Welcome back to Chapter 2 of the "Roommate from Hell" series (RfH). For those of you just joining us, there will be some recap, but if you want to read the prior chapter first, please check out: "RfH Ch.1 That Thing in the Corner."
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Have you ever found yourself worrying that you might get your throat slit in the middle of the night? That you're going insane? Or even worse; that the fundamental understandings of reality you've lived by your entire life are disastrously mistaken? Or is that just me?
Well real or not, that's the situation I found myself in. I moved into this apartment about a month ago, and I probably should have moved out then. Not because of the location, the price, or even my terrible roommate, but because of that THING in the corner.
From the very first day, there has been this malevolent growth in the living room that only I seem to be able to see. It drove my friends away, and it nearly drove me insane.
I don't know why I stayed for so long, maybe it's because it was so recent after the accident that I didn't want to move again so soon. Maybe some part of me thought it was a hallucination brought on by my grief, a hallucination that would go away when I got better. As if what I went through is the kind of thing anyone gets better from. I don't like to talk about it.
For what ever reason, I did linger for longer than I should have, and wound up witnessing a murder. That's where my roommate Melissa comes in.
At first I thought she was just rude and messy, but that quickly turned out to be the least of my problems. She recently had an adult guest over who attacked her, and she responded by killing the man. I had been watching their activities in hiding for reasons I'm not too proud to admit, but it resulted in me seeing the entire crime go down.
Every time I went to bed, I expected her to creep in and violently carve my guts out onto the mattress. Maybe to silence me, maybe as retribution for spying on her, or maybe just for fun. Every time she walked passed, I held my breath waiting for her to suddenly lash out and strike, or at least confront me on the matter. But that was more than a week ago, and she hadn't said a thing.
And as much as I should still have been concerned for my life, I found my thoughts drifting to other matters. Like the way her unkept hair would swish and bounce when ever she moved, or like the slowly accumulating smell of a woman who hadn't had a shower since she killed a man last week. I couldn't get the image of her abundantly voluptuous naked body out of my mind. Not only had I received a peek while I had been discreetly viewing on the night of the crime, but she would often walk around in just her underwear.
She used to wear a bra around the house to go with her increasingly sweaty panties, but she had recently replaced it with a large T-shirt. The pallid men's T-shirt she wore now was so mundane that it was indiscernible from the shirts I wore to work. It's oversized fit on her didn't cover everything. But it covered a little more than the old mammary holster had, which was simultaneously better, and much worse.
Sure it technically dropped less nip slips than her bra, but she sweated so much that the thin fabric would cling to her skin in a dingy semi-transparency. It might have covered her ass a little bit, but those edges yanked my gaze down every time she bent over, sat down, or took a step too quickly and flashed a transient glimpse at the bountiful, moistened paradise beneath.
The smart thing to do would have been to leave. Just calmly walk out the front door, start running, and keep sprinting until I collapsed into a ball of sobbing madness. Instead I found myself lingering again for the second time, but this time it was for other reasons. Stupid reasons.
Some part of me just wanted answers, to see this whole thing through to the end for better or for worse. But mostly I just wanted to grab those perfect squishy hips of hers and pound that luscious ass into the mattress. Regardless of how bad of an idea it was to stay, I had made my decision. But this time would be different.
Last time I had nearly been caught because I let myself get out of control. This time I had a plan. I had to keep my mind clear. While I still couldn't fap under the murky gaze of that thing growing through the thin plaster walls of the living room and peeking into mine, I could do something about the smell that my roommate persistently spread throughout the place. I had a secret weapon. A huge, bulky secret weapon that was extremely difficult to carry up two flights of stairs.
Plopping the air conditioner unit down on the counter, I took a minute to catch my breath and close the door behind me. Using this, I would be able to bring the summer temperatures of the living room down enough for Melissa to ease up on all that sweat, or even put on clothes. There was just one problem, that thing in the corner had pieces of itself draped all over the floor. Not only did I have to walk across the living room without stepping on any of them, I had to actually move the greasy tentacles stubbornly hanging in the window sill to install the air conditioner.
Clearing off that window would have to be the first step, but I was increasingly unsure of how to do it. I didn't even like being in the same room as this thing, not to mention walking up and touching it. I had been planning to use a broom to gently sweep the protuberances off, but now that I was here looking at it, I was reconsidering that idea as well.
Those slimy limbs were sprawled across the floor in a way that reminded me of webbing, and the insectoid nature of those ocular growths was a little too reminiscent of a spider's gaze for my comfort. For all I knew, they would all suddenly lurch to life the moment I so much as touched them, wrapping up and strangling its helpless prey before devouring me whole like a venus-fly-trap. That's assuming this thing was even a plant, which I wasn't entirely convinced of despite its vegetable appearance. If it was an animal, then there was no telling if it would just get up and chase me down for upsetting it.
Working up the resolve to follow through, I settled on a modified version of the plan. After retrieving some duct tape from my room, I attached a kitchen knife to the broom handle before taking a deep breath and venturing into its territory. I tried to shake the feeling of a bug venturing forth into the spider's web as I carefully tip toed around its appendages.
My sense of accomplishment upon reaching the other side was short lived, as I was reminded that I actually had to provoke the thing now. Cautiously, I took the pointy end and extended it towards the roots creeping along the wall into the window. I let out the breath I was holding in a sudden gasp as the vines reacted to the sharp prodding. Lurching away from the pointy knife, the oozing tendril in the window recoiled itself like a snake ready to strike. All around me, the appendages shivered and trembled.
I stood there petrified with my flimsy broom at the ready until everything stopped moving. After confirming that I was in fact still alive, and the thing hadn't eaten me, I slowly resumed my probing with a new approach. Sliding the knife under the tentacle this time, I gently lifted it away. The many slimy appendages flinched again, but not as violently.
I shoveled it onto the floor and took a moment to confirm that there weren't any more stray tendrils in the window sill. I exited the living room just as safely as I had entered, and steadied myself for the hard part.
Standing in the safety of the kitchen, I took my time trying to memorize the layout of the tentacles and plan the most efficient path from one end of the living room to the other. The best way seemed to be behind the couch, walking along the wall on the left. There were only a couple appendages growing there, and I made note of their position before setting off on my arduous trek with the hefty appliance.
There wasn't much room along the walkway between the couch and the wall, and I was already tired from having carried it all the way up those stairs. Counting my steps carefully, I made sure to step over the vine at the tenth step, or was it the ninth? Which ever it was, my heart sank as I felt a squishy wriggling under my foot and heard an oozing squelch.
The tendrils immediately sprang to life, reacting violently to the weight of a full grown man and an air conditioner suddenly coming down on it. A particularly vigorous tentacle swiftly shot out from under the couch and latched itself around my ankle. I completely dropped the entire conditioning unit is a giant crash as the monstrous organism yanked me from of my feet. I reached desperately for the broom, the knife, or anything at all but it effortlessly dragged me under, taking the couch with it.
I screamed in a howling shriek slightly less dignified than I'd like to admit, but fortunately the monster decided to let me off with a warning this time. I don't know why it chose to spare me. It certainly had the strength to drag me into what ever cold, mucosal hell it had lined up in those festering vegetative bowels, but for what ever reason, I felt the death-grip on my ankle slacken, and release.