Rose Garden Sanatorium - Prologue - UPDATED

in #writing6 years ago

Since the last time I posted about my upcoming series; Rose Garden Sanatorium, I have edited and updated it a lot. So, here is the new updated version!

Prologue

Sam Chaudhary

A large swarm of pigeons suddenly flew up in a panic, disturbing the long since settled dust. Their wings echoed as they clapped in the vastness as if they were applauding the perpetrator that spooked them. Most vanished out through the large hole in the roof. Others, which were only a few, nestled elsewhere; atop of an old door or the other side of the room bobbing along the floor in fear.

They were originally hiding safely in a derelict building. A building that many years ago once held many people. Doctors once would have walked around in their white coats, holding patient records in their hands and with their stethoscopes hanging around their necks looking important. Nurses also would have rushed around with bed pans and other equally rudimentary items, wearing aprons with large red crosses on them and with their hair pinned back into tight buns. Patients would be seen in straitjackets screaming at the top of their lungs when they were due for more sedatives.

The building now, however, was eerily silent - yet if you listened close enough you would swear you could hear a distance ghostly scream. There were scattered red bricks from the broken walls, broken windows boarded up from the outside and graffiti clinging helplessly on the peeling walls. It was obvious the building was no longer in use.

The pigeons made the boy jump as he walked into the open hall, he had accidentally spooked them while he side stepped past a weed that had decided to reclaim the area. His foot knocked a loose brick which had caused the pigeons to scatter. He stopped to regain his breath and slow his beating heart.

The boy was young, his round slightly tanned Asian face still had a hint of baby fat lingering in his cheeks and his short dark hair complimented his dark brown eyes. He stood holding the zipper on his jacket, close to where his beating heart sat pounding in his chest. His jacket was slightly dirty from months of use and not seeing the inside of a washing machine. It was his favourite and deemed lucky jacket, it was dark red with black trim around the collar and cuffs, contrasting with the blue in his jeans, which were slightly too long for his legs, evident from the fraying at the bottom, where his brand new Nike trainers would catch them when he walked.

'It's just an old building,' he thought to himself, hoping to calm his nerves as he looked nervously around himself. 'There are no monsters!' he added, sighing deeply. He remembered what his mother would say to him every night when she would tuck him into bed. That was when he was younger, of course. He was far too big now to be tucked in at night. He was twelve and a half, thank you very much. But his mother's sweet voice automatically filled his head; 'Monsters aren't real, beta,' she would say. 'Beta' being the Hindi word for 'son'. She would do that occasionally, adding in Hindi words into sentences, she didn't want him to lose his Hindi roots.

After composing himself a little, feeling a little more confident no monsters were going to jump out and eat him, he decided to continue moving onwards and through the vastness of the open hall.

'The quicker I get it, the quicker I can get out,' he thought to himself as he climbed over a fallen wall, the broken red bricks threatening to pierce the skin on his legs.

He walked quietly and as quickly as possible to the other side of the hall to another corridor, the smell of urine potent in this part of the building as he neared a door separating the hall from the corridor ahead. He also noticed another smell lingering in the air, yet he didn't think much of it; he had a job to do.

The door, mould threatening to consume it from the bottom upwards, was leaning awkwardly against the corridor wall, one hinge still attached, the other not. Although he was sure his friend told him he'd have to open a door at the other end of the hall? Maybe it just fell down since his friend had been there?

The boy looked down the corridor to another door at the far end. That was the last door he needed to go through, he was nearly there. He walked slowly, stepping over some broken glass and side-stepping past an old chair left discarded and lonely in the corridor. Feeling proud of himself for getting this far.

But something made him stop; a sound. He listened out. He could hear someone muttering, and it was coming from that room beyond the door. He realised that strange smell was stronger here too. He certainly wasn't imagining it. He couldn't place what the smell was, but he knew it was some sort of incense, it reminded him of his Aunt Mysha.

He stood there for a few seconds, in panic. He knew if he ran away now, he'd have his friend at him, telling him he was a wimp for not getting the item he was supposed to get. That damn brick. But if he stayed here, and whoever was the other side of the door was a murderer or something, he'd be dead.

The muttering started to get louder as he stood there, the person was talking louder now, and the boy realised it was a woman's voice. Spiked with curiosity, he couldn't help but walk towards the door slowly and quietly. Maybe, if he got close enough, he could hear what she was saying.

The closer he got, the louder the voice got, but not just because he was getting nearer, she was getting louder. Now able to hear her, he started to realise that she was repeating something, although he just could not work out what she was saying, she was speaking a foreign language. The only word he picked up was 'mammon' or something similar.

'What is she doing?' he thought, 'And what language is that?' He crept closer to the door, his curiosity getting the better of him. He was now right by the door, if he just peaked through the gap, he'd be able to see into the room. He could already see shadows dancing across the walls and floor, there was some kind of light and a waft of that strange incense smell too.

The boy shifted his weight slightly on one leg, so that he could peer round the corner of the door, the room slowly came into focus. There was indeed a woman; a woman dressed in all black, she had one hand up in the air, as if she was waving to someone and the other held something burning. She was now shouting, which the boy was grateful for as he was worried she would have heard him by now otherwise.

He saw the brick laying in the middle of the room on the floor, with a very delicate carving of a strange symbol in its side. But he knew there was no chance he was going to be able to go in the room and get it without being noticed. But before he could turn around and leave the building empty-handed, a strange cloud like object started to form before the woman.

Transfixed on the sight, he watched as it swirled and swirled, getting bigger and bigger until suddenly it somehow imploded and vanished. But it didn't vanish into thin air, it vanished into a crack, a crack that had formed in thin air. The woman stopped shouting now, the room fell eerily silent. The boy found himself going rigid, not just out of terror, but worried about making a sound.

Suddenly, the crack started to open up from the other side, it was as if something was trying to come through, like a rip in fabric. But he could just about see the other side, where the room was beyond it, there was nothing there. The crack started to get wider and wider and a terrifying clawed red hand reached through. The boy's eyes went wide and he held his breath as he saw the red hand tear the crack open up in one swift movement and the whole red body attached to the hand climbed through, horns, tail and wings included.

The boy let out a squeak of terror accidentally and covered his mouth with his hand, but it was too late, the creature and the woman turned round, both staring right at the boy, both with the same horrifying pitch black eyes.

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