The Roars are Coming
By Michael Shimek
It was supposed to be an easy job: kidnap the
kid, hold and watch the kid for five days until the bosses show up, get paid.
Easy as pie, as his mother used to say, God rest her soul. Well, okay, maybe
not that easy. There was the
responsibility of feeding him and keeping him in line, making sure he didn’t
try anything stupid like trying to escape. But no one said he would be
babysitting a little monster.
Monty
sat on the fancy black and leather couch--most likely stolen--that was up
against the wall opposite the room, the cell, that held the kidnapped child.
His foot tapped the cement ground repeatedly, his nerves getting the better of
him as he stared at the closed and locked door. Whoops, playful yells, and the
sound of things being thrown around, all the sounds of someone making a messy
ruckus, came from behind the steel door.
“The
roars are coming, Mr. Man. Rawr!”
The kid was loud whenever he made the roaring noise, louder and deeper than a
normal kid his age should be.
“Shut
up, kid!” Monty couldn’t think straight with the kid acting weird and loud and
annoying. The child was really starting to get on his nerves. The thought of
striking a child had never crossed his mind, but this little brat was testing
him for sure. “If you don’t shut up, I will come back there and shut you up
myself!”
A
child’s laugh came from the back room, followed by more roaring noises and his
incessant jumping around.
“Ugh!”
Monty screamed. He got up and stormed out of the warehouse, slamming the door
behind him. He wanted to yell into the cool night air, but he knew that really
loud noises could bring unwanted attention if someone happened to be within
hearing distance. It was late, with the large, full moon--maybe that was it,
the kid was acting out because it was a full moon--peeking out now and then to
say hello from the cloud scattered sky that was lit up from the bright city
lights, and they were situated in a part of the city even the police were
hesitant about. But as much as he wanted to scream at the top of his lungs, he
still couldn’t risk it.
He
pulled out a cigarette from the pack--Marlboro 27s--in his jeans, lit the end,
and inhaled deeply as he let the smoke fill his tar-ridden lungs. Ah, his vice.
Smoking always helped him calm down, a temporary escape from the world’s
stresses and anxieties. As much as he willed them to, the cancer sticks just
weren’t cutting it lately. It was this job; he wasn’t going to be able to
handle this goddamn job much longer. One more night. Just one more night and he
would be rich.
#
“Hey,
Monty,” the scruffy voice said on the other end of the cell phone. “It’s
Vince.”
“I
know who it is. What do you want? My debt with you has been paid off for five
months now.”
“Hey,
I know, I know. Don’t get your panties in a bunch. You remember Donny?”
“That
fat-ass piece-of-shit you call a boss?”
“Whoa,
Monty. Don’t go saying such hurtful things. You never know who could be
listening.”
Monty
made sure to keep his running mouth quiet. Donny was a lazy sack who had his
minions do all his bidding for him. He vowed never to get involved with Donny
and his goons again once his ten thousand dollar gambling debt had been paid
off earlier in the year.
“Why
are you calling me, Vince?” Monty got straight to the point.
There
was a slight pause before the man on the other end continued. “I was wondering
if you wanted to help out with a job.”
“I’m
not interested. Sorry.”
“It
pays well.”
“I
told you, I’m not interested.”
“It
pays very well, Monty.”
“I’m
hanging up.”
Monty
was about to end the call when Vince spoke up one more time.
“Five
hundred thousand dollars, Monty.”
The
high numbers flashing through his head caused him to pause for a long time.
That was a lot of money. A lot of
money. Retiring money. Not that he really had anything to retire from, though;
he was currently between jobs, earning his money by peddling fake designer
watches, wallets, shirts, and the like on the streets. That kind of stuff would
be a thing of the past if the money were true. He would be set for life.
“You
still there?” Vince asked.
“Yeah,
yeah. I’m thinking.”
“You’d
be rich, Monty. That’s settling down money. Donny needs an answer in two days,
so don’t take too long thinking about it.”
Vince
hung up, leaving Monty to regret ever picking up the phone in the first place.
#
That
was one week ago, and now he was stuck babysitting a five-year-old child with a
major ADD problem. The only thing getting him through it was the thought of all
that money coming his way in the end. That and the many cigarette breaks to
help calm his nerves.
Monty
finished the last of his cigarette and snubbed the butt out under his shoe. He
needed to get back inside and make sure little Jimmy was behaving himself.
Little
Jimmy Reinhold, son of Alexander and Meredith Reinhold, was worth an estimated
fifteen million. At least that’s how much Donny “Big D” Pantini was ransoming
the kid for. The Reinhold’s could afford it. Easily. The Reinhold name was
stamped onto every art gallery and museum in the eastern half of the United
States. Getting his start in the stock market, and getting very lucky,
Alexander Reinhold III began investing in finding places to house small
galleries or artists he liked or were his friends. He quickly became popular,
finding the hippest and trendiest spots in a city to open a new art center, and
with that popularity came even more fortune. He was an artist himself, selling
several paintings and sculptures to other rich and famous people around the
world--Johnny Depp owned a piece that was proudly displayed in his home. With
the Reinhold name at its peak in popularity, Donny thought it was about time he
got in on his share of the profits. The man was operating and living in New
York City, Donny’s neighborhood, so it made perfect sense for Big D to get his
cut.
And
now Monty would be getting a cut as well, even if the amount was small compared
to what Big D was asking for. Money is money, and now he’ll have enough to live
his life how he really envisioned it. He was already making plans in his head
with what to do with all that cash. He’d always wanted to live in the Caribbean
and with five hundred thousand dollars his dream would come true. A life of
quiet relaxation in the sun. Who would want more? Not Monty. He was a simple
guy who enjoyed the simple things in the world.
Walking
back into the warehouse, he wasn’t sure he’d be able to finish the job. He
could hear the thrashing and destruction that kid was making in the tiny room.
That kid, man! He’d never had to put up with someone as obnoxious and
troublesome as that kid. He probably should have known the minute Vince put
Jimmy in his care.
#
“Here
ya go, kid,” the large and thick man said, throwing the screaming and flailing
child into the small room. He landed
against the wall on the other side with a thud and then landed on the
mattresses that had been laid out for his arrival. “Make sure you behave
yourself for good ole’ Monty here. Otherwise you’ll be seeing me again.” Jimmy
got up from the makeshift bed and made a run for the door, but Vince was
quicker and slammed it in the kid’s face.
Monty
stood nervously in the background of it all, wincing every time he thought
Vince’s large hands were hurting the little boy. He looked so small and frail,
a skinny little twerp who was probably not even four-and-a-half feet tall.
While Vince had been manhandling Jimmy, Monty noticed one of the man’s hands could
almost envelop the child’s head. He envisioned Vince doing so and then
squeezing until the head burst like a grapefruit. Vince’s muscular hands could
probably do it, too; Monty once saw him crush a man’s windpipe with only one
hand. The man was vicious.
“Well,
my job is done for now.” Vince turned his attention away from the prison cell
and turned to Monty. “Now it’s your turn, Monty. This is a big a job. The
biggest job Donny’s ever attempted. Keep him fed and attend to his needs. Make
sure nothing happens. You have no idea how important this is. Don’t. Fuck.
This. Up.”
Monty
choked down a gulp. He was always so nervous and fidgety around the
intimidating brute. He reached down into his pocket and pulled out a cigarette
from his pack to smoke. He greeted the soothing smoke with pleasure. Jimmy
Reinhold was constantly screaming and pounding in the background; Monty tried
his best to ignore the wailing pleas.
“So,
can you handle this, Monty? Did we find the right guy for the job?”
“Yeah.
Of course.” He had to take a few more long drags to soothe his mind.
“Good,”
Vince said, now with a large grin on his face. “And, put that out. No smoking
in here. You can smoke outside.” He plucked the half-smoked stick from Monty’s
mouth and crushed it under one of his large boots. Monty knew well enough not
to protest.
“Now,
before I go, are there any questions?”
“Well...”
“Because
there should be none. We went through everything you need and need to know. You
have money for food, I think Donny was a little too generous in that
department. How much can a kid really eat in five days anyways? And you have
all the amenities in this warehouse a normal apartment would have. You’re set,
and will be set if it all goes as planned. You have my cell, but I don’t want
to hear from you. Donny and me will come by on Friday to pick up and deliver
him back to his parents. That is, if they pay.”
Monty
didn’t want to think about what would happen if the kid’s parents didn’t pony
up the dough. The message left was loud and clear: if you don’t pay, little
Jimmy’s throat gets slit and his body gets thrown in the Hudson. Would Big D
really kill a child? He pushed the gruesome thought out of his head.
Without
saying another word, Vince had left Monty. He was now alone, all by himself,
babysitting a ten-year-old for the better part of a week. It was a big job, a
huge responsibility. He’d never taken care of a child before. He never wanted
kids. And now he was stuck with one. One worth five hundred thousand. And then
there was the possibility of getting caught. He knew if anyone was going down,
it would be him. That’s why he was asked to take care of Jimmy Reinhold; he was
the perfect chump to pin it all on.
Was
it worth it?
#
That
question had run through his head so many times in the past four days he had
lost count. And it was definitely going through his head now as he approached
little Jimmy’s holding cell. Things seemed a little quieter than they should
be. Too quiet. What was that little shit up to?
Monty’s
footsteps echoed through the suspiciously quiet warehouse. The place was
basically a big, huge empty room. Large, rusty beams shot up from the ground,
barely holding the old structure from caving in. The only windows were a single
row that ran along the entire building near the top--most of them were probably
broken by hooligans trying to have a quick blast by breaking some glass, which
littered the floor along the walls. The only other thing in the warehouse was
the previously empty room--well, there was a toilet and sink in there--that now
made do as a holding cell for a small, young boy.
Jimmy’s
usual wild behavior had quieted down and now there wasn’t a peep coming from
the other side of the steel door. Monty’s hand rested on the door handle, his
nerves making his hand shake a little as he gripped the handle. He put his ear
up to the door. There was nothing. The only time the child was quiet was during
the night, but even then the kid’s snoring was loud enough to wake all of New
York City. There wasn’t even the snoring this time.
Something
was up. And if that brat thought he was going to get the better of him, then he
truly underestimated Montgomery James. He was thirty-eight, and Jimmy was only
ten. So why was he still afraid?
“I’m
coming in, kid!” he yelled through the door. “If you try anything at all I’m
gonna wring that little neck of yours. Capiche?”
There
was no answer.
Sighing,
hoping there wasn’t going to be any trouble, Monty unlocked the door and slowly
pulled it open. The bright light from inside seeped out into the darker
warehouse. There was no movement, so Monty opened the door until it was wide
open. He studied the inside, but there was no Jimmy Reinhold.
The
room was a mess. Jimmy had been given many things to keep him busy and
entertained while being held ransom. There were coloring books, crayons, and
markers for him to draw with. A shitty TV was placed in the corner with a
Nintendo 64 attached to it with several cables and many games to choose from.
He had a couple of mattresses to sleep and play on. The kid had everything he
needed. All of it, everything he had been given, was broken and shredded and
thrown around the room. The TV was broken and shattered on the floor. Papers
were torn and scattered. The mattresses were ripped apart, with the foamy
insides gutted and their skeletal springs showing. The walls had been colored
on; squiggly lines were drawn around the room in every color.
But
there was no sign of the kid.
“What
the? Kid you better show--”
A
deep, growly voice that came from behind the messy mattresses cut him off. “The
roars are here, Mr. Man! I told you they were coming.” The voice was followed
by an unearthly growl. Tufts of black hair poked out from behind the
mattresses. When they moved, he slammed the door.
What
the hell was that?
He
locked the door as fast as he could. A loud crashing noise, probably the lights
breaking, came from behind the steel door. Monty, trembling in his sneakers,
backed away from the door. He fell onto the couch when the pounding began.
Bang! The steel door shuddered in its
frame.
“I’m
coming for you, Mr. Man!”
Bang! The steel door shuddered again.
“Mr.
Maaaannnn! You’re going to be so tasty!”
Bang! The steel door almost came free,
barely holding.
“I
can smell you! Mmmmm!”
Bang! The steel door flew from its
frame, flying to the ground.
Deep,
yellow eyes glowed from the darkness that was within. A rough snarl echoed.
It
was at that moment Monty finally found his nerves and ran. Never turning
back--because he knew the second he turned his head the kid, that thing, would have him--he ran for his
life. His footfalls echoed through the warehouse. He was halfway to the door
when he heard the loud and heavy stomps behind him, gaining on him. His right
arm reached the door to the outside. He pulled and was slammed against the
door, shutting his escape. Sharp pains dug into his back as he was brought
face-first into the ground. Something weighing a ton began to drag him back
into the warehouse. Monty screamed and clawed at the cement ground. His
fingernails snapped off, leaving bloody clawing marks on the floor.
Before
disappearing into the cell that once held a kid, and then a monster, Monty
couldn’t help but think how this was not the way this should have ended. He
should have ended up rich, living on a beach somewhere in the tropics. He
wasn’t supposed to die by what was once a ten-year-old boy biting into his neck
and ripping his head off.
#
“Try
him one more time, and then we’re going in.”
Vince
sat nervously in the driver’s seat of Donny’s black GMC Denali XT. He had his
cell phone up to his ear. Come on, Monty.
What’s taking you so long? You know the boss doesn’t like to be kept waiting.
I’m gonna hurt that fucker. It was the third time he had tried Monty’s cell
phone and received no answer. They were parked outside the warehouse, and if
they had to go in, Vince would get some shit for it.
“That’s
it,” Big D said. “I’m going in there. If those rich assholes won’t pony up the
money, I’ll have to show them I mean business with a few mailed boxes, each
containing one of the boy’s ten fingers. Did you hear what they responded back
with? They said we better watch ourselves,
that we are in store for a special
treat. How dare they mock me! I really should just kill the kid outright and
show them who runs this city.”
Donny
opened the back door--he liked to have someone be his chauffeur, making him
look important--and stepped out into the cool night. Vince sighed; he knew this
was not going to end well. He got out of the car and followed the boss. It was
a short walk to the other side of the building, where the entrance was, and Big
D never stopped complaining.
“Damn
that Monty character, making me wait and waist precious time. What did you
promise him after this whole deal?”
“Five
hundred thousand,” Vince answered, quickly to add, “Like you said, boss.”
“Maybe
we should just let him go. He doesn’t have any friends, does he? He wouldn’t be
missed?”
“No
one would know.” Monty was usually a decent enough guy, and Vince didn’t really
want to put a bullet in the man. But if Big D decided it was so, then it was
so.
“Hmm,
I’ll think about it. Maybe he could do some more business for us to get on my
good side. I’ll have a little talk with him when he finally shows himself.”
The
two arrived to find the door to the warehouse busted out from its hinges, wide
open for anyone to just enter.
“Is
this a joke? Is Monty not taking this job seriously?”
Vince
laid his hand on the gun at his hip. “Monty wouldn’t be that stupid to leave
the door open. Look how it’s all busted up. I think something’s up.”
Vince
could see a little fright enter Big D’s eyes. The man always tried to play it
smooth and cool, but Vince knew the man got scared fairly easily. And whenever
the boss was scared, he would send one of his goons to solve the problem, so
Vince knew exactly how this would play out. He would get sent in to make sure
everything was safe.
“Well,
what are you waiting for?” the large man asked his lackey. “Go in and see
what’s going on.”
“Of
course,” he replied, taking out his silenced pistol.
Vince
walked into the empty warehouse. There was no one around. But there were
definite signs of something out of place going on. He could see a spot on the
ground where it looked like someone had been dragged and the cement had been
clawed at. Looking closer, he saw spots of blood and six to seven bloody things
that looked like fingernails. He followed the trail of blood, which grew larger
and larger, until he reached the room where the kid was supposed to be staying.
God, Monty, if you let that kid escape...
The door to the room was lying in front of the black couch; it looked like it
had been torn off by something large. Big dents were in the steel door and
nothing small could have done that. The bloody trail led into the dark room
that should have held Jimmy Reinhold.
“Monty?
You in there?” He waited, his pistol pointed down into the room, but there was
no answer in return. “Monty? Jimmy?” Nothing.
Vince
cautiously walked into the dark room. He couldn’t make much out, but it looked
like the placed had been ransacked. He could make out a broken television on
the ground and a large lump that had to be the mattresses. Then there was the
other large lump on the floor, the one that looked an awful lot like a body. He
took a slow step forward and stepped into a slimy substance that was pooled on
the floor around the body-like lump.
“Monty?”
“Vince!”
The yell came from inside the warehouse. It was followed by two shots from a
gun. Then by more yelling. “Oh, God! Help me, Vince! Ah!” Two more shots, and
then a horrible ripping and gurgling sound. And was that a snarl? Vince heard a
splash and then saw a round object looking a lot like Donny’s big, bald head
roll by the entrance to the small room he was in. It left a line of red across
the dirty and grey cement floor.
“Who’s
there? I have a gun!” He yelled into the outside, hoping to God that whoever
was out there would get scared and run.
A
deep roar answered him. “It’s me. I remember your smell. You brought me here
and hurt me. And now I’m going to hurt you.”
Vince
aimed his pistol at the light that poured into the room. He could see the couch
on the other side of the warehouse and that line of blood. Then there was a
dark shadow that began to loom forward. Vince fired into the opening. The
giggle of a child and a deep growl challenged him back. Vince backed up,
walking deeper into the dark room that he was trapped in. He cowered behind the
dirty, ripped apart mattresses.
“The
roars are here! I told the other one but he didn’t believe me. Here I come!”
Vince
was able to get three more shots off from his gun before the furry creature
that was once a young little Jimmy Reinhold tore his neck wide open. He could
see his own red blood splash against the dark, black fur and sharp, white teeth
that snapped at him. The last thing he heard were snarls, growls, and a child’s
giggles.
END