"Hello, Professor."
The voice rasped from the recorder. He'd found it on his desk. "You
may be wondering who I am, but I assure you that isn't what's
important. What's important is who you are, and what I can offer
you."
He looked at the recorder. Who had left it here?
Why?
"We're going to play a game. Day after day you encounter
hundreds of different people. You wield the power to help them
succeed in life, or to ultimately send them spiraling down into the
rat-hole of mediocrity. You can make them feel important to you, to
others, and boost their self-confidence. Or you can turn them against
their friends, their peers, and most horrid of all: Themselves."
He'd read about this in the paper, and seen it on the news, but
never thought it would happen to him.
"What I have to offer you,
Professor, is appreciation. From the students you teach to the life
you live, you don't seem to appreciate much."
He picked up
the phone and dialed 911, but discovered the line was
cut.
"Precautions must be taken, and steps must be watched,
Professor Thomason. You've been poisoned, but there is hope. It is
a very simple poison, any hospital can give you an antidote, but for
now, it would be in your best interest if you were to stay right
where you are."
He stopped at the door. If there was more to
the riddle, he should hear it. Jigsaw was known for giving hints and
clues in his messages.
"There is a warehouse not far from here.
You can go to the warehouse and receive the antidote there, or you
can risk running to the hospital, pumping the poison further into
your veins."
He would have to run. That morning his car was
stolen. Now he knew why. The hospital was about five blocks away, to
the east. The warehouse, however, was only three blocks away, and to
the west.
"You're not allowed
to come in contact with anyone aside from the doctors at the hospital
or me at the warehouse." The message continued, "For there are
more ways to die than one, and poison can be the least of your
worries. Will you choose the right answer on this 'test'? Or will
the final bell ring before you get to finish? The choice is yours.
Good day, Professor, for it may very well be your last."
He
grabbed his coat and walked out the door, doing his best to look calm
and carefree as he made his way down the school hallways. Why him?
What had he done?
"From the students you teach to the life
you live, you don't seem to appreciate much."
What did
he know? He was a mass murderer. He wouldn't know what it's like
to deal with one hundred kids a day. One hundred wise cracking, smart
mouthing, disrespectful kids. If he did, he just killed them. That
was, after all, what killers do.
He walked out the school doors
and headed west. The warehouse would be his best bet, because then
he'd have Jigsaw's fingerprints, description, and location to
give to the police afterwards.
It took him about an hour
and a half to reach the warehouse, because he was walking, and
walking slowly. Every step could be his last, and who knows when or
how Jigsaw had given him the poison?
It could have been any
number of times or ways. In his food, his water, while he slept… Or
yesterday. He thought.
Yesterday he'd gone to the hospital
for his monthly check-up, and the doctor recommended a new medicine
to relieve stress. Jigsaw could be anyone, including that doctor, and
the poison could be anything, including that medicine. He'd only
taken one pill, but that would be all it took.
I'll soon
find out. He thought as he opened the warehouse door.
"Hello?"
He called.
"Hello." A raspy voice answered, "Please, do come
in. And shut the door, it's cold outside."
The professor
shut the door and took a few steps forward, but stopped, deciding the
least amount of movement before he got the antidote would be best.
Jigsaw then proceeded down some metal stairs that had led to a
walkway up above. His footsteps echoed as hetook each slow
and deliberate step, interrupted every now and then by a very hoarse
cough.
He was wearing a black cloak with red linings, his head
bent low and the hood pulled over his face as he walked towards the
professor. He stopped about five feet away from the professor,
reached into his inner pockets, and pulled out a small vile
containing a purplish liquid.
He bent down and rolled the glass
vile over the dirt floor to the professor, who picked it up eagerly
and took out the stopper. He drank the entire thing in one gulp.
"I'm
afraid to tell you, Professor," He rasped, "That you were never
poisoned."
"What?" The professor dropped the vile in
surprise, but quickly bent down to pick it up again. He collapsed,
clasping his heart and moaning.
"That was the poison."
Jigsaw said as he picked up the empty vile and began to walk away, "I
did say, after all, that it would be in your best interest to stay
where you were."
"But…" The dying man gasped, "That's
not fair!" He was sweating profusely as the poison took its
tulle.
"Life's lessons aren't fair." He replied as he
began his ascension up the stairs.
The professor gasped as he
recognized the irony of this statement: It was what he had told most
of his students over the many years he'd taught at that
college.
"Life isn't fair," Jigsaw repeated, "And yours
has come to an end."
