
As red surrounded him.
He tasted copper in the air.
The door to Daniel’s other life closed before him.
It was a one-way trip. That’s what the strange woman — hope fucked from her face — said. One-way trip.
Daniel didn't worry about the details.
Skinny, heavy, young, old — the message was the same.
I was not getting out of this alive.
“Absolutely, skin-crawlingly horrifying — brilliant work my friend.”
But that was okay.
Name one thing — one exit — we get out of without our life?
We pay for everything eventually with our life.
The precipice. That is where I find myself. On the cusp.
Before it happened.
A stabbing pain ripped me from the present.
Then the red became black, and a bright toxic-scented fire surged through my head.
“Kendall is so right — a total Creepshow at its best. Good job in this freaky one.”
And then — silence.
In the back of my head, the last words I heard before crossing from my own time into this liminal space began to echo.
Find the rabbit.
Find the rabbit.
That was the last thing on my mind.
Pressure mounted across my temples, through my sinuses.
I had no intention of looking.
“Yikes… Creepshow much? :)”
I was happy falling further down the hole with no purpose.
Rabbit holes are not voyages of discovery.
They twist. They turn. They dislodge us from the safety of reason.
My plan? Avoid the rabbit.
I wanted to know who sent me inward.
The woman that hope forgot made it clear: this was an order.
But who gained from this deep dive?
When falling, when does one truly stop?
I closed my eyes, and as my body made contact with the floor, everything moved in slow motion. “Gorgeously horrifying 😁”
I was aware of everything and nothing at once. Memories of the rabbit and who I thought I was faded to reveal my own reflection or refraction in the mirror placed above my head.
When objects in the mirror appear to be closing in on you, be aware.
Smash!
The mirror then broke into a thousand shards. All could pierce and kill me, but something or someone deflected them so they were projected towards the Rabbit.
He was not the common variety or called Peter. He was not a hare.
He was one of the most cautious and considered animals Daniel — that is to say, I — had ever met.
He stretched out his arms, reaching for my hand, but I refused. Had questions.
Hopeless woman and the Rabbit did not seem usual coconspirators. But as he spoke, it was with her voice.
A challenge was issued. A challenge or a trial fit for shipwreck and sirens.
Something is working its way inside me. Hundreds of somethings probing the insides of my body with fresh and frantic tendrils.
I could swear I felt its presence. The moment I woke, I could feel something along the lining of my lungs and larynx.
A slight but abrasive scraping along the tunnels of my esophagus.
What. Is. Happening.
“I’m avoiding horror until I’m in a safer head space. Bookmarked for when I can approach it.”
I close my eyes to steady my mind.
For a moment, all is clear. I am alone again in my skin.
Until the reverberations of marching, out of time with anything familiar, echo in my ears.
Onward.
Forward.
Inward.
Through the eardrums and beyond.
Mum.
Again. I tighten my eyelids shut until I see kaleidoscopic stars, hoping to shut off the madness.
For a few brief moments, it stops. The invasion was purely mental. A cerebral vinyl skip of distortion.
Then, from under my skin, I feel slithering bodies. Mandibles pierce my skin. Something drags through my arms and legs.
I want to scratch the itch, make the movement stop. “Gorgeously horrifying 😁”
As my nails dig into my arms, I fight the unbearable feeling. But no matter how much I scratch, I still feel it. The mandibles grasp, so I dig my nails in deeper, harder, until the fresh red lines I've drawn become canals along my veins.
When my arms feel afire, I shift my nails to chase the pulsations just under the surface of my facial skin. I need to make it stop.
Mum.
Wait, did I say that?
I dig deep into the flesh of my cheeks. Resistance. Something. Is. Stopping. Me. I can't break free from the infestation.
My only hope may be to cut it off at the source. Or burn it to its core. Where it all began. At my ears and throat. Regardless of the cost.
But still I feel it taking over. It may number in the hundreds of thousands, but it moves united, with order and structure.
Mum.
I try in vain to close my eyes in the smallest hope that I am just imagining it.
But I can't close my eyelids. My sight is obscured. I can feel and taste the venomous secretion as slug-like creatures block the light and prevent me from ending the nightmare I still think I'm stuck in.
I try to grip the slithering black spots on my eyes but can't, so I reach for a knife instead and, without thinking, press it to my throat to open up the flesh.
As I pierce through the skin and blood starts to seep from the opening, a black sludge-like substance sprays out from the wound.
Before I can do anything else, a set of wings unfurl and spread from the wound.
I can't move.
Whether paralysed with terror and disgust, or because I no longer have control — well, the real me anyway.
So I try to stay awake, against my better judgment, as I tap into my need to survive.
The wings sprouting from my throat flutter, knocking off excess flesh and blood to reveal a dark brown tone.
There is a strong stench of death.
Then silence.
But not the kind of silence that offers a reprieve.
As my eyes are fully covered, darkness takes over to join the silence, and then time has no meaning.
“Absolutely, skin-crawlingly horrifying — brilliant work my friend.”
…
I feel nothing until the marching begins afresh, with the invaders traversing the expanse of my body to my chest, and then a shooting pain forces me forward onto my knees.
I am not sure why, but I feel the need — no, the desire, the hunger — to scratch at the top of my head.
As my fingers follow the same pathways and the valleys deepen, the pain does not impact me. Change is occurring, but I feel none of the setbacks and consequences.
There is a rumble and, without even thinking to stop, I start to grip at the skin as if it were fabric sewn over my flesh-coated head.
There is a strange light ahead, but not from my defunct eyes.
My field of vision changes to the wall behind me.
Wait. What is happening.
Mum, I'm coming to find you.
That wasn't me. I move to the mirror, and I am horrified at what I see.
A brand new face staring into the mirror from the back of my head, and then I feel a quick jolt to my heart, and my arms twist, and I hear the distant call of Mum on the horizon.
This is goodbye.
To self.
Or at least, the self I was. So many years ago.
I've been all around, bass thudding, drownin
I've been high, low, free soul where love is
But I've been having mood mood mood mood mood…
Thanks for reading!
Author's Notes: So I was messing about with some of my existing pieces and spliced a few together to create something experimental and existential. It features some comments by fellow creators. I've removed the names.
About the Creator
Paul Stewart
Award-Winning Writer, Poet, Scottish-Italian, Subversive.
The Accidental Poet - Poetry Collection out now!
Streams and Scratches in My Mind coming soon!
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Comments (3)
This is so so interesting! You really could interpret this in so many ways. I liked the chaos of it because I can imagine when someone is dying, what your thinking and feeling might become fragmented, not to mention the "life flashing before your eyes" phenomena that lots of near death cases report. And goddamn the imagery in the last half; cutting his throat open desperate to release what's inside, all the goop and ichor and the WINGS! Ahhh, I'm a sucker for this imagery, probably because I've had nightmares of a similar vein in the past during the worst of my depression. It's scary experiencing it yourself, but reading/seeing it in media makes me excited. I don't know why. xD I just think it's cool! I have to shout out this line: “I’m avoiding horror until I’m in a safer head space. Bookmarked for when I can approach it.” I feel like this is the defining line for the whole story because it ties into the horrifying imagery and the characters desperate fight to 'not chase the rabbit'. Yet, he cannot escape. Really fun piece, Paul! : D
What a thrilling horror story and what happens when you go down the rabbit hole. Good job.
Coming back to read, just skimmed. In love with that image. I might be getting too weird for some of my readers, perhaps a bit cryptic in poetry today.