01-12-2020, 08:38 PM
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Six months was all it took to forget about the lonely little ghost. Time, his ever-constant nemesis, insistently ditched him in the dust, leaving him to prop himself up on his elbows and spit dirt from his mouth. Six months ago, the poltergeist was unceremoniously dragged by his mangled scruff back from the hellish desert the others warred against, battered and bled out a dozen times over. Six months ago, he was sentenced to bedrest, rendered helpless by the wounds tattering his flanks; wounds that refused to heal no matter the medicine and comfort provided. Six months ago, he lost every ounce of the fragile hope remaining after the sadistic hand of fate raked him through the mud one last time.
By this point, it was expected for his name to only surface as a murmur of a vanished generation. The worn and haggard founder of Tanglewood finally joined the long line of missing posters pinned to an ignored lamp post. To everyone who didn't approach the decrepit houseboat sunken into the wetlands, he was as good as gone. Had his so-called friends forgotten him too? Or were they just as gone as he was? The very thought kicked him back down to bite the dust. And so, he surrendered to the soil, willing himself to be six feet underneath rather than six months behind. Alone. Forgotten. Gone.
Yet he wasn't gone. He still remained, as beaten and hopeless as he was. He still cowered within the four walls of his house turned hospital. Who was he kidding? It'd been half a year -- oh, how much changed within that measly timespan, even if it only translated to a speck of sand within the infinite hourglass. The poltergeist was absent for all of it. Six months he squandered within his houseboat, willingly confined to the swaddle of blankets adorning a bare mattress. For six months, he grit his teeth and ached through the day, one by one, falling into a motionless daze; a slumber without dreaming. For six months, he practically withered away with bloodshot eyes glued to a television screen, the windows eclipsed by curtains and dust gathering around him as he only shifted to change the tape.
Selby visited almost daily throughout the six months. He couldn't help but feed the festering guilt gnawing at his fractured ribs for demanding so much of the sawbone's time. And yet... Beck looked forward to every single visit, greeting the tabby with a fatigued, but real, smile. Friendship often bloomed in the most unlikely of places. And Selby... well, Selby had saved him from the brink. For once, someone extended a hand -- er, paw to help him from the ground he was beaten into. Desperate and lost as he was, he did not bite the paw nor did he shun it as he did to all those who came before. Meekly, hesitantly, he accepted it, allowing himself to be lifted from his self-made grave. And even now, he still clung to it, seeking a comfort never once before found within all the junk food or pain or movies.
Selby became his merciful savior, his patient guidance, and most stunningly of all, his first true friend in years.
How was he ever supposed to word his gratitude and loyalty? Did Selby even return the feeling or was it all a ruse for the poltergeist's own sake? No, he needed to stop doubting everything. Two or so months prior, an idea struck him, rattling the murky cobwebs inside his skull. He could return the favor in the form of a gift! Lots of gifts! And why stop with Selby? Beck had nothing better to do than sulk and laze around. Plus he figured his newfound family needed compensation for tolerating him, too.
Bandaged paws wound a sturdy cord around a groove in enamel, the final product of his crafting frenzy. Audrey III just so happened to shed their teeth every so often, similar to a shark. This particular tooth he had to wrestle away from them once it was pushed out by sharper newcomers; the flytrap often ate the now-useless teeth, although the poltergeist couldn't quite tell why. But now, the large polished tooth hung on a necklace as its lone pendant, tightly tied on. Nipping away the excess from the securing knot, he gingerly placed it atop the first of two cardboard boxes full to the brim with various presents. A content sigh slipped past his half-disfigured snout, pleased with his handiwork. Soon, he will be able to deliver each and every present to his peers.
But for now, dizzying fatigue sunk its hooks into his mind with an accompanying headache. Bringing a paw up to rub his forehead in dismay, he pushed himself to his feet, legs shaky from remaining motionless for so long. A stumbling limp brought him to the tattered old mattress he dragged in from the junkyard an eternity ago. Flopping onto his side with a ragged wheeze, he wiggled his way beneath a fortress of fleece and yarn blankets. He tucked his head down to his chest as he willed sleep to wash away the pounding tides of a migraine.
A well-deserved rest never arrived. Even with his eye closed (one missing due to a friend needing it more at the moment), the air crawled with unnerving paranoia. Beck lifted his head up, shaking aside the blankets. Something was wrong. His nose twitched, then twitched again. The distinct scent of smoke riddled the air. Was somebody cooking nearby? Or... he opened his eye only for it to stretch wide in horror. The bitter cloud of smoke was coming from his door. And his door was engulfed in a vicious, spreading inferno. Panic overtaking his senses, he jerked upright and scrambled from his mattress, claws scrabbling on the hardwood. Instinct screamed at him to get the hell out of there, but before he could bail through an open window, he glanced back at the boxes of gifts dangerously close to the hungry blaze. It didn't take much time for him to make a decision.
Already wheezing and heaving from the overwhelming smoke invading his creaking house, he rushed to the boxes, grabbing one's edge in his jaws to drag it and kicking the other to slide it closer to the window. An awkward process, painstakingly slow as his sanctuary erupted into a hypnotic dazzle of lapping orange, red, yellow, and black. Despite the embers swirling in the sweltering air, the beams of wood collapsing within mere feet of his desperate struggle to the window, and the momentary pause to retrieve his old cloak packed full with belongings not stowed safely away in his basement, he reached the window. Now came the tricky part. Boosting the boxes up one at a time to shove them off the windowsill and down to the marsh below, Beck's chest burned and stung with effort. Or was it the smoke? Breathlessly panting, he clambered up onto the ledge, swiftly tumbling to lay among his scattered, yet spared, presents.
Disheveled fur smeared with soot and blood with the bandage covering the empty socket equally as dirty, he rolled onto his belly, oil dripping from his mouth from the force of his coughing. He wobbled, unable to keep himself steady on his legs like a newborn fawn. His knees buckled. His intact cheek hit the dirt. Beck stared into the fiery mass that once stood as a sunken little houseboat, his unorthodox paradise away from society. He couldn't think. What was he supposed to think? Sides heaving in determination to suck in at least one shallow gasp, Beck sprawled there like a fish out of water. Where was Audrey? They hadn't been in the house, had they? He didn't remember seeing them. He didn't even remember what happened.
The ash-smudged cat gagged and sputtered, croaking out a call for the gluttonous plant. "Audrey?! Audrey!" He forced himself up from the mud, dark eye frantically searching around him for any sign of the flytrap. He even managed out a shrieky whistle through his teeth, the signal for them to return home. But nobody came. Had the worst happened? A hoarse sob escaped him, his throat now charred and bitter. "AUDREY!" The little ghost collapsed, too breathless to produce another sound. He curled his claws into the earth and squeezed his eye shut, listening to the crackle of flame consuming everything he had known for six months. And he returned to the dust, refusing to pick himself up once more.
By this point, it was expected for his name to only surface as a murmur of a vanished generation. The worn and haggard founder of Tanglewood finally joined the long line of missing posters pinned to an ignored lamp post. To everyone who didn't approach the decrepit houseboat sunken into the wetlands, he was as good as gone. Had his so-called friends forgotten him too? Or were they just as gone as he was? The very thought kicked him back down to bite the dust. And so, he surrendered to the soil, willing himself to be six feet underneath rather than six months behind. Alone. Forgotten. Gone.
Yet he wasn't gone. He still remained, as beaten and hopeless as he was. He still cowered within the four walls of his house turned hospital. Who was he kidding? It'd been half a year -- oh, how much changed within that measly timespan, even if it only translated to a speck of sand within the infinite hourglass. The poltergeist was absent for all of it. Six months he squandered within his houseboat, willingly confined to the swaddle of blankets adorning a bare mattress. For six months, he grit his teeth and ached through the day, one by one, falling into a motionless daze; a slumber without dreaming. For six months, he practically withered away with bloodshot eyes glued to a television screen, the windows eclipsed by curtains and dust gathering around him as he only shifted to change the tape.
Selby visited almost daily throughout the six months. He couldn't help but feed the festering guilt gnawing at his fractured ribs for demanding so much of the sawbone's time. And yet... Beck looked forward to every single visit, greeting the tabby with a fatigued, but real, smile. Friendship often bloomed in the most unlikely of places. And Selby... well, Selby had saved him from the brink. For once, someone extended a hand -- er, paw to help him from the ground he was beaten into. Desperate and lost as he was, he did not bite the paw nor did he shun it as he did to all those who came before. Meekly, hesitantly, he accepted it, allowing himself to be lifted from his self-made grave. And even now, he still clung to it, seeking a comfort never once before found within all the junk food or pain or movies.
Selby became his merciful savior, his patient guidance, and most stunningly of all, his first true friend in years.
How was he ever supposed to word his gratitude and loyalty? Did Selby even return the feeling or was it all a ruse for the poltergeist's own sake? No, he needed to stop doubting everything. Two or so months prior, an idea struck him, rattling the murky cobwebs inside his skull. He could return the favor in the form of a gift! Lots of gifts! And why stop with Selby? Beck had nothing better to do than sulk and laze around. Plus he figured his newfound family needed compensation for tolerating him, too.
Bandaged paws wound a sturdy cord around a groove in enamel, the final product of his crafting frenzy. Audrey III just so happened to shed their teeth every so often, similar to a shark. This particular tooth he had to wrestle away from them once it was pushed out by sharper newcomers; the flytrap often ate the now-useless teeth, although the poltergeist couldn't quite tell why. But now, the large polished tooth hung on a necklace as its lone pendant, tightly tied on. Nipping away the excess from the securing knot, he gingerly placed it atop the first of two cardboard boxes full to the brim with various presents. A content sigh slipped past his half-disfigured snout, pleased with his handiwork. Soon, he will be able to deliver each and every present to his peers.
But for now, dizzying fatigue sunk its hooks into his mind with an accompanying headache. Bringing a paw up to rub his forehead in dismay, he pushed himself to his feet, legs shaky from remaining motionless for so long. A stumbling limp brought him to the tattered old mattress he dragged in from the junkyard an eternity ago. Flopping onto his side with a ragged wheeze, he wiggled his way beneath a fortress of fleece and yarn blankets. He tucked his head down to his chest as he willed sleep to wash away the pounding tides of a migraine.
A well-deserved rest never arrived. Even with his eye closed (one missing due to a friend needing it more at the moment), the air crawled with unnerving paranoia. Beck lifted his head up, shaking aside the blankets. Something was wrong. His nose twitched, then twitched again. The distinct scent of smoke riddled the air. Was somebody cooking nearby? Or... he opened his eye only for it to stretch wide in horror. The bitter cloud of smoke was coming from his door. And his door was engulfed in a vicious, spreading inferno. Panic overtaking his senses, he jerked upright and scrambled from his mattress, claws scrabbling on the hardwood. Instinct screamed at him to get the hell out of there, but before he could bail through an open window, he glanced back at the boxes of gifts dangerously close to the hungry blaze. It didn't take much time for him to make a decision.
Already wheezing and heaving from the overwhelming smoke invading his creaking house, he rushed to the boxes, grabbing one's edge in his jaws to drag it and kicking the other to slide it closer to the window. An awkward process, painstakingly slow as his sanctuary erupted into a hypnotic dazzle of lapping orange, red, yellow, and black. Despite the embers swirling in the sweltering air, the beams of wood collapsing within mere feet of his desperate struggle to the window, and the momentary pause to retrieve his old cloak packed full with belongings not stowed safely away in his basement, he reached the window. Now came the tricky part. Boosting the boxes up one at a time to shove them off the windowsill and down to the marsh below, Beck's chest burned and stung with effort. Or was it the smoke? Breathlessly panting, he clambered up onto the ledge, swiftly tumbling to lay among his scattered, yet spared, presents.
Disheveled fur smeared with soot and blood with the bandage covering the empty socket equally as dirty, he rolled onto his belly, oil dripping from his mouth from the force of his coughing. He wobbled, unable to keep himself steady on his legs like a newborn fawn. His knees buckled. His intact cheek hit the dirt. Beck stared into the fiery mass that once stood as a sunken little houseboat, his unorthodox paradise away from society. He couldn't think. What was he supposed to think? Sides heaving in determination to suck in at least one shallow gasp, Beck sprawled there like a fish out of water. Where was Audrey? They hadn't been in the house, had they? He didn't remember seeing them. He didn't even remember what happened.
The ash-smudged cat gagged and sputtered, croaking out a call for the gluttonous plant. "Audrey?! Audrey!" He forced himself up from the mud, dark eye frantically searching around him for any sign of the flytrap. He even managed out a shrieky whistle through his teeth, the signal for them to return home. But nobody came. Had the worst happened? A hoarse sob escaped him, his throat now charred and bitter. "AUDREY!" The little ghost collapsed, too breathless to produce another sound. He curled his claws into the earth and squeezed his eye shut, listening to the crackle of flame consuming everything he had known for six months. And he returned to the dust, refusing to pick himself up once more.