Vision2

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Authors: Kristi Brooks

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Vision
2

 

Vision
2

 

Kristi Brooks

 

PegLeg Publishing, LLC

Oklahoma City
,
Oklahoma

 

 

PegLeg Publishing, LLC

PO Box
75409

Oklahoma City
,
OK
73147

www.peglegpublishing.com

 

Vision
2

First Edition March 2006

Kindle Edition March 2012

Copyright © 2006 by Kristi Brooks

Cover art by Carol Gravley

 

ISBN: 0-9777660-0-4

Library of Congress Control Number: 2006901029

 

For information regarding bulk purchase, please contact

PegLeg Publishing at 405-525-0439 or [email protected]

 

This is a work of fiction. All characters, locations, names, and incidents in this book are either fictional or used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any person, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales of the same name or names is entirely coincidental.

 

All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including xerography, photocopying, and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without the written permission of the editorial office of PegLeg Publishing, LLC, PO Box 75409, Oklahoma City, OK 73147 U.S.A.

 

Printed in the
United States of America

 

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Acknowledgements

First, I want to say that none of this would have been possible without my parents. I know we

ve had our problems over the years, but
you

ve
taught me about love, acceptance, and perseverance.

I also want to thank my Nene, who gave me every possible tool to believe in myself. There have been times when no one else thought I would be able to accomplish my dreams,
but
she never believed in anything except me. I want her to know that her acceptance gave me everything I needed to make it.

To Matt, my tireless editor, I want you to know that I appreciate every word change, every comma that was replaced, and every grammatical mistake that caused you to pull out your hair and cuss into the night. I would never have gotten this far without your support and your unflinching (okay, maybe a little flinching) belief in this book.

I want to thank all of my friends and family that I haven

t mentioned before now: Leah, Stephen, Connie, Gail, Anita, Mary Jo, Stacey,
the other Kristina,
Shorty, Donna,
Elaine,
Jennifer, Justin, Joy,
and Susan. My two little muses,
Daymean and Zina
. And my tribe of adopted pets,
Smokes, Wickett, Cosmo, Sloth, Muffin, and Buddha.

Finally, I want to make sure that I recognize everyone out there with a dream. All of you reading this have helped make it possible. Remember that sometimes you need to take a chance in life, and sometimes you need to support those
who
do. And, in buying and reading this, you have done just that.

Thank you.

 

 

This book is dedicated to my husband, Dooney.

 

I could never have done any of this without you.

I don

t know of anyone else who

s ever been as supportive and accepting of who I am. For all those long nights of me hacking away at the keyboard, the support you gave me while I went to college (financially and emotionally), and for putting up wit
h my refusal “to get a real job,

I love you.

Prologue

The stool tipped as Roger leaned forward and grasped the bathroom counter, pulling his entire body onto its slick Formica surface. He

d scraped his leg down by the river, and his mom would freak out if she saw how bad it looked.

Shouldn

t have listened to that stupid Jimmy Bowen, huh?
His mother

s voice echoed in his head while he plugged the sink and watched the basin fill with cool, clean water. Turning his head, he inspected his face for cuts.

His mirror self looked okay, just a little dirty. But it wasn

t the dirt that caught Roger

s attention. He

d heard stories about people whose eyes changed colors, and they even made fun of Susie Garris because she had two different colored eyes, but this wasn

t the same thing. His eyes were still the same color, they just looked different, older somehow.

The water splashed out of the sink and onto his pant leg, momentarily distracting him. He shut off the valve and barely noticed how much his skinned leg stung as he plunged it into the water.

They have to be the same.

He looked back at his reflection, tilting his head as he absentmindedly rubbed the dirt and skin off his knee. He couldn

t explain why it bothered him so much, and perhaps that bothered him even more. Even at seven, Roger liked knowledge; knowledge provided answers, and the people who had the answers were always better off.

Without realizing what he was doing, he put his hand against the cool, reflective surface and flinched. He sat there for a moment, his dripping palm pressed firmly against the bathroom mirror while his breath came in shallow pants and his heart thudded loudly in his ears. Nothing.

Roger inwardly shrugged and tried to pull back his hand so he could finish cleaning off his knee, but he couldn

t. No matter what

207

 

Kristi Brooks

his brain told his hand, it wasn

t moving. He pulled back one last time and gasped as the mirror

s surface shimmered like a wave of heat rising off a summer sidewalk.

Beneath the dirty reflection he saw a barrage of images. A shrill noise, like fingernails on a chalkboard, filled his head and caused him to grind his teeth until his jaw hurt, but then it was cut off as the image focused on a man. There were several small, dark creatures scuttling around the poor man. The mysterious forms darted in and out of the picture in a line of giant blurs, as if they had been sped up while the agony of this man was frozen solidly in time.

Something flickered and Roger noticed that parts of the poor man

s body were hooked into large tubes that fed into a cylindrical machine. The machine looked like the giant shimmering squid on the cover of his
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
comic. The tentacles snaked into the man

s arms and legs, leaving his skin red and puckered where each one sank into his flesh. The steel beast began to hum, and the tentacles were immediately filled with a jittery, glowing, blue light which seared a haze across Roger

s eyes so powerful he was forced to squeeze them shut and peer through water hazy lenses.

It was then that Roger noticed an oddly shaped jar jutting out of the steel like a crystal wart. A glowing purple liquid that strongly resembled grape Kool-Aid sitting in the sunlight began to fill up the clear container.

The man shrieked and the entire world shimmered around Roger, and although he knew that he was still safely perched on the countertop in his bathroom, the world split open beneath him and he found himself balanced on the edge of a deep and yawning void. Fear held him tight for nearly a minute before Roger clapped his free hand to his ear and pressed his head against his bony child-shoulder to block the pain-filled voice. Tears flowed freely down his cheeks, creating clean rivers on his grime-covered face.

The clammy palm couldn

t stop the scream from echoing through his head, bouncing around like a rubber ball. Roger grimaced as he raised his head and looked into the mirror. One of the scuttling creatures turned and stared at him, its violet eyes searing into him. It bared its teeth at him, hissing in a manner that made it seem like a beetle.

He hiccupped once and fainted, falling off the countertop and hitting his head on the edge of the toilet. When he woke up six hours later in the hospital, all he could see was his mother

s worried face peering down at him, and he could no longer remember what he had seen.

************************

Itckrelle stood over the human as the servant gnomes drained him. The man

s horrible peachy flesh was hooked into the machine that had always served him well. When the gnomes turned it on, the harsh blue light sped across the darkened room. He raised his face to bask in it as if it were sunlight.

The human thing screamed, its agony rolling off the walls like a dark symphony. This was his favorite part. He leaned into the scream, allowing the torment to soak into his pores. He allowed its melody to roll over him, moving and humming to a rhythm that he felt only in his mind, and laughed a little at how the council members would be truly appalled if they ever saw him enjoying such torture, regardless of what kind of creature it was being done to. Most of them actually valued those texts they worshipped, keeping small versions of them tucked within their cloaks and consulting them whenever they felt any doubt.

He could see their scared green faces and pouting purple eyes now, all upturned to wait his decision. They were afraid of him, afraid of change, but mostly they were afraid of uncertainty. They wanted, no,
needed
, someone to tell them how tomorrow was going to be. He

d meant for it to be like that when he designed it, and he intended to see that it stayed that way.

One of the gnomes scurried past him, the dark brown cloak rustling at his feet and causing him to turn slightly to let the creature pass.

As he turned, he noticed the vacant space in the ceiling behind him. It wasn

t an absence of light, but rather a space in the roof where nothingness existed. He narrowed his eyes and studied the anomaly. He interpreted every unusual occurrence as an attempt to strip away his power.

Itckrelle raised his hand toward the darkness but jerked it back when the face appeared. It was as ugly as any human he

d ever encountered, maybe even more so because of its youth and innocence. Every muscle in his body tensed, and he felt ready to pounce at a moment

s notice. He licked his lips, savoring the taste of adrenaline.

Looking around, Itckrelle noticed that none of the gnomes in the room with him seemed to notice anything. He turned back toward the creature, lowering his cloak

s hood and widening his eyes to get a better view.

Then, the image opened its mouth. Itckrelle barred his teeth and hissed in a desperate attempt to keep the thing at bay. When he did, the image disappeared and the dirt green ceiling returned.

He stared at it for a few more minutes, his teeth barred and his crimson hair on end, but nothing ever happened. Itckrelle believed that he must have been the only one who

d seen the human child, but that changed as soon as he saw the captive

s putrid brown eyes staring at the ceiling. His chapped and bleeding lips kept moving as if reciting some kind of ritual, but Itckrelle couldn

t make out what he was saying.

Itckrelle barely noticed the gnome

s yellow glares as he pushed them aside; he was too focused on the human.

He leaned over the man

s face and caught the last word to escape his dying body,
Roger
, and then he was gone, unable to offer an
explanation
. Itckrelle stormed out of the room and into the hall, his morning torture session ruined.

By the time he finally allowed his body to sleep that night he

d convinced himself that Roger was nothing more than the unreliable memory of a dying man.

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