Sonata
Trickling away
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- 12
- Years
- Seen Feb 17, 2025
Chapter 1 : The Mother
For the longest time, I had felt out of place in my own home. My brothers and sisters, younger and older, had all gone and matured long before myself. Every year the time of progression came ?round, and every year it passed me by with no changes. My mother would assure me the day after that it would be alright, that there was always the next year. She said I was simply a ?late bloomer? and that everyone went through the changes at a different pace. We weren't all the same, as much as the preacher might lead us to believe. It's in our chemistry to be different from each other. As much as my mother tried to protect me and cheer me up, the distant gaze of my father's cold eyes tore away at the cozy blanket she tried to wrap me in. For the longest time, I never did understand why he looked at me with such disgust. Now I wonder why he even came to the ceremonies at all.
My mother was a chemist. She worked from home for dozens of hours a day searching for new ways to take apart the human gene and piece it back together into something better. She believed that humans could become something greater than what they were and what they'd been led to believe they are. Some nights I could hear her screaming in frustration, cursing something or someone that I didn't know. She participated in numerous conference calls online with doctors across the world pursuing similar research, so she new many different languages. But when she cursed in this way, she fluctuated between all sorts of languages including ones that I had only ever heard when she became truly upset. Inhuman sounds would escape her throat and then when be followed by the banging of her desk or muffled sobbing. She never let her work interfere with her primary duties which she had said were taking care of and loving her family. She always made time for us, regardless of how upset at or lost in her research she became. My father and siblings were her anchors, while come to find out I was the weight dragging her deeper into the darkness.
A few weeks prior to my twentieth birthday, my youngest brother Mark completed his own ritual. Being the last two of the children in the house at the time, we were joined only by our mother and father in sending him off into the world. As with the celebration of every other child?s passing into adulthood, we feasted. The table was set for twenty-two, with my mother and father sitting at opposite ends. The eldest of the children sat closest to Mother on her left, and the youngest sat nearest to Father on the right. Clarisse was my eldest sister, and the only one of the children older than myself. As such, I had always sat on the same side of the table as Mark albeit on opposite ends of the spectrum. Tonight, every seat except for the four of ours were empty. All seats were set only as a reminder of how far our family had come.
Our Father stared coldly as he always did at these sorts of things, while Mother gave her big speech filled as equally with tears as it was with words. I started to zone out, as I usually did at these sorts of things. Hearing the same speech eighteen times over didn?t exactly make for a welcoming environment for attention. I?m sure that my Father felt the same, even if my Mother felt as strongly about what she was saying as she did when she first said it for Clarisse. Mark was only fifteen, but he?d heard the same speech being given at least a dozen times. However, looking down at the end of the table I saw his eyes filled with tears and his body shaking. It almost made me feel bad about phasing in and out of attention for the majority of these things. Almost.
My brother left just three weeks later. He?d taken up a position at a factory a few cities over shortly after completing the ceremony, but had taken his time to pack his belongings. Every single day he came to me to talk, fearful of the life he was about to step in to. All any of us had ever known was the world inside of this house. Most of us had never even ventured into the town at the bottom of the hill upon which our home sat, nor had we ever seen anyone attempt to approach our house from the massive glass arches which made up the face of the place. There were likely hundreds of people in that cluster of dwellings beneath us, but never once had anyone even approached the gate which surrounded us. Not once had I ever seen another child lose a toy to our yard like so many had in the movies I filled my time with. We were avoided by those around us like a plague, or a graveyard filled with the lonely and childless.
Once Mark finally left, the house seemed to grow considerably colder. For nearly a week I was without any communication with either of my parents. For my Father, this was nothing new. He had never said more than a few lines to me in my entire life, and we had never once held a conversation. As for my Mother however, this was a completely new and unnerving experience. Through my entire life she had been there every day, never failing to greet me in the morning or bid me well into the night. After the first day of being without her, I grew worried. The second, third, and fourth day of the week I searched for her throughout all of the house. Starting with her office, I moved through all three floors of the mansion and then even searched the basement and my Father?s study. In every room, there was nothing. Nobody at any point and no notices as to if they were leaving for somewhere or when they had gone.
On the sixth day, as I lay in bed I heard the front door of our house creak open and then slam shut. I?d been unable to sleep for almost the entire week leading up to this moment, so for me to finally get some sort of confirmation that I was no longer alone here was relieving. Within minutes of hearing the door close, I was asleep. I drifted from dream to dream, but in each new world that I went to I was finding small similarities. In each place, there seemed to be the repeated sounds of a door creaking open and then clicking softly shut. I could hear heavy breathing when the door was opened, and when it shut each time I would swear that I could hear my name being whispered.
?No, stop this. It?s Vanessa.?
Shortly after hearing this, I would shift into a new dream with a recognizable break in my subconscious. The similarities between dreams stopped here, but the longer I slept the more I began to focus on what kept happening. The dreams themselves became more and more distant as I tried to further myself from them and focus on the recurring element.
?No, stop this. It?s Vanessa.?
Again and again I could hear my name being whispered in this context. I felt a weight on my chest as I tried to listen in closer, completely doing away with the dreams altogether as the words set themselves on repeat.
?No, stop this. It?s Vanessa. My baby girl? I couldn?t? I shouldn?t but I? I can?t resist any longer? the research is pointless anyways. There is no hope for her or any other. These primal instincts, these similarities in our genetics? curses can?t be cured anymore, no more than they can be replicated in those not already involved in them. It?s pointless to search any further. I must? I must??
I hadn?t even realized that I?d been woken up until the voice was already through its monologue. My eyes peeled open, the moon?s light shining down on the door which was slowly creeping ajar. Something caught my eye in the corner of the room, and without making a sound I turned my ever so slightly so as to get a better look at whatever it was. There in the corner of my room I saw a white cloak, and a feminine figure with its arms wrapped around itself as if attempting to restrain itself.
?I must not? It?s not right, not after all that we?ve been through together. I can?t do this!?
The figure screamed out and then lunged at the bed, digging its long fingernails into the mattress. I slammed my eyes shut and gripped at the sheets of my bed beneath the cover of my blanket. Putrid, rotten smelling breath washed over me as I heard the sound of bones popping and breaking. Drool dripped from the creature?s mouth as it hovered over my bed, digging its nails still deeper into the mattress of my bed as it sobbed.
?Just let me do it! Just let me do it! It?s pointless anymore! You can?t hold us back any longer! Just give in!?
The creature continued to argue with itself as it ripped its nails through the mattress and fell back into its corner, sobbing as it tore away at its own skin. The corners of my mouth twitched as I tried not to sob as well, my fear growing steadily now after having nearly been killed by whatever this monster was. Tears fell from my eyes and I rolled over, trying to face away from the creature. I had always had this strange feeling that I should keep a knife at my bedside, but never understood for what reason. It was only now that I found the reason.
?Are you awake Vanessa??
My Mother?s voice.
?Oh child, did I frighten you? There?s no need to be afraid. I would never hurt you. You are my favorite after all. Why do you think that I saved you all those years ago? Why do you think that I-?
I could feel the monster climb up onto my bed. I lowered my hand into the dresser door next to me and wrapped my fingers around the knife which I kept inside it. I pursed my lips as I felt the creature?s hot breath roll over me. Chills ran up my spine as I pulled the weapon out of the drawer and down to the side of the bed, my muscles tensed as I readied to stab away at the monster beginning to mount me.
?Don?t you see my darling Vanessa? This is what we are. This is why we went through the rituals. I tried so hard for so long? but now that Mark?s gone, there?s no reason to hide it any longer. You are not one of us, nor have you ever been. I wish I could help you, but this is just the way that things are. You understand, don?t you? Without me, you would have died when you were still just a baby. Now, it?s time to repay your debt to me. The flesh of a hunter is always so much more delicious than the average person's.?
I felt the creature?s fangs begin to scrape across the gown I?d worn to sleep. The liquid which fell from the monster?s mouth dripped down onto my bare skin and began to melt away at my flesh, causing me to scream out and fling my hand around the side of the bed with all of the strength that I had. The knife pierced the monster?s eye, causing it to wail in pain and fall from my bed. The creature stumbled back and then was illuminated by the light of the moon which shone through the window. Grey-ish black scales glistened with the pale night?s light, and two long tusk-like teeth dripped with a liquid which melted the ground which the creature stood on as it fell. The monster wore my Mother?s complete outfit, down to the I.D. that she wore to enter the video meetings.
?How dare you! How dare you!? The monster screeched as it scraped at its own face, attempting to pull free the blade that I?d plunged into its skull. ?You ungrateful fucking bitch! I?ll kill you! I?ll rip you limb from fucking limb as you scream for me to save you once more!?
I rolled out of bed, clutching my shoulder where the flesh had been eaten away at. Tucking my head down, I placed my one good shoulder in the creature?s chest and used all of my weight to send it and myself toppling out of the fourth story window.
For the longest time, I had felt out of place in my own home. My brothers and sisters, younger and older, had all gone and matured long before myself. Every year the time of progression came ?round, and every year it passed me by with no changes. My mother would assure me the day after that it would be alright, that there was always the next year. She said I was simply a ?late bloomer? and that everyone went through the changes at a different pace. We weren't all the same, as much as the preacher might lead us to believe. It's in our chemistry to be different from each other. As much as my mother tried to protect me and cheer me up, the distant gaze of my father's cold eyes tore away at the cozy blanket she tried to wrap me in. For the longest time, I never did understand why he looked at me with such disgust. Now I wonder why he even came to the ceremonies at all.
My mother was a chemist. She worked from home for dozens of hours a day searching for new ways to take apart the human gene and piece it back together into something better. She believed that humans could become something greater than what they were and what they'd been led to believe they are. Some nights I could hear her screaming in frustration, cursing something or someone that I didn't know. She participated in numerous conference calls online with doctors across the world pursuing similar research, so she new many different languages. But when she cursed in this way, she fluctuated between all sorts of languages including ones that I had only ever heard when she became truly upset. Inhuman sounds would escape her throat and then when be followed by the banging of her desk or muffled sobbing. She never let her work interfere with her primary duties which she had said were taking care of and loving her family. She always made time for us, regardless of how upset at or lost in her research she became. My father and siblings were her anchors, while come to find out I was the weight dragging her deeper into the darkness.
A few weeks prior to my twentieth birthday, my youngest brother Mark completed his own ritual. Being the last two of the children in the house at the time, we were joined only by our mother and father in sending him off into the world. As with the celebration of every other child?s passing into adulthood, we feasted. The table was set for twenty-two, with my mother and father sitting at opposite ends. The eldest of the children sat closest to Mother on her left, and the youngest sat nearest to Father on the right. Clarisse was my eldest sister, and the only one of the children older than myself. As such, I had always sat on the same side of the table as Mark albeit on opposite ends of the spectrum. Tonight, every seat except for the four of ours were empty. All seats were set only as a reminder of how far our family had come.
Our Father stared coldly as he always did at these sorts of things, while Mother gave her big speech filled as equally with tears as it was with words. I started to zone out, as I usually did at these sorts of things. Hearing the same speech eighteen times over didn?t exactly make for a welcoming environment for attention. I?m sure that my Father felt the same, even if my Mother felt as strongly about what she was saying as she did when she first said it for Clarisse. Mark was only fifteen, but he?d heard the same speech being given at least a dozen times. However, looking down at the end of the table I saw his eyes filled with tears and his body shaking. It almost made me feel bad about phasing in and out of attention for the majority of these things. Almost.
My brother left just three weeks later. He?d taken up a position at a factory a few cities over shortly after completing the ceremony, but had taken his time to pack his belongings. Every single day he came to me to talk, fearful of the life he was about to step in to. All any of us had ever known was the world inside of this house. Most of us had never even ventured into the town at the bottom of the hill upon which our home sat, nor had we ever seen anyone attempt to approach our house from the massive glass arches which made up the face of the place. There were likely hundreds of people in that cluster of dwellings beneath us, but never once had anyone even approached the gate which surrounded us. Not once had I ever seen another child lose a toy to our yard like so many had in the movies I filled my time with. We were avoided by those around us like a plague, or a graveyard filled with the lonely and childless.
Once Mark finally left, the house seemed to grow considerably colder. For nearly a week I was without any communication with either of my parents. For my Father, this was nothing new. He had never said more than a few lines to me in my entire life, and we had never once held a conversation. As for my Mother however, this was a completely new and unnerving experience. Through my entire life she had been there every day, never failing to greet me in the morning or bid me well into the night. After the first day of being without her, I grew worried. The second, third, and fourth day of the week I searched for her throughout all of the house. Starting with her office, I moved through all three floors of the mansion and then even searched the basement and my Father?s study. In every room, there was nothing. Nobody at any point and no notices as to if they were leaving for somewhere or when they had gone.
On the sixth day, as I lay in bed I heard the front door of our house creak open and then slam shut. I?d been unable to sleep for almost the entire week leading up to this moment, so for me to finally get some sort of confirmation that I was no longer alone here was relieving. Within minutes of hearing the door close, I was asleep. I drifted from dream to dream, but in each new world that I went to I was finding small similarities. In each place, there seemed to be the repeated sounds of a door creaking open and then clicking softly shut. I could hear heavy breathing when the door was opened, and when it shut each time I would swear that I could hear my name being whispered.
?No, stop this. It?s Vanessa.?
Shortly after hearing this, I would shift into a new dream with a recognizable break in my subconscious. The similarities between dreams stopped here, but the longer I slept the more I began to focus on what kept happening. The dreams themselves became more and more distant as I tried to further myself from them and focus on the recurring element.
?No, stop this. It?s Vanessa.?
Again and again I could hear my name being whispered in this context. I felt a weight on my chest as I tried to listen in closer, completely doing away with the dreams altogether as the words set themselves on repeat.
?No, stop this. It?s Vanessa. My baby girl? I couldn?t? I shouldn?t but I? I can?t resist any longer? the research is pointless anyways. There is no hope for her or any other. These primal instincts, these similarities in our genetics? curses can?t be cured anymore, no more than they can be replicated in those not already involved in them. It?s pointless to search any further. I must? I must??
I hadn?t even realized that I?d been woken up until the voice was already through its monologue. My eyes peeled open, the moon?s light shining down on the door which was slowly creeping ajar. Something caught my eye in the corner of the room, and without making a sound I turned my ever so slightly so as to get a better look at whatever it was. There in the corner of my room I saw a white cloak, and a feminine figure with its arms wrapped around itself as if attempting to restrain itself.
?I must not? It?s not right, not after all that we?ve been through together. I can?t do this!?
The figure screamed out and then lunged at the bed, digging its long fingernails into the mattress. I slammed my eyes shut and gripped at the sheets of my bed beneath the cover of my blanket. Putrid, rotten smelling breath washed over me as I heard the sound of bones popping and breaking. Drool dripped from the creature?s mouth as it hovered over my bed, digging its nails still deeper into the mattress of my bed as it sobbed.
?Just let me do it! Just let me do it! It?s pointless anymore! You can?t hold us back any longer! Just give in!?
The creature continued to argue with itself as it ripped its nails through the mattress and fell back into its corner, sobbing as it tore away at its own skin. The corners of my mouth twitched as I tried not to sob as well, my fear growing steadily now after having nearly been killed by whatever this monster was. Tears fell from my eyes and I rolled over, trying to face away from the creature. I had always had this strange feeling that I should keep a knife at my bedside, but never understood for what reason. It was only now that I found the reason.
?Are you awake Vanessa??
My Mother?s voice.
?Oh child, did I frighten you? There?s no need to be afraid. I would never hurt you. You are my favorite after all. Why do you think that I saved you all those years ago? Why do you think that I-?
I could feel the monster climb up onto my bed. I lowered my hand into the dresser door next to me and wrapped my fingers around the knife which I kept inside it. I pursed my lips as I felt the creature?s hot breath roll over me. Chills ran up my spine as I pulled the weapon out of the drawer and down to the side of the bed, my muscles tensed as I readied to stab away at the monster beginning to mount me.
?Don?t you see my darling Vanessa? This is what we are. This is why we went through the rituals. I tried so hard for so long? but now that Mark?s gone, there?s no reason to hide it any longer. You are not one of us, nor have you ever been. I wish I could help you, but this is just the way that things are. You understand, don?t you? Without me, you would have died when you were still just a baby. Now, it?s time to repay your debt to me. The flesh of a hunter is always so much more delicious than the average person's.?
I felt the creature?s fangs begin to scrape across the gown I?d worn to sleep. The liquid which fell from the monster?s mouth dripped down onto my bare skin and began to melt away at my flesh, causing me to scream out and fling my hand around the side of the bed with all of the strength that I had. The knife pierced the monster?s eye, causing it to wail in pain and fall from my bed. The creature stumbled back and then was illuminated by the light of the moon which shone through the window. Grey-ish black scales glistened with the pale night?s light, and two long tusk-like teeth dripped with a liquid which melted the ground which the creature stood on as it fell. The monster wore my Mother?s complete outfit, down to the I.D. that she wore to enter the video meetings.
?How dare you! How dare you!? The monster screeched as it scraped at its own face, attempting to pull free the blade that I?d plunged into its skull. ?You ungrateful fucking bitch! I?ll kill you! I?ll rip you limb from fucking limb as you scream for me to save you once more!?
I rolled out of bed, clutching my shoulder where the flesh had been eaten away at. Tucking my head down, I placed my one good shoulder in the creature?s chest and used all of my weight to send it and myself toppling out of the fourth story window.