MAUDE’S
JOURNAL
Friday, Night Time
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Photo: zeusitup.com |
I don’t like the way they look at me. All… mucky. Their
faces, mucky. They don’t like me, I see it, I know, but they don’t care, and
the other ones, they don’t see them. Probably plotting against me, like those
things they call spoons. Not utensils, not at all, not when they’re so
sinister. Sinister in disguise. I have proof, too. I saw him go, disappear,
poof! Right before my eyes. I saw it. They don’t believe me. They laugh, the
mocking things. I don’t need them to believe me, I have Gunny. She believes me.
Every time I walk past a reflecty, I can tell Gunny what I saw. She waves when
I wave, smiles at me like I smile, ‘cause she likes me. And Hans, he’s good. He
gets it, he listens, he smiles. Not like the mocking things, they don’t smile
or wave.
They’re just mucky.
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Photo: farm6.staticflickr.com |
Saturday, Morning Time
Somebody else went. In the night. I saw it. The mocking
things still hate me, don’t believe me. Gunny says be careful.
Saturday, Night Time
I hear them whispering. All the time, just sneaking,
whispering. They say I’m next. The spoons, they’re plotting things. Like the
mocking things. Too many things. Gunny looks scared, too. I packed up camp. Not
gonna let them poof! Not th--
HANS
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Photo: essediem.files.wordpress.com |
The old man bent to pick up the stray notebook, closed it
up, put it on Maude’s crate. She had a disease, one that required medication,
but she couldn’t afford it. She suffered
from delusions, hallucinations; she ranted about them to anyone who would
listen, about abductions, disappearances, and most people just laughed at her.
She was just a crazy person. Few cared to get to know Maude better, to find out
whether or not her ravings held some truth. The old man had just recently
discovered that when she talked about “spoons”, she didn’t actually mean the
flatware. She meant people dressed in odd suits, with rounded helmets. Probably
just another of her hallucinations. He wondered where she had gone.
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Photo: farm4.staticflickr.com |
Last night
she had told him part of one of her abduction stories, one that she’d told some
of the other villagers, but they mocked her for it. They didn’t believe her,
because it was so implausible. He never got to hear the ending. He’d hoped to
hear it tonight. He looked at the horizon; it was getting late. His wife was
holding dinner for them, him and Maude. It was Maude’s favorite. She’d turn up
eventually. She wandered often, getting lost in thought or running from the
“spoons”. He pulled his jacket tighter around him, and began the walk home, odd
whispers filling the night air at his back.
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