Read Experiment in Terror 05 On Demon Wings Online
Authors: Karina Halle
Tags: #Fantasy, #Horror, #Romance, #Adult, #Mystery, #Suspense, #Goodreads 2012 Horror
forehead slowly, like I pained him just by speaking. “You
were in love with a man, he broke your heart. You end up
pregnant by him without even knowing it, then you lose the
baby in a traumatic miscarriage. I hear what you are saying
but you are missing something very obvious and plain
here.”
“Such as?”
He sighed, getting visibly frustrated with me. Good.
“You have gone through a terrible, heartbreaking event
and you haven’t been able to deal with it. It’s al manifested
into this delusion of yours, that you’re possessed, that
you’re being haunted. There’s no one else in your head,
Perry. It’s just you. You’re haunted by the very feelings you
haven’t addressed yet. You’re grieving and hiding it and
when you try to hide grief, it can come out in the most
peculiar ways.”
For a split second I believed him. I thought it was total y
possible that it real y was al in my head and that my
subconscious was making it al up as a way to face what
was real y going on.
But that’s what he wanted me to think. I was smarter than
that.
“I didn’t even want a baby,” I told him, trying to think of
something to refute it with. “It would have ruined me.”
“That doesn’t mean you wouldn’t mourn the loss. That
would have been the last tie you ever had to him.”
For some reason, that phrase dug into me: the last tie.
I’d gone from thinking we’d always be connected in some
way, that we were the same person separated a long time
ago, to having no ties at al . I was here, going through hel ,
and he had absolutely no idea. He real y was cut and gone.
But he had nothing to do with anything and I was
suddenly furious that the doctor tried to turn my broken
heart into some emo cry for help. Who was I, Taylor Swift?
“I think you’re ful of shit,” I snarled.
He nodded as if he agreed, and I wanted to punch him.
He sensed me tensing up and quickly scribbled down on
his pad and said, “I’m going to recommend you come in
once a week from now on.”
“And if I don’t?”
“I can’t make you. You’re an adult. But I’d hope you’d do
it for your family. They love and care about you.”
I snorted at that and got up.
“Meanwhile,” he said quickly as he ripped off a
prescription pad, “start taking these two pil s.”
Remembering what Creepy Clown Lady said, I took the
paper from him and eyed the chickenscratch suspiciously.
“I can’t read this. What are they? Do you think I’m schizo
now?”
“No,” he said plainly. “And schizophrenia is a real deal,
not to be taken lightly. One is to help you relax. You need
rest and relaxation more than anything. The other is to help
you deal with your grief.”
“And if I have no grief?”
He gave me a terse smile.
“Perry, we al just want to help you.”
That’s what they always said. Everyone always wants to
help but no one ever wants to believe me.
I’d been down that highway so many times, they might as
wel cal it the Perry Expressway.
I was so livid and defeated when I left Doctor Freedman’s
office that I couldn’t remember what happened afterward.
We must have dropped Ada off at school, we must have
gone to Walgreens to fil the prescription for me. But I
couldn’t recal any of that. My memory was wiped.
I was just suddenly in the passenger side of my mother’s
car, my hands smel ing like vinegar salad dressing, the
clock on the dashboard indicating at least two hours had
passed.
We were leaving downtown going over the Burnside
Bridge, the river water below reflecting the dul , colorless
sky above.
I was hit with a wave of nausea, fol owed by another
wave, a warning, that something extremely terrible was
about to happen. A feeling of absolute dread. I looked at
my mother like it might be the last time I’d see her. She was
driving cautiously, her hands gripping the wheel so hard her
bony knuckles protruded. She had her sunglasses on even
though it was frighteningly dark for the late afternoon. She’d
looked exhausted lately – I knew it was because of me. Tiny
lines had a permanent home at the corners of her pinched
mouth.
“Mom,” I said careful y. Scared.
She jumped a little, then covered it up with a quick smile.
“What is it, Perry?”
“I don’t feel wel .”
And it was suddenly the world’s biggest understatement.
The most revolting, violating feeling flushed my insides. I
wasn’t alone in my head. Someone else was inside me
with me, waiting, perched just out of the corner of my eyes.
They were in me, watching me, monitoring these very
thoughts.
Then my world stretched forward in a horrific display of
tunnel vision. I was thrown back, back into oblivion, but only
my mind, not my body.
I watched as I raised one hand in the air, waving it slowly
in front of my face. I wasn’t doing it. I wasn’t in control. I
wasn’t the one in charge.
Mom!
I shrieked.
But I was only screaming in my head, not out of my
throat. I didn’t have control over that anymore. My throat
wasn’t mine.
I was being held hostage in my own body.
And at that realization, something inside churned with
anger.
The arm I was holding in front of my face, which was now
drawing a curious glance from my mom, suddenly shot
across to the wheel, gripped it and swung it violently over to
the right, toward the cars in the other lane.
Toward the barrier.
Toward the edge of the bridge.
And the river far below.
My mother screamed as the car careened into the other
lane, nearly clipping a BMW. There was a horrid
screeching in surround sound and the smel of burning tires
and my mother’s screaming and the screaming I was doing
in my own head. With every bit of strength I could
concentrate on, I pushed hard and felt a pop inside my
chest and suddenly al feeling rushed back to me like I was
being brushed with pins and needles.
I let go of the wheel and braced myself on the dashboard
and my mother got the car under control seconds before we
slammed against the barrier. If we had hit, we would have
flipped and gone over.
Other cars sped past us, honking, waving their fingers,
mouthing swear words, while mom slowly, gingerly applied
the gas. She was shaking and her Kung-Fu grip on the
wheel was the only thing keeping her from bouncing out of
her seat. We crawled down the bridge and at the first
opportunity to pul over, she did.
Acting like she was in a dream-like state, she flipped the
car into park, turned off the engine and turned in her seat to
face me. She lifted up her sunglasses to reveal smudged
mascara and blue eyes magnified by tears. Her expression
matched that unforgettable look I saw in my father’s face as
he hauled me up from the roof. But there was something
else. Almost an understanding, like she was recognizing
me for the first time and seeing the monster I real y was.
“Perry,” she breathed.
“I said I didn’t feel wel ,” I told her glibly.
Then I pitched myself into uncontrol able laughter that
lasted most of the car ride back home.
~~~
The minute I burst through the front door, I rushed to the
downstairs bathroom to puke. I keeled over the toilet and
brought up everything until my throat burned raw. It turns out
I had salad for lunch. That explained the salad dressing
smel earlier.
When I was empty and exhausted I looked at myself in
the mirror. My heart dropped in my ribs.
I looked like a different person. No, not different. I looked
like I was barely even alive. My cheekbones jutted out of my
face, the circles under my eyes had spread. My lips were
dry, cracked and bleeding. My eyes themselves were ful y
dilated into black holes. My neck was red and teased with
scratches that I knew led down into my chest. I wondered
how Doctor Freedman could chalk up any of this to a
measly broken heart. I looked like I should be locked up
and put away, like the asylum ghosts at Riverside Institute.
I couldn’t look at myself anymore; it was making me sick
again and I didn’t have any food left to throw up. A piercing
pain jabbed at my temples instead. I turned off the light in
the bathroom and stepped out into the hal way.
My mom and dad were in the kitchen talking to each
other in hushed, frantic voices. Three guesses as to who
they were talking about.
I stood in the doorway and they shut up with nary a guilty
look on their faces.
My mom waved me in.
“Come sit down, pumpkin,” she said, and poured a
glass of water for me. I wondered how she could stil cal
me such an endearing term after I tried to kil her.
The tea kettle on the stove boiled over and the piercing
whistle made me wince in pain, exaggerating the pain in
my head.
“Sorry,” she said, and quickly took it off the burner.
“Perry, I heard what happened,” my father said. He
looked down at the cuffs on his red and white striped shirt
and started smoothing them out. “I can’t stress the
importance of these pil s that the doctor gave you.”
My mother smiled forceful y and plunked a pair of yel ow
and pink pil s beside the glass of water. I eyed them wryly.
“I’m not taking these,” I said. Before anyone could
protest, I rushed on, “Doctor Freedman said I could make
my own choices. I’m twenty-three. You can’t force me to be
medicated.”
“Not yet,” my father said.
I raised my head sharply at that.
“That’s OK, Perry,” my mother cut in. “You’re right. You
don’t have to take them. It’s just...you need them. You’re not
wel . The doctor said so himself, and I think you know it
yourself. In the car…I…”
Feeling a bout of shame, I looked down at my hands.
The scratches seeped clear fluid. It didn’t even faze me
anymore. I was becoming someone else and there was
nothing anyone could do about it. The pil s would be futile
except make it easier to give up. If I wanted to go, I wanted
to go in my right mind with every fighting ounce I had left.
“If you don’t care about us enough to take them, think
about your sister. Or think about yourself. Your self-hate
can’t run that deep.”
My chin jutted out defiantly and I met her eyes. “I don’t
hate myself. I hate what I’ve become.”
“Become?” my mother said with a hint of irony in her
voice. “Pumpkin, you’ve always been like this.”
Then she shrugged with false carelessness and gave
me a cup of rooibos tea.
“Anyway, your choice. Here, have some tea. I put extra
honey in it. You look like you could use something sweet.”
My throat did burn after the vomiting and I was feeling a
bit on the dizzy side. I took the hot cup in my hands and
slowly sipped it. It tasted surprisingly sweet – she went
overboard with the honey.
My dad sat down on the bar stool beside me and placed
his hairy hand on my arm.
“You’re not alone in this, OK, sweetie?” he said. The
tenderness in his voice, so rarely heard, made me want to
cry. But I nodded and swal owed hot gulps of red tea to
keep the emotions away. I was tired of losing it and afraid
to let go.
And I real y was tired, too. Like suddenly, irrevocably
tired
.
My head swayed and I pushed the cup of tea away from
me.
“Whoa,” I said with a bit of effort.
I looked up at my parents. The room began to spin
around them but they remained motionless, watching me
very, very closely. My eyes glazed and unfocused.
“I...”
“Perry, you should go to bed,” my mother said quickly.
She hurried over to me and tugged at my arm, trying to get
me out of the bar stool. I awkwardly got to my feet and she
immediately started leading me toward the stairs.
My feet felt like lead. What was going on?
“Mom?” I questioned, but it came out in a slur.
Suddenly my dad was beside me with a stranglehold on
my other arm. “Come on Perry, up to bed.”
It’s 3p.m.,
I tried to say, but my mouth wouldn’t move. It
came out in a mumble.
They led me to my room and I fel onto the bed just as my
feet lost al feeling.
“This is for your own good,” my mother said as she
swiped the covers out from under and tucked me in.