69: A Short Novel of Cosmic Horror
Page 16
“Christ.” Missy bit her lip. “When did she pass?”
“Just now. Maybe in the last hour.”
Missy nodded, gripping the counter for support. She felt unusually unsteady.
“I know how close you were.”
Missy cleared her throat. “She was a good woman.”
“Alice wanted me to find you, in case you wanted to say goodbye.”
Using her thumb, Missy wiped a teardrop from her eyelash. “Yeah, I'd like that very much.”
Emily held her hand as they strolled down the hallway, no hurry in their pace. The whole way there, Missy felt lightheaded. Like a piece of her had been taken, forcefully and without mercy. It was a strange way to feel about someone she'd only known for a year, but Emily was right—she'd grown close to the woman. She had made her laugh, had told her riveting stories, treated her as if she were family. It was the mother/daughter relationship Missy had never had with her real mom, the one who'd raised her, if she could call it such. If spending all afternoon scoring drugs and all-night shooting junk into her veins counted as parenting.
“You okay?” asked Emily. They were outside the woman's door now. Alice, the head CNA, was waiting there with two other nurses. They looked sad. It was a sudden loss, one that would be felt from the top on down.
“Yeah, I'll be fine.”
Emily helped her to the door.
“Take as long as you like, dear,” Alice told her.
More tears came; she couldn't help it. When she walked into the dorm, she felt something heavy drape over her, as if she'd walked into a sauna and the weight of the steam had folded over her like a lead curtain. As if there was something alive in here, with her; although, there shouldn't have been anything.
(dead)
How can she be dead?
Sixty-nine was too young. Way too young.
Missy sat down across from the woman who'd died sitting in her chair, her head tilted back, staring at the ceiling. She held a pen in her hand. A note had been left on the desk. Missy stared at it, wondering why she'd scribbled down two numbers the moment before she succumbed to death's touch.
6.
9.
Sixty-nine?
“I'm so sorry, Miss Guerrero,” Missy said, reaching out and taking her cold, freezing hand. Her flesh felt like an ice cube.
(dead)
Something moved in the woman's throat. Her flesh danced. Missy jumped back, shrieked. The other nurses quickly filled the room, each whispering their concerns, asking questions Missy didn't have answers for.
Are you okay?
What happened?
Is everything all right?
Instinctively, Missy reached out, felt for the carotid artery in Miss Guerrero's neck. She knew she had found it when she felt the woman's pulse.
“Amanda?”
Nothing.
Still.
Frozen.
(dead)
“Oh my god, I think she's alive.”
Sixty-nine.
Too young to die.
Acknowledgments
Much love to my wife, Ashley, who keeps me sane. Thanks to Matt Hayward who made the paperback version look nice and pretty with his expert formatting skills. I salute Tim Feely and Lydia Capuano for beta reading this beast and providing valuable feedback. Of course, a special thanks goes to my editor, Jenny Adams, who makes me sound smarter than I actually am. All the Bookstagrammers and book reviewers who have liked, shared, and posted about my work - y’all are the best and I wouldn’t be here without your support. THANK YOU. If you’re reading this, then hugs go out to you as well.
Until we meet again, friends.
Tim Meyer
6/14/2019
About the Author
Tim Meyer dwells in a dark cave near the Jersey Shore. He’s an author, husband, father, podcast host, blogger, coffee connoisseur, beer enthusiast, and explorer of worlds. He writes horror, mysteries, science fiction, and thrillers, although he prefers to blur genres and let the stories fall where they may.
You can follow Tim at https://timmeyerwrites.com