The man, if he could be called a man with his sunken eye and sallow skin, continued to stare at me while the woman packed the last few items from the bed. He didn’t move, except for the slight shift of his fingers keeping the pen, my pen, in motion. He didn’t seem to blink either, though it was hard to tell. His eyes were the same color as the shadow that fell over them.
“I’m sorry I sent my friend to come get you,” the woman said and made me jump right out of my skin. I wasn’t sure if the man could smile, but I swear that that thin bastard showed me a glimpse of teeth. Sure I was spooked, damn near scared to death, but I didn’t want someone like that grinning at me even in my best moments. “I was a little preoccupied with other business.”
She tossed one of the photographs down to me on the floor. It landed face up at my knees. On it, a new man lay on a concrete floor, a pained expression over his face. At least, the portion of his face that hadn’t been obscured with duct tape.
“The ticket agent?” I said.
“That’s right,” the woman said. She’d finished packing and hopped up to sit on her case while she buckled the clasps shut on either end. “He had to be punished, too. Just like that other man. And you.”
“Me?” I tried to stand and couldn’t. Not because the man’s power had come over me again, but because I simply lacked the strength “Punished? But, what did I do?”
“That’s funny,” she said and looked over at her friend. “Every single one of them say that.”
“What did I do?” I said again, and fought very hard not to start crying.
“Take a look around this room,” the woman said and waved a hand out to the world around her. “On the dead man’s body behind you, an empty money clip. Under the helpless girl who had no way home, the case you took from her. And that’s just the past few days. We guessed you’d lived a guilty life before we had the misfortune to meet you. And now that my friend has been in your head, we know exactly what sort of person you are. He’d heard your angry thoughts, your perversions, your demons you keep in a closet. He knows exactly who you’ve hurt and even why. Your most noble moments, shrouded in fear and self-doubt and, yes, guilt.”
“That’s not fair,” I said. “You can’t judge someone on what’s in their head. You can’t.”
“Why not,” came a voice from the walls around me like a warm liquid oozing from between molded boards. It immediately made me feel groggy. I had to place a hand on the carpet before me or risk collapsing. The man in the chair spoke again. “I have been within you, I have tasted your soul and listened to the whispers that hide inside your heart. It made me sick.”
I gasped for a breath, and I nearly didn’t find it.
“I’m not a bad person, everyone has bad thoughts,” I said. This time I couldn’t fight the tears. They re-traced the lines that were made when I’d gotten my body back. I hung my head.
“See, the thing about that is,” the woman said. I felt her hand on the back of my neck. “Most people fight off the occasional urge or ill thought. Your whole head if full of them. It’s almost as though the good thoughts are swimming in a pool of bad ones. And even those good ones aren’t that good.”
“Please,” I said.
“No,” the woman said. This time I could feel her friend smile, as though it were my smile, too. I felt him inside of me again. His hands bleeding into my hands, his eyes pushing into my sockets. I was forced onto my back, where I looked up at the woman. Her friend no longer sat in the chair, no longer belonged in the room. He’d found his way inside me.
In my last moments of control, I wriggled and writhed. It didn’t hurt. In fact, it was quite the opposite. Every bit of me that he filled, I lost feeling in. I licked my lips and tasted the salt from my tears. Then nothing. The woman took out her camera again. I had no control over my eyes and could not shield them from the flash.
They didn’t kill me. At least, I don’t think they did. Think is about all I can do these days. Living a half-existence isn’t so bad, really. I don’t have to taste what he makes my body eat since he’s taken my tongue. And I don’t have to see or hear anything if I recede into myself. Alone. The darkness is comforting, until the bad thoughts find me.