Lightning slashed the skies as thunder shook
the library. Fear hung in the air; the
very scent of it had caused a panic attack, sending him half-crazed into a
corner when the power out went two hours before.
He was okay.
For now.
He searched through the darkened isles of
books for what he was hoping to find. He
knew if he found a cube, he was done for… but an envelope was going to be
directions to another place.
Was he really this dumb to follow directions
on a piece of paper? It seemed so, as he
approached the table and found a blank business-sized envelope; sealed as usual.
It was smudged with dirt, as though the person who put it there couldn’t have
been bothered to wash their hands.
Paul picked it up. As he moved it, he could smell the soil – the
garden – on the paper. It was getting
all over his hands. He hated this smell
now… it disgusted him to the point he was trying not to gag each time he saw
this on paper of any kind. He opened the
envelope – it didn’t tear, showing it had only been seal recently – and out
fell a slip of paper. He unfolded it and
there was a single word scrawled on it:
Undertaker
‘What the hell?’ he thought as he read it
again and slotted it back into the envelope.
Where the frigging hell was he supposed to go from here? Paul walked to the front of the library,
where the front desk was left silent and empty, went past it and around to his
left, down the stairs and out to the back where , huge floor to
ceiling windows had been fitted into the massive study to overlook the park and
half the town. The storm raged outside
as he stood leaning on the back of one of the lounges not knowing what the hell
to do.
The last clue in a long line of many had one
word and it was ‘Undertaker’. He had to remember that he was the last one alive
out of a group of twenty people and he was going to get the hell out of this
town alive – and with his soul – if he could, if he didn’t come across a cube
in the next day or so that sang to him that is.
Besides, he had run out of food a day or so ago and he needed to go
scavenging after the storm broke and see what there was available that was
still good enough to eat.
Then he had it! Undertaker = graveyard = cemetery!
“Oh crap!” he grunted as he pushed himself
off the back of the lounge and knew there was only one cemetery he knew of that
was inside the town and one outside it.
He needed to be ready – armed – so that he could take on whoever this
Undertaker was. But that would be
tomorrow. He sat in one of the lounge
chairs and listened to the rain.
He opened his eyes in the morning to
sunshine, and dread within his heart. Before
long, he was on his way to the cemetery.
But first, he thought to try the funeral home – the only one in town. This place was a lot smaller than he thought;
as it was a large house and it creeped him out immediately and he hadn’t even
gone inside yet. But there was no
Undertaker there.
So, he walked to the cemetery nearby and
found its gates were wide open with a sign taped to it: ‘I’ve been waiting
Paul’
As he stepped inside, the day quickly turned
to night, chilled down and the street lights turned on. He hesitated, looked over his shoulder in the
hope that the daylight would still be outside the gates; but he was wrong. He turned, walked inside the gates and, as he
cleared them, heard them close behind him; sealing him in.
He didn’t get far when he saw a large, metre
square white cube. His gut turned cool
at the sheer sight of it; knowing that if he heard music, he was screwed!
“So, a white box scares you more than me?” a
voice whispered by his ear.
He spun to find a tall, pale, imposing man
standing next to him, “You know what the cubes do, right?”
“Soul-takers.” He whispered, “Sing songs,
shows you something from home and while you are hypnotised, you’re fried.” He
smiled, “Not a pretty way to go.”
“So, why are you tracking me?” Paul glared
at him.
A sickly grin of knowing pulled up the face
of the man, “Because, Paul, you are the last one alive. You are the one who I have been looking for
and you have won.”
“Won what?”
The Undertaker put out a bony hand, “Well,
the prize to be my right hand man for eternity.”
Paul started to laugh, “It’s the money, the
box … or the door!”
“What door?” he asked.
“There’s always three choices in game shows;
and this was one big, sick, horrible game of yours.” Paul said, “What is the
third choice?”
“There is none.”
“Bullshit!”
“Okay… you want to know!” the Undertaker
shouted at him and when Paul didn’t answer, he shook his head, “Crap, you want
to know. You are stuck here and you die…
there’s you’re lucky door prize choices!”
Paul was dumb-struck… he was screwed no
matter what he chose. But he didn’t want
to be with this prick for eternity. From
his right, the cube began to sing to him.
He turned toward it.
“No!” the Undertaker grabbed his arm,
snapped Paul’s head around, slicing his neck open and drank deeply. He needed a new right hand man, and Paul was
it!
“Why?”
“Because, I was you at one point, human… and
this is a far better choice than any other.
Besides, this way, you still have part of your soul.”