Joaquin hadn’t seen him for over 20 years, which isn’t
to say that he hadn’t thought of him from time to time. It was unmistakable though. His little silhouette had stood there
in the doorway, very much the way Joaquin remembered it from before, when he
had only been a child. Joaquin had
not been able to sleep well since that startling moment, only three nights
ago.
He figured now, that it had only been his
imagination. Seeing him there could
only have been a figment of his memory, brought about from the deep seeded fear
that he’d once carried so strongly in his mind. Still, being completely honest with himself, he had been
sure of what he saw at the time.
He was sure that he’d heard Timothy’s little footsteps carrying him away
into the night, before vanishing.
How the little monster had escaped the uber-alert ears of his Chihuahua,
Ned, was beyond his belief.
Joaquin sleepily finished out his shift at the
supermarket and headed home for the night. He convinced himself to dismiss the events from a few nights
back as just his ridiculous imagination playing tricks on him. It seemed to be working as he had
finally been able to concentrate better at work, and he was determined to get
some sleep.
He walked into his first floor condominium apartment
and he was greeted by a bouncy and happy Ned. “Hey, Ned! Good
buddy! Good buddy!” he greeted
back. He dropped his knapsack and
grabbed the leash to take Ned out.
As they left the apartment, Joaquin walked through the landscaped grounds
and gave Ned the chance to relieve his bladder.
He had loved living at the complex. He looked off into the distance where
the path disappeared into more housing units. He didn’t see the cute girl that he’d seen a couple of times
over the past month, walking her dog.
He glanced at his watch, and it read 6:43. Maybe it was too late, he wondered. Maybe he was dreaming, he confessed,
but he wondered if he would ever have a chance with her. “Maybe...” he said out loud.
Joaquin let Ned lead him out to the grassy knoll that
they usually had to themselves.
There, he tossed out the ball for Ned to retrieve. There was still some daylight out, and
they enjoyed the bond of their friendship for another half hour before going
back to the apartment flat. “Next
time we’ll play longer, buddy, I promise.
Daddy’s kind of tired today.”
In his kitchen, Joaquin prepared a sandwich. He thought of his little friend and the
fear surfaced again. His heartbeat
elevated slightly, and he felt frustrated. “No! I’m not
going to get scared!” he said to himself. His mind throbbed and he looked at Ned who stared back at him
curiously, wagging his tail slightly.
“We aren’t going to be scared, are we Ned?” he said in the baby voice
that he reserved specially for Ned.
“Let’s do a quick check, just to make sure, shall we?”
Joaquin opened a bottle of Jagermeister that he’d had
in his cupboard for years and took a sip.
He went into a nervous, frantic state, and proceeded to open up all of
the cupboards. He saw no sign of
the tiny beast. He walked into the
living room and looked under the lampshade, under the couch, and then behind
the TV. He dead-bolted the
door. He checked the
bathroom. Ned followed him into
the bedroom and Joaquin checked in the closet, and finally, nervously, under
the bed. There was still no
sign. “I’m going psycho, Neddie!”
he declared in playful frustration.
After a bit of TV, Joaquin decided it was bed
time. He decided that he would
fight his fear this time, so he took a Tylenol PM with some warm milk and got
in bed. He was asleep soon
afterwards. Later that night, he
dreamt.
Joaquin was just young boy again, only about six years
old. He was at his grandma’s
house, and he was in lying awake in bed.
He could hear the TV on downstairs still, and he knew that Grandma and
Grandpa were there. There was a
light on coming from the hallway that he had purposely left on which allowed
him to see the floor space just outside of his bedroom door. He knew that Timothy was out there
somewhere.
His eyes had been pinned to the floor space for as
long as he’d been in bed. The
covers were pulled all the way up to his nose. He listened for the footsteps, but he could hear nothing but
the faint sound of the TV. Then he
thought he finally heard something, and then, a flash of a dark shadow came and
left. His eyes opened even wider,
and he became completely alert. He
froze, and there it was. The
little beast peeked his head around the door frame, clearly showing his face in
the shadow of the light. Joaquin
held his breath, and they made eye contact. He could see Timothy evilly smile at him.
A sound commotion was made from the kitchen from
Grandma and Grandpa. He could hear
them coming towards the stairs, and Timothy, slowly and surely backed up, and
disappeared, never to return for the night.
Joaquin woke up in his bed, in a state of shock. He was out of breath, and his heart was
beating loud. Ned was on the bed
next to him, staring at him with concern.
It had only been a dream.
Joaquin sat up for a moment and then tried to relax. “It’s ok, Ned. I just had a bad dream.” Ned, with seeming comprehension,
relaxed too and rested his chin on Joaquin’s arm, as they both drifted back to
sleep.
The next day when Joaquin came home, he found a
horrifying sight. Police,
paramedics, and other emergency personnel where waiting outside of his apartment. As he walked up, a couple of police
officers stopped him.
“Are you Joaquin Lopez?” one of the officers
asked. Fear overcame Joaquin as he
began to panic.
“Yes, officer.
What’s wrong?”
“We have some questions for you, please come with us.”
The police gave him a chance to let Ned out to go
potty, and then he was taken to the police station. As he sat in a small room with one-sided glass, similar to
what he’d seen on TV, he came to realize that Mrs. Suarez from the apartment
directly above his had been murdered the night before. Joaquin was not a suspect, but he was
being questioned on anything that he could recall witnessing or hearing. Unfortunately, because of the pills
he’d taken, he had not heard anything, and he couldn’t recall seeing anything
strange. He did not tell the
officers anything about the pills though.
“Ok, Mr. Lopez.
You are free to go,” the officers finally declared after about an hour
of information gathering.
“Can I ask, officer, what happened to Mrs. Suarez?”
Joaquin asked before leaving.
“Well, we’re not sure, exactly. We can’t say anything while this case
is under investigation, but since you have been questioned, I can tell you that
she was stabbed to death. There
were numerous slashes to her shins and ankles too, which is why we thought you
may have heard a struggle last night.”
Joaquin nodded sympathetically and walked out. As he did, he realized that he knew exactly
what had happened. It could only have
been Timothy. Joaquin had just
become severely frightened. He
called in sick the next day and decided to drive over to Grandma’s house, which
was just about fifteen miles away.
It was time to put the issue to rest for good.
“Hi Grandma!” he greeted his dear grandmother, as she welcomed
him into the house.
“Hi, mi hijo, what a surprise to see you!” she replied
joyfully. “What brings you by?” He followed her to the kitchen, and he
could smell the familiar aroma of something wonderfully Mexican that she was
cooking. His mind was not on the
food though.
“Grandma, I wanted to talk to you about something,” he
declared as he sat at the counter.
She smiled and went over her stove to stir the pot.
“What is it, mi hijo?” she asked, without looking at
him.
“I wanted to ask you about Timothy,” he answered. She kept stirring her pot, without so
much as a flinch. Surprised by her
lack of response, Joaquin went on.
“Do you still have him?”
“Yes, of course,” she answered. She took the spoon out of her pot and
dabbed some of the liquid on her finger to taste it. She closed her eyes and pursed her lips with disapproval.
“Where is he?”
She smiled at him after putting the spoon down. “Needs salt.” She stood across the counter from him and looked at him
curiously. “Are you still afraid
of him?”
“No,” he lied.
“Of course not,” he muttered.
She smiled again.
“You know, he’s just a little lost hobo that we
adopted to protect the house.”
“What does that mean? Why do you always say that? What possessed you to ever want such an ugly thing?”
“Shhh,” she shushed him. “Don’t say that about him. He will get mad.”
“See? Why
do you always say that, as if he was alive?”
She chuckled slightly. “Come on, I’m just kidding. Why have you always been so scared of him?” she asked with
sympathetic grin.
His mind went back to that night as a child when he’d
seen him, and his heartbeat increased slightly. “I’m not scared of him. I just want to see him, where is he?”
She smiled and shook her head slightly. “Ok, calm down, Joaquin. I took him off the bookshelf a few
years ago and put him in a box in the garage.”
“Can you show me?” he asked. She looked at him in disbelief. “Please?” he begged.
She shook her head. “I don’t understand why you want to see him. Ok, come on,” she agreed, leading him
into the garage. He followed her
as they stood before a mess of boxes, an ice chest, an old tricycle, and a toy box
that once belonged to him. She
examined the boxes with her eyes until she fixated on one in particular. “Check that one,” she said, pointing to
one on the bottom.
Joaquin nervously took some boxes down to reach for
the bottom one. “This one?” he
confirmed. She nodded. He pulled it closer and crouched down
in front of it. He opened the box
slowly. There were some books and
a couple of trophies. There was no
sign of Timothy. “Where is he?”
“That’s strange,” she replied with a confused
look. She leaned in for a better
look.
“Are you sure this was the box?”
She didn’t answer, but remained still with the same
confused look. Joaquin looked
closer and moved the trophies aside, revealing a hole in the corner of the box
about the size of a large coffee mug.
Fear struck through him and he looked at Grandma, who now had a look of
terror across her face. “He got
out!” he gasped. “I have to go,
Grandma,” Joaquin uttered in fear.
He stood up quickly, and backed up towards the door. “I have to go,” he repeated.
Grandma stood in shock. “Wait!
Joaquin!” she hollered after him.
“Wait! I have to talk to
you!” she called out, but he was already out the door.
Frantic and scared, he rushed home. He was worried about Ned. He was certain that Timothy had escaped
and murdered Mrs. Suarez. His mind
was spinning. He didn’t know what
would happen, but he felt sure that Timothy would be coming for him tonight. He would have to face him, and this
time, he would be ready.
At home, Joaquin prepared himself for a fight with a
tiny monster. He threw out what
his mind refused to accept, that Timothy could indeed be a real, living,
breathing creature. He wondered of
the notion, that something that he believed to be so real as a child, when his
mind had not yet been corrupted by societal beliefs and limitations, could be
the absolute truth. He had to
assume now, that the impossible was indeed, possible.
He secured the windows with broken broom and mop stick
handles. As he added duct tape to
the window panes, he thought about the creature. The image of the one-foot tall, dark brown creature sitting
on the book shelf was seared into his mind. Where, why, or what had ever possessed Grandma to acquire
such a wretched thing had endlessly bewildered him. The tiny, rubbery man with his oversized head and permanent,
evil, smile, could only look cute in the devil’s mind. He pictured himself stomping out the
little demon, and he felt strong.
The darkness of the night fell upon the apartment and
Joaquin sat on the couch with Ned.
He had already taken Ned out for his last potty. “Ned, tonight we are going to war. We have to be ready, and that’s why I
am not going to feed you tonight.”
Ned, his trusty Chihuahua, stood by his site, curiously unaware of what
his young owner was saying to him.
“Don’t worry, Ned, I’m not eating either. And when this is over, we will both feast. I promise to make it up to you, but you
have to be alert and strong tonight.
We have to be ready for him.
Ok?” Joaquin patted Ned’s
head gently, and they packed up for bed.
He brought a kitchen knife with him to bed and placed it at his side.
He would not fall asleep. The night moved on drearily, and although he tried to fight
it, he and Ned eventually fell asleep on the bed. Before he realized full consciousness, Joaquin woke up
suddenly, in the dark, with Timothy standing on the bed, by his ankles. Joaquin screamed out and Timothy instantly
stuck his metal tipped spear deep into his Achilles tendon. Joaquin reacted by kicking Timothy,
sending him flying over the side of the bed and onto the floor. Chaos ensued as Joaquin let out another
scream in pain.
He yanked the covers off and glanced at the blood
gushing out from his ankle, and he grunted in pain. Ned became hysterical and he went flying off the bed in the
direction of Timothy. Joaquin
panicked, fearing for the life of his dog. “Ned! Ned!” he
yelled out, he searched for his knife, and then found it, falling off the bed
as he grabbed it. He could hear
growling and the commotion of a fierce struggle. With the knife in hand and only moonlight guiding the way,
he crawled towards the foot of his bed when he heard the high pitched shriek of
a dog’s yelp of pain. “Ned!” he
screamed out.
He could see very little in the dark, and the room was
suddenly quiet. The pain throbbed
terribly in his leg, and suddenly the beast appeared before him. The fear of Ned’s fatal demise summoned
courage within Joaquin and he lunged forward with the knife pointed towards
Timothy. The little monster ducked
it though, and instead, the quick beast stuck his spear into Joaquin’s hand,
causing him to drop the knife.
Joaquin yelped in pain again, and he crawled backwards
on instinct. The creature glanced
at the knife and grinned. He made
his final approach, moving towards Joaquin like a leopard stalking his
prey. Joaquin’s eyes opened wide with
fear, and he began to tremble, when suddenly Ned appeared and rushed unto
Timothy in full attack.
Ned attacked viciously, growling and chomping so fast
that Joaquin could hardly see what was happening. The best let out a bizarre sounding screech with the
likeness of a tiny tuba, and then Ned cried again. Ned let go, and the little monster fell to the ground. Joaquin reached beneath the bed to his
right and grabbed his rubber-soled slipper, but when he looked up the beast was
gone. He limped back over to Ned,
who was injured, but very much alive.
In the aftermath, Joaquin had come to realize that the
little beast had come in through the chimney. He had gone out that way too, by evidence of the blood drops
leading that way. Joaquin had also
found the tiny spear, left behind by the injured monster. Joaquin tried to make sense of it all,
but couldn’t. He knew that the
beast would come back someday, and he would have to be ready. In the meantime, Grandma had some
explaining to do.
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