Sleepless Nights
ISBN: 978-1-932926-37-8 (ebook)
Copyright 2014 by Pierre C. Arseneault
Cover design: Pierre C. Arseneault
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Names, characters and incidents depicted in this book are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of the author or the publisher.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photo-copying, recording or by any information storage or retrieval system without written permission of the publisher, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review.
Shadow Dragon Press
9 Mockingbird Hill Rd
Tijeras, New Mexico 87059
[email protected]
www.shadowdragonpress.com
Visit the author at his websites:
Mysterious Ink - www.mysteriousink.ca
PCA Toons - www.pcatoons.com
You can also follow Mysterious Ink on Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mysterious-Ink-Pierre-C-Arseneault-Angella-Jacob/167392516657647
or email: [email protected]
Also available from Pierre C Arseneault, written in collaboration with Angella Jacob is Dark Tales for Dark Nights. And check out their forthcoming collaboration, Oakwood Island.
Sleepless
Nights
By
Pierre C. Arseneault
Shadow Dragon Press
Albuquerque, New Mexico
This book is dedicated to my good friend Angella Jacob. Without really knowing it, she inspired me to write, reawakening my desire to tell stories.
Table of Contents
Subliminal
The Statues of Pine Glen Forest
Sleepy Meadows
Bill and Frank
Pre-ordering Murder
Flljan, Flljan
Penny For Your Thoughts
Speechless
Nothing Ever Happens in Carlton
Author’s Note
Subliminal
1
“I can’t believe how much blood there was,” Jason Donavan thought as he walked at a brisk pace. He was looking down at the sidewalk, marching toward the campus on the way to his dorm room. He struggled with his heavy backpack, his heart still pounding from the adrenaline; it felt as if his feet barely touched the ground as he hurried along, focused on his destination.
2
About forty minutes ago, without knowing the following events would be leading to this moment, Jason was sitting down to lunch at one of his regular spots, Pickadeli’s Sub Shop.
The taste of the lettuce was overwhelming his taste buds as he crammed a large portion of the cold cut sub into his mouth. A pickle fell onto the table before him as he wrestled with what was left of the fat, foot long sub that was the Tuesday special. Chewing, he heard nothing of his surroundings, drowned out by his own personal music choices from his iPod. This current playlist featured a local Indi group with an original song he loved.
He looked up and scanned the room, trying not to be obvious about it, but Jason couldn’t help himself. He stole another glance her way. The girl in the slim fitting, black jeans was sitting across the sub shop from him with an older lady, who had to be her grandmother. Her long, raven-colored hair hid her pale face a little when she looked down at her iPhone. She would occasionally glance away from it and look his way. When she would catch him looking at her she would smile coyly at him, sipping at her Cherry Cola in the giant, frozen glass mug Pickadeli’s was known for. Her grandmother tugged at her arm to get her attention and showed her an older model flip phone. The girl grinned at Jason, adjusted the ear buds of her own iPod and took the phone from her grandmother’s hand. After a few fast motions of adept thumbs she handed it back to her. With his ears still full of the music his iPod was spewing, Jason watched as the older woman’s frown turned into a smile when she took hold of her phone. He could see her mouth the words “thank you,” and she put the phone to her ear, listening intently.
When Jason looked down again he saw that a glob of ranch sauce had fallen onto his iPod when he was looking away. Quickly he dabbed at it with a napkin that was already dirty and made it worse. Frustrated, he reached over to the table next to him and picked up some clean looking napkins the previous customers had left behind. He rubbed one of these against his glass Cherry Cola filled mug, using the condensation to dampen it, and proceeded to clean off his iPod.
As he shot a glace around the room he noticed the older couple, a bald man and a woman with an old fashioned perm, get up and make their way out of the place. A familiar looking man in his early forties wearing a brown tweed jacket with old fashioned elbow patches proceeded to get his soft drink in his frozen glass mug from the self serve counter. The pimple-faced teenager behind the cash register put his sub into his tray and said something that Jason didn’t understand because of the beats of the Indi group in his ears. With a nod and a smile the man gathered his tray with his drink and sat at the table near the young girl and her grandmother.
Just then Jason felt his iPhone vibrating on the table as he reached for his Cherry Cola. With his attention on the text message from his fiend Tony, and a quickly sent reply, Jason never noticed when the raven-haired girl stood up. What did catch his attention was when he saw Cherry Cola splash all over the table behind the girl, spraying her grandmother as she hoisted the heavy glass mug above her head. She stood behind the man with the tweed jacket, and before anyone could react to what was happening, the girl brought down the glass mug as hard as she could with a loud crunch that echoed through the room. Jason could see that she was stone-faced, almost without emotion. The seated man was clearly stunned by the blow and unable of stopping the young, emotionless girl as she raised her now bloody mug to strike him again, and again, and again. The man in the tweed jacket stumbles as if to get up, but his legs buckle under him as all the strength is drained from his body. Blood trickles down his face as he struggles to grasp what has just happened.
Leaving a trail of blood mixed with droplets of Cherry Cola on the ceiling the girl strikes him again. This last blow sends him sprawling forward onto the table, tipping it over. Falling to the floor he drags along everything that was on it, spreading his food and drink onto the ceramic tiles. He lay on the floor amidst the food and spilled Cherry Cola for a brief moment before the convulsions start and the blood pools around his head. The girl, standing over him, watches numbly as he spreads the blood with his body and head while twitching and gasping for what would be his last breath. He stiffened and then lay very still, his tweed jacket now covered in blotches of dark crimson consisting of the cola and his own blood.
The girl lifts her blood covered hand letting the slick, bloody glass mug fall and shatter loudly on the floor as she begins to shake uncontrollably. She looks over her blood-speckled arms and then touches her face, looking at her fingers in amazement. It was as if she had just come to realize that her face was speckled with the stranger’s blood. She let out a very loud shriek as she began sh
aking violently. Her eyes rolled back into her head and she crumpled to the floor, unconscious. The stunned onlookers, including her grandmother, only now reacted to the horrific scene they had just witnessed.
“OH MY GOD!” cried her grandmother.
A man’s voice called from the back. From somewhere behind the counter he could be heard shouting “Somebody call 9-1-1,” which came out sounding like nine-whon-whon.
Across the room sits a small piece of a cold cut sub with napkins covered in ranch dressing, a heavy glass mug still containing some Cherry Cola, but the young man who had sat there was gone.
3
“I can’t believe what I just witnessed right there in Pickadeli’s,” Jason said to Tony, who had arrived just in time to witness the event. They were walking quickly away from the restaurant.
“What the hell did the guy do?” asked Tony.
“I didn’t really see what happened,” panted an out of breath Jason.
“I was at the door, just about to go in when I saw the guy fall on the floor and she started screaming. I mean it happened so fast. And then I saw you coming at me before I ever made it through the fuckin’ door.”
“Dude, I had to get out of there before I tossed my lunch,” Jason uttered as he struggled with his heavy backpack hanging over his left shoulder. He felt his stomach churn as he fought back the urge to vomit as he replayed the scene in his mind.
“Do you think it’s like that guy last week from across town?” asked Tony. “You know; the guy who beat the old lady to death with his skate board and then said he didn’t know why he did it.”
“Maybe,” replied Jason.
“And that fourteen year old kid who beat his stepmom to death with her own groceries. With a fuckin’ canvas bag of canned goods for fuck sakes.”
“How the fuck should I know!” exclaimed Jason as he walks across a busy street, cutting through traffic. A car swerved to miss him and honked his horn, screaming something they didn’t understand. But neither of them acknowledged it as they marched on.
“It happened again last night in a pool hall downtown. This guy beat his best friend to death with a number nine pool ball.” Tony looked over his shoulder nervously and added “people are fuckin’ going crazy man.”
“Tell me about it.”
“Well I guess a greasy burger it is then. I’ve got a sudden craving for red meat. I’ll see ya at class, dude,” said Tony as he jaywalked across the street and headed for a place called Greasy Al’s Burger Joint. (A place where the burgers aren’t greasy, Al is.)
4
Having made his way back to his dorm room and kicking off his smelly sneakers, Jason booted up his custom-built desktop computer and locked his door. He sat at the machine he had put together himself out of discarded parts he had collected from friends, and had built the best computer on the campus. Opening his backpack, he removed his laptop and his new books on psychology that he had just bought for his second year in university. Jason looked at his cluttered desk, and then tossed aside a pizza box that still contained a few bits of crust, and several empty cans of Monster Energy Drink, placing them into the trash to clean off a small space on the desk. He then collected some scattered books on music into a stack and neatly placed the new psychology books on top. He removed his iPod and placed it on top of the stack of books.
For a moment he sat there with mouse in hand staring blankly at the screen. He couldn’t get the image of the girl out of his head. He could still see her holding the mug over her head just before she brought it down hard, smashing in the stranger’s skull. A stranger he now was starting to remember as Mr. Baker. A substitute teacher he had had last year for a couple of classes. Shaking off the thought, he unlocked his computer and opened a browser, clicked on Bookmarks, scrolled down and clicked on Ramstunes.
The web site’s home page showed the latest song picks by the site’s owner, who was a big fan of music. The same man who Jason got to know very well since he was also his music teacher, Harold Ramsey. The professor encouraged his students to record original music and put it on his web site for people to download for free. He told them that it could make for great lessons in many schools of life. Teaching you humility when you failed, he also emphasised the value of being humble when you succeeded. Jason found the thought of all this to be very interesting as he, like a few others also, was studying both psychology and music. But it also inspired him to use this idea for his own studies and perhaps research into psychology by using his talents in music.
Harold had said that if your song didn’t get many downloads and people didn’t like it, then it would teach you valuable lessons about failing. He loved to use phrases like “if at first you don’t succeed, try again.”
This inspired Jason and so he recorded and mixed a couple of instrumentals, which he posted under the fake name he still uses. They had a slight peak at first as people checked them out for the first time, but eventually they failed to attract an audience. They had been strictly rock-style grooves. His latest effort was different, a blend of a rhythmic techno beat, with a rock flavour.
Checking the download stats he saw that his latest song was getting a great number of downloads considering the small population of kids using this site. It had been downloaded a total of 1,106 times over the last week.
Jason pulled a red notebook from a drawer and noted the date and the download stats in a list on a well worn page. He went to the site’s general list and saw that he was sixteenth in a list of top one hundred downloads from the site’s Indi chart.
He looked up the song’s downloader’s comments and saw thirteen new comments since his last visit to the website.
“This song rocks, dude,” posted a guy called “RockStar Phil.”
Another comment from a girl named Debbie, who said. “Best workout song EVER!!”
He scrolled through all the comments and stopped to re-read his favourite on his previous instrumental piece called Slumber, which read “Truly a hypnotic masterpiece.” This was the comment that had inspired him to create his latest work, and had surpassed his previous efforts.
Logging out, Jason then logged in under his own name. He went to see the anonymous account he had created tagged under the name “The Sublime Rocker.” Once logged in as a user, he clicked on “download” for the song listed as Subliminal only to get a message reading “File not found.” He smiled in satisfaction that the program he had embedded in his music file was working. With a quick logging out and back in as “The Sublime Rocker” he proceeded to upload the song to the site again. Another fact he wrote in his notebook in a list of dates and times. A list that was keeping track of the cycle of times his file became corrupt and the times he had to upload it again. This he did to prevent people from being able to share the music without his approval. This was important if he was to keep control of his experiment.
He got a great deal of satisfaction from having this control over the file. Satisfied the song was in the process of being uploaded again he sat back, plugged his iPod headphones into his computer and hit play on his song. Listening intently to the music’s hypnotic techno beat and heavy rock sounds that were filled with the repetitiveness he had worked hard to achieve. The lyrics he had recorded himself more as spoken word than actual singing. Then using a few computer programs he turned the spoken words into a guttural tone that was barely understandable to most and layered this on top of the music track thus creating his latest masterpiece called Subliminal.
He clicked play and mouthed the words and sort of sang along to it. While listening, he clicked on his browser and typed in “random murders in Stonevalley,” as the lyrics echoed in his mind.
Subliminal
Subliminal
Subliminal
Subliminal
You’re getting sleepy
Subliminal
You’re getting sleepy
Sublim
inal
You’re getting sleepy
Subliminal
You only hear the sound of my voice
Subliminal
One the count of three you will do as I say
Subliminal
You will pick up the nearest thing to you that will make a good weapon
Subliminal
You will beat someone near you
Subliminal
You will not stop until they are dead
Subliminal
Once you awake from the trance
Subliminal
You will remember nothing
Subliminal
One
Subliminal
Two
Subliminal
Three
Subliminal
Subliminal
Subliminal
Subliminal
The song had been downloaded a total of 1106 times and had been effective to prove the power of hypnosis over the subconscious a total of seventeen times. He wrote more notes in his red notebook as he read about the latest news on the recent outbreak of violent murders. Later that night he would visit the news site again and write notes on the witness accounts from Pickadeli’s Sub Shop and the girl named Clara who killed a stranger named Franklyn Baker and claims to not know why she did it.
5
Jason found himself sitting at his regular table at Pickadeli’s, unsure how he had got there. He looked around the room and everybody in the place was looking at him. Before him was a foot long, cold cut sub and an ice-cold frozen mug, empty except for a single red-stripped white straw. The blood-speckled, pale-faced, raven-haired girl was standing over a man who lay on his back, propped up on the leather patched elbows of his blood-spattered brown tweed jacket. He was turned towards Jason, blood on his pale face, his hair matted and dripping while staring directly at him.
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