home

search

Fourth Fail

  About five meters away stood a filthy, bent shape that no one would recognize as the pristine Julia. She was gasping for breath, hacking wet coughs from her chest, and supporting my nephew, who draped his arm around her neck like a broken puppet bowing in gratitude.

  With my poor vision, I could see his kneecap twisted into shards of bone, bloodied and protruding.

  


      
  • How terrible! — I — But I’m not helping you—deal with this yourselves.


  •   
  • What do you mean, darling? It’s us! — Julia cried from her last ounces of strength.


  •   
  • When they hit Antwan, he called me by my full The real Antwan would never call me Alenari.


  •   
  • Please, don’t be angry! — She almost — He got shot in the leg and was in shock—he might’ve said anything. Just help me get him down and put something under him.


  •   
  • They limped across the light barrier and approached me. Inside, everything did a few flips: terrified ones first, then They were really my friends—after all, the circle of light wouldn’t have let them through otherwise. I took off my jacket again and laid it down as bedding, setting my backpack beside it to mimic a pillow.


  •   
  • And just like that, we built a makeshift hospital bed and gently laid down a groaning Antwan, who kept slipping in and out of consciousness. Mia talked to him softly while I prepped to set the bone and figure out how to rig up a DIY splint.


  •   
  • As we played field medics, somewhere close by we heard the murmur of conversation, the clink of glasses, and soft music. I lifted my head instantly and exchanged a glance with Julia.


  •   
  • I heard it too, — she said, her voice — I don’t like this one bit.


  •   
  • Same here, We’ll check it out later—Antwan’s getting worse.


  •   
  • My nephew’s face had gone pale as death, and his leg spasmed in violent jerks. I had no choice but to sit beside him and start the bone-setting procedure. I laid down a ragged scrap of cloth from the bottom of my pack, got comfortable—and fell into darkness.


  •   
  • Shaking my head, I looked up to see the streetlamp a dozen steps away


  •   


  —and looming over me were two silhouettes. Julia and Antwan, fully healed and standing strong. Their hands reached for me.

  Did you know this text is from a different site? Read the official version to support the creator.

  Fourth failure.

  


      
  • Again that ambient sound, like a restaurant in full swing, and the spawn of the Abyss began to growl low and Their voices had no trace of my friends—just the dry rustling of dead leaves.


  •   
  • The restaurant (or whatever the hell it was) piped up again, louder now, a full-blown argument. The outlines of my pseudo-friends wavered like a curtain in a storm. Then they settled again, still and silent on the pavement.


  •   
  • I stayed sitting, waiting for their arms to come down toward me, ready to catch and flip them to the ground with a judo throw. But it wasn’t needed.


  •   
  • With a grunt, I stood and looked from the lamp to the Mirage after mirage. I was bouncing between illusions like a pinball, flung from one hallucination to the next. What even is reality anymore?


  •   
  • Pondering the transcendental could wait. There was a problem to


  •   
  • I silently pulled a flask from the pack behind me and doused my - relatives- in its contents. Julia and Antwan’s faces froze like those concertgoers’—though here their features twisted and melted depending on how fast their flesh slid off during incineration.


  •   
  • I turned away. Fishing around the bag that had landed in my hands, I found—blessedly—a fresh punch bottle. Right… I hadn’t drunk it in... - real - My hands trembled a bit as I thought: what if that version was actually the real one? What if Julia and I were tending to a wounded Antwan right now?


  •   
  • Screw that. Thoughts like these will get you killed faster than any monster in this I marched off, trying to shut my ears to the sound of sizzling meat.


  •   


Recommended Popular Novels