DISCLAIMER: The Thundercats are owned by other
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Thundercat Universe.
“Stranger with
Candy”
By RD
Rivero
ÓAugust 1,
2000
His feet splattered the mud
of the deep, soggy pools that littered the undergrowth. Sometimes the brackish water would spray
into the air to land upon the crumbling barks of trees, sometimes it would hit
him in the face and he would stop to wipe it clean with his
arm.
On his back he carried an
overburdened sack, bulging with
hints and outlines of the package that lay hidden, unseen
within.
Alluro's work, his
self-imposed chore, was nearly complete, he just had to find the right
spot. He stopped for a moment to
rest, weary from his last, nocturnal encounter with Chilla. He set the bag on the ground and then
sat himself on it. Above, he could
see through the branches of the trees that the sky was not as dark as it had
been only minutes before when he left the sanctuary of the underground
ruins.
"To live for you," he said
facing the ever-brightening heavens.
"To die --" his eyes roamed over the earth, the dungy earth. Rotted, decayed --
perverted.
Surrounded by a receding,
gray mist, he saw animals, slump around in the stench of the humus, wallow in
the infested mud, bloodied, beaten, skins raw and peeling. One of the smaller rodents lay across a
rock and flopped onto its side, ants and worms crawled out of its nose and
between its teeth -- its last gasp inaudible.
In sadistic pleasure he
laughed -- then he was struck by a loud, booming sound. His ears perched, he arose to see the
Thunder Tank approach from a distant, murky path. Alluro went back to his work -- and
quickly. He did not want to be
discovered, not before he was done, not before his plan was
complete.
[Part
One]
From a hollow trunk, burst
apart by the violence of that night's torrents, birds and small animals scurried
into the distance, into the shadowy murkiness of the undergrowth. Trees circled with luscious vines and
flowered foliage hung low toward the wet earth, soaked in a heavy dew that
trickled loudly around fallen, moss-covered logs.
The last great storm of
summer passed early that morning.
The sun ascended above the peaks of the tall, eastern mountains and
flooded the valley with crisp, yellow sunlight. Thick, black clouds dissipated into gray
mist, convoluted by sputters of lightning.
The Thunder Kittens and
Panthro practiced in an open, quiet clearing. The crass was soft and ankle-high in
most parts -- unicorns often grazed there and travelers were known to stop for
moments of peaceful, tranquil bliss there.
The Amazonian women frequented the area during their mating season, they
believed their ancestors once held a strong fortress, a castle long ago consumed
by the earth, in or around those grounds.
The youngsters had been
given knumchucks: a red one for WileyKat, a blue one for WileyKit. The boy fluttered his weapon in the air
in a mocking display for his sister's amusement. "Ah!" he winced -- one of the carved
ends hit his face above the right eyebrow.
In shock he let the instrument fall.
A rustling came from the
trees but none turned to see.
"Ha, ha, serves you right
--"
"Will you two pay
attention?" the panther called from behind -- he appeared from the air, from
nothing. He then walked up front
several feet before them.
WileyKat reached down to
pick up the weapon. He stood close
to his sister, too close for comfort.
"WileyKit, move away from your brother or else you two'll be hitting each
other."
Satisfied that there was
enough room to maneuver between them, Panthro began: "Now," he said, "I want you to feel the
knumchucks in your hands -- feel them, know them."
WileyKat tried hard to
follow the instructions. WileyKit
tried her best to hold back the impending laughter. "Snap out of it," she scolded
herself.
"Weigh them
--"
"Ha, ha ha," she giggled
and quickly covered her mouth with her hands. Her weapon dangled, hanging limp between
her fingers. "WileyKat, stop that!"
she said to divert attention away from her.
"Me? And what did I do?" He looked at her and laughed and dropped
his weapon again. She let out
another giggle but that time it was forces, noticeably
forced.
"Can't you two pay
attention?" Panthro asked annoyed.
Eyes stared at them from
the bushes -- a devious smile, too, but both went
unnoticed.
The twins practiced for
several minutes getting to know their weapons. WileyKat gained a little control over
his clumsiness. WileyKit wielded
hers like a pro.
"The lighter one you'll
hold on to, the heavier one you'll twirl in the air."
Panthro had them spinning
their knumchucks.
A cold wind. Trees around the scene swayed and bent
in the bone-chilling current. It
was undeniable that the summer season had come to an end. Soon they would need to find a more
temperate location to drill their marksmanship. Thankfully, after Skytomb's untimely
demise -- after the engines exploded near a pool of evaporating methane -- and
all the Lunatics had perished, much of Third Earth was safe to enjoy
again.
The chain on WileyKat's
weapon snapped and the heavy end was sent flying into
trees.
"Watch out!" he
cried.
"It landed near those
bushes," Panthro said.
"I'll go get it," the boy
answered.
He broke away from the
triangle to the patch of forest that jetted into the field. He disappeared in the shadows within the
green vegetation. WileyKit had kept
her eyes on him until -- she looked up in surprise. Panthro had put a warm hand on her
shoulder.
"Ah!" her brother screamed
and she looked away from the older, studlier Thundercat. "Ah!" came a second shriek, then a
third, then a fourth followed.
"What's going on?" she
asked.
"WileyKat's spotted
something."
He ran into the forest, she
was hot on his trail.
At the end the two found
WileyKat on the ground on his knees throwing up a noxious, yellow-red, runny
substance, one streaming mouthful at a time. Little bits of white meat floated in the
slick mess, in the puddle that had formed on the ground between his legs. Weakly, he pointed to a nearby
bush.
WileyKit stood still in
shock, neither approaching, neither backing off. Only Panthro dared to approach. The whole world was silent but for the
sounds of their collective hear beats that resonated through the
trees.
The broken part of the
knumchuck had slammed down through a thorny, prickly bush, its leaves were
unnaturally brown, crisp, barren even for that pre-autumn weather. Intertwined within the hedge were two
naked bodies, bloated and transfigured.
The hands and feet were tied together over the backs. The ropes had, in time, rotted through
the green-gray flesh of the skin while bulbous fungi grew from open scars. The stomachs had been cut open in an
‘x'-shaped incision. Entrails had
flopped out onto the ground, petrified.
Parts of bones and organs had been removed -- flies, beetles and crawling
maggots had taken their place, an army of ants scorched into the crisp,
sunburned blood vessels.
The heads were covered in
black, leather bags.
He did not want to, he
would have turned and ran away but -- he was driven irresistibly onwards to do
it. One bag was tied tightly in
place by a thin rope that came away cleanly to his sharp claws. The bag nearly shot out like a
projectile, so concentrated were the waste gasses that had accumulated
inside. A green haze evolved from
the sorry sight. He gagged but he
did not stop. He grabbed the top of
the bag and in his fist he pulled off the cover to reveal
--
"Ah!" he screamed, he
darted back, he fell to the ground and crawled on his hands to the youngsters
who looked on wide-eyed.
The body he had disturbed
turned and slunked forward involuntarily.
The head had been skinned clean.
The jaw had been removed, the tongue drooped lifeless. An eye fell from its bare, open socket
but did not fall to the earth -- it was still connected, attached to the head by
thin, shriveled nerves and blood vessels, worms and maggots slithered through
the gore.
"Get back, get back to the
Thunder Tank," he said, he screamed like a young girl, shrill-tongued, "get back
at once!"
[Part
Two]
The cluttered basement of
Cat's Lair was cast in perpetual shadow and yet the vast room was not completely
dark. A clear bulb -- whose single,
coiled filament glowed softly -- swung
freely from a long chain over a skeletal, metal table. A red blanket was swept across the top
and dangled down the sides. The
cloth-cover hid well what textured contours and deep wrinkles tried hard to give
away.
"I haven't finished the
autopsy," Tygra said, he was the first to appear from the murky oblivion. Cheetara, Liono and Panthro came out
into the open after him. The four
stood around the table in a tight circle.
"Yet I've discovered plenty of useful information." He leaned forward but stopped -- he
looked at the others from left to right.
"I'm going to pull the sheath back now."
Panthro grunted, Liono
stepped back a little. Cheetara was
nervous, visibly nervous. She kept
one hand firmly under her chin, the other was kept in swift, constant jerky
motion.
Tygra reached out and
grabbed the farthest corner of the blanket from him and in one turn, by the wave
of the arm, he exposed what was beneath -- the two, grotesquely disfigured
bodies he and Panthro had brought from the clearing that noon. Cheetara looked away but not in disgust,
she had been forewarned about what to expect. No, something else, something else that
-- she caught sight of a withered leaf tthat had been flung in the air. Her eyes followed it while it swam
violently in a current until it came to rest soundlessly on the
floor.
"These two are, in fact,
Unicorn Keepers. Their physiology,
or what's left of it, indicates that."
"So badly decomposed,"
Liono said, he gagged for a moment then regained
composure.
"Would you like an open
window?" Tygra asked.
"No, no, don't be
bothered. Go
on."
"OK. They have been dead for some time
already. One, two weeks," here he
pointed to the inner edge of scar under the ribs, "I can tell by how deep the
maggots have eaten through the skin."
The tiger removed a small
pile of dirt and rubble that he had failed to clean earlier. He had been very careful, he had else
been perfect. The rest of the
Thundercats stood in disembodied silence, watching him while he performed that
most menial duty.
"The male is intact for the
most part. His face and jaw have
been removed, not hacked nor butchered.
Notice that the bones were not traumatized or chipped and that the
muscles, ligaments and connective tissues are uninjured. A very sharp razor or cutting instrument
was used to remove the flesh with the least injury
possible."
"Why?" Panthro asked, "Why
be so meticulous?"
"He was careful, the
killer, he wanted the parts he removed to come out as cleanly as they
could. Now," he said, refocusing on
the conclusions of his incomplete report, "the cause of death was this
catastrophic incision across the midsection. It was not
instant."
He stopped and reached
under the table. He pulled out
curved, metal basin -- the kind used to catch vomit. A blue, wafer-like cloth was draped over
it. He set it next to the body and
removed the napkin. Inside was a
stomach, shrived and dry. Tygra had
attempted to cut a small slit along the side but the organ snapped in half. The solidified contents slipped out in a
single, brown gooey mass.
"Vegetables, no meat, but,
oddly, I found traces of candy."
"Candy?" Liono asked
stunned.
"Flecks of red and
white. Candy fruit, maybe, but I
think it was harder, denser. Notice
the upper, front teeth. Bits of it
are stuck to the enamel."
He waved them over to the
female.
"Now her face was butchered
-- with a serrated knife. The skin
around the trauma is raw and burnt by the decay process and not by the sun --
remember that their heads were covered in leather bags. The flesh has been shredded in a random,
chaotic manner. They eyes have been
popped, the nose has been sliced in half, the cheeks torn into stringy
threads. Samples of skin were
removed from her thigh and her entire left buttock was amputated clear to the
bone."
"And the cause of death?"
Liono looked at him.
"Blood loss, massive blood
loss, even though she, too, had that deep incision made to her abdomen. It was postmortem, just like the
shredding of her face was postmortem."
"She ate the candy, too?"
Cheetara asked. She was about to
say more but the tiger answered her quickly.
"Yes, I also found traces
of that candy in her stomach."
"What, what lunatic did
this?" Panthro was incensed, angered more by his earlier reaction than by he who
cruelly killed two innocents.
"The only physical clues we
have are several strands of long, white hair." Again from under the table he pulled out
a glass tube, topped with a cork.
The fibers in question were within.
"It doesn't correspond to either of the victims."
A collective pause
followed.
"I can only tell you how it
was done. The killer removed those
parts that he wanted and left the rest alone. In that I do see the hint of purpose,
but --"
"But?"
"I'm not a betting
man."
"Could they have known
their killer?"
"No," Cheetara said, "no,
he was a stranger. He lured them,
trapped them." She walked around
the corpses. "Darkness. I see --"
"What is it? What is it Cheetara, what do you
see?" Liono held her in his
arms.
"We know the killer." She glared into his face. "I've sensed this, evil, before only
never like this. Perverted,
distorted, unnatural."
"Calm down,
relax."
"Evil, the evil of
something natural that went wrong, horribly wrong."
"We should go back and comb
the area," Tygra said to Liono.
Liono held Cheetara's arm
and looked at the others. "We
should learn more about what's happened.
The Unicorn Keepers are out friends. We'll go now."
[Part
Three]
It was late in the
afternoon but it was not yet four.
Still the skies were beginning to darken. In the ensuing weeks the sun was doomed
to set earlier and earlier everyday, in a stone-gray, depressing aura. The air, that had at least been lukewarm
since morning, was now chilled in a
biting, stinging cold.
The trees rustled and
yellow, brown leaves fell to the ground.
The area where WileyKat had
first discovered the bodies was scoured by Liono. He saw the severed weapon exactly where
it had come to rest but he left it alone while swarms of hungry insects crawled
over its engraved surface.
Tygra and Cheetara worked
the upper, northern boundaries. The
underbrush was thicker there and he was amazed, stunned even beyond the power of
words by the amount of telltale evidence he found there. Cheetara, on the other hand, roamed
around though in search for something, aware of something that the others not
only had but continued to overlook.
Panthro was left to search
through the remained of the clearing -- the south and western sections where the
grass was tall up to his knees, unkept and ungrazed. It was his idea to keep the Thunder
Kittens back at the lair with Snarf.
The kids had seen too much already for one day.
Liono had better luck
collecting bodies but Tygra found many himself. Almost always the corpses were slain in
pairs, one male, one female. The
killer preferred to dump his victims in the northern parts of the grassy
clearing.
The sun was a brilliant
red-orange and falling, fading quickly into the night.
After an hour finding
nothing, an enraged Panthro left the hazy, bug-swamped grass and rejoined the
others. Tygra had erected a large,
blue tent, the canvass flapped noisily in the breeze. Within he had arranged a makeshift
morgue.
Twelve male bodies lined
one side, eleven females were piled on the other. Not all were Unicorn Keepers, in fact,
there was a surprising even mixture of Wollo, Berbil and Amazonian. The men were intact, except for the skin
-- each had a different part of the skinn removed. The women suffered a similar fate,
except that along with skin, organs and bones were
removed.
"I ordered them in terms of
how long they've been dead. Of
course it's not entirely scientific.
I don't have the equipment on hand to make an accurate
determination. These victims were
killed maybe as long as half a year ago."
Tygra pointed to four bodies, so dark and so crisp that they resembled
pieces of over-burnt coal.
"Our killer is collector,"
Panthro said. He got the point
quickly.
"The pattern is,
clear. He, because I believe it's
one man, hunts pairs. There should
be another female, there, out there that we haven't stumbled upon
yet."
He looked at
Cheetara.
"I detect a presence, I've
felt it since, since I saw the bodies in Cat's Lair. The man is still here -- look, this body
is fresh. He was probably killed
today, yesterday."
"Not quite," she was
interrupted, "there was no blood in the area where I found him," Liono
said.
"There was no blood, Liono,
no blood anywhere."
"He is around here,
somewhere," Panthro said sternly.
"These are people who are
known to travel through this area.
I believe he traps them here, kills them elsewhere, then returns to plant
the telltale evidence behind.
Cleaned and dressed with those black, leather bags and free of
evidence. I think there's still a
female body left undiscovered out there.
He's taken one of every organ from the women except for the sex organs,"
Tygra said.
"Sex organs?" Cheetara
wondered.
"From one of the males he
skinned the external genitalia."
"You say he cleans the
bodies of evidence. What evidence
do we have of the killer's identity?"
"Not much except for the
hairs, long, white-gray hairs. No
DNA evidence's left behind, he doesn't rape the women or sodomize the men. In all the victims I've found that candy
-- well, almost all of them, one of the women didn't have
stomach."
"Stranger with candy,"
Panthro said. He turned away to
face the opening of the tent. He
did not need to know more.
"I'm convinced there's
another female body, we must find her, Liono," Tygra
concluded.
"Should we go and search
again? I'm sure there's plenty of
sunlight left," Cheetara said composed at last. "It wouldn't be right to leave her out
there like that, alone."
"It's almost six, I think
we have an hour or two before sundown.
We can go on," Liono concluded although not as eager as
before.
Cheetara even more than
Panthro wanted to run out of that hut of death. Her stomach turned at the sight of those
decaying corpses and she tried hard to keep the revulsion to herself. She could not help but think that at one
time those corpses had been living, breathing, that they once had been standing,
moving around like her, like her friends.
Thoughts, feelings, emotions, desires -- and fear, terror. The screaming, it rang through her ears,
it echoes in her brain and it came from them, from the bodies, from the horribly
mutilated bodies. Faces
shredded.
Violated.
She wanted to scream if
only to silence the crying of the damned -- but once again she held
back.
The smell of death was upon
her, it clung to her heavy fog. On
her hands, on her face, embedded in her fur. She scratched her skin and rubbed
herself raw but she could not escape the totality of its
presence.
Over the open, flat land of
the clearing she looked up into the ever purpling sky -- she saw vultures
circling overhead, their calling muffled by the distance. She looked into out across through the
wilderness and wondered what horrors and unsettled terrors were hidden in plain
sight.
"Most of the bodies were in
the northeast and I have a feeling that place has been combed through entirely,"
Tygra said.
"Then we'll look in the
west, northwest." Liono pointed the
others toward where he wanted them to search.
At first Cheetara stumbled
around the area she had been directed to go but then she began to wander. Not consciously, no, her mind was lost
and unfocused. She reeled at the
thought of an unknown killer, a serial murderer, lurking through the
wilderness. Had she stumbled upon
him before? Did she know
him?
When she returned to her
senses she found herself at the end of a trail she had trekked through only
hours before -- before the grizzly discoveries in that tent. Starting where she had left off she
decided to trust her instincts and so she continued.
The trees thickened, the
skies darkened. She looked back --
the landscape was unfamiliar. She
was lost but, undaunted, she did not let that stop her. Rocks, large boulders and small pebbled,
stones rough and dirty littered the ground.
She stooped and picked one
up to look under it. A red worm
squirmed into the loose earth and disappeared forever. A long-legged, stick insect crawled onto
her hand and she screamed and flung the bug away into the air. It landed on the ground, broken in
half. The back legs twiddled
violently into the air, the front legs, still attached to the head, walked about
in circles, in an awkward gait.
Her heard settled and she
dropped the rock with a dull thud -- she looked at her hand, her fingers were
covered in blood. Panicked, she
turned around quickly and crashed into a tree -- five, long, deep scratches were
carved into the bark, a fingernail was embedded in the wood and covered in fresh
sap.
The cries of the victim
were there, too, she could hear the horror of the eternal wail in her
mind.
Cheetara stepped back. The ground was covered in leaves, far
too many leaves than normal. Few
crumbled under her feet since most of them were green with fragments of thin
stems and branches still attached.
The foliage had been ripped apart recently and by someone experienced in
tearing life asunder.
She did not realize the
trick until it was too late. She
stepped on ground that was not solid -- a net. She lost her balance, she could not stop
the fall and she screamed while she plummeted through the darkness of the
tunnel.
[Part
Four]
When she awoke she found
herself in a cold, dark chamber.
She was on a floor, flat on her face -- her body ached. She had been injured in the fall, her
shoulder dislocated, her leg broken.
She tried to stand but the best she could do was sit up in an odd,
acutely angled position. That was
when she noticed that her wrists and ankles were bound by heavy, iron
chains.
Cheetara mumbled to
herself. The whispers were
inaudible even though the sounds echoed crisply in the stone vault
interior. She looked left to right
slowly, letting her eyes adjust to the dim environment. Light -- a fire from wooden torches that
adorned the nearer walls. The sound
of the flames flickering was omnipotent.
A strong, musky odor was
intermingled with the smell of death, decay -- horrified, she wondered in fear
if she was not back in Tygra's blue tent morgue.
"Hello?" She managed to
utter through the biting pain, the tremors of cold fear.
No answer followed except
for a hiss that then filled the air.
"Hello? Who's there? Who's --"
The hiss returned -- it was
a signal to shut up she realized.
A misshapen, metal bowl was
flung across the shadows, over the floor, toward her folded legs. It came to rest some feet from her. She crawled closer to it -- the plate
was silver tinted green and yellow-brown -- she gagged -- it was tarnished
beyond repair.
Cheetara began to cry when
she saw what was in the plate.
"Eat it," a disembodied
voice spoke. "Eat
it!"
Familiar.
A male voice began to laugh
-- softly.
Familiar.
She turned white, pale,
cold. A brittle, glossy, candy cane
-- red and white -- lay on its side in tthe bowl.
"My friends will
--"
"It doesn't matter if you
eat it!" the voice shouted. The
hidden figure stomped on the ground and the chains that were attached to her
body retracted into the wall behind her.
She was dragged screaming in pain until she came to rest, upright against
the wall completely restrained.
The torches blew out, one
at a time, while the stranger advanced to her until only one firelight remained
-- the one that hung right under the ceiiling, framed in the center of a wooden,
spoked circular frame.
The advancing, approaching
figure, cast in silhouette, stood before her familiar in the deepest sense and
at all levels. Coldness came from
him, from behind him, his long, stringy hair waved in the
darkness.
"Eat it!" he yelled, he
jammed the candy cane he had taken from the bowl into her mouth until she choked
then took it out and smashed it across her face. Sticky fragments and shards of its
substance flew into the air, into her eyes.
"Yes! Yes! Mwahahaha, hahaha, hahahahaha! I've got you now, my pretty. My other self is complete!" Softly, so softly, so very softly: "You want to eat it, you know you want
to eat it." He pressed broken,
pointed end of the stick over her quivering lips. "It feels to good on your lips, don't be
afraid, it's different but don't be afraid. Give in to the fear -- your friends
won't be able to save you, you know that, you know better."
He nudged the sharp end in
between her lips to her teeth to try to pry her mouth open. She resisted but the pain in her body
was too great, too much to bear.
"There, there, let me put
it in your mouth, make it feel good, yes, just like that."
She smacked the sticky
shaft with her wet lips -- the taste was sweet, far sweeter than it should have
been. She felt an odd, tingly
sensation spread throughout her body.
Her pain ceased, her heart settled, her breath was slow and
paced.
"Oh, you know just what to
do, ha, haha, hahahahaha, ha," he spoke excitedly and without restrain. His motions were quick and violent. "Oh, my pretty, you KNOW what to do," he
whispered into her ear while he maneuvered the candy in her mouth, twirled
around her tongue.
Calm once more he stopped,
he stepped back from her.
He let the candy bar fall
to the floor, he pulled out a weapon -- the shiny glitter of the blade revealed
a stinted fragment of his face.
[Part
Five]
"The screams came from
around here, Liono." Panthro shouted into the cold, night air. His breath evolved a slight mist. "Liono?" He held a bright, quartz lantern in his
shaking hand, he brought it up to his face while he looked around in the
darkness of the woodlands. Two
other blue lights, small and flickering, came through from within the
trees. Liono and Tygra were coming
to him, he could see them. "Be
careful, the ground's full of traps."
Another scream -- a howl
echoed up from the hole the panther had discovered.
The Thundercats were by his
side. The world was quiet once
more, eerily quiet. Deep violet
clouds parted to reveal a full moon that glowed in electric
vibrancy.
"She must have fallen into
that hole," Tygra said. He went
down on his knees and called into the absolute blackness of the tunnel: "We'll be right there, Cheetara, hold
on! We'll be right with
you!"
Liono restrained him: "We don't know what's down there,
Tygra. We must find another way in
or we might be caught in a trap too."
"Yes, yes," he backed off
and stood up, "I'm sorry." He
looked down upon himself. "You're
right." He regained his
composure. "The Amazonians believe
that there was once a castle in this area.
Cheetara could have stumbled into an underground ruin, a
bunker."
"Could there be more than
one way in?"
"Tough luck trying to find
it in the dark," Panthro injected.
A slight, laughter -- the
three Thundercats stared at each other in confusion.
"That's
--"
"Shhh!"
Tearing and ripping came
from the hole along with a dull and muffled wail.
"Cheetara!" Panthro
shouted, he stuck his head into the darkness of the
opening.
"Wait, wait!" Liono tried
to hold him back too. "We don't
know what it could be --"
"I see a light -- there's a
light down there," he waved to the others.
"All right," Liono was
desperate to regain control over them, "all right. We'll go down
carefully."
The tunnel had been dug
into the earth by hand, built along a steep angle to the
ground.
The three Thundercats
crawled in very close together.
Tygra was in the lead, he kept his slow pace by carefully holding on to
the crumbling soil of the wall.
Dirt and vermin crawled across his fingers but he did not have the time
to worry about it. The weather had
eroded much of the passage and at the verge of an impending drop Tygra stopped
cold.
"What's the matter? Tygra?" Liono asked, he was at the end
up against Panthro.
"Nothing, it's just gotten
a little dangerous here." He nudged
forward, "Ah!" He slipped and
landed face down in a deeper part of the tunnel. He angled up his head and saw that the
other two were still above, waiting.
He looked down. The
firelight was bright, brighter than he had expected. A warmth circulated through the
tunnel. "There's a drop. Be careful of
there."
He slunked forward out of
the way so that Panthro and Liono could make the drop.
"Are you OK?" Panthro asked
him.
"A little worse for wear
but I'm fine," Tygra answered.
After another fifty feet
the three found themselves in an underground chamber. It was a stone hall with flaming
lanterns built into the walls between barricaded wooden doors. Panthro forced one of them from its
bronze holder. Liono and Tygra
walked behind him while he treaded through the passage until it ended in vast
chamber.
"It's a dungeon," Tygra
said, he reached down and collected an old, battered whip from mounds of
dust-encrusted spider webs. "A
chamber of horrors."
"What other surprises await
us."
From one of the many barred
cells came murmurs, from another cell, whose door was open, came faint traces of
motion, scarcely perceptible in the shadows.
"It's Cheetara!" Tygra saw her through the iron bars of
the door.
Panthro handed the torch
over to Liono then charged. The
door along with the stonework of the frame crashed onto the ground. Inside the cell the three ran toward the
wall where they found her at last, held in place by the chains attached to her
body.
"She's free," Panthro said,
he broke apart the restraints.
Liono took her into his
arms then placed her on the floor.
"What's this?" the tiger
asked. He found a shattered
section of a long, sticky bar. He
brought it close to the torch that he was then holding. It was a candy cane, wet and covered red
-- he showed it to the others.
"Look! Look!" Liono shouted, he pointed between
Cheetara's legs where her uniform had been torn and ripped, the fabric soaked in
blood. Her entire pelvic region was
hollow
A deep gash in the form of
an ‘x' had been carved into her stomach up to the chest.
"It's, it's --" The men were stunned silent by the sound
coming from her mouth. Cheetara
turned her head softly, her eyes opening, closing , her mouth quivering. Liono pushed her hair back from her
face, splinters and flecks of the candy were stuck to strands of her mane. "Ahhh, ahhh, el, ahel --" a last gasp of
air followed, it would have been a word, a name but she had lost the energy to
go on.
She stiffened and her body
grew cold rapidly.
"She's dead, Liono, she's
dead."
Liono started to sob, the
rest looked on in shock at what had befallen --
"Yes! Yes!" A loud, booming voice came from
the distance, from the nearby cell of
the open door.
Without a verbal cue the
three arose and crawled their way forward out of Cheetara's crypt and into the
mysterious chamber that remained in shadow, even in the soft light of the torch
Tygra held in his hand. Still, they
could see the clear suggestion of violent, rhythmic
motion.
"Yes!" A tall figure got up suddenly and stood
before a table upon which he had ridden.
He stumbled away toward an eerie, straw-covered corner out of
sight.
The table, there was
someone on the table, flat and motionless.
The body -- it was horrid, it was unthinkable. The head Amazonian, the neck from a
Wollo, the flesh of the arms, of the legs, the breasts -- everything -- had been
put together from pieces of others, from the victims uncovered in the
clearing. And the newest and the
last, the bloodiest and the freshest, the ultimate, crowning achievement -- that
part -- came from none other than the fallen Thundercat.
The skins were preserved in
a sharp, foul smelling liquid, but there was no life, no
life.
Liono turned his head and
threw up, even Panthro was taken aback.
Only Tygra managed to keep
his head, only for a little while.
He ran his hands over the rough, jigsaw seams of stitches of the
skin. The demonic work had been
hacked, put together in utter and complete randomness. Under the slight pressure of his hand
the makeshift quilt-work came undone.
The patches of flesh and skin came apart to reveal Chilla's body
beneath.
"It's Chilla only from the
chest up, along the abdomen is that same ‘x' shaped scar. It's deeper, it cut her in half." He looked at the others, then back at
the table -- that he then noticed was constructed from an amalgam of bones. "No, it wasn't a cut, it was an
explosion that tore her apart and her missing body parts were reconstructed from
dissected equivalents, from the sacrificed females."
The mouth was open, a
thick, mucus-like substance smeared the lips, flecks of red and white candy
stained the teeth. The
crescent-moon tattoo on her brow had been destroyed by the great heat of
fire. In its place were the words,
scribbled into the flesh:
"CHILLA! TO LIVE FOR
YOU! TO DIE FOR
YOU!"
"What are you doing? Get away from her!" a voice shouted from
the corner.
The killer stood before
them.
"Who are you? What are you?"
The Thundercats turned to
see. The figure, still in shadow,
raised an arm in whose hand he held a heavy club. Panthro yelled and threw his weapon at
it. The crystal-topped club fell to
the ground, it shattered on the cobblestones.
Panthro and Liono rushed
him and tackled him to the ground in a fit of rage and violence not incapable of
Thundercats. His skin was loose --
too loose. Under the light of
Tygra's torch they saw that the figure was cloaked in a costume, a disguise put
together from the leathery, preserved skin of the male corpses. But unlike Chilla on the table, less
attention was given to the male ‘outfit' -- the seams were sown with thick hemp
string. There was no zipper, there
were no buttons, rather the costume was kept in place by knots tied from
shredded, finger-like flesh.
"Wait, Liono, I think he's
dead. I think you broke his neck,"
Tygra said.
The man was unresponsive,
his head tilted back at an unnatural angle.
Panthro stood in shock and
terror -- he stepped back from the scene on the floor afraid of what he had done
-- afraid of what his young Lord had beccome.
"I'll break him in
half!"
The pieces of the male
outfit were torn asunder in Liono's hands.
He ripped the covering from off the face and head. "Murderer!" the lion yelled at the top
of his lungs. "Murderer!" He threw the fleshy mask and scalp to
the side having revealed the stranger's identity --
"Alluro?!"
"He must have gone mad,
Liono," Tygra said, "after her death."
Liono did not
answer.
"Liono?" Panthro asked in a
glassy, child's voice. He was half
in, half out of the shadows by the open, iron door.
Liono looked at the tiger, then at the panther, his lips curled, fangs sharp and wet. He began to laugh -- softly.