Genre: Horror
IMAGINARY
By Randy Romero
Chelsea Greene was preparing
dinner when her son walked into the kitchen. Of course, Greene was actually her
maiden name. She started using it again once the divorce was finalized. Thomas
had kept his father’s name, Wentz. But Chelsea didn’t mind as long as Thomas
was happy. And Chelsea was just happy to be Chelsea Greene again.
The name Wentz brought her nothing
but bad memories and filled her with regret. Nothing could dissolve the years
of verbal and physical abuse. But when her ex-husband smacked her in front of
Thomas, she vowed it would never happen again. Her life started over the second
the divorce papers were signed. Nobody would ever raise a hand to Chelsea
Greene again.
Thomas greeted her as he walked
in, then sauntered over to the fridge to look for a snack.
“Don’t even think about it,” Chelsea
said. “Dinner will be ready in ten minutes. I’m not going to let you spoil your
appetite.”
Thomas sighed and closed the
fridge.
“Mom, is it okay if Frank sleeps
over again tonight?”
“Of course, sweetheart,” she
smiled benevolently. “As long as it’s okay with Frank’s mom.”
“He says it is.”
“Well that’s splendid. I hope he
doesn’t mind spaghetti for dinner.”
“Frank will eat anything, mom.”
“I’m sure he will. Now run
along. I’ll call you when dinner is ready.”
Frank was Thomas’s imaginary
friend. Chelsea imagined that the divorce was tough on him, and she wasn’t at
all surprised by the development of Frank. Lots of kids have imaginary friends,
especially at Thomas’s age, and especially children with separated parents. It
was just a phase. Thomas would grow out of it eventually. In the meantime, Chelsea
didn’t see the harm. She assumed it was Thomas’s way of coping with the
divorce.
Chelsea called Thomas when
dinner was ready. She made linguine with marinara sauce because it was one of
her son’s favorites. Thomas loved her homemade sauce with the sautéed onions
and garlic. Shockingly, Frank didn’t join them at the table. They ate together
and talked about their day. Thomas talked about school, about his classes and
his friends. Chelsea bored him with talk about her job.
“Can we go to the movies this
weekend and see the new Avengers movie?” Thomas asked.
“Which Avengers movie is this
one? There’s so many of them.”
“This is Infinity War.”
“We’ll see,” Chelsea said.
Thomas sighed. “That means no.”
When his plate was clean and he
couldn’t possibly eat another bite, Thomas asked his mom if he could take a
plate upstairs for Frank. Chelsea humored him by fixing another plate of
spaghetti for Thomas to bring upstairs.
Thomas went to his room and Chelsea
washed the dishes with the television on in the background. She could just make
out what the reporter was saying.
In other news, the manhunt continues
for escaped serial killer Francis Horner. Horner has been able to evade capture
at every turn and police still have no leads as to the whereabouts of this
deranged individual. Horner is considered to be armed and extremely dangerous.
Any sighting of Horner is to be reported directly to the police. If you see
him, do not attempt to approach or apprehend him.
“Francis Horner?” Chelsea
repeated. “Francis…Frank.”
Chelsea thought for a moment
about Thomas’s strange request. This wasn’t the first time Thomas had asked to
take food upstairs for his imaginary friend. And he often came back with a
clean plate.
She rushed up the stairs to her
son’s bedroom and flung the door open.
There he was. Perched on the
windowsill. That’s how he’d been getting in and out. Who knows how long he’d
been using her home for food and shelter?
Chelsea had read about him in
the papers. Francis Horner killed over a dozen people before the police captured
him. In some cases, he stabbed his victims. In other cases, he strangled or
suffocated them. There was no pattern, no motive, no specific type that he targeted.
There was no reason or explanation for his actions. He killed for the sheer
thrill of it.
“Mom, this is Frank. Frank this
is my mom. I’ve told him so much about you.”
“Thomas, get away from him!” she
cried.
“But mom, Frank’s my friend. He
could be your friend too if you let him.”
The boy had been corrupted,
brainwashed by this psychopath. Who knows what he had told the boy in
confidence? Who knows what dark thoughts he embedded in his fragile mind?
“Thomas, this man is not your
friend. He’s very dangerous. Now step away from him before he hurts you.”
“Frank would never hurt me,
right Frank?”
“That’s right, Thomas,” Frank
said, his voice deep and raspy. “My apologies for the intrusion, Mrs. Wentz. Oh
I’m sorry, it’s Ms. Greene now. I forgot. Thomas has told me so much about you.
He’s a good kid. I like him. So let’s be calm about this situation. I’d hate
for anything to happen to him.”
That was all Chelsea needed to
hear for her maternal instincts to kick in. She rushed over and an intense
struggle ensued. He tried to strike her, but she grabbed hold of his wrists,
digging her fingernails in deep. She got one foot up to try and kick him, but
Frank used his knee to block it. He wriggled free from her tight grip and
wrapped his massive hands around her throat.
“Stop it!” Thomas screamed.
“You’re hurting her, Frank!”
Frank swatted him away with one
of his giant paws, and Chelsea clawed at his face, freeing herself from his
grasp. She shoved him and he stumbled back, bumping into the windowsill. One
more push was all it took.
Francis “Frank” Horner went
tumbling out the second-story window and snapped his neck on impact.
Thomas checked on his mother,
then walked over to the window. He stared down at the man he genuinely thought
was his friend. He had a look on his face his mother couldn’t quite place. It
wasn’t shock or terror. It wasn’t anger or sorrow.
It was the absence of emotion.
“I’m sorry Frank hurt you,”
Thomas said. “He promised me he wouldn’t. He told me about the other people
that he hurt. He told me that they all deserved to die. He told me their names.
Told me everything about them. He told me lots of stories…I really enjoyed
them.”
“He’s gone now, sweetie. He can’t
hurt anyone. Not anymore.”
“You’re wrong,” he said, so calm
and cool it chilled Chelsea to the bone. “He’s not really dead. Frank lives on…in
me.”