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Terry Cummings

Short Stories
- Mr
- Housemates

Housemates (3 ratings)
         by Terry Cummings
Page 1 of 3

Had I been afraid before then it is nothing that holds memory for me. There is surely no other time in my life when I have sat still and quiet in a darkened room, waiting for the noises outside my door to relent. And there is no other time in my past when I have felt this hungry. Hungry to the point where I am choking back acid bile and watching my face grow thin and gaunt in the mirror as my body consumes its own excess in order to survive.

Sleep is a fortune that brings short relief, but it is a fortune that I have lost with the grips of starvation, which has deprived my body of the ease needed to allow such rest.

Should I die from fear alone? No it is the conditions that fear brings. The circumstance.

Even as I write this, I find that my language is faltering, the words that I thought I knew so well are all falling juxtaposed upon one another and fighting for meaning in ways that deplete one another`s efforts.

I heard them last night, at least eight, maybe as many as twelve. They were snuffling around in the light of the kitchen, talking to one another in their own manner. I could of course have had no idea of what they were saying but there was humor in it I am sure, because every now and then the mess of conversation would crescendo and there would be something akin to laughter.

Something wild and powerful.

I could hear cupboards opening and closing, the sound of cans being popped open. The moving of bowls, plates, cutlery.

I have heard them come to my door, sniff at it, their shadows shifting in the thin sliver of light that met the floor, and then they would leave for a while.

Five days now. A sixth I will not be able to bear. I have been eating from the pad of paper I found in one of my suitcases. I will leave just enough to finish this and when I have finished the last page, either written or consumed, I will make a break for my freedom. By then the desperation will hopefully be greater than the fear.

At least that is my hope.

Maybe I can last seven days.

I heard the sound of a guitar playing once, in the kitchen, I recognized a few of the tunes but the sounds of singing falling into accompaniment soon dispelled any illusion of normality.

The landlord had been right to have accepted my counter~offer concerning the amount of rent he wanted for the room. When it comes down to it I`m surprised he didn`t just offer it to me for free. But then I would never have taken it of course. I had haggled on the price and had come to a point lower than I had paid for any other room in the area before. It was cheap and close to work. From the kitchen you could see the high~rise building where I worked through the window. I could walk there in six or seven minutes, which would mean I could stay in bed later.

That first afternoon when I had met the small Indian landlord was the last time I had seen the kitchen. That was the last time I had seen anything of this place other than the hallway and the confines of my own room.

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Copyright © 1999, 2000, 2001 Terry Cummings, sffworld.com. All rights reserved. No part of this may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the author. The author has submitted the work in accordance with and in agreement with the following Submission Guidelines.

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