âThere isnât a car here.â
âI⌠Iâm trapped.  My legs are crushed.  Nobodyâs coming.â
The mention of his legs made pain emanate outward. Â The brute lashed out, but the different sources of noise were confusing it.
âYou were in an accident,â I said. Â âWhat are you going to do?â
Move it along. Â Push him to follow the script.
âIâm⌠need to get my phone, call for help.  But itâs not where itâs supposed to be.  Dayâs dead.  Oh god.  My arm hurts.  Why?â
I wasnât sure, but he seemed a fraction fainter than he had.
He was coming to pieces. Â Every time he mentioned his legs, he reaffirmed the imprint heâd made in the world. Â Every time the arm came up, though, he was running headlong into dissonance, into something that didnât fit him and his existence.
Question was, would his anger and restlessness drive him to keep pursuing me, despite everything else, or could I get him back on track, using some metaphysical survial mechanism?
âYou canât reach your phone. Â Whatâs the next step?â
Not a bad thing, if he was unraveling. Â But it was taking too long, and I only had thirty seconds to a minute at best.
âWhatâs the next step?â I asked, again.
âGet out, get away, the car might blow up. Â Have to get up, get away.â
Cars didnât really blow up, but that was the narrative. Â The image that was Mr. Legs here.
âThen hurry,â I said.
I could see the image distorting, a gap, a flaw. Â A scene trying to play out and glitching on some fundamental level. Â An interruption in the script.
Blake needs to hurry too!!!! Canât believe this is working though.Â
My voice echoed through the trees. Â The giant punched a tree where the sound had bounced off it.
Not necessarily a good thing. Â More were coming. Â I might very well have cut off my head to spite my face. Â Or whatever the appropriate metaphor was for attempting to solve one problem and creating a bigger one.
If I couldnât handle two Others, how was I supposed to handle four? Â Or ten?
He was replaying the script, stuttering.
âHurry,â I hissed the word, pushing him to try again. Â If he broke down enough, I could slip free. Â But I couldnât jump down to the ground if he was right there, to grab me, or hit me full-on with whatever he was made up of.
He tried again, a little more distinct. Â I could hear him now.
âI can do this, I just have to push hard enough, squeeze myself free-â glitch. Â â-My arm, itâs not there.â
âTry,â I said, once more.
I was nearly out of time. Â Others were now drawing closer, getting caught up in one of the same tangles of branches that had slowed me down. Â Except they didnât care about making noise. Â Not ghosts. Â Men and women in white, features bland and blanched by pain, their clothes stained red around gouges where sharp blades had penetrated the cloth and flesh beneath. Â Intelligent enough to be distracted by the sound. Â Perhaps intelligent enough to look for me and find me.
The ghost began to struggle, jerky movements, replays of scenes. Â This time, however, he simply skipped the scenes where heâd used one arm to help pull himself free.
He screamed, an agonized sound, somehow folded over or partially wrapped aroud something that wasnât present here, and blood began to pour, flooding the snow around him. Â His legs were tearing, his wound where the arm had been torn off joined them in how it bled openly.
I felt the same pain in my own legs. Â Each time Iâd felt his power, Iâd felt like something was being used to pulverize my kneecaps. Â Now I got to experience what it was like to try and heave those pulverized limbs free of a vise.
My vision swam. Â It was bad enough that I nearly let go of the branch.
I could hear a growling echoing around the area.
Sorry for big chunk of text, I was just on the edge of my seat.
ANyway, Blake is fucked.Â
When I managed to heave in a breath, gasping for air like I was drowning, I heard that same sound echoed. Â The noise had been my own, echoed.
I saw the ghost pause for rest, and fragments of bone slid out to protrude once more through the flesh around his knee. Â He screamed.
Three or four stab wounds made themselves felt around my own knees. Â Illusory, not real, no real harm done, but I still felt it, still screamed, a strangled sound. Â I closed my eyes, to shut out everything else, to keep myself from losing my lunch as my vision wavered.
Adrenaline flooded my body. Â Again, not real adrenaline. Â Only an illusion, the desperate sort of energy one got when they had no other choice but to face terror head-on.
No doubt in my mind: destroying oneâs own body in a desperate attempt at freedom and escape was terrifying.
Congrats Blake, by saying that you have ensured that that will happen to you.Â
He wrenched himself free, tumbled over some invisible barrier, and collapsed in a heap, radiating agony.
The old spatters of blood from his earlier theatrics faded as the new ones appeared.
He wasnât moving. Â I didnât, however, trust him to stay still when I hit the ground. Â Not with how my own mobility might be suffering.
âYouâre free,â I said. Â âWhat now?â
âIâm- I did it,â he said, without rising.  âMy⌠my arm.  Iâm supposed to have an arm.  Day!  Day, can you hear me!?â
He was barely there, his voice faint.
âWhat now?â I asked, again. Â âSheâs not responding. Â She canât respond.â
My real voice was enough for the pale Others in the woods to turn my way.
I wasnât exactly sure what they were, but they moved as a flock. Â Pale haired, pale skinned, dressed in white, bleeding from their ragged Hyena-inflicted wounds.
I got a bad vibe from them. Â Of all the Others here that were in pain, they were in a eerily quiet, bottled-up sort of pain. Â They were solemn. Â They were different, cold, and I liked them less than I liked anything else I could make out.
Now they were headed my way.
âYouâre free of the car, Day isnât listening. Â What do you do?â
I couldnât keep the desperation out of my voice as I asked that last question.
Maybe the desperation was what he paid attention to.
âThe car isnât here,â I said.
Just like that, he was gone.
...Wow, you did actually save them. And yourself. Kind of. For now. Also I remembered Blake canât lie so I double checked and it seems like he didnât, so good for doing that too.Â
I couldnât say whether it was one more straw, to break the camelâs back and unravel him or if heâd simply gone back to where the accident happened, but he was no longer beneath me.
I dropped from the branch. Â Half hopping down, half letting go.
The snow crunched under me, and my âwoundedâ knees didnât hold my weight. Â I fell, the snow crunching again, beneath my weight. Â Both crunches echoed around the space.
The brute and two more ghosts seemed to react to the ghost noises, but the pale ones werenât so foolish. Â They were heading for me, moving with a quiet sort of insistence, heedless of branches in the way, to the point that they got caught, branches scratching their faces and digging into their chests and guts. Â But each branch in turn broke, and they were making headway.
The phantom pains in and around my knees faded swiftly, now that âMr. Legsâ was gone. Â I found my feet, assessed the general dangers around me, and headed for the nearest gap, the same direction the ghost boy had gone.
The false adrenaline faded, and I made myself slow down, take stock of where I was going, where I was coming from, and what I needed to do.
Branches were broken here or there. Â Had I not seen the Others, if I were viewing all of this in blissful ignorance, I might have dismissed it as the casualties of winter. Â Ice and snow tearing weaker branches from the trees.
As it was, I was aware that these were more wounds, of a sort. Â Something big had come this way, and its mass had knocked healthy branches free, scattering them to either side. Â The clearest, most open path available to me was also the path that it traveled.
More things were veering my way as I made my way through the woods.
I shouldnât have been making that much noise, butâŚ
I was multiplying the amount of noise I did make.
As much as I wanted to keep moving, I made myself stop, and I manually altered the glamour.
Glad you remembered that cause I sure forgot!Â