Read Heven & Hell Anthology (Heven and Hell) Online
Authors: Cambria Hebert
Heven & Hell
Short Story Anthology
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Bonus Content
By Cambria Hebert
HEVEN & HELL ANTHOLOGY Copyright © 2013 CAMBRIA HEBERT
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions
thereof, in any form without written permission except for the use of brief
quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
Published by: Cambria Hebert
http://www.cambriahebert.com
Interior design and typesetting by Sharon Kay
Cover design by MAE I DESIGN
Edited by Cassie McCown
Copyright 2013 by Cambria Hebert
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents
either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used
fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead,
business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.
To Aurora, my Mommom. Thank you for reading everything I publish, including this.
Oh, and for all those times you let me buy Boardwalk when we played Monopoly.
Sam
I stared before me at the mess. The mess
I
was supposed to clean up. I was tired of doing this. Tired of this lifestyle and pretending like it didn’t bother me. It did. It was disgusting – and by extension
I
was disgusting.
Completely unworthy of someone like her.
Heven
. I hadn’t heard her name until yesterday, when I got close enough to overhear it. It was perfect, it fit her perfect. Because to me she was heaven, she was everything I could ever want and everything I couldn’t have.
I stared down at the splatters of blood and gore, the pieces of ripped flesh. The scent of death clung to the air, leaving it heavy and regretful.
“Don’t just stand there,” the person whom I was beginning to view as a monster snapped.
A person that once upon a time wasn’t like the crazed –psycho killer that stood before me today. I had learned things from this person, learned about myself, learned how to survive.
Was I going to end up like this too?
What would Heven say if she saw what I was about to do?
“No.” I said, firmly, refusing the order that was just issued.
“Excuse me?” Eyes narrowed until they were nothing but slits. Behind me the others stopped their gathering of what was left of the victim… or victims, it was hard to tell with what was left so scattered about. I could feel their eyes bore into the back of me, but I didn’t care.
“I’ve cleaned up your last mess. I won’t do it anymore. You’re sick.”
“After everything I’ve done for you, you dare talk to me like this?”
“If you don’t stop killing people, I’ll make sure the police know where to find the bodies of all the people you’ve murdered… and evidence of exactly who put them there.”
“If you turn me in, you’ll go down as well. You might not have had the fun but you helped hide the crime. Every. Single. Time. The police won’t think you’re innocent.”
I shrugged, praying that I looked as bored as I tried to. “As long as you go down, I don’t care.”
“And what of that little girlfriend that you seem to covet above all else? I wonder if you would feel the same if these were her parts scattered at your feet.”
“I don’t know who you’re talking about.” I lied.
The laugh that echoed around me was one that did belong to a monster. What had caused such a change? Why the constant need for bloodshed and killing? It was almost as if the monster was trying to prove something. “You know full well who I am talking about.”
“I haven’t seen her in weeks. She means nothing to me. Do what you want. I meant what I said. I am done here.” I turned away, feeling sick to my stomach, praying that my bluff wasn’t called.
The others had resumed collecting the remains so that they could burn or bury them later. They were no longer looking at me, but as I walked away from the monster, a pair of dark eyes flashed to mine. I stared back without blinking; I would accept any challenge that was issued.
“Wait.” The voice was a near growl, a forced word that the monster must have practically choked on to force out.
I stopped but didn’t turn back. I was my own person – my own man – I was done following orders.
“Will you still help me look?”
Ahh, the thing that mattered most to the monster. Finding something that probably didn’t even exist. I waited a few moments, weighing my options. I could walk right now and never look back. I could get into my truck and drive until the landscape changed and I knew no one. But that would mean never seeing her again. The thought left me surprisingly hollow. And, it was no guarantee that Heven would be safe, I could leave and the monster could carry out the threat to harm her. If I stayed, if I agreed to continue searching then maybe Heven would be forgotten, she would be safe.
I looked back, over my shoulder. “I’ll help you look but the killing stops now. You waste searching time when you take out your anger on innocent people.” Like I cared how much time was wasted searching, but I was tired of the death… the echoes of screams and pools of blood that filled my dreams.
“Fine,” the monster snapped. “Just remember who you are and who you aren’t. Remember exactly who you have forgotten.”
I didn’t respond. I walked away, allowing the darkness of night to swallow me whole and give me some sense of relief. Message received. There would be no more killing as long as I continued to stay far away from Heven.
It was a small price to pay to give someone that pure, someone that innocent, the life she deserved.
I just wished I could have met her once.
Heven
“Can you believe the nerve of our history teacher?” I complained, walking down the hallway and stopping at my locker. “I mean who assigns a
three
page essay to be due the
next
day when there is only two weeks left of school until summer vacation?”
“Google, my friend, Google.” Kimber said, watching as I tossed my unwanted books into my locker. “I fully intend to buy a paper.”
I laughed as I consulted the small pink framed mirror hanging on the inside of the door. I pulled out a tube of lip gloss and unscrewed the cap. “I cannot buy a paper, Kimber. If my mother ever found out I would be grounded for life.”
“Lucky for me my parents hardly know I’m alive.”
She said it off-handedly, but I knew that her parent’s lack of attention was hard for her. “Looks like I’ll be spending my evening in the library.” I sighed.
Kimber reached into my locker and pulled out my pink sequined duffle bag. “Cheer first, school later.”
I slammed my locker door and we headed off toward the locker room where we would change for cheerleading practice.
Just as we turned the corner we saw two guys heading in our direction. Cole and Brice. Kimber elbowed me in the ribs and I giggled. “Here he comes, Hev.”
Cole and Brice stopped a few feet in front of us with Cole leaning forward to kiss Kimber. When he pulled back he gave me a smile. “Hey, Hev.”
“Hey, Cole.” Cole’s eyes slid to Brice. “Hey, Brice.” I said brightly, offering my crush a smile.
“Hey, Heven. You’re looking good.”
“Thanks.”
He acted like he might say more but the group descended into silence with Cole standing over me and Brice like a chaperone.
“Cole, I wanted to talk to you about something.” Kimber said, giving me the eye.
“Sure, Kimmie,” he said, glancing at her, waiting for her to continue.
“In private,” she said, exasperated and took his arm, leading him away. She looked back at me and gave me a dazzling smile. I giggled.
When they were a fair distance away Brice cleared his throat. “So, I was wondering if you wanted to go with me to Kimber’s end-of-the-year party?”
Excitement exploded through my middle. “I would love to.” I had been hoping he would ask me! We had gone out a few times before, but this, showing up at Kimber’s party together would be making a statement. A statement that we were an item.
He smiled, turning the power of both his dimples and his dazzling smile on me. “Yeah? Cool.” He shoved a hand through his brown hair, visibly relieved.
I twisted a strand of shiny blond hair around my finger and smiled, about to say something completely ditzy I’m sure, but Kimber saved me from making an idiot of myself. “Heven, we gotta go. We can’t be late for cheerleading; they’re announcing next year’s squad captain!”
How could I have forgotten about that?!
“I heard that you’re going to be named.” Brice said. “Congrats, captain.”
“Thanks,” I said. “But it hasn’t been announced yet.”
Kimber made a noise. “Please, like you don’t know it’s in the bag.”
Well, okay, it was pretty certain. I gave Cole and Brice and little wave as Kimber drug me away.
We quickly changed into our cheer uniforms and I took a moment to brush my hair into a ponytail and add blue and gold ribbons (the school’s colors) wanting to look fabulous for the moment I was made captain.
Then we rushed out into the gymnasium where my future awaited.