Read Scarlet Dusk Online

Authors: Megan J. Parker

Scarlet Dusk (21 page)

Zane shook his head, walking towards her. “Crazy talk,” he narrowed his eyes, “Crazy talk motivated by
truths
.” He pointed back to Nikki, “I heard what she said: anything and everything a person knew, right? What about the relic? You called it a chalice. You
knew
about it?” He shook his head, “
That
wasn’t crazy talk. So what was all that about doing what you were told? What was all that about
killing
me and Raith? What reason would you have to kill us, Celine?”

Celine backed away with each advance Zane took. “Please, no. I didn’t mean it. It’s nothing. I wasn’t thinking.”

Zane shook his head and cocked his head back. “Hey, Michael, you know all that shit I said was a part of
his
magic, right?”

Michael nodded,
Of course, sir. No harm done.

Zane motioned towards Celine, “So what do you think about what
she
said?”

I think you’ve caught on to something she doesn’t want you to know, sir.

Zane smirked and nodded. “Yea. I think so, too. Maybe I’m not so dumb, after all.” He started towards Celine again, “You going to start talking?”

Celine shook her head, “Please, Zane, I
swear
! I don’t know anything!”

“Good,” Zane waved Michael towards them, “Then you won’t mind letting us have a look inside your head, will you?”

Celine’s eyes widened, “N-no! You can’t! Don’t! Why can’t you trust me, Zane? Why can’t you—”

“Oh I’d say the trust-train has long-since left the station, doll.” Zane nodded to Michael, “Do it. I want to know
everything
that she’s hiding.”

Michael nodded and started towards Celine, who took another two steps back before her body froze within the auric’s hold.

“P-please… don’t,” Celine whimpered. “Y-you can’t look inside my—”

“We can,” Zane said flatly. “We can, we will, and we are.”

Michael’s eyes went glassy as he probed into Celine’s head, his pupils shifting as he navigated her mind. As his efforts progressed, his eyes grew wider—his face more and more horrified—until his body suddenly seized and he dropped to the floor in convulsions.

“Oh shit!” Zane hurried to the auric’s side, dropping onto his knees and trying to keep Michael from hurting himself in his seizure. “Nikki! Help me!”

The others hurried to Zane’s side, trying to see what had happened. Nikki’s tattoos glowed as she chanted spell after spell, but nothing stilled Michael’s tremors.

“I… I can’t. I don’t know what’s happening to him, but I can’t stop it!” Nikki told him.

“God dammit!” Zane growled and stood, “What did you do to him, you bi—”

But Celine was already gone…

“WELCOME BACK, PEACHES. DID you have a good run?” Mister Miller looked up from his morning paper as his wife of fifteen years—breathing heavily and glistening with a fine sheen of sweat from her exercise—stepped through the door.

Missus Miller, though winded, felt a fresh swell of happiness at the sight of her husband’s freshly shaven face, and she nodded to him as she started towards the table, where he’d already set out a glass of OJ for her. Already prepared for another day at the office, he looked somewhat silly in his undershirt tucked into his dress pants. This, however, Missus Miller understood, spotting her husband’s button-up white dress shirt draped over the back of his chair, the two of them having learned from past mistakes not to trust the morning routine to keep his piping hot coffee from spilling on his work clothes.

Gulping down the juice and relishing in the bliss that was her post-run, pre-breakfast moment, Missus Miller toweled off her face and hair before taking a seat across from her husband.

“Did you see that Bill and Sarah got a new dog?” she asked, starting to relax her breathing.

“They did?” Mister Miller looked up again and, deciding against finishing the Sports column, folded the newspaper and set it aside. “Did you happen to see what kind?”

She nodded, “A poodle, I think. Maybe some sort of a mix. It looked like it might have had a bit of collie in it.”

“Collie, eh? That’s a fine dog. Not sure why anyone would want to go and muck up something like that with a poodle-mix, but”—he shrugged—“live and let live, I suppose.”

Missus Miller giggled and nodded, “It
did
look a little silly, to be honest.”

“Now now, dear,” Mister Miller fought the smirk growing from her comment, “one man’s trash…”

“… is another man’s treasure. You’re right, dear.” Missus Miller smiled. “Are the kids up yet?”

Mister Miller considered this a moment and glanced over his shoulder. “I was certain I heard
somebody
…” he spotted his elderly mother—still wearing her light-blue robe and matching slippers—pouring herself a cup of decaf by the entrance to the kitchen. “Morning, Mom. Did you sleep well.”

“Oh my, yes,” Grandma shuffled in, her feet barely lifting from the floor as she blew some of the steam from the mouth of the mug. Slowly, with the calculation and forethought of her years, she set the coffee down—making a small noise as she let the corner of the mug touch the tablecloth without a coaster before retrieving one from the center of the table and remedying the problem—and pulled her chair back inch-by-shaky-inch before carefully settling in and scooting herself forward. Once comfortably set at the table with her son and daughter-in-law, she picked up the mug in both hands, letting the warmth melt into her arthritic palms, and took another sip. “That new mattress you bought was just lovely, dear. Not a toss or turn to be had all night.”

“Grams,” Missus Miller smiled over at her mother-in-law, “you didn’t happen to see the kids on your way down, did you?”

Grandma considered the question for a moment before shaking her head, “No, I don’t reckon so. Should I have woken them?”

Mister Miller smiled and stood, giving his mother a kiss on the top of her bluish-gray hair, “No, Mom, we’ve already discussed this; you’re a guest in this home. We didn’t move you in here to treat you like some sort of darned nanny. Now drink your coffee. I’m going to go get the kids ready for breakfast.”

Grandma smiled at that and nodded. “Such a dear boy,” she offered before taking another sip of coffee.

Missus Miller smiled and, after topping off the last of her OJ, stood and started towards the kitchen. “Bacon and eggs sound good for breakfast?” she called out to her husband.

“Sounds like a million-dollar breakfast, dear,” Mister Miller called back before he started up the stairs.

 

 

“No. No, I
know
your parents are douchebags too, Marie, but hear me out: it’s like they’re damn carbon copies from Little House on the Prairie or something! It’s driving me insane! I mean, my dad used to be some strung out loser—probably sucked dick in alleys just to get high—and my mom was a
hooker
that he met in rehab! Yea, yea… Yea, I
get
that it’s great that they turned themselves around and found Jesus or whatever, but I just wish they’d cut it out with this whole ‘perfect Miller family’ bullshit; Dad manages a SubWay and Mom—what? No! Not like the train station, Marie; a goddam
sandwich
store! My dad, the ‘sub artist’—god, what a tool! And, y’know what’s worse, he acts like he’s a goddam executive for it. Like if Mom
weren’t
giving piano lessons on the side he’d actually stand a chance of keeping this house. And now that they’ve gone and moved my grandmother in—which I’m
so
sure has
nothing
to do with the fact that Grandpa just died and that will-money is starting to look pretty damn close, by the way—they’re just
slathering
the act all the harder. The old broad’s, like, this hardcore ol’-skool type—probably lost her virginity to a guy who traded two pigs and a cow for her—and if she had any idea that I was conceived before they even went down the aisle she’d probably White-Out their names from her inheritance and donate it all to the KKK or something classy like that. I swear to god, Marie, running away and joining the circus is looking like fucking
Heave
—”

“Tiffany,” Tiff’s father knocked on her door and she quickly held her breath to see if he showed any sign of overhearing her phone call. “Tiff, hun? You awake?”

“H-huh? Oh, oh yea. Sorry, Dad. Did I oversleep again?” Tiff faked an alerted yawn and grumbled sleepily, rolling her eyes to herself and stifling her laughter in response to her friend’s cackles over the line.

“No, no. It’s just time to rise-and-shine, love. Mom’s making bacon and eggs, so shake a tail-feather unless you want to miss out.”

“Mmm! Sounds great, Dad. Be right down,” she faked the upbeat inflection and waited until her father’s footsteps started past her door. “Choke me with a big black dick, Marie, the man acts like we don’t eat bacon and eggs
every-fucking-morning
! Anyway, I gotta go. I’ll text your ass when I’m leaving, so don’t be late in that new VW Bug, bitch! Bysies!”

 

 

Between an eight-PM bedtime
after
the nightly “Merry Miller Pray-O-Rama” and a six-AM door-to-door wakeup call, Jeremy hardly ever had any time to jerk off. His parents insisted that he was still too young for a cell phone, and with a mandatory lights-out rule at bedtime he’d been forced to hunker under his covers with a flashlight and whatever porno mag he’d blindly scored from under his mattress. The other day, however, he’d gotten to trade a pair of his mom’s used panties, four weeks’ worth of allowance—adding up to a whopping twenty bucks—and a jumbo Ziploc bag full of his grandma’s chocolate chip cookies for an issue of Penthouse. This being a special occasion and all, he’d set an alarm for five-thirty to get a few loads out before his dad came knocking.

He’d woken up at five-seventeen.

Four loads later, Jeremy knew he was pressing his luck with pushing for a fifth before the “wakeup” knock, but he’d fallen particularly in love with a shot on page one-twenty-three that demanded just a few more pumps to get the perfect morning started.

From down the hall he could already hear his dad’s voice by his sister’s door, and he fought to keep his mind from abandoning the fantasy of coming on the sexy blonde’s heaving breasts.

Tiff was already awake, anyway; he knew it.

She woke up early
every
morning to call her friend, Marie—a senior who’d just gotten her license—about how much she hated her life and how much she wanted to run off to fuck black circus performers.

She sees
Cirque du Soleil
one time and suddenly she wants to be a runaway
, he thought to himself, pausing long enough to turn the page of his masturbatory aid to enact the final stretch of his fantasy.
She’s such a whiny bit—OH GOD! AM I THINKING OF HER WHILE I—gross gross gross gross gro—

His father’s knock came at the door then. “Hey, J-man! Time to get up, buddy! I’ve got a few crispy strips of bacon downstairs with your name—”

“GAH!” Jeremy started hating himself as the first string of climax emerged, the overwhelming sensation tarnished by the past three seconds of his life. “S-so-sorry, Dad. I… I just had a nightmare; a really,
really
bad nightmare.”

“Oh,” his father’s voice faltered; never having a response for any news that
wasn’t
perfect, “Well, hurry on downstairs. I’ll get you some Sunny-D. That’ll cheer you right up!”

And then his footsteps moved on.

“Yea,” Jeremy sighed to himself, reaching under the bible in his bedside drawer to retrieve his trusty-yet-crusty tube sock. “Thanks for the pep-talk, needle-dick!”

 

 

The razor glided across little Mary’s thigh, and the preteen shivered as a fresh trail of blood seeped to the surface and started rolling over the side of her leg. Not wanting to let the blood stain her bedspread and give her away. Snatching up a stolen roll of toilet paper, she ripped free a piece and let it drop onto the fresh wound; marveling with a morbid appreciation as the pristine white material soaked in the deep, rich red of the blood—drawing the makeshift bandage closer as it did. Recalculating her next cut, she placed the razor several inches inward to keep the blood from moving too quickly for her to appreciate. Then, when she was certain that she had the placement right, she made another pass across her leg; groaning at the bitter-sweet sensation of the release.

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