Doll Face (30 page)

Read Doll Face Online

Authors: Tim Curran

Tags: #Horror

BOOK: Doll Face
10.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The light picked out a slumped form against the far wall.

“Shit,” she muttered, her breath catching in her throat.

At first, she could not say that it was Soo-Lee up against the dirty brick wall. She saw a naked female form, long-legged, a sweep of lustrous black hair hanging over her face. The hair, if nothing else, triggered recognition because she had known very few women outside of fashion magazines that had such beautiful hair. Soo-Lee was dead, of course. She looked deflated, bony and wraith-like as if the skeleton inside her had become more pronounced in death. Her pale skin was speckled with blood. It was even clotted in her hair. And that wasn’t too surprising because it looked as if a bomb had gone off inside her, tearing her open from crotch to belly in a dark gash. She sat in a pool of blood. It was splashed up the wall behind her. It even dripped from the ceiling.

Ramona turned away, trying to keep her stomach down.

In a flash that made her head fill with sharp blades of pain, she knew what had happened and she saw it in all its grisly detail. She had to lean up against the doorjamb so she did not pitch straight over.

It came out of her,
she thought numbly.
What she carried, the seed that was planted in her and blossomed, it came out of her…no, it
chewed
its way out of her and she was awake through it all. At least, until the shock and trauma and agony made her pass out.

Ramona leaned there, what was in the room reaching out to her, striking her in waves of formless black evil. She could barely catch her breath.

(THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS TO CITY SLUTS)

In her head, it echoed and echoed. The pain was unbearable, each word like a razor dragged across her gray matter, slitting her open and making her bleed.
“Please,”
she heard herself say.

(THEY COME TO STOKES, OUR PERFECT TOWN, AND SPREAD THEIR DISEASE WITH THEIR FILTHY CONTAMINATED DIRTY PARTS)

Ramona was down on her knees now. It felt like each word landed with physical force, with impact. Her head felt like it was a bag being worked by a fighter.
Boom-boom, bang-bang.
She was fighting to stay conscious, but Mother Crow was winning. And who was she to stand up against something that could cheat death and re-create an entire town from smoking black ash and gutted ruin?

(THE DIRTY CHINK, TWO-DOLLAR GOOK WHORE, ASKING FOR IT)

“No, no, no, no,” Ramona moaned.
“Oh please, please, no more…”

(BEGGING FOR IT, JUST BEGGING FOR IT, AND SHE GOT IT)

“Shut up!”

(SHE SCREAMED WHEN HE IMPALED HER, WHEN HE RUPTURED THE FOREIGN CUNT AND MADE HER BLEED LIKE HER KIND ALWAYS BLEED IN THE END! SHE SQUEALED AND CRIED OUT AND HE KEPT RAMMING, SPLITTING HER OPEN AND MAKING THE HOT RED FOULNESS WITHIN HER RUN BETWEEN HER LEGS!!!)

Ramona felt anger rising in her and it canceled out the fear and made the pain subside. And she knew it was her only true weapon, the only weapon anyone had in the conformist, meat-grinder, police state of Stokes: free will. Mother Crow could not abide it. She did not like men who thought they were her better and she did not like loose-tongued women who thought they were her equal. People needed to know their place and she had no civility with those that didn’t. Questionable morals or independent thinking were enough to get you ejected from the prison camp of Stokes in the old days and now such things were enough to condemn you. And the judge, jury, and executioner were one in the same: a bitter, frustrated, sour-souled, acid-tongued old spinster that no man had ever touched. So since she did not have a man to run and belittle and control with an iron fist, she forced her affections on the town and ran the people like cattle.

“FUCK YOU!” Ramona screamed at her. “FUCK YOU, YOU VICIOUS, FRIGID OLD TWAT! FUCK YOU
AND
FUCK STOKES!”

The house shook and Ramona thought it would come down around her such was the pure wrath of Mother Crow. Nothing hurt worse than the truth. Nothing could possibly cut deeper. And no wound bled as much or refused to be cauterized. There was thunder in the streets and the stench of roasted flesh and burning hair. It cycled through the house in a hot, gagging stink.

When it was gone, Ramona stood there with the light on Soo-Lee while Mother Crow’s hate and rage made the town tremble outside the walls of the house. Soo-Lee was like an old pipe that had burst and gushed blood in an ensanguined flood. A dear person with a dear, understanding heart and her death was made ugly and brutal by the old hag.

Ramona would make that evil bitch pay for it.

There were no two ways about that.

It was at that moment that she heard something under the bed frame. A sort of scratching sound like the claws of a rat. But it was no rat. She put the light over there and saw glittering black eyes like those of a Raggedy Ann doll staring out at her.

“So there you are,” she said in a beaten voice.

It shifted under there, a darkly evil pygmy-like form that the light could not adequately reveal and maybe that was a good thing. Illumination gleamed off its shoe-button eyes and teeth. Its claws ticked against the floor. Ramona stepped closer to the bed frame, not wanting to see it…but something in her almost
demanding
that she look upon it like some freak in a sideshow jar. The terror building in her was almost enough to make her faint dead away.

“Show yourself,” she said, her voice sounding determined yet almost weak.

The thing rustled there in the shadows. It made a wet sucking sort of sound.
“Eeee, eeee, eeee,”
it said with a shrill little voice that went right up her spine. It sounded like a stepped-upon mouse.

She kicked the bed and it scampered away, faster than her light seemed to be able to track it. It ran across Soo-Lee’s corpse and splashed through her blood, its nails ticking along like those of a cat that could not retract its claws. The light caught sight of its toothsome grin and a shiny, bulb-like, embryonic sort of head with trailing hair on one side that looked like seaweed.

It thinks you’re playing with it,
Ramona thought.

The very idea was twisted and horrible, yet she was almost certain of it. Maybe Mother Crow had thought it all into being, the rape and the pregnancy and the birth, but now that it was alive, it
really
was alive and had a child’s sense of play.

It was grotesque to the extreme.

Ramona tried to follow it with her light and it scuttled across the floor, to the left, then the right, then she lost it and felt it slide between her ankles with a hideous weight.
Oh, Christ.
Something told her that such a horror needed to be destroyed, that letting it survive was almost a sin…but she didn’t know if she was up to it. The idea of getting close to it made a hot, liquid madness run in her mind.

She heard a squeaking noise.

She swung the light around.

It was jumping up and down on the bedsprings, flying five or six feet in the air and then coming back down to repeat it again. It was malformed, lumpy, and squirming like a fetal rat. It leaped off the bed and waited there like it wanted her to try it, too. Ramona was simultaneously filled with horror and pity. She put the light right in its face and it squealed like it had been scalded. It did not like the light as she supposed things like it never did. Its face was wrinkled and deeply seamed, its eyes rolling blank gray balls. When it squealed, its jaws yawned wide and she saw it had two teeth. Each long, sharp, and tusk-like. One on the bottom jaw and one on the upper. Both were stained pink from what it had chewed through to be born. She likened them to the egg teeth of baby birds.

It hid from the light, turning its back to her and she saw protuberant, knobby bones straining against membranous flesh. It was shivering. As she stepped closer to it, gripping the Ray-O-Vac like a club now, it skidded across the floor, making that same
eeeee, eeeee, eeeeeeee
sort of sound that was tinny and strident.

Ramona went after it and it leaped through the air straight at her face.

She dodged it, but just barely. Even so, its flesh brushed against her cheek and it felt cold and slimy like a dead carp. It struck the wall, but did not fall. It hung there, claws embedded in the plaster. It was breathing very heavily now. As she stepped closer to it, it squeaked and trembled like it was frightened and a glop of pink jelly dropped from its hindquarters as if it had shit itself out of fear.

This was too much.

She was going to leave. Maybe that was wrong and maybe it was even unethical somehow, but she couldn’t take any more of this. Her revulsion for the thing was simply too great and if it touched her again, she was going to really lose it.

It craned its head around and looked at her, flashing her a grin of juicy pink gums, its two spike-like incisors looking lethal, the sort of things made for tearing out jugulars. Its doll eyes watched her, shining and reflective, filled with a naïve idiocy that made her heart ache even as goose bumps broke out over the backs of her arms. She couldn’t get past the idea that it was really not a living thing at all, but some horrible prop or loathsome toy.

It thumped its knees against the wall repeatedly. It wanted her to come after it again. It wanted her to try and catch it. Play, it was all just play…yet, she had seen its teeth and claws and they were the sort of things that could play you right to death.

“Eeeeeee?”
it squeaked.

“No,” she said. “No play. I don’t have time”

It snapped its teeth at her, drumming itself against the wall. It made a hissing sound like a snake. Long ribbons of drool hung from its mouth.
“Eeeeeeee!”
it squeaked again, but this time there was a definite note of anger and impatience in the shrilling little voice.

Nearly mad with terror, the flashlight shaking in her hand, Ramona began backing away toward the door. The hellish little moppet watched her with gleaming eyes. It began climbing up the wall, digging in its claws, leaving gaping holes in the plaster.

“EEEEEEE!”
it shrieked at her.
“EEEEEEE!”

She wanted to toss the flashlight and cover her ears with her hands because the sound it made completely unnerved her and made a scream loosen in her throat. Sweat ran down her face and the trusty Ray-O-Vac jiggled in her hand. It was up near the ceiling now, hanging there like some mutant simian horror. It closed its mouth and puckered its swollen lips into something like a suckering kiss. Maybe she had lost her mind, but she almost sensed that it had a certain affection for her. It hung by one claw-hand now, swinging back and forth.

I don’t have a mommy now, Ramona. I want you to be my mommy and my playmate and at night I’ll curl up next to you and I’ll never let go. And when I’m hungry, I’ll fasten my mouth to your tit and suck the blood right out of you. You can scream all you want, but once I get my teeth in, you’ll never pry me loose!

Those words ran through her head, all inflected with that piercing elfin voice. Fuck this. She went for the door. She couldn’t take it anymore. The light splashed over Soo-Lee’s gutted corpse and this time she did scream.

The little beast got very excited. It mimicked her scream with a perfectly awful
“EEEEEEEEE!”
and jumped up at the ceiling, again digging its claws in and crossing it quickly like a kid on the monkey bars. Ramona dashed for the door and it slammed shut in her face. She felt claws like the thorns of rose stems tear open her cheek and she fell back, swinging at the little monster with her light. But it was too fast, it dodged away into the darkness and she swung around in a drunken circle with the light, trying to find it. A blur swept past her face with a hot rancid wind and she cried out.

“GET AWAY FROM ME!” she shouted.

But that only delighted the creature and it squealed right back at her, bounding across the floor and nearly knocking the legs out from under her. When she thought she had found it with the light, it was suddenly somewhere else, making her spin around wildly, trying to pinpoint it as a crazy sort of vertigo whirled in her head.

Breathless, dizzy, her face wet with sweat, she saw it on the ceiling, then the walls, then she lost it completely right before its dead weight dropped onto her shoulder and she felt its hot breath against her neck. She dropped the light and reached up to grab it, seizing it in her fists. Its flesh seemed to crawl under her hands and waves of disgust swept through her.

“NO!” she cried as it pressed its monstrous, bloated face into her own, grinning with child-like glee, its carnivore fangs darting out and nipping the end of her nose.

Cold sweat flooded her body and she went absolutely feral with panic and rage. She peeled it from her and threw it as hard as she could, hearing it strike the wall with a meaty slap. She grabbed up the flashlight and put the beam on it. It was squatted there on the floor, making a perfectly frightful mewling sort of sound. Its head was wet with what had to be blood and she soon saw why. She had injured it. Maybe it
was
alive, but it was still a degenerate hybrid of human tissue and mannequin and its skin was more like a shell. Its head had cracked open like that of a baby doll upon impact with the wall, a piece of its cranium lay at its feet.

Other books

Enticing the Earl by Nicole Byrd
The Prospector by J.M.G Le Clézio
Blessed by Michael, David
Under Your Skin by Sabine Durrant
Lickin' License by Intelligent Allah