WebNovels

it was not a dream

Akram_7595
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
87
Views
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - it was not a dream

It wasn't a dream. I was walking home through the fog when I saw the red light. It wasn't a neon sign; it was the glow of a wound in the side of a brick building. I stepped inside The Gristle & Bone, and the door didn't close—it healed shut behind me.

​The air inside was hot and wet, like the inside of a throat.

​The First Aisle: The Shelf of Pears

​I walked down a hallway made of compressed, grey hair. On the first shelf, I saw a row of glass jars. I thought they were fruit. I was wrong.

​The Wet Hearts: They were pinned to velvet cushions. They were still beating, all in different rhythms. As I got closer, they all synced up to match my pulse.

​The Glass Eyes: Hundreds of them, floating in a thick, yellow jelly. When I moved left, they all rolled left. When I blinked, I heard a wet squelch from inside the jars.

​The Second Aisle: The Living Furniture

​The floor started to feel soft. It wasn't carpet. It was a layer of human tongues, laid out like tiles. Every step I took made a licking sound.

​The Ribcage Chairs: I saw a row of chairs made of white, bleached bone. The "leather" seats were translucent skin. I saw a tattoo on one of them—it was my own name.

​The Breathing Lamps: The shades were made of thin, stretched faces. The light didn't come from a bulb; it came from a glowing, pulsing brain inside the skull.

​The Third Aisle: The Price of Looking

​I reached the back of the store. There was no counter. There was just a massive, rusted meat hook hanging from a chain that went up into a black void.

​A voice didn't come from a person. It came from the walls themselves. The walls groaned the words:

​"You've been looking for an hour. That costs a gallon."

​I felt a sharp pain in my side. I looked down. A silver tap had grown out of my own ribs. A bucket sat beneath it, and I watched my own blood start to fill it, cold and dark. I couldn't move. I couldn't scream. My mouth had been sewn shut with invisible wire while I was browsing the "specials."

​The Exit

​The store doesn't let you leave through the door. It digests you.

​I felt the walls start to squeeze. The shelves of eyes and hearts began to melt into a red soup. I realized then that I wasn't a customer. I was the new inventory.

​I am still here. I am the lamp you are looking at right now. My skin is the shade. My thoughts are the light.

​Do you want to know what the "Manager" did to my hands so I could never leave, or do you want to hear about the person who just walked through the front door?