Nightmare! (2000 Words Horror Story)
Hello I am
Prachi so if you want me to hire then please hire me at Fiverr for writing your
stories.
www.fiverr.com/pronaina
The school bell rings, indicating it's midday. I
ram my books and pen into my satchel and hurry down the brown corridors,
keeping to my left as per school rules.
I push through the swing doors and hold one open
with my foot as the boy behind me grabs the handle. I pick up my pace and move
past the chatting hordes of bustling pupils and make my way down the sloping
playground to the main road entrance.
I walk sideways, looking for a gap between cars
so that I can cross the road. Once over, I walk a few paces and run a few all
the way home. It takes about twenty minutes.
The sooner I get home, the more time I will have
in which to splash some water on my face and under my arms to refresh myself,
have some lunch, and play with my beautiful dog Sue.
I hurry down the main road, turn left at the
bridge over the railway line, cross the road, turn right and into the street
where I live. Our house is the second one down, but first, you have to pass the
long, tall fence of the garden on the main road.
A smile begins in the corners of my mouth as I
anticipate the welcoming soggy licks Sue will give me as soon as I open the
door. The warmth of her softness as my hands plunge deep into her fur and give
her a gentle squeeze.
I put my key in the lock and open the door. I am
greeted not by a fluffy bundle of love but by a convulsing, thrashing dog lying
in what looks like a war zone.
I'm sure I don't go inside in slow motion, but
it seems that way. My eyes grow wide, and my jaw drops open.
Mum is kneeling on the floor with the lounge
door pressing on her back. Dad made the door, so it automatically closes
itself. You have to prop it open. Mum was keeping it open with her back. I lean
forward, push the door and wedge it with the slab of green marble we have for
this purpose.
Sue is lying on her side in the throes of a
convulsion.
"She's been fitting for at least twenty
minutes," Mum says. I throw my satchel onto a chair in the backroom and
rush back to Mum and Sue.
"What can I do?" I say as I glimpse
around the room at the poo on the furniture, walls, and ceiling where Sue has
messed herself, and her long bushy tail has lashed out like some cowboy's
bullwhip and spread the mess everywhere.
The foamy saliva and blood from her bitten
tongue have mixed with the urine and poo. It has all spattered around the
room.
The whole room stinks. If ever there is a smell
of death, then this is it. It fills my nostrils.
Sue's head, legs, body, and tail are thrashing a
concoction of body fluids and excrements over Mum and the walls. I gawp in
disbelief.
"You'll have to call the vet. I don't think
Sue is going to come out of this fit." Mum says. "Take some money off
the mantlepiece. The number's on a scrap of paper behind the commemorative mug
on the windowsill. Go to the phone box and tell the vet Sue has not come out of
her fit for at least twenty-five minutes."
I hurry into the backroom, take the money from
the mantlepiece, find the scrap of paper behind the commemorative mug, steer
myself around Sue's thrashing legs and body and instinctively put the door on
the latch.
I run the short distance up the road, around the
corner, and to the shop on the next corner, where the red phone box stands
tucked into its indent in the long wooden fence. The feeling of urgency rises
in me, and my pulse quickens.
I dial the number marked Miss M. Vet on the
piece of paper. A young voice answers immediately. "Miss M's veterinary
practice, how can I help you.?" Between short quick breaths, I tell the
voice on the other end of the phone that Sue has been fitting for at least
twenty-five minutes. I slam the receiver back down and run home.
I run past the open front gate with the sign
that says, 'lease shut the gate.' The 'P' fell off the day Dad nailed the metal
plate on and then closed the gate too sharply.
Sue is still convulsing. Mum is doing her best
to keep an old flannel across Sue's teeth so that she does not bite her tongue
anymore.
Mum is holding her tail down to stop even more
mess going up the walls and onto the ceiling. I stand looking, feeling
helpless.
I turn to the window as I hear a noise outside.
The vet arrives. She must have been in the area. There is no way she could have
got from the practice to our house amid the busy town traffic unless she had
driven at ninety miles an hour. These thoughts add to my feelings of-this is an
emergency. More panic rises from within.
I open the door for the vet. She is a short,
plump lady and out of breath as she comes up the steps to our house and kneels
beside Sue. Her saggy black bag next to her.
I know I have to get back to school. We have a
maths exam. No one asks me if I want to stay. I can think of some excuse to
tell the teachers if only someone would ask me to stay behind with my dog.
My eyes grow big as I watch the vet reach into
her bag and take a big syringe from a box full of long needles. My mind
flashes back to when I was about five years old and was having my tonsils
out—the nurse standing by my bed with a massive needle. I grab the barrel with
such force that it breaks the glass syringe attached to the needle. Now the vet
is going to stick an enormous needle in Sue.
I know Sue is going to die. She is not going to
come out of this fit-ever. I know the syringe does not contain some magic
potion to help Sue recover and be a normal fit-free dog again.
I rush to the back room, snatch my school
satchel off the chair and quickly walk back to Mum, the vet, and the still
fitting Sue. I feel helpless. There is nothing I can do. I am not wanted or
needed here in this world of mayhem.
The only way out of the room is by half stepping
over Sue and scrambling over the kneeling plump lady vet and then out the front
door. I stumble on, and as I look behind me at the gruesome scene, Sue still
convulsing on the floor, blood, wee, poo, and froth everywhere, I hear the
plump lady vet say, "what a horrible child."
I close the front door. Hold back tears and run
just over a mile back to school. As I run, I relive Mum, all on her own, trying
to do all she can to help Sue. I relive opening the front door and a scene
reminiscent of the last days of Gettysburg hitting me in the face.
I am oblivious to the main road, the lunchtime
traffic, the heat, the fumes, and the noise. All I have echoing in my ears are
the words of the plump lady vet. "What a horrible child."
I slow my pace and catch my breath as I go
through the school gates up the incline, through the tarmac playground, and
into the school corridor. I compose myself. I think I'm okay. I try to appear
normal.
My friend is coming toward me on her way to
class, "What's wrong?" She says.
"Nothing," I say and realize I'm going
the wrong way. I turn and follow her into class and sit down at my desk. Tears
erupt from eyes. I cannot stop them. They blot over the page of the exercise
book on my desk. I wipe the book with my sleeve, but the page still warps under
the wetness left behind.
I spend the rest of the day crying and do
horribly at my maths test.
The teacher asks my friend why I am crying.
"She's had her dog put to sleep, sir." My friend says.
When the final school bell of the day rings out,
I put my bits and pieces in my satchel saunter to the exit and out onto the
main road. I slowly walk home. My best friend will not be greeting me tonight.
At home, no one mentions Sue or the day's
happenings. No one speaks her name.
I push my supper around my plate and apologize
to Mum for not being hungry. I go up to my room and lay on my bed. I want sleep
to claim me so that I can wake from this nightmare.
I close my eyes and drift off into a dull, grey
ache that will not go away.
In the greyness Mum is talking to me.
"There's a man at the top of the hill, near
the church, who has some puppies for sale. If you want one you'd better hurry
as they'll sell fast. He wants two shillings and sixpence for them."
I think "that's the total amount of my
week's pocket money."
I'm not sure what to do. Has Mum forgiven me?
It's been a whole year since I went out with my friends, climbed the school
gates, and ran around the school roof. It's been an entire year since I forgot
Bunty was with me, and she went looking for me and got run over and killed. Was
I ready for another dog? Was I responsible enough to know how to look after
another dog?
I take my pocket money out of the little
container in my bedroom cabinet drawer and place it in my cardigan pocket. I
walk down the road, turn right, cross the road, and go up the hill to the
church: the hill, the opposite end of the road where Bunty was run over.
I knock on the battered front door of the house
next to the ancient church. A withered old man silently greets me and beckons
me into the kitchen, where there is a box full of puppies. The puppies squirm
when they see me.
"Do you have any girls?" I say.
The withered old man takes the prettiest puppy
in his gnarled hands. "This is a girl." He says. "The others are
all boys."
I take two shillings and sixpence from my
pocket. The withered old man holds the tiny puppy in one hand and opens the
palm of the other. I place my pocket money on the deep dark lines of his skin.
I take the girl puppy from him, go out of the kitchen, out the front door, and
carry her home in my arms. I name her Sue.
Still in troubled sleep I'm playing with Sue,
reading books on dog training, and putting the lessons into practice. Sue sits,
stays, rolls over, and plays fetch.
I throw a ball down the long, narrow garden
path. Sue chases it. The concrete path becomes a beach, and Sue is running into
the sea.
I call her, "Sue, Sue. Come back,
Sue."
I wake from my dream and enter my
nightmare.
0 Comments