"Stop the Torture Already"
Author:
Anne
Rating: R for language only
Chars: Remy, Bobby, a comic
writer who shall go nameless...
Disclaimer: No one below belongs
to me. If they did, some of them would be a hell of a lot happier.
From the diary of "X-writer"
I keep telling myself
there had to be something wrong with that last pint of Chunky Monkey.
Something Salmonella, E Coli wrong. I mean, what I saw and heard
can't have been real.
Yet there's the window I don't remember
opening. And the lamp I don't remember breaking. Not to mention the
chunks of ice melting all over my back yard...
The night
had been a fairly uneventful one. Write, eat, sleep. All had been
going according to plan. So much so that he'd allowed himself a
little ice cream before bed. He'd long ago learned that good periods
of writing came more frequently with regular rewards, and ice cream
was one of the best ways to give his subconscious what it was
craving.
Unfortunately, one thing it had not been craving was
his sleep being broken by a loud crash, followed by a hand clamped
across his mouth. A very, very cold hand. One that as lucidity and
wakefulness slid across his brain, he realized was a hand made
totally of ice.
He opened his eyes and tried not to faint back
into unconsciousness.
The ice sculpture standing by the side
of his bed pulled his hand away. Behind him, there was a normal
flesh-toned man with a bandage across his eyes backing away from the
writer's bedside table, now covered in pieces of wire mixed with
ceramic. "Sorry about the lamp," the ice sculpture said.
"Remy doesn't quite have the hang of sneaking around the way he
used to. Has to do with not being able to see anymore." The
sculpture crossed his arms. "But then, you'd know something
about that, wouldn't you?"
The writer sat up and pulled
the cotton sheets protectively over his torso. He rubbed a hand over
the lower half of his face. It felt wet. "I don't..." he
said. "You can't..." He dropped his hand to the mattress.
"You both can't be here. You're not real."
The blind
man swung his face back around towards the writer, turning from where
he'd been facing the opposite side of the room. "'You're not
real,'" he parroted. "So sure of dat, are you? Even when
we're standing here, in our maimed and mutated states before
you?"
The sculpture laid a cold hand on the blind man's
shoulder. "What did you expect, Remy?" he asked. "I
think we can tell from the things he keeps having us and our friends
do that he can't be that bright." He pulled the hand back and
pointed it at the writer. "Hell, there's even a reviewer who
says his work's on the level of a retarded seven year-old.
Considering all of that, I'd say we probably shouldn't expect a hell
of a lot from him tonight."
The blind man stumbled
forward and felt along the edge of the bed, checking where he was.
"Remy don't care," he said. "Remy just want this over.
Can't be useful if can't see. Can't be good for Rogue if I'm blaming
her and everyone else fo' my uselessness. Remy needs this
fixed."
The sculpture sighed, dropping the accusing hand.
"I know, man, I know." He glanced at the sheets covering
the writer, and the writer thought he saw a thin coating of frost on
the edges of the cotton.
"Do you see what you've done to
him?" the sculpture asked, icy hands swinging between himself
and the blind man. "Hell, do you see what you've done to me? I
don't know what's worse. What you've done to our bodies or what
you've done to our personalities. I mean, this..." He ran a hand
up and down his torso. "Is bad enough. Do you have to make us
lash out at everybody too? Because you know, having been altered and
crippled...no way we'd want to have our friends be there for us in a
time of need or anything. That would be just too logical. Or
obvious. Or something else I'm too dumb to think of."
The
writer ran a finger along the edge of the sheet. Yes, frost. That
was definitely frost. He tried not to gape at the sculpture when he
looked at the icy form, but he could feel his jaw hanging low, no
matter how he tried. He moved his mouth and made it attempt an
answer.
"But you both don't understand," he said.
"I'm just trying to make you both interesting. Insert a little
difficulty, a little angst into your stories. Fans love that sort of
thing. We know. We get letters."
The blind man threw his
hands up into the air. "Fans love angst when it's done well!"
he shouted. "This is not 'done well angst.' Troubles are
supposed to bring people together, make them closer. You just use
them to push people apart. What's the point of that? What good does
it do us to suffer if it don't work to make us closer to the ones
we're supposed to love?"
The writer stared at the blind
man, eyes drawn to the bandaged eyes. "But, it will. I promise.
You just have to give it time..."
The sculpture snorted.
"Yeah. Time." Cold eyes focused on the writer, and the
frost creeped up the sheets a little more. "How long have you
had me dealing with the whole 'my chest is turning to ice' deal? Did
you have me go to any of my friends about it? Say, maybe my best
friend, the big, blue-furred doctor?!" A mist of water started
to seep into the writer's sheets. "I mean, I can see being a
little embarrassed about not handling it well, but sooner or later,
you'd think I'd have to kick myself in the ass and go see him.
Except, you know, when I didn't."
The sculpture ran a hand down the
middle of his chest, then flung it out to his side. "Exactly how
pathetic do you want to have me be?!"
The writer gripped
his sheets, ignoring the now-increasing cold and wetness. "I
didn't..." he said. "I mean, I intended to..."
The
blind man abruptly turned and starting feeling his way towards the
open second story window. "We're wasting our time here, ice
cube," he said, carefully finding the sill. "He ain't about
to see what we're talkin' about. We oughta just go home and try
throwing ourselves on our friends' mercies."
The
sculpture nodded. "If we even have any friends left," he
said. The sculpture walked away from the edge of the bed and gently
laid his hands on the blind man's shoulders, pulling the man away
from the window. The writer watched until he realized that his sheets
had suddenly become dry again.
"Wait!" he called. "I
don't want you to think...I honestly did believe that I was doing a
good job with you guys. I thought I was giving you fan appeal."
The
sculpture gestured angrily with his hands, cutting off the writer and
making an ice slide out to the back yard. "We don't care. Just
fix us," he said. He helped the blind man find his footing and
watched as the other carefully slid down to the ground. Then began
to step out himself, throwing one last remark over his shoulder as he
did so.
"I mean, who the fuck do you think you are? A
fanfic writer? Leave the angst and torture to them." He stepped
over the sill. "Most of them do it way better than you do
anyway."
And with that, he slid out into the night. The
writer watched him as he left. Then quickly hopped out of bed to get
to his computer.
He adjusted the thermostat as he walked by
it. The house suddenly felt a whole lot colder.
Fin.
