Authors: Gord Rollo
Tags: #Suspense, #Horror, #Fiction, #Occult & Supernatural, #Thrillers, #Organ donors
head would explode like an overripe tomato being
struck with a sledgehammer.
Perfect.
"Stop, you fool," Dr. Marshall shouted once it be¬
came obvious what my plans were. "Grab him, Drake.
Hurry!"
Drake came after me, but I knew I had the angle on
him. He knew it, too, but kept coming anyway. W i t h a
yell of pure triumph, I launched myself into the air,
easily shattering the lead-framed stained glass window
and was ready to fly free as a bird into the bright blue
yonder. Fly for a second or two, at least.
Wasn't gonna happen.
I hit the glass hard, breaking through it easily enough,
but my flight to freedom only lasted for another three
inches. That was when I hit face-first into the wire mesh
window screen bolted to the outside brickwork. It was
heavy-gauge mesh probably installed on these expen¬
sive windows to protect them and it stopped my forward
progress pronto, my nose painfully reduced to a red
pulpy mess upon impact, the rest of my face and body a
patchwork of cuts and puncture wounds from all the
exploding glass. So much for my great escape.
Bounced back into the tower room, I landed with a
heavy thump at Drake's feet, where he found the sight
of my bloodied face and body tremendously amusing.
He was laughing so hard, in fact, that Dr. Marshall was
the one who came over and held me down so I wouldn't
try r u n n i n g away again.
"Get the needle," Dr. Marshall said to Drake.
"What's the hurry? Why don't we let him have a run
at the other window? I'd love to watch that again."
"Just get the needle, we've wasted enough time with
this loser. I'm late for surgery."
"All right, it was j u s t a thought," Drake said, still de¬
lighted by my suffering.
I watched him walk over to a rolltop desk and remove
a large hypodermic needle from one of the drawers. He
filled it with a clear yellow fluid—probably the same
stuff he'd drugged me with down in the cellar—then
walked over and handed the needle to his boss.
Part of me knew I should be flailing about, scream¬
ing like a banshee, and desperately trying to get away,
but I j u s t didn't have it in me. I was battered, bruised,
and bleeding, and every inch of my body hurt like hell.
Worse still, the impact with the metal screen had r e -
opened my right shoulder wound, and with the amount
of blood I was leaking all over the floor, I was getting
light-headed, feeling n u m b , stunned, and more than a
little lethargic.
I'm sure I would have passed out on my own if they'd
given me another thirty seconds, but Dr* Marshall wasn't
taking any chances. He viciously plunged the hypoder¬
mic needle into my thigh, but I don't remember feeling
any pain. I never even screamed. Within seconds, every¬
thing went black.
C H A P T E R T W E N T Y
Speaking from the experience of someone who has
drank several hundred gallons of cheap, often home¬
made booze, then eventually progressing to stolen
Sterno, I knew what it was like to wake up with a head¬
ache. I was an authority on them, actually. I've had
more hangovers than I care to remember, but none of
those self-induced headaches hurt half as bad as the
way I felt when I finally woke up and slowly stirred back
to life.
My head was pounding, driving a six-inch spike of
agony through my brain with every blood-pulsing beat
of my heart. I didn't dare open my eyes. Heaven forbid.
Instead, I lay perfectly still, j u s t concentrated on tak¬
ing short, shallow breaths, and tried to ride out the
storm.
Must have been a hell of a party last night. Blue J and I
must have really—
Then, t h r o u g h all the pain and the hazy memories
filtering out of my drug-saturated brain, I remem¬
bered where I was and what had happened to me up
in the castle's tower r o o m . I tried to fight it, deny my
m e m o r i e s , because accepting the t r u t h would lead
me in a direction I simply wasn't ready to go. No
way.
Maybe Puckman brewed up another batch of that awful
Screech, and I drank so much I don't—
I gave up halfway through my pitiful attempt at avoid¬
ing reality. W h a t was the point? I knew perfectly well
where I was and why I had such a bad headache. All the
lies and wishful t h i n k i n g in the world weren't going to
help my situation or make me feel any better. Why
bother?
Because the truth scaredme too much, that's why.
Obviously the reason I had a headache was because
I'd been whacked out on drugs. W h y had I been drugged?
Because Drake was taking me to the operating room
for surgery. Why was I headed to surgery? Because Dr.
Marshall said—
He said he needed my legs.
Oh God, please. Not that. Not my legs.
Not my fucking legs.'
My thoughts seemed to freeze up. I wouldn't allow—
couldn't allow—myself to keep t h i n k i n g about this. I
wanted to die, right then and there. Die, before I found
out if anything had happened to me.
I opened my eyes.
Then I started screaming.
I didn't have proof yet that my legs were gone—I
hadn't looked down or anything—but I didn't need to.
Lying six feet away from m e , strapped in his own bed
and looking straight at me was Lucas, the older man
who'd begged me to end his suffering in the blood bank
room. He was shaking his head and looking at me with
a sad expression on his face.
"Welcome to Hell," Lucas whispered, then turned
his face away from me.
This can't be happening.
But it was. There was only one reason I'd be lying next
to Lucas. Dr. Marshall had made good on his threat to
take my legs from m e , and even worse, he'd decided to
put me up in his special room on the fourth floor. He'd
carved me up, and turned me into one of his Bleeders.
C H A P T E R T W E N T Y - O N E
I must have passed out again, because it was nighttime
when next I opened my eyes, the Bleeders' room deathly
quiet and in darkness. The only light came from the
window, the moonlight filtering in through a foot-wide
gap left in the heavy curtains. It was still too dark for
me to see much of anything, which was a little unnerv¬
ing, but at least my headache was a lot better.
I tried to sit up a few inches, trying to peer through
the gloom to get a look around, and that was when I
learned I was strapped to the mattress. So I didn't fall
out of bed, I suppose. With no arms or legs, it was prob¬
ably a good idea, but it pissed me off. I started twisting
and turning, trying to get myself free. I thrashed and
pulled and lashed my body around in a senseless fit of
pure adrenaline-fueled anger. Truth be told, my rage
didn't really have anything to do with the straps, they
were j u s t the last straw after I'd been so violated body
and soul lately. Eventually, exhaustion and pain calmed
me down, and I lay panting for air in the dark with tears
running down both cheeks.
"You okay, Mike?" a voice said on my right.
It was a familiar voice, but I couldn't quite place it. It
didn't sound like Lucas, but that's who'd been beside
me earlier, hadn't it? I turned my head and could make
out a big lump on the bed next to m e , but that was
about it.
"Who's there?" I asked. "That you, Lucas?"
"No. Lucas is in the bed on y o u r left. It's Red Beard,
M i k e , remember m e ? "
"Course I do. H o w you doing?"
Stupid question, but it was out of my mouth before I
thought about it.
"Same as y o u " Red said, "Cut down to n o t h i n g by
that filthy bastard surgeon, and wishing I was dead."
I looked around the room again, trying to see how
many other beds were filled.
"I can hardly see, Red, are Bill Smith and W h e e l s
here too?
"Nope. Just us. Wheels was for a while but he died in
his sleep. I think they took too much blood out of him.
Lucky bugger. Haven't a clue what happened to Bill
Smith, though. Never saw him again."
"Maybe Bill made a run for it and got out of here. I
tried that myself."
"Me too," Red Beard said. "That's how I ended up in
here. Piss Dr. Marshall off and this is where he sticks
you, I think. Oh, and don't worry about y o u r vision.
Your eyes will get better accustomed to seeing in the
dark once you've been here a while longer. You've only
been here for about three weeks. Give it,some time."
Three weeks?
"What are you talking about?" I asked. "This is my
first day, isn't it?"
Red laughed at that. "No, 'fraid not, my friend. They
brought you in at least two weeks ago, but I think it was
closer to three. They keep the new arrivals pretty
drugged, to keep the pain down and let y o u r wounds
heal without you moving around. You were probably in
a recovery room for a few days too."
Son of a bitch,
I guess that explained the killer headache—they'd
had me out like a light for weeks. It dawned on me then
that I had no idea what the date was, or how long I'd
been here at the castle. I didn't even know what m o n t h
it was.
"What's the date, Red? Any idea?"
"Does it matter?" he asked. "None of that makes a dfference anymore, so forget about it. Around here there
are only two days of the week you need to worry about.
Bad days, when they drain our blood, and good days,
when they leave us the fuck alone. That's it, good or bad.
N o t h i n g else matters."
We lay in silence for a long time, and I felt myself
starting to nod off again. I was sleepy but I had to ask.
"Hey, Red?"
"Yeah?" he answered, sounding tired as well.
"What day is tomorrow? "
I heard him take a deep breath; then in a soft whisper
said, "Bad. Get some sleep."
C H A P T E R T W E N T Y - T W O
Apparently I slept in. I woke up at the crack of dawn,
the sunlight j u s t starting to chase the darkness away,
but everyone in the room whose mind was still intact
was already wide-awake and starting to get nervous.
The nurses and the orderlies would be coming through
the door soon.
"It can't be that bad, can it?" I turned to ask Red
Beard, but it was old Lucas, on my left, who answered.
"You ever donated blood before?" Lucas asked.
"Sure," I said. "Lots of times. It was never that big of
a deal."
"Yeah, I agree with ya. W h e r e did they take it from?"
"What?"
"The blood. W h e r e did they take it out of y o u ? "
"Oh, my arm."
"Right. W h i c h arm do you want them to take it out
of today? Oh, that's right, you don't have
anyfrtggin'
arms, j u s t like the rest of us, ya damn fool. They'll be
takin' it out of your head, for Christ's sake. Ever had a
big needle jabbed into your head, Mike?"
Lucas was obviously hot u n d e r the collar, but I wasn't
sure if he was genuinely mad at me for not killing him
when I'd had the chance, or if he was j u s t on edge,
nervous about what was about to happen. Probably a
bit of both, so I bit my tongue and didn't say anything
back.
"Relax, Lucas," Red Beard j u m p e d to my defense.
"He's new, it's not his fault he doesn't know what's hap¬
pening."
"I know," Lucas sighed. "It was j u s t such a stupid
question, and I feel like crap today. I j u s t want it all to
end, Red. I can't take much more of this, I really can't."
"I know, Lucas," Red commiserated. "We all want it
to end."
I felt a bit like a spectator at a tennis match, turning
to my left, then right, as my roommates talked back
and forth. W h e n they lapsed into silence for a moment,
I j u m p e d into their conversation.
"First of all, Lucas, I'm really sorry I didn't finish the
j o b , back when you wanted my help. You don't need to
forgive m e , but understand something. I wanted to
help, I tried to help, but I fucked up. I got scared and
ran to save my own ass. N o t that it did me much
good."
"Ah shit, Mike," Lucas said. "I don't hold it against
ya. I'd have done the same. It's j u s t this awful place. It
drives ya crazy. They torture us again and again, and
there's nothin' we can do about it. Wears a man down
after a while. Wears him until he snaps. Remember
Charlie, the guy who started screaming and brought
the guards r u n n i n g that night?"
"Yeah, I remember," I said, t h i n k i n g about how I
couldn't get him to quiet down and shut up.
"Well, he finally snapped. His body's still over there,
third bed on the right, but his mind has shut down and
gone bye-bye. God, how I envy him!"
"Don't say that, Lucas. You gotta keep fighting. We're
not dead yet."