Too late. Again.
There was a bloody scene with Blake crippled on the floor; a gaping hole through his chest. He was still holding onto life but was it slipping quickly.
“Blake…” Alaire leaned over him, “What did this?”
Blake coughed up blood, his eyes rolling, “Some…thing…dark…something…”
Alaire grabbed Blake’s hand. Aaron and Matt crouched next to them in respect, “We’ll stop them,” Aaron said, “Rest easy, friend.”
Blake snickered, coughed, and was gone.
Alaire refused to cry this time, but her body felt like a shattered mirror with someone continuing to stomp on the shards of glass into smaller pieces.
“I really don’t think Taylor could do this…” she said.
“We can always go ask her,” Aaron growled. He was looking at a door at the end of the hallway. It was closed, but a dark shadow loomed around it. Alaire could feel it too, that something sinister waited for them inside.
Aaron, Alaire, and Matt walked to the door, to their doom and to, hopefully, answers. Alaire could sense a numbness taking over her. There’s been so much death and terror that whatever was ahead couldn't possibly bring her any lower. They had to stop this.
Aaron opened the door, which was surprisingly unlocked, and walked into an empty a small storage room. Matt muttered something that sounded like “shit, shit shit.” In the middle of the floor was a large chalk-drawn symbol that resembled a butterfly.
“That’s it…” Aaron whispered.
Standing in the far corner of the room was Taylor. Her back faced them and her head was bowed. Thick black chalk covered her hands and elbows. She was whispering something over and over, “Sorry, sorry, sorry…”
Alaire took care not to touch the symbol with her feet, but slowly started walking towards her, “Taylor?’
Taylor flinched.
“I think… it’s time you explained yourself.”
Taylor’s head slowly rose, “Oh… you want answers.”
Alaire actually hoped that in the end Taylor would’ve said something like "she was a victim and none of this was her doing." Instead, Taylor’s voice was cold and apathetic.
“How?” Alaire demanded, “How could you be involved? How could you do something like this?”
Aaron and Matt stood by Alaire, both fuming.
“How…” Taylor mumbled, “Do you know what thanatophobia is?”
Alaire scoffed, “What does that have to do with anything?”
“EVERYTHING!”
Her volume startled them. That voice couldn’t belong to a soft-spoken girl like her, Alaire cringed, imagining the dark figure from the video.
“I found a way… to escape death,” Taylor was half crying and half laughing, “But we have to make the appropriate sacrifices… to please Thanatos.”
Finally she turned around to face them. It was like staring at a ghost. Her face was pale and sunken.
“The only way… Thanatos relieves you from the reaper… is if you reap souls yourself. They have to be willing. They have to be consumed by fear. There has to be a certain amount…”
“So all of this was you!” Aaron, “And like hell we were willing!”
Taylor smiled, “But you were. You all signed up for The Thanato Project.”
The three of them shifted their eyes to each other. Perhaps this had something to do with the seminar Professor Kellor hosted, Alaire wondered.
“You were all more than willing, excited even. I interviewed you all and you confessed your personal fears to me. I did my best… but I was too careless.”
Taylor was back to tears, “I left symbols too obvious for you to find… I got too attached to… Oh, no... He’s so very mad at me…”
“How could you be doing all of this?” Alaire asked, “You were with us… why?”
“To observe mostly. Oh… I wasn't alone.”
Taylor was back to smiling, “There’s more of us… and him.”
The door shut behind them. Alaire and Aaron turned around to see Matt. At first, Alaire didn't quite understand what it meant, and then it hit her.
“Matt?” she spat.
Aaron stormed over to him, but Matt pulled out a gun and stopped him dead in his tracks. Alaire shook her head, did he have that this whole time? Impossible!
“Sorry kids,” Matt said, “But that’s how it is.”
Alaire quickly shot Aaron a look, who shook his head frantically, “Not me, I’m not with this garbage.”
“You’re the professor…” Alaire said.
Matt sighed, “Yeah, crazy right? I can pull off hipster awkward-adult pretty well.”
“You…” Aaron glowered, “You don’t look like Kellor…”
“Well, duh. I wasn't going to come in here looking like myself.”
Alaire watched the gun in his hand. He was pointing it at them like it was no big deal.
“So what happens now? Are you just going to shoot us and get back to worshipping Thanatos? How do you know he’s even real? What if it’s something demonic screwing with you!”
Matt aimed the gun at her, “You didn't see him? On the computer.”
Taylor whimpered suddenly, and Matt sighed heavily.
“I’ve done quite a few of these,” Matt spoke calmly, “But this was Taylor’s first. She got a little carried away… Didn't you.”
“I told him I was sorry,” Taylor sobbed.
“Sorry sweetheart, I don’t make the rules.”
The symbol on the floor started to leak a black fog. Alaire clung to Aaron’s jacket as they scooted away. The black figure that they saw before started to emerge from the smoke. It struggled like it was inside thick sludge.
Taylor cowered back to her corner, “There’s still time… I can fix it…”
The black figure, Thanatos, stalked towards her. No way, Alaire thought, there’s no freaking way this was real! There was nothing left for Taylor to do. Alaire wanted to run, to not see anymore, and just hide back in her dorm room at school. She had to avert her eyes.
Thanatos grabbed Taylor by the mouth, muffling her screams, and lifted her off the ground. She kicked and tried pulling away, but in a split second, Thanatos’s grip crushed her skull making a loud snapping sound.
“Pity…” Matt said, “She really was a creative one. I thought she’d take this more seriously.”
“You sick-” Alaire started to say, but Aaron suddenly dropped from her side. He was on his knees scrubbing at the chalk symbol. Instantly, Thanatos was roaring in pain, and Alaire could see that physically his mass was weakening. The blackness making up his shape flickered like a dying flashlight.
The deafening sound of a gunshot made Alaire’s ears ring. Aaron rolled onto his side, clutching the spot between his shoulder and neck.
“Aaron…” Alaire could barely hear herself speak, “Aaron!”
Aaron was in shock. He kept pressing on his wound, but his eyes looked around him like he was unsure of where he was.
“Don’t touch him,” Matt said. He still had his gun out so Alaire obeyed. Matt grabbed her roughly by the arm, “Unfortunately, that doesn’t count as a real sacrifice.”
Alaire was dragged to the door, “Where are we going?” she asked, “Why are you doing this Matt…”
“I’m your professor,” he chuckled, avoiding the question.
“Seriously… Why are you ok with this?”
Instead of opening the door, Matt pressed her head against the wall and placed the gun on her temple.
“What was it that scared you again? I feel like it had something to do with water… Drowning perhaps? Or was it insects… The irrational fear of tiny creatures getting under your skin.”
Alaire shut her eyes, this was it.
“Death by your fears…” Matt hissed, “Is the only way his hunger is satisfied. Then… we gain immortality.”
“At the expense of so many good people?” Alaire felt some last-chance courage building up inside her, “Honestly, you’ve already sold your soul. You’re worth nothing!”
“You’re making this really hard on me…” Matt said. He grabbed a handful on Alaire’s hair and pulled it tight. Tears involuntarily fell from her eyes. “Normally these things go a lot more smoothly… Now hurry on out and finish the job.”
He threw Alaire against the door. No, she trembled, not out there again, not all alone!
Suddenly, Matt shouted in surprise. His body hit the ground hard. Aaron was on top of him, wrestling the gun from his hand.
“Finish the symbol!” Aaron ordered, “Do it now!”
Alaire scrambled to the floor using every part of her body to destroy the drawing, her arms, legs, even stomach. It was a large symbol and her body was pretty small, so there was a lot of ground to cover.
Thanatos was crumbling to pieces in front of them. The more he disappeared the more Alaire could feel the air changing. The evil aura was depleting, and it was easier to breathe like they’d been trapped in a dark cloud this entire time.
Someone grabbed Alaire’s foot and dragged her back. Matt had gained the upper hand on Aaron, but only for a moment. Aaron gave Matt a powerful punch to the face, knocking him out, and the gun slid passed Alaire and against the wall.
Instinctively, Alaire got up and obtained the gun. Her body was shaking and coated in black chalk. Aaron looked up at her knowingly. He was bleeding badly from his shoulder but he managed to make his way over to stand next to her. Matt was stirring from his knock-out, and sat up off the ground, frowning.
“I guess it’ll be easy for you…” he muttered, “You’re a killer too aren't you?”
Of course, he knew about the clown, he knew about everything. Alaire almost dropped the gun from her hands being so unsteady. Aaron extended his hand out to her, “You don’t need to do anything.”
“He killed my brother,” Alaire said, “He killed everyone. And he’s killed more.”
“Yeah, but you don't have to,” Aaron protested, “I’ll do it.”
That wouldn't be fair, Aaron, Alaire thought, I already have blood on my conscience.
“The final girl…” Matt slowly rose, “Make your choice.”
Matt rushed towards them, not giving Alaire time to think. So she reacted.
Gunshot. Gunshot. Gunshot.
Alaire swallowed. Matt was back on the ground this time with three bullet holes through the chest. He touched his blood with concern in his eyes, “But… I thought… I couldn't die…”
“Sounds like you were duped, asshole,” Alaire aimed the gun at his forehead.
Aaron pulled her back, she was in the mood to protest, but Thanatos was making his way towards the commotion. He was only half a figure, most of him decomposed. Instead of bothering with Alaire and Aaron, he walked passed them with indifference and headed for Matt.
“No, no, not me!”
Thanatos crushed his skull in.
Both Aaron and Alaire blocked the image, but the disturbing noises of crushing bones couldn't be avoided. It made Alaire gag.
“You got most of the symbol…” Aaron spoke in a pained voice, “So why…”
Thanatos turned to them, his presence domineering even in half form. However, he didn't reach for them or move at all.
What do you wish for?
The voice was like a whisper in the back of her mind. Alaire was puzzled.
“What do you mean?” she asked.
You have satisfied my hunger. I must give you something in return.
“Are you hearing this?” Aaron nudged her. Alaire nodded.
“If that’s true…” Alaire thought of Cole, and how badly she wanted him back. But that was playing with the same dark magic that got them all into this mess. This had to stop.
“Let us leave this place, alive. Don’t come after us again.”
As you wish.
*****
“Update on the missing college students from UOA: two have been located, Alaire Bowen and Aaron Clement. Both seemed to have escaped death, one suffering from a bullet wound in the shoulder.”
“We interviewed Miss Bowen once stabilized and she claims that this is the work of a sinister cult worshiping someone named Thanatos. Supposedly the god of death.”
“The bodies of Jessica Hunt, Cole Bowen, Katie Kelley, Dwight Mendenhall, Jacob Tanner, Jane Garrity, Aly Mangisi, Kord Cheff, Spencer Holdaway, Blake Davis, and Andrew Millet were finally discovered early this morning. Many of them brutally murdered. The images are too graphic to be released to the public.”
“The ongoing investigation on this Death Cult has lead officials to believe that there could be a link with the recent disappearances at several other universities.”
“Professor Kellor, a teacher at UOA, and Taylor Atchley, the prime suspects, have both disappeared. The victims of the UOA kidnapping claim that both were killed, but their bodies are still nowhere to be found.”
“A memorial service will be held this weekend for the student’s who tragically lost their lives.”
“We’re here interviewing Taylor’s previous psychologist who worked with her in her time at the institution. What can you tell us about her, and what could make her go so far?
- She was a sweet girl. But very scared, very confused. The idea of a mortal life is only natural for humans and animals to understand. We all know that there’s an end to this earthly life. However, for some special people, like Taylor, the idea of dying is worse than any conjured nightmare. It’s something we cannot always control. It’s something that will come to us at any given moment. Living with that anxiety and anticipation every day, every hour, every second of your life can make anyone distressed.
I believe that Taylor was seduced by the idea of a being or entity that could save her from her ultimate fear, and without realizing it she plummeted down the rabbit hole. Everything is justified when you believe it’s in self-defense.
"Thank you for speaking with us."
THE END