They sat and talked about how Fred’s new position was
going. Fred said that he really enjoyed
it and the responsibility that went with it.
After having three beers and watching an old rerun on the television
with Sam, Fred decided to go for a walk to see what was going on in the
neighborhood. It was a bright sunny day
out and the warmest that it had been for a long time. He took a few hits off his pot pipe, put on his sneakers, and
headed out the door. Sam asked, “When
you get back we’ll go to the store for some beer, okay?”
“Sure Sam, anything you
want.” Just as he finished saying that
the door shut behind him.
Fred headed in the direction of The
Mill for no particular reason, but sub-consciously, as he wrote later that
night, he wanted to see if he’d have any more episodes. This has to be my imagination and just my
mind playing tricks on me. It was as if
there was a magnet drawing me toward The Mill.
Was it his imagination, or was
there something there?
At the top of the hill that led
down to The Mill, he paused. The
feeling that brought him this far was far too strong to resist. The gate was locked, so he turned onto the
roadway that went around The Mill. As
he rounded the corner at the far end of the road that led back to the main
road, he felt relieved. “So far, so good.” But just then he heard, “Fred help us,
Freddie come back, we need you.” The
voice was different this time from the first three times. This time it sounded like a small crowd of
people that had mixed voices of old, young, male, and female. He took off running toward the main
road. Turning around to take one last
look at The Mill, he noticed a group of figures that had been formed in the
smoke coming out of the exhaust of the heat-treat area. He stopped to rub his
eyes to make sure he was seeing what he saw, and as he opened his eyes the
figures seemed to be drawn back into the building, disappearing at the same
time.
When he got home, he went to the
store with Sam as he said he would.
When they got back, he took a beer to his room. He sat on his bed holding his head in his
hands, shaking it back and forth not knowing what to do. He decided to smoke some pot. I thought to myself as I read, Fred depended
on beer and pot to make everything all right.
Sunday ended with Fred staying in his room, only coming out for a beer
and to use the bathroom.
June 14, 1997, This has to
stop one way, or the other.
Sam woke Fred up the next morning
after he hadn’t heard Fred’s alarm go off.
Sam had already made the coffee when Fred came out, so all he had to do
was grab a cup and run out the door, so he wouldn’t be late. All the way to The Mill, Fred was thinking
that he had to concentrate...he was there by himself, and if he let this stuff
get to him he wouldn’t be able to perform.
He made it to the time clock with only two minutes to spare. He was headed down the stairs to the heat-treat
area when he heard, “Fred, Fred,” in almost the same tone as the voices he had
been hearing. Turning around quickly,
he shouted, “Leave me alone!” He was
surprised to see Andy sneaking a few drags off a cigarette and realized that it
must have been him he had heard. Andy
wanted to know if Fred wanted any, but Fred shook his head and hurried to his
area.
See ya at break, dude,” Andy
yelled after him.
In heat-treat, Fred couldn’t
concentrate at all. The voices kept
asking for his help, for him not to leave, and for him to kill. Over and over again the same phrases...the
only thing that changed was the tone.
Sometimes it was a female; mostly they were males, young and old. There was no place that he could go to
escape them. They seemed to follow
him...never letting up, always persistent.
He started to see more and more human faces and figures coming from all
five ovens. He would turn his head away
from them, and when he turned back they would be gone. Somehow he managed to do his job and do it well
enough that no one noticed his conversations with the voices he was
hearing. If they did, he would surely
be called crazy and probably lose his job.
At the end of the day, as he headed for the time clock, all of a sudden
he felt a draft that gave him a huge whiff of the smoke from the ovens.
This time that smoke from all the
ovens formed into the figures he had seen before. They appeared to surround him as he spun in all directions
looking for a way to escape. His
movement was stopped abruptly, as if something had frozen him in place. Panic set in and before Fred knew it he felt
something engulf his whole being.
Looking down, he saw one of the cloudy figures moving up his body. This entire cloud entered his nose and mouth
until it vanished completely. He
immediately started to choke violently and fell to the floor.
He searched around as he tried to
get his breath to find someone to help him.
But then the large cloud was gone and he could now move freely. The end of the day buzzer sounded, and as he
punched out he looked around and saw that everything appeared normal near the
ovens. He turned and ran up the stairs
to get out of there as fast as he could.
He looked back once more and saw nothing unusual. He continued to hear the voices until he
left the building, but now they seemed more intense and much c