MicroHorror

March 5, 2010

The Skeletons’ Request

There are three of them, and they only come after my wife and young daughter have gone to bed. They make no effort to be quiet when they arrive; they hurl the front door open, no matter how many locks I put on it, and slam it shut behind them. Each step is punctuated by the typewriter clacking of bone against bone. When they speak, it’s in high-pitched howls, laughing and crying; they have a drunk’s wild abandon paired with a sober intensity and meticulousness in every word. But my family never wakes up, and so I understand that these sounds are made for me only.

All I know is that I am somehow responsible for them, but when I ask why they only tease and scream nonsense in my face. I don’t understand–I’m no murderer or rapist, no criminal. I’ve done some terrible things in my life, the same as anybody has–I’ve lied and cheated, I’ve hurt people deliberately with words, I’ve refused to help people I knew really needed it. So I can only conclude that somewhere along the line, one of these common, everyday sins has had some unintended consequence–that some thoughtless misdeed run through the Rube Goldberg machine of time and human events resulted in some terrible crime I never meant to commit that nonetheless claimed three lives. But I have no idea what it was.

They know, though, and they say one day they’ll tell the world. They’ve promised the knowledge will ruin me: friends will pretend they never knew me, people on the street will spit as I pass, and my family will leave–leave running with tears squeezed from eyes heavy with looks of disgust. Sometimes I get a little wild myself and yell that they have no power, that nobody’s going to believe a bunch of skeletons spreading slander about a decent man like myself. But, inside, I know that if they can walk without muscles and talk without tongues, there’s probably no limit to what they can do. They promise all I have to do to ensure their silence is do as they ask.

They want me to take a knife and go out into the night and make them a fourth partner.

I tell them I’d never do it; I’d never deliberately add to the blood already on my hands, unmeant and unseen. They smile politely as I shout and storm–with no lips, they can’t help but smile–and when I’m done they ask me if I’m quite certain of my decision. And I tell them I am.

But after they leave I walk through the house in the dark and see my daughter in her bed, the covers pulled snug around her face, and my wife rolled over to one side of our bed, dreaming and waiting for me to join her.

I have decided to do as the skeletons request.

2 Comments »

  1. Sheer madness!

    Comment by Oonah V Joslin — March 6, 2010 @ 10:20 am

  2. I liked this one a lot!

    Comment by Don Bagley — March 30, 2010 @ 12:55 am

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