Mike sat at his desk, bleary-eyed and ready to die. He cursed as he died and smacked his desk with a loud pop. He flicked his eyes to the clock on the wall. 1am. He couldn’t end with another loss, wouldn’t, even, but with work starting in six hours…
He started another round. It had been a long grueling day in his game, and he was certain they were all cheating. Cronus and Strike Packs, hardware cheaters, the lot of them. It wasn’t that he was getting older, the techniques advancing. Certainly wasn’t the 16-year-olds that got to play twelve hours a day while he slaved away at his customer support job.
He was finding his groove, pulling the mouse this way and that, his bullets going where he commanded. He was feeling good, not just good, great. As he pulled a particularly nice headshot, the power died. Blackness swept over his vision as the light faded from his monitor.
“Shit,” Mike said. Thunder pealed right outside his window, the bright flash momentarily blinding him through the blinds. Mike peeled his headset off, the sweat sticking it to his ears. There was a pop as the first earmuff came loose. He fumbled it onto the desk and rolled his chair back to begin standing. A whoosh of air sent Mike sprawling. He cursed as he hit the ground with a thud. The impact forced the breath right out of him. Wheezing, he looked up in the dim light of his office. A figure stood above him, standing awkwardly close. The silhouette of its head leaned toward him, inspecting.
Mike’s office lights came on. There was no figure standing above him, only his gaming chair spinning slowly. He rose to his feet, wiping sweat from his forehead. When had his heart ever pounded in his ears like that before?
He checked the time. 1:36AM. It was late. Maybe… Maybe it was time for bed.
Mike could never get used to only getting four hours of sleep. That first hour was the worst. But once the caffeine hit the veins and got the brain going with something stimulating, Mike found he could simulate being human well enough.
During his morning shower Mike caught himself checking the bathroom closet over and over. He shouldn’t have left the door open. Every time he looked, he expected the figure to be there. Of course, it wasn’t. Still his eyes darted there. Over and over.
“Yes, that’s right sir,” Mike said. “I know you said you restarted it already; this is just the first step we always take.”
The man on the other end of the line chuckled. “Okaaay,” he said.
Mike scrolled his phone while the man restarted his tablet. A notification banner dropped down, and he swiped at it, trying to dismiss it. Instead, he pressed it, and he huffed a sigh.
“What was that?” the man on the line asked.
“Nothing, how’s that restart going?”
“Booting up now.”
“Very good, let me know when it’s… when it’s powered back on.”
The app Mike had accidentally opened was the NextDoor app. The top of the feed featured a post getting a lot of traction. It was someone talking about last night’s storm.
He skimmed it. A death happened. The power had been out what, 6, 7 hours? Oh, if I had just kept reading, he thought, I’d have seen it was 8 hours.
8 hours with no power. It had been his day off, too. Couldn’t have been his Friday or something. No, not for Mike.
“Mister Mike?”
“Oh, what’s that?”
“I was saying it’s on.”
“Ah, right. Okay, go ahead and go into settings…” This was saying it had been a lady killed. Jesus… it hadn’t been pleasant.
Thunder cracked outside, piercing through his headset. He paused, waiting, praying that the power would go out. His lights stayed on. Bastards.
By 9pm Mike crawled into bed. His friends ribbed him relentlessly as he bid them farewell. It had been a late night before. Sometimes you had to get in an early night.
Mike lay flat on his back, his eyes wide open. The rain clattered against his window, drumming away. His eyes were glued to the window, on the opposite wall. Lightning flashed every now and then, illuminating the tree that hovered near his second story window.
He yanked his eyes from the window, glancing at the red glow of his alarm clock. 10:44PM. Oh hell.
Slow breaths. That’s it. Count it out. Like counting sheep. 1.. 2.. 3.. 4.. 5..6….
Mike awoke to the absence of noise. He caught the sound of his bedroom fan sputtering to a halt, the blades whirring to a stop. The sudden absence of everything, the a/c, the fan, roared in his ear. His eyes opened to the window. Lightning flashed outside, illuminating the figure, and the tree behind it.
The figure? Sitting up, Mike felt his pulse quicken. “Who…” Was all he could get out before the lightning flashed again. The figure was leaping, arms outstretched.
Clamoring backward, the sheets and blankets bundling under him, Mike felt his throat suddenly burning. He punched at the air, fighting, when he realized he could hear the whir of his electric fan spinning to life. The AC was kicking back on, and the faint red glow of his alarm clock was blinking. The strobe of the red light showed nothing before him.
He coughed, realizing he had been screaming. Panting, wheezing, trying to catch his breath, Mike stumbled toward the bathroom, and puked in the toilet.
Mike dragged himself to his office and powered on his work computer. It had been a long, sleepless night. His eyes found every dark space and latched onto it, searching, trying to pierce the pitch darkness.
He clocked in and stared at the Wait button. It was a drop-down list, and it was already 7:30am. He was supposed to have put himself into “Available” 30 minutes ago. He took another gulp of coffee, and with a shaky hand he clicked the button.
Through his office window he could see that the rain had let up. The clouds were heavy and thick, but no rain. He checked his Amazon cart for the fourth time. The twelve pack of battery powered lanterns would arrive by 5PM. Damned Prime. The six pack of 1-pound bags of salt would be arriving the next day. Damned Walmart.
Mike didn’t know shit about spirits. But he’d watched Supernatural, and while he didn’t have a demon killing knife, he could get some salt.
The woman on the phone screamed at him, her voice so loud it was cutting out the microphone. It lessened the effect she wanted but Mike sat silent. His cat Torb had crawled in his lap earlier and was fast asleep, oblivious to the woman spitting venom only a few inches away.
“Ma’am, like I said earlier, a password book is a common practice. There’s nothing wrong with it.”
The woman screeched again. Mike peeled the headset off his head and plopped it on his desk. He curled into Torb’s tabby ears, snuggling him. “She’s just a wittle angy.”
The cat purred his pleasure. Mike noticed the lady had stopped screeching and pulled his headset back on. Only one ear this time.
He waited.
“Hello?”
“Yes ma’am?”
“Fuck you.” The line went dead. Mike stared at the screen, his case log half filled. The timer had swapped to the off-call count and was steadily clicking away. Mike let his eyes go blurry, the words and lights melding together.
He snapped his eyes to the counter. 12 minutes? That wasn’t good. He noticed the blinking alert on the team chat.
Shit shit shit!
He sent himself into available, pushing Torb out of his lap. It was going to be a long day.
Mike stood before his power switch in the living room. He had a lantern strapped to his belt, and another in his hands. The sun had set late, around 8:40pm. The salt circle was closed around him. It was time to see if he could lure this son of a bitch out.
He pulled open the panel and looked at it. He had never flipped the breakers before, but they looked just like levers, or sideways light switches. Some of them were labelled, and one set even had some kind of joining plastic on it, so it had to be flipped together. He activated his lanterns, the soft orange glow barely competing with the bright light of the living room ceiling fan. He hardly noticed his hand shaking, more like someone who observed something in someone else. He laid his palm on the first set, closed his eyes, and began rapidly flipping all of the switches.
With his eyes closed he couldn’t tell if anything had happened. He opened them slowly and turned to face his living room. The orange glow now seemed much brighter, casting long shadows into the hallway and near the office doorway.
Mike could feel pressure rising in his chest, his breathing came too rapidly as his eyes darted this way and that, looking for the shape, the figure. Nothing. Silence. Stillness.
Gulping for air Mike let his logical brain begin rambling. There were way too many variables here. Was his light scaring off the figure? Did the salt work that well? Was only cutting the electricity to his apartment enough? Had he missed a switch? No, no they were all flipped. Was it possible that the salt was like a wall, and the figure was right there, out of sight?
“Oh Jesus. To hell with this.”
Mike stepped out of the salt line. Nothing.
He fumbled his lantern light, then clicked it off after three tries. Silence.
With a chuckle that sounded like rasping gasps, Mike flipped the light switches back on. Stillness.
Then he felt pressure on his leg, and he leapt back, a scream threatening to escape him. All that came out was a shrill laugh. Torb stood under him, tail straight up and back arched. He vocalized his disapproval.
“I’m sorry buddy, c’mere.” He scooped Torb up and walked with him to the bedroom.
Mike watched the weather app almost by the hour. Any time the rain threatened him, he dumped salt out around him. The ground was speckled with the stuff, little white mounds and lines everywhere. He was like a really bad drug addict, leaving his drugs lying around.
Three weeks went by with no new storms. He even got a sunny day on one of his days off. He didn’t work up the courage to go check out the pool, but from his office window he saw many groups heading that way, floaties and towels and swimsuits, oh my.
He tried to game. He was told multiple times his shooting seemed off. Yes, he was alright. No, he didn’t need anything.
Then he saw it. One week out, on his Wednesday off. A 90% chance of rain. A severe storm, they predicted. Last week predicted the same thing, of course, but that one hadn’t come to pass.
Mike’s eyes darted to the corner of his office closet. Nothing. He stormed over and slammed it shut. Stillness.
Silence.
The days passed in a blur. Less and less sleep. Once he even awoke, flailing out of bed, believing the figure to be right there. But the power had been on, and it had been his imagination.
Wednesday arrived. He had stayed up all night Tuesday with the rain falling lightly. Now the storm began in earnest, just like they said it would. He paced around, little pockets of circled off safe areas. Most of them were broken and useless, not contributing to anything meaningful. He really wished he had the demon killing dagger instead of this damn salt.
Finally, he went into his office. He put a line of salt at the door. He sat at his desk, and twirling in his chair he poured the contents of an entire bag out around himself, flinging most of the stuff in useless clumps.
He launched up the game. Thunder roared outside, the rain smashing into his window and walls and roof and pounding in his ears. He had a lantern in his lap, one on his desk. He thought he left one hanging on the door.
His play got progressively worse. He missed more shots. His friends logged off one by one, wishing him a good night. 2:26am rolled around, and his power held. Maybe… well. He didn’t want to jinx it.
It happened. The screen flashed off. The a/c came to a screeching halt, the ceiling fan above lost power with a dying whir.
Mike stared at the black screen, and with a deft hand he flicked on the lantern in his lap. He hit the one on the desk too. The orange glow filled the room.
The headset rolled to the ground, falling into a pile of salt. Twirling in his chair, Mike waited.
knock… knock… knock…
It was so quiet, he almost didn’t hear it. It came again, louder this time. Each knock was deliberate, with an even cadence.
Mike stood up, the pit in his stomach reaching his feet, making his toes tingle. He dragged through white snow and reached the door. He opened it. It creaked meaningfully as it swung wide.
Standing before him was a tall figure. It wore no clothes, except for spikes covering the torso like a stalagmite tunic. Black pitted eyes stared straight ahead, not fixated on anything. Long black fingers that ended in points twitched back and forth.
Frozen in place, Mike stared at the being that had been terrorizing him. Then, it stared back. Its black eyes somehow seemed to expand on seeing him, then it looked down. Mike followed his gaze. Realization was replaced by horror as he saw the paw print that broke the line of salt. Torb’s tail flicked out of the room and out of sight.
Backing away, flailing his arms, Mike cried out. The light flicked off and on, the figure appearing to teleport closer with each flare. The ceiling fan buzzed back to life and whirred angrily with each interruption. The a/c was roaring on and off. With his back against the wall, he slid to the floor.
Thunder crashed outside, the peal of it so violent he jumped. There was a pop from the surge of electricity, and the power died its final death. He knew this time it wouldn’t come back on. Silence.
He looked up to the figure standing before him. Stillness.
Nothing.
Dallas is based in Houston with his wife, daughter, fat orange cat, and dachshund. IT guy by day, author by night.