In Need of a Fix
ANCIENT WISDOM
(Witchcraft - Northport Campaign)
"In Need of a Fix"
1:35AM, Saturday, May 7th.
Downtown Northport, Eclipse Nightclub.
Strobe lights.
Sweat mixed with the slight aroma of alcohol.
The bass causes her teeth to vibrate when she tries to close her mouth. Hundreds of bodies are packed tight and writhing to the in-house DJ's special euro-blend. She's dancing with a tall, dark haired man wearing a black vest and no shirt underneath. Next is a blonde woman in a pink tank-top, then a long haired teenage boy with studs through his nose and tongue. Nothing more than flashes through a drug haze. A haze that's unfortunately starting to lift. Suddenly she's at the edge of the human sea with an unobstructed line to the bar. She breaks free of the mass and makes her way there.
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While waiting for the bartender she studied herself in the mirror. Straight, long, white-blonde hair, red lipstick and dark eyeliner. Her fair skin showed no trace of the tan she got last summer. She was nineteen years old last month but the silk dress and silver necklace she wore made her look twenty-five. Not that the establishment was too concerned with checking ID's.
"Hey Melissa, are you danced out yet?" In the mirror she saw a young, pretty, brown haired woman slightly shorter than her own five foot eight inches step up behind her and drape an arm over her shoulder. Her best friend and roommate, Misty - who loved the club scene somewhat less than her - and was always the first ready to call it a night.
She smiled and leaned her head closer, "I'm ok with going home if..." She whispered the next, "... we make a little stop on the way there."
Misty smiled, then groaned, "If by little stop, you mean to the 'pharmacy'... Mel, do you realize what the neighborhood around there is like this time of night!?"
Melissa put her arm around her friend, "Oh come on, it's not THAT bad, and besides, we'll drive there. It's just a quick stop and we'll go home. I promise." She crossed her heart with her finger.
"I guess I should be thrilled that you're willing to go home this early in the first place." Misty looked her friend in the eyes, "Fine, you win, but I'm not getting out the car!"
Melissa grinned. The bartender didn't look to be acknowledging them anytime soon so the two girls gave up and wound their way towards the entrance.
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Twenty minutes later Misty was cursing her best friend as they sat side-by-side in her red, Nissan Acura. "We'll driiive there, just a quick stop!" she mimicked Melissa's words from earlier.
They were parked on the side of the road in a rundown neighborhood. The headlights were off and they argued in the dark.
"How was I supposed to know we we're gonna get a flat?!" Melissa yelled. "Am I psychic? Jesus Misty, I'm not exactly thrilled either!"
Misty looked through her windows nervously, "Could you keep it down please. Let's try not to attract attention to the two defenseless women in the nice car."
They were parked on the corner in front of a closed, mechanic's shop under a non-functional street light. The nearest light source was another street light two blocks down. Beside the shop was a bare, dirt lot and then a row of boarded up store fronts. Across the street was what seemed to be a warehouse, though they could see no sign, just a metal garage door and one barred door and window.
"Besides," Melissa said in a quieter voice, "How the




was I supposed to know you wouldn't have your cell phone with you? What the hell good is a cell phone if you leave it at home?"
Misty had the grace to look embarrassed.
"Look, John's apartment is like, three blocks that way," she pointed in the direction of the working street light. "He's not exactly a friend, but I'm sure he'd let me use his phone to call a tow truck." She thought a moment and motioned towards the trunk, "Do you still have that baseball bat?"
"Yeah," Misty pouted.
"Good. Let's take it with us and walk to John's. We'll be there in a few minutes." Melissa flashed a reassuring grin.
"You don't even know if that's his real name Mel. How can you be so sure a drug dealer will help us?"
"I'd be damn surprised if that was his real name, but I'm a regular Misty. I've put a lot of money in his pocket. He'll probably just look at it as protecting his interest." She frowned, "I am SO not saying that "John" is Dudley Do Right, but it's a better option than sitting here all night in this




ing car." She started to open her door until Misty put a frightened hand on her shoulder.
A homeless person was making his or her way across the mechanic's parking lot pushing an over-filled shopping cart. Upon closer inspection it turned out to be a woman. Her hair was covered in a ragged scarf and she wore a baggy shirt and torn raincoat. It was too dark to make out details but the cart seemed to be full of trash bags. The wheel made a rhythmic squeak as she passed. She had obviously noticed the two girls in the nice car and was unabashedly staring back as she walked on, craning her neck to do so. It wasn't a particularly friendly look.
Melissa spoke first, "I am SO not staying here all night!"
Misty popped the trunk and said, "Get the bat. And just so we're clear, we are




ing speed walking right?"
"Right."
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Misty insisted on carrying the bat. She held it in a two handed, white knuckle grip as she kept a brisk pace next to her longer legged friend. They crossed the street and hurried towards the illusory safety of the first street light, heels clacking on the cracked pavement. Besides the bag lady, the streets seemed totally deserted. In the distance she could hear the repetitive bark of a dog. It was cold and Melissa kept rubbing at the exposed skin of her arms to fight back the goose-bumps. Neither woman spoke.
They both slowed as an older model, black mustang rounded the corner. Latin rap and a heavy base line blared from the lowered windows. Four hispanic teenagers in gangster attire stared at the two white women as the car slowed. Misty's hands ached as she squeezed the bat. One teen said something to the driver and they all laughed. The car sped up and was gone in a matter of moments.
Melissa whispered, "Let's walk a little faster."
Seconds later Melissa stifled a gasp as they passed the mouth to an alley. Two homeless men huddled near a stack of palettes. One man wore an old army jacket, jeans and a baseball hat. He had long hair and a full, tangled beard. The other was black, tall and skinny. He wore a faded orange ski jacket and a grey ski hat pulled low over his forehead. Both men looked up and caught her eyes before she had time to look away, then she and Misty were passed the alley and both men disappeared from view.
At Melissa's gasp, Misty had just caught a glimpse of the two men as well. "This was so not a good idea Mel. Where the hell are these apartments?"
Melissa's only answer was to take hold of her friend's arm and move faster still.
A couple minutes later they were standing on a corner several blocks further down. Misty was seriously considering using the bat on her roommate. "What do you mean it's not here!? You SAID his apartment was three blocks, we've walked five!"
Melissa bit her lip and hugged her harms close to her body. "Dammit Misty I'm so sorry! I could have sworn we were on the right street. Maybe we should walk back to the car."
Misty was staring with a worried expression over Melissa's shoulder and back the way they had come, "I don't think that's such a great idea Mel..."
Melissa turned and saw the two homeless men stop on the previous block. They stared in the girls direction for a moment before stepping into another alley and out of sight. To walk back the way they had come would mean the girls would have to pass that alley. They looked at one another then simultaneously shook their heads from side to side.
"Let's keep going and look for a phone," said Misty.
With frequent glances behind them they set off once more.
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They walked briskly, staring about them with fearful eyes and desperately seeking a better area of town. To Misty it seemed that they had somehow entered a twilight zone episode. Block after block there was nothing but trash filled lots, boarded up windows and featureless stone buildings. The only good news was that they seemed to have lost their itinerant stalkers.
"Holy




!" whispered Melissa.
"What!? What!?" Misty gripped Mel's arm painfully.
"The guy with the beard... we JUST passed him in that alley back there." Her hands were shaking.
"Are you sure?"
"Yes, I'm




ing sure! He was just standing there staring!" Melissa's voice was rising towards a hysterical pitch.
"Calm down!" Misty felt anything but calm herself. She glanced behind them and thankfully saw no sign of the man. "CRAP! Didn't the city put even one god damned phone in this neighborhood?!"
Like an answer to her blasphemous prayers Misty spotted the blue glow of a pay-phone light up ahead. "Mel, look."
Pointing was unnecessary since Melissa had already seen it too. A small gas and grocery store lay ahead. In the welcoming neon glow of a red and yellow 'Quick-mart' sign stood a lone phone box, the cord that once held a phone book dangling empty. The business was obviously closed. No lights were on inside and the barred doors and windows showed no sign of movement within. But it was a phone and Misty had change. Hell, you didn't even need change to dial 911.
As they stepped over the concrete border to the parking lot Misty was already contemplating what she would say to the 911 operator. 'Yes it's an emergency. Yes, we're being stalked by hairy homeless men. Yes we want the cops to come right now!'
They were forty feet from the phone when the hairy homeless man in question stepped around the edge of the store and leaned against the phone box. The girls stopped in the center of the parking lot. He smiled at them and Melissa was struck by how white his teeth seemed, framed as they were by a mass of dirty beard hair.
"Y'all ladies need a hand wit anythang?" The deep voice came from behind them and both girls spun, Misty raising her bat defensively. The tall black man was standing no more than ten feet from them.
Melissa said, "n-n-no thanks, we're good."
He smiled, "I'll bet you is." Unlike the hairy guy, his teeth were in bad condition.
Misty glanced back towards the other man. He was walking casually towards them, smile still in place.
"We're leaving now." Melissa pulled Misty along and they both hurried back to the sidewalk at what could almost be called a jog. The black man paced them, staying just back enough to keep them from running. The hairy one just stopped and watched as they crossed the street and disappeared around the corner.
"Leave us alone! I Don't want to have to hurt you with this!" Misty brandished the bat as she walked backwards. Melissa's head was bouncing from front to back as she simultaneously tried to watch their pursuer and the sidewalk ahead of her.
She slowed Misty by grabbing her shoulder, pointing ahead of them with her other hand. Misty spared a look and saw the hairy man walking towards them, less than a hundred feet ahead, that same grin in place. Somehow he had gotten ahead of them again. The girls stopped and so did both men at a distance of about ten feet in front and behind.
"This is the point in the play where you scream and run." The bearded man's voice was scratchy. It sent shivers down their spines. With those words he had erased any doubts the girls might have had left that these men didn't mean them harm.
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With terrifying quickness his hand flashed forward and grabbed Melissa by the throat. Her scream came out as a gurgle as she flailed in an attempt to escape. Misty cried out as she swung the bat up and around, bringing it crashing with all her strength into the man's lower leg. It bounced off his shin, jarring her arms and bringing a snarl from her target.
"You'll pay for that!" Besides angering him, the blow seemed to have no effect.
Thin but strong, arms enwrapped Misty from behind, pinning the bat to her body and forcing the air from her lungs. The black man's sickening breathe was hot on her neck. She panicked and whipped her head backwards in an attempt to head butt her assailant. Her head bounced against his shoulder and he snickered.
The hairy man spun Melissa around with force and wrapped an arm around her throat. She fought to breathe and dug her nails into the material of his stained jacket. He flexed the muscles in his arm, cutting off the oxygen until she stopped fighting. Stars were forming in her field of vision when he relaxed his grip. She stayed still, just straining to take in air.
"You know what I think?" the bearded man rasped casually.
The black man answered, "Naw what?"
"I think this is too easy." He moved forward until he was right before Misty and her grappler. "I think we need to even up the odds a little... make things more challenging." He reached over her shoulder, caressing her cheek with his hand. A warm splash of liquid hit her exposed neck and ran down her back in slow rivulets. There was no pain and she briefly wondered if that was usual for having your throat slit, then the black man's arms loosened. She heard his body hit the ground and a slow hiss come from his lips. In falling, his coat had caught on her dress and pulled the strap off her left shoulder. Her bra was revealed and she couldn't manage to make her arms work to fix it.
The hairy man said, "Ah ah ah, there'll be time for that later," in his calloused voice. Misty saw unbridled panic in Melissa's eyes and thought that her eyes must look the same.
With a violent shove the man pushed Melissa away and towards the nearby mouth of an alley. She stumbled, barely managing to keep her feet under her. Misty was surprised to realize she still held the bat in her right hand. In desperation she swung it towards his head, every ounce of fear and adrenaline-gained power behind the blow. The impact numbed her arm. She realized that she had squinted her eyes to the point of being closed and quickly opened them. The fingers of his left hand were curled around the bat. He held it a foot from his head. As she stared in disbelief he squeezed. The sound of splintering wood preceded a crack, as he twisted his wrist and the upper eighteen inches of the weapon broke off in his hand.
He smiled, and this time his teeth were sharp and if anything even shinier. "Now... is it time to run?"
Melissa sobbed and stumbled further into the alley. The man stepped towards her, sharp teeth still visible. In a moment of calm thought, she knew that both her and Misty would not survive. Her plan was desperate but she knew it was the only chance one of them had.
"Misty! Run the other way, he can't chase us both!" She bolted down the alley.
Misty was frozen in place, eyes wide and staring. All she could see was sharp teeth and the shattered haft of the bat still clutched in her numb hand. The blood was cooling fast on her neck and back, and the wind was cool on her exposed side. She heard Mel scream to run, but she couldn't even move. She watched as the monster gave her the once over before jogging off after her friend.
He whispered, "I'll be right back," as he passed her.
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Melissa spared no more thoughts for her friend's welfare. All of her bodily resources were now focused on negotiating the dark alley at a run. She slammed into a trash can, sending it's noxious contents across the ground before her. Casting a glance over her shoulder, she was horrified to find that the bearded monster had chosen her to pursue.
"Lovely plan Mel," she whispered to herself. Though the man was twenty yards or more behind her, she heard him laugh, as if he had heard her.
Knowing it was hopeless, she ran faster.
She turned off the alley pavement and crossed a bare lot, scattered with broken bits of cement and broken glass. She cut through a narrow corridor between two grey buildings. The darkness was almost complete at times and once she slammed her knee hard on an unseen object, bringing tears to her eyes and an involuntary moan. His laughter floated up from somewhere close behind her.
She was tiring and she hadn't lost him. She was hopelessly lost and he probably knew exactly where he was going. Stumbling blindly around the corner she barreled into something and came crashing down on top of it. The clash of metal on metal was loud and something gave a muffled curse as she came to rest in a pile of smelly garbage bags. When she looked up she was surprised to see the bag lady from earlier in the evening, grumbling to herself in incomplete words and levering herself up from where she had fallen.
Melissa sprang to her feet with new-found energy. "Oh my god oh my god, thank you thank you pleaseyouhavetohelpme?" She whined and clung to the plump woman's dirty overcoat.
The lady shrugged her off and continued to grumble as she set to righting her capsized grocery cart.
"You don't understand!" Melissa pleaded, "There's a man - no a monster, and he's after me! Please you've got to help me, hide me, PLEASE!"
Once more Melissa was pushed away by the old lady, who now fretted over her garbage bags, placing them one by one, back into the cart. She wiped the sweat from her face and looked down the dark alley, searching for signs of the monster. The old woman had now finished loading her cart and swiveled it away with a squeak of wheels. She was still grumbling as she started off around the corner. Melissa took a shuttering breath, cursed and started running once more, praying that the old lady might at least slow down her attacker.
Two turns and one empty street later she leaned wearily against the wall of a boarded up store front. After several ragged breaths she looked up and around for her pursuer. There was no sign of him or the black man... no wait, the black man was dead. She watched the monster rip his throat open. Suddenly she was having trouble catching her breath again. She pressed her back against the cool bricks and wiped the sweat from her brow, eyes desperately searching the street.
"click... click... click."
The quiet, rhythmic sound of two hard surfaces lightly tapping together.
She stopped breathing and pushed herself off of the now cold bricks, spinning around, trying to place the source of the noise. It was like heels on sidewalk, or nails on glass.
"click... click... click."
No matter which way she turned it sounded like it was right next to her. She stopped spinning. In dawning horror she realized there was only one way she hadn't looked. Slowly, willing herself to be wrong, her head tilted backward, eyes straining upward.
Inky darkness descended like a curtain from the brick wall above. From the edges of the dark mass were writhing tentacles of corpse white flesh, tipped with wickedly hooked, ebon claws. She only got glimpses of the appendages as they emerged and sank into the thing's dark center. It was ten feet above her when she finally took the in air to scream.
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Misty was ten feet from the pay-phone when she heard Melissa's piercing wail. It only lasted a brief moment before being cut short. The mixed tears and mucus brought forth by mad panic streamed down her face as she dove for the receiver. It had only taken a moment to regain the use of her legs after the monster chased her friend down the dark alley. She had turned to run and fell prone, tripping over the body of the black man. She was up in a flash however and running back towards the phone with energy born of fear.
Her hands were shaking too bad to push the right buttons. She had to pause and collect her wits. Just three important buttons, two in the same place.
*Nine... one... one.*
"...Nine one one, what's the nature of your emergency?" The female voice was calm and authoritative.
"P-pleasehelpus, we wereattacked! My friend isindanger! Two-men! Helpus!" her words were almost unintelligible to the operator.
"Ma'am, please calm down and speak clearly. Are you in immediate danger?"
Misty took a steadying breath, "Yes - I mean no - I mean Melissa is! It followed her - It killed the other man! It's attacking herrightnow!"
"I have your location as 34th street and Williams Ave. Is that correct ma'am?"
"Wh-what? I'm not sure, just a minute..." She squinted her eyes and tried to read the street sign at the corner. She could only see the sign that said 34th Street. "Yes! that's us! Please you've gottohur..." She froze in mid-sentence.
Walking casually across the street came the bearded monster. Even from this distance his toothy grin was painfully obvious.
"Ma'am, is there a problem? Are you in danger?"
"Yes," Misty's mouth moved, though her eyes never strayed from the oncoming menace. "He's coming for me. He's done with Melissa and he's coming for me now." Her voice was surprisingly easy to understand.
"Your attacker is coming towards you? Do I understand you correctly?"
He stepped over the parking lot's concrete border. This somehow broke the spell of calm that had briefly settled over Misty.
"YES! He's coming this WAY! What do I do? What DO I DO?"
There was a two second pause on the other end of the line, "... Ma'am you're going to have to run. Stay on 34th street and the police will be there soon..."
At 'run' the operator was speaking from a swinging receiver. Misty had taken the first of the advice and dashed for the street and back towards her distant car. It was only luck that this complied with the rest of the operator's instructions.
She had run one block and just crossed the second street. She looked back over her shoulder and wasn't surprised to see that he had closed the gap between them. He was twenty feet behind her and moving fast, his body low as he bounded over the pavement. With no hope of outrunning him, she wearily turned, fists raised and prepared to die fighting.
"BWE, BWE, BWEEEE!" The sound of a police siren rang out behind her and then was silent.
The bearded monster paused his forward momentum. Misty heard the screech of breaks engaging followed by doors, and, "GET DOWN ON THE GROUND! KEEP YOUR HANDS WHERE I CAN SEE THEM!" Red and blue lights highlighted the monster's human looking face and body.
She didn't know whether the officer meant her too, but she dropped anyway, placing her cheek against the sidewalk while keeping the monster in sight. This meant that she was able to witness the same thing they did, and hear what they probably didn't.
The bearded man smiled - this time not revealing his teeth - and said in a his low gravelly voice, "Your lucky I'm not that hungry girl," before bending his knees as if to kneel and bounding away with inhuman speed.
By the time she heard, "I SAID GET DOWN!" from the officer behind her, the monster had already reached the corner and was disappearing around a fence and into the night.
She lay there with the cool pavement at her cheek and thought of how comfortable it seemed as she watched one of the officer's give chase. It was almost a shame when she was lifted gently by the other policeman and lead towards the cruiser and it's harsh, flashing lights.
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Northport Herald, Page A-12.
"College Students attacked by Homeless Assailants."
Two students of Northport College were attacked by homeless men last night in the old downtown area near 34th Street and Williams Blvd. Melissa Parker, 19, was killed by her attacker while attempting to flee. The other woman - whose name is not being revealed at the request of the NPPD and her family - escaped with minor injuries. One of the assailants was killed during the attack, while the other man remains at large. Police are requesting that anyone with information about the crime please call 348-555-8200.
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THE END.