The Faceless One
© by Gary Morton (4400 words)
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Rusty
pictured death as a typhoon.
It was a great power that could wipe out every trace of his miserable
existence. When he was a child and a good life was as certain as his dreams,
death was an enemy. Now death appeared as a friend, but an illusive friend
constantly escaping him. On every street and alley he could see the Reaper
ahead, his cloak of bones and decay fluttering as he fled around a distant
corner.
Glancing
around the cluttered shack he called home, he figured he could just as well
be looking at the mess in his own head. Rusty knew he was disturbed, a
misfit - he had that power of reflection. His self-image wasn't distorted;
it was like truth he couldn't escape. A shambling loner, wherever he worked
he’d eventually be fired. People just didn't like him and it just wasn't
fair. With women the hitch was that he was a total fickle, and few women
cared for him, especially not after they learned of his bizarre sexual
preferences. His gay lovers quickly learned to hate him even more. He wasn't
really dangerous, and although he preferred dirtier words, weirdo was the
term most often used when it came to him. So what could he do? The things
that got him off weren't things he'd wished for; he was just sort of stuck
with them.
A brief and
twisted idea emerged and then suddenly vanished as Rusty realized that today
was money day. His employment insurance payment was already on the wire,
popping directly into his account. He booted a pizza box aside and for some
strange reason he saw the bank computer staring at him with beady eyes.
Nasty thoughts possessed him and he felt his blood boil as he walked to the
back door. Swinging it open, he clenched his fist and shook it, thinking
that this time he wouldn't fail - by God! He'd have just enough money to
kill himself.
When the
brightness of the sun cleared, he saw through blood haze and realized he was
shaking his fist at a little girl skipping on the beaten earth of his back
yard. He shook his knuckles with even more fury, "Get out of here you little
brat! I'm the bad man!" A grimace bit his face as she thumbed her nose at
him and ran away. Funny, the way her eyes are so tiny and beady, he thought
as he watched her bolt through a space in the fence.
Out on the
street he walked to the bank with some plans hatching in his head. It was a
beautiful summer day, but his mind was like a bloodshot eye that hurt in the
light. Rollerblades in the window of the Fabulous Sports Shop were the first
thing he really noticed. It would be nice to roll over to one of those steep
hills in Rosedale and then speed skate down to the highway. By the time the
traffic finished with him he'd look like a carcass thrown from a meat wagon.
It was a nice thought but the chances of survival were too good, and he
didn't want to end up in one of those new wheelchairs that wipe your drool
and spoon-feed you as you roll along.
He envisioned
a Smith and Wesson revolver, and then got angry with himself. He'd tried to
buy a gun but couldn't meet the license requirements. "Damn new laws,
they're screwing us all!" he said to a telephone pole as a misfit-hating
businessman tip-toed across the road to avoid him. He'd also tried to buy a
hot piece, only some slick black dudes up on Jane Street had sold him a
replica. To make matters worse, some other guys had surprised him while he
was in an alley trying to figure out why the replica didn't work. He'd hoped
they'd cut his throat and leave him to die like a dog. Instead a gang leader
with a lower lip as big as a trout had nailed him in the balls. Rusty wished
his wallet had been a replica.
Drowning, now
drowning was something else. He stopped in his tracks. It hadn't worked
before because he always went down to the river and hopped off the bridge.
Then a panic response would cause him to swim to shore. What if he rented a
boat and motored out a ways? Naw, he thought
with a shake of his head. Too much room for failure there, and if it was
possible to fail he would do so. He didn't like the idea of his life
flashing before him either - he was trying escape it not relive it.
Beady eyes
again, staring down from a maple tree. He halted; they made him think of
little black pills. Cutting through the park he thought of drugs he could
overdose on. The little black pills he'd taken last time were out, since all
they'd done was turn him into a zombie for three days - and give him
pneumonia. He winced as he recalled the jabbing pains in his chest. Drugs
were only an option if he was sure they'd kill him fast and clean, and with
his high tolerance - rat poison only gave him diarrhea - to everything, they
weren't the best option.
Gas was out.
He'd already turned a pal's house into a pile of splinters with gas. Who
would expect the mailman to come and press the doorbell while the place was
filling up with gas? Rusty had been returning from the ZIPSHOP with matches
when he saw the roof blow and come in for a landing on the house next door.
What really changed his mind concerning gas was the sight of the mailman's
head bouncing up the sidewalk. Gas was too messy. It was for slobs and
litterbugs, and there were a lot of slobs - guys who made sure they left
their brains dripping from the walls. There was even the jerk that jumped
from a skyscraper and went through the glass roof of a shopping mall. There
are ways of saying good-bye, and coming through a high roof as a rain of
blood, glass, sausage bits, giblets, chickens quarters and cubed beef tongue
isn't one of those ways.
Inspiration
was drying up, but he could see the bank machine and he was sure a handful
of bills would also be a handful of ideas. The machine looked lonely and
abandoned, attached to the side of a gas station like a growth of plastic
junk. A robot corpse and he wished it was a spitting maw of doom instead of
a money dispenser. Sinister, that's what it is, he thought, trying to
imagine something sinister about it as he stepped lightly across the street.
At least it's as sinister as a JANE CA$H machine can be.
The tinted
window was down and he saw his own desperate face staring back at him as he
took out his card. Stepping sideways, he checked his profile as he slipped
the card in the slot. He always looked so much better in profile; if only he
could stand sideways when he talked to people he'd feel cool instead of
lousy.
The plastic
window slid up and he found his profile replaced by two beady eyes. He
jumped back as if from a rattler, then he cautiously stepped back up.
Disbelief made him light-headed. Instead of the usual instructions two eyes
were in the slot. They were textured like black marbles and had an intense
shine.
He stuck a
finger in to poke an eye.
"Don't touch,"
said an intelligent and very human voice.
"Who are you?"
"I'm the
devil."
Rusty's eyes were rather flat to begin with and
now they went as dull as fried eggs. His face soured like he'd seen a roach
skitter across his plate. "This is a trick. I know the devil isn't a
machine. You better choke out some money or else."
"Please pay up
the interest on your credit card, sir, or I'll punch your teeth out."
"So, the
dirty, rotten bank is behind this."
No sooner had
Rusty spoken than fifty-dollar bills began to shower out of the slot. Moving
swiftly he pocketed the wad, then he glanced around.
"See, I don't
work for the bank. I'm a robber."
"I thought you
were the devil?"
"I don't want
people to believe in me. Actually I'm called the faceless one. You are
destined to be the eyeless one. Today I'm wearing this bank machine for a
face. I'd much appreciate it if you would help me get a new face?"
"I can't. I'll
be killing myself today, and I really don't know how to help."
"Scratch my
back and I'll scratch yours. Help me and I'll help you die?"
"Okay, but
how?"
"Take me out
of the machine and put me in your pocket. We can talk more later."
Rusty plucked
the eyeballs from the slot. Now that he took a close look he could see they
were very old. Almost like real eyes that had blackened and petrified. He
figured he'd struck a poisonous jackpot so he stuck them in his pocket as
carefully as he would pearls.
Walking back
across the street, he saw his pal Steve coming around the corner. Steve had
a bounce to his step so that he seemed to be walking on air or climbing a
ladder. His cheeks were sunken and he had a forehead full of moon craters.
Rusty had chummed around with him in high school. He figured Steve to be the
sort who wasn't bright enough to kill himself.
"Listen,"
Steve threw an arm around him. "Ever thought of robbing a grocery store or
maybe even a bank?"
"Nope, but I'm
looking for a gun if you got one."
"I have a
replica, but forget that for now; let's talk hold-up. A supermarket heist
would be easy, but I guess you've never had the guts to do business with
real crime."
"Don't bet on
it. I'm gonna commit the big M today."
"Who is this
insect you're terminating?"
"Myself."
"You are
uncool, very uncool."
"Yeah, I'll
show you something cool."
"Okay, hit me
with it."
"It's not an
it. It's a who."
"All right.
Who?"
"The faceless
one, here he is," Rusty said, pulling the eyes from his pocket. Than he
blinked as no eyes were there. He was holding two black marbles."
"The faceless
one. Right. Listen, Rusty, kill yourself right away, just for me."
As soon as
Steve stepped away the marbles became morbid eyes. "Gasoline," said the
faceless one. "You need a big can of gasoline. Now don't ask questions, just
do it - believe me, you'll see death and love dying."
As it
happened, Rusty had a large gas can among the rubbish in his back yard. He
judged it suitable and took it to the station. The faceless one is a genius,
he thought on the way back. But if he thinks I'm gonna
set myself on fire he's also crazy. Curiosity got the better of him and he
took out the eyes. They were brighter now, with a shine almost like a
bluebottle fly.
"I know all
about fire," Rusty said. "If I light myself up and live I could end up
screaming in pain for weeks before I die."
"What you do
is set fire to some old carpets. The smoke will be lethal poison that'll
kill you quick and painlessly."
Rusty jammed
the eyes back in his pocket. Ahead, through a hole in the fence, he saw the
little blond girl playing among the rubbish in his back yard. Setting down
the gas can he picked up a stone and winged it off a rusty hubcap by her
feet. She took off and ran behind a pile of old bricks and shingles. He
didn't bother to pursue her, but instead cut through and opened the padlock.
There was a bong as a stone struck the gas can. Turning, he saw the girl
duck and run behind the fence.
Smartass kid,
he thought as he went inside. An idea came to him and he went straight to
the couch and sat down. Why not forget helping the faceless one and just
asphyxiate myself and get it over with - yeah, why not? As he got up to pile
some carpets in the center of the room, he noticed a leak in the gas can
where the stone had struck. Checking the contents with a slosh he found that
a good bit of gas had already leaked out. Quickly, he carried it back out to
the yard and plugged the hole with a piece of rag.
Back inside he
decided to have a last cigarette. A Lucky Strike. But when he tried lighting
the smoke he wasn't lucky. The matches were damp. After three or four broke
one fizzed and went out. Frustrated he snapped one hard on the emery paper.
It lit but the head flew off and landed in spilled gasoline. The gas ignited
and flames poofed and followed a line across the
room and out the door to the can. To his horror he could see the little girl
standing out there, preparing to toss a stone.
It was a stone
that was never thrown. The gas can burst into a sheet of flame and engulfed
her. Thinking to help her he snatched up a blanket and ran through the
flames. She was already a human torch, but when the blanket went around her
she became a fireball. He hadn't noticed that the blanket was gas soaked.
Staggering
clear, Rusty beat out the fire on his clothes. It was too late to save the
girl; she'd died before she could even scream. He grabbed a mat and went to
work beating out the flames in the house. When he stepped back outside again
her smoking corpse was crumpled beside his old rusted-out Ford.
Grabbing the
feet he dragged the body into the house, burning his hands on her melted
shoes in the process. Since it was a flash fire he figured no one had
noticed, or if they had, thought it was a controlled bonfire. It dawned on
him that he'd put the fire out when he could've inhaled the fumes. Goddamn,
he muttered, wondering why he always did the wrong thing.
After locking
the doors he dragged the body into the bedroom and closed the curtains. The
little girl hardly looked human at all. The burlap blanket was burned to her
in such a way that she resembled a charred fire log. Only her head and feet
protruded at the ends. Her face was hideous, the mouth forced open by a
tongue like a big scraping from the bottom of someone's oven. Two holes
running with thickening lava were her eyes, and she had only a blistered
lump for a nose. Some of her hair hadn't burned, although now it was
scorched and smoke colored.
This was big
trouble; if the cops were to come they'd call it murder. He'd be ruled
insane and put in a place without even a belt to hang himself. He wept,
feeling like he really had gone mad. The thought of people discovering that
he'd fried a little kid was unbearable. His photo would probably appear next
to the killer clown in the crime flashbacks. And what about the trial, all
those shrinks and lawyers pretending to be on your side while they really
felt you should be disemboweled. Questions, sweat and endless interviews;
you had to be long-winded to answer to justice, and they would never let you
die.
Hanging his
head got tiring. Maybe the faceless one had an answer. A way to kill himself
fast. He took out the eyes, and found their stare to be both morbid and
fierce. "You tried to cheat me," the faceless one said. "I'll make you pay."
From a wicked
stare to a hypnotic gleam, Rusty saw tiny windows grow in the pupils. A
vision took him, thoughts of suicide vanished, drums pounded in a rain
forest, a beat of the blood, hot as an eruption from a molten god. There
were bubbles in a cauldron that resembled the faceless one's eyes, and
silver began to flash and take form. Finally, he was looking down, watching
himself take a knife out of the cutlery drawer in the kitchen.
His eyes
belonged to the faceless one; they were evil and intense. Blood thick as
strawberry syrup oozed as he cut the corpse's head off. His face became
lined, his neck muscles corded as he strained on the blade. Once the head
was free he sat in an arm chair, cradling it in his lap. Two burning eyes
were all he seemed to be.
Soon he knew
it was time and he got out a sharp fruit knife. With deep and precise cuts
he removed the scorched skin and scalp. The skull and the rest of the body
he wrapped up for burning in an old carpet.
Taking a
sturdy needle from a wooden box on his dresser, he prepared to sew the lips.
Using pins he held them everted while he sliced
some leather fringes off an old coat. With fishing line for thread he
stitched the headskin up, then he sewed the
leather through the lips.
Now it was
time to boil the headskin. Holding it over the
pot he muttered some verses of a heathen incantation. The water bubbled red
when he plopped the skin in . . . some parsley and spice served for
seasoning.
After an hour
of cooking he used tongs to remove the headskin
and dried it with a towel. Taking out a jar of honey he combed some through
the sparse hair, and then he hung the headskin
on a rusty nail on the door.
Out back he
built a small fire, making sure to place some large stones on the blaze. His
eyes were arsonist wild. He watched until the fire smoldered out, then he
took down the skin. Using a small spade he carefully filled it with hot sand
and stones. He set it upright on a plank and in time it began to shrink.
Stones and the sand were forced out at the neck. Rusty had taken care to
arrange the remains of the hair so that it hardened neatly into gruesome
place.
Darkness had
fallen and now the moon looked on with the faceless one as Rusty built a
bonfire and burned the carpet-wrapped body. Using a hook and chain he hung
the head over the fire to smoke it. At midnight, when only ashes remained,
he took the shrunken head inside and placed the faceless one's eyes in the
empty sockets. Then he touched it over and hardened it with resin. For a
final touch he polished it and sealed it in a large gleaming jar.
He was in
his rocking chair when he came back to himself, and he stared in horror
at the hideous creation in the jar on his lap. So the faceless one really
was some kind of devil, and he'd arranged the girl's death in order to come
back as a shrunken head. It caused his heart to sink; he didn't like the
idea of devils being real. They'd put him in torment when he succeeded at
suicide, or at least they would if he was stupid enough to die with one in
his lap. He decided that disposing of the faceless one would be a wise move.
Dirt was baked
on his hands and his skin crawled with invisible maggots so he put the
faceless one on the coffee table while he showered and shaved. It did no
good, his stomach was sour and weak and a soup of sickness swam before his
eyes. Bugs seemed to be eating at his back and he ground his teeth as he put
on a red T-shirt and jeans. After scrubbing his hands raw and red he gave
up, figuring his state of the creeps was an emanation from the faceless one.
Rusty's logic had never been good, but his
thoughts were clear enough to tell him that an evil being like the faceless
one would have plans that didn't include him as a long-term partner. He was
just an instrument, some idle hands that'd been used. His hair began to rise
and he felt hackles lifting on the back of his neck. Insects crawling on
him, his breath like garbage cans; the faceless one had to be turning him
into a zombie slave. Zombies and shrunken heads go hand-in-hand he figured.
That's what he must be up to.
He grabbed the
jar. The eyes were glowing softly, like Mars, and the face was absurdly
hideous. "Okay faceless one, you got even. So what's this you're doing now?"
The gruesome
lips didn't move but the faceless one spoke. "You want to be dead so now you
feel like a rotting corpse."
"That's not
dead. That's the living dead. Take the feeling away."
"No."
"Okay, listen.
I've decided to drown myself. Want to come down to the river with me? You
can watch me jump."
"Why jump. I
can make you feel like a bloated corpse now."
Rusty held up
his hands, and though they looked normal he could feel his fingers swelling
and popping. His testicles blew up to balloons and split grossly. Gas began
to hiss from holes all over his body. A monstrous slab of rotten meat was in
his throat. Wet things were swinging from a gash in his belly. Even his eyes
were swelling. The worst pain came from the worms he could feel
chowing down on his back.
"I want to
die, not feel like a corpse."
"But what's
death other than feeling like corruption forever?"
"I'll say a
prayer before I die so I'll feel good."
"Say any
prayers around me and I'll make you feel like a bucket of maggots."
"I don't know
any prayers, so don’t worry."
To be
practical Rusty took a covering from an old birdcage and draped it over the
faceless one before going out. Although he felt somewhat better his feet
still smacked the pavement like dead meat. The moon was full and the night
had graveyard airs. No sooner had he got to the corner than a police cruiser
appeared and began to crawl alongside him. Sweat appeared instantly and
beaded his brow, then the cruiser's sparklers began to spit hellfire and it
sped off.
"That was
close," he said, stopping and peaking at the faceless one.
"Fancy that.
They think just like you."
"How's that?"
"They were
thinking of throwing you in the river."
"Why are the
good guys rotten?"
"Boy, are you
stupid. Power leads to arrogance and corruption."
Deciding it
would be better to stay off the streets, Rusty cut through a long park that
stretched over to the banks of the river. Usually there were more muggers
than trees and he didn't want trouble. He took the cover off the faceless
one so the sight would scare off any creeps.
Shambling
along feeling like a swamp thing, he made his way over the rolling turf, all
the while keeping his eyes fixed on the dark arch of a bridge and a
glittering ribbon of water. As he grew close to the rush of water and spray,
willow trees overshadowed him, their dark shapes creating a tidal wave of
death and dark night that was soothing. He never would've imagined that
feeling like a corpse would give him insight. Yet he had an awareness of all
men as corpses. Life was a flash of brilliance few people experienced. Even
the faceless one, when he turned mortals into shrunken heads, was trying to
be alive, to break out of the numb ritual of death and darkness and glimpse
the flash.
Shades of
anger began to lighten his step; the corpse cloak of the faceless one was
melting in the moonlight. He found himself hating the dead, too much of the
world was dead, and as he walked up the footbridge his eyes were alive with
madness.
He set the jar
on the wall. Directly below a fast piece of river spat foam. He watched it
bubble, knowing why he'd chosen suicide. It wasn't that he was trying to
find the darkness; he was trying to find the light. Except for a few happy
days he'd always been dead, and he wanted to escape. Suicide was the
manifestation of an inner truth.
He looked to
the faceless one. The eyes were bright, but this time with fear. "So you
want to watch me die!" Rusty said, seizing his moment of revenge. "Then
watch from the rocks!"
He swept the
jar up and tossed it in one smooth motion. It tumbled toward the water, a
bright soap bubble in the moonlight. Rusty never saw the splash; his eyes
caught fire, shooting stars of pain, and he gouged the embers of it out.
Then he was aware of floating darkness and death as he fell to the water.
A
reflection of clouds and the summer
day almost hid Rusty from view. But he was there, rocking in his chair with
his hands in his lap. His face was to the window, but he wasn't aware of the
world outside.
It was
lunchtime on the grounds and one of the younger psychiatrists looked up,
getting a clear view from his place at the picnic table. He turned to his
mentor, a rather sophisticated older man with salt-and-pepper hair. "He
believes he's a corpse, and though he put his eyes out he sees a hellish
world he can describe in vivid detail."
"Yes," the
older man said. "I studied his case, and the strangest part is what happened
to the man that rescued him."
"What was
that?"
"After he
pulled him ashore he lost his mind. He's in a padded cell. He screams a lot,
mostly about a disembodied head he thinks is staring at him."
---The End---
