she told him. “Get inside and be careful not to let any doggies out.”
The little boy thought about it for a moment. One of the other coven members grabbed him before he was ready and shoved him into the cage. With the cage so packed with dogs, the boy was nearly out of breathing room. The dogs seemed happy to see the boy and started to lick his face.
“Good boy,” The albino nurse told him through the bars. “You’re so good at cheering up the doggies. Keep up the good work.”
Standing in a dark puddle of urine, the little boy tried to pet and comfort as many dogs as he could. Many of them were still too afraid to stop trembling and whimpering. The little boy did his best to console the dogs around him. “When can we all come out?” He asked her.
“Not just yet,” she told him. “You’re doing so well. Keep trying to make the doggies feel better.”
Just outside the abandoned school, three military fuel transport trucks idled. The albino and two of her coven lieutenants met the trucks outside. “Get the cage in position after the pool is full,” she told them. The remaining members of the coven connected a series of fire hoses to the trucks and set the other ends in the empty pool inside.