For Kitty and Priss
Orange neon tubing lettered a sign that hung bolted with rusted rebar to the sandstone above the Silent Harp’s entrance. Lynette saw dark yellow paint peeling behind lights that flickered with the hiss of chemicals reacting with electricity.
After dark, this no-doubt beckoned drunken New Yorkers inside with rich promises of debauchery and music. Right now, she could tell this place would creak in the oppressive city heat. Above her, the words TAP ROOM BAR became ROOM BA, then clipped back again with a pop that threatened to shake the apparatus free from the wall.
An unpleasant thrum of anxiety hung in her chest as she crossed over the entrance to the place. As a location for a first date, this wouldn’t have been anywhere close to her ideal choice. Green, velvet-rimmed bar stools. Walls cracked with thin, wooden paneling. No menus: no kitchen. Still, this place was local, meeting her and Peter halfway between their own spaces within the arteries of Manhattan. Should she reject him, he could walk home, as could she. If she liked him, her place wasn’t far. So she’d agreed to meet him here.
The bar was almost empty, but she felt heavy and observed already. Surely Peter had spotted her. Seen her awkward gaze flitting over empty chairs, seeking his. But no- an older couple sat by one end of the bar, and another solitary man sipped at something, two chairs by. The bartender paid them no attention, instead focusing on her phone as she texted. There was no one else here.
Lynette made her way to the other side of the bar, where she could sit undisturbed. She reached below its wooden surface, found a hook, and strung up her handbag. Next, she peered towards the back rooms, into the shadows that swirled there. Saw booths to the side, torn upholstery adorning the surfaces. She felt uneasy and needed a moment to collect herself. Her makeup was a rush: in this humidity, her mascara would streak down her cheeks. The restroom was to the back, she thought. She’d find it. Collect herself, take a breath with the mirror to assess her appearance, and force these thoughts away.
“Hey there! I love that dress,” announced the bartender instead.
“Oh, thank you,” Lynette replied. “I just ordered it. It just arrived.”
“I love that,” the woman said. She poured Lynette a glass of water and placed a napkin beside it.
Lynette asked the bartender to decide her evening’s signature on her behalf and appreciated the look of approval nodded her way. She’d felt self-conscious in her dress too, that sensuous low-cut high-riding silk thing that felt insincere to wear, let alone become. Well complementing the shoes that bit into the back of her feet, already blistering her skin. Still, both arrived in time for summer, fit great, and were unworn until now. And she’d seen women wandering worse-for-wear in similar choices in the park recently.
She retrieved her phone from her handbag, flipped its camera lens to face her, and peered into her reflection. Her makeup wasn’t smudged, after all. Her hair wore the summer’s humidity well- gently curled, shoulder length. Perhaps she’d stroke it if she liked Peter. Lean into him and giggle while she toyed at its ends, like she’s unaware that she’s doing it, teasing him by accident. Watch the breath catch in his throat, his verbal apparel lost in the upcoming flood of alcohol and attraction. Her lipgloss was visible if he was conscious enough to look- but believe her, it was there.
The bartender reappeared and placed a generous pour of red wine on the bar. Grinning, Lynnette lifted it to her lips and took a heavy sip.
“This is delicious, thank you,” Lynette said.
“Mmm hmm,” the woman agreed.
“Hey, Lynnette?” announced a man’s voice behind her. As Lynette stepped off her chair to welcome him, she smelled the heavy cologne exuding from his clothing and skin.
“Peter? Peter,” she said. A bristle of unshaven cheek brushed hers’ as he presumed to kiss her. Then she leaned back away from him to review. He looked close enough to his profile picture. Dressed more casually than she’d have liked. Heavier set than in his photographs, not muscular. He was taller than her. She felt a tingle of attraction to him- she could gaze at this. What was that scent he was wearing?
“Shall I get you a merlot to match?” the bartender asked Peter.
“No. I want a beer.” Peter said.
“Sure thing. Something light?”
“Didn’t you hear me? That’s what I said, yes,” he directed. Lynette saw the woman wince at his words.
Rude, Lynette thought. That was rude.
“Sure,” the bartender said. Her eyes flicked towards Lynette, and she dissolved away to prepare his drink.
“Hey, at least the service is quick,” Peter said.
Strike one, Lynette thought. You have two more. Please don’t be a prick.
“Yes. She’s nice. She made a good choice of wine,” she said as she brought the glass to her lips and sipped.
They slid into the conversation well and leaned into each other as they tested their shared air. One strike down, two remaining- she hoped their rapport would deepen throughout the evening.
“So, what are you looking for when you meet someone on the app?” Lynette asked.
“That’s a fair question.”
“Classic.”
“And the honest answer?”
“Please. Then I’ll tell you.”
“The honest answer. I’m not looking for anything, exactly?”
“Oh, really?” she asked, her eyebrow raised. “Because most people on here are just looking for a hookup.”
“Depends on the person,” he offered. “If we liked each other enough, then, I’d have to say I’d just want to see.”
“People can like each other and still just be looking for a hookup.”
“Yes, and if a hookup happens when I’m dating, and if it’s just that, then it’s just that. And that’s great. I wouldn’t complain. I mean, I haven’t complained. In the past.”
“I’m sure. I’d hope not,” Lynette said. He was circling the rim of his glass with his fingertip, she saw.
“But if we decided to see where things led, then I’d be open to more, at least? I don’t feel any pressing need to be with someone, but it would be nice. So I’d want to be careful and see where we wound up? I mean, if I just wanted a hookup, I’d say so. But irregardless I’d never want someone to feel any pressure, ever.”
Irregardless, she thought. Second strike. She watched him sip his beer. His finger continued to glide along his glass. If he was nervous, he didn’t betray this through his body language or tone. Ah, I’ll allow it, she thought then, and waited for him to continue. It was a good answer, at least one that would do. And she liked the timbre of his voice well enough.
He sunk the last of his drink, rested the glass on the bar and continued. “Zero pressure, you know? Especially in Manhattan.”
“Right. Sure. You said that earlier, incidentally.”
“What bit?”
“About ‘not feeling pressure.’ When we were messaging.”
“Oh, did I?”
“Yes. I thought that was pretty fair. So you’re the first person I’ve dated in a while. I deleted the app for a while, actually.”
“Really? Why?”
No, of course not, Lynette thought. “I just needed a break.”
She sipped her last and signaled the bartender to refill them. The place was beginning to liven now. And she’d noticed that their server had stayed nearby her throughout their talk. Let her listen, Lynette thought, judge away. There was nothing to learn that her date hadn’t preached before, to countless women before Lynette. Through numerous summer evenings and practiced conversations, every lure rehearsed and reinforced through repetition. As it was with her and each and every one who’d ever dated in New York City. Listen all you like.
“Alright, so, your turn,” Peter said.
“Turn for what?”
“You said you’d tell me if I told you, and I did. So it’s your turn.”
“Hmmm. I did, didn’t I? I’m looking to find someone who likes cats,” Lynette answered.
“Cats?”
“That’s right.”
“You’re a cat lady?”
“I am.”
“A crazy cat lady?”
“Is that a problem?”
“No, it’s fantastic. I’m a crazy cat guy, would you believe.”
“Are you? Do you have one?”
“I have.”
Lynette turned away from him and reached for her phone. Her fingers were slippery, her grip softened by the wine. She dug her nails underneath the device and pried it from the table.
“I’m serious- I love them,” Peter said.
“I believe you,” Lynette assured him. She held her phone towards him, opening her mouth to savor his perfumed scent. On its surface, she revealed a photograph and tilted it his way. She studied his face for a hint of insincerity as he looked. “This is Eurus. She’s the best cat. I adopted her as a kitten from a litter from a friend. So you could say she’s a rescue. Her mother was a feral. That makes her feral, too.”
Lynette scrolled through the photographs, showing picture after picture of her pet. She settled on a selfie taken with Eurus nuzzled against her chest, its paws on her shoulder, its head cuddled against her cheek. Its long hair melted into her own as Lynette grinned into the camera.
“She suits you,” Peter said.
“Thank you. I use this picture on my lock screen,” Lynette continued. She snapped the phone off and dropped it back on the bar. “I like to be reminded of her like that when I’m not home. She’s not what she used to be, but I keep her close. They get old. They age. So that’s Eurus.”
“Is she your familiar?”
“Familiars are supposed to be black. She’s white.”
“Yes, she’s- she’s long-haired Siberian?” Peter asked.
“Yes! That’s right. She is.”
“They make the best cats.”
“Eurus is the best cat,” Lynette concluded.
Eurus wasn’t a Siberian; she was an Angora. But at least he recognized a breed. For now, that was close enough.
Slivers of conversation seeped between their drinks. Peter’s fingertip continued to dance along his glass’s rim, exploring its loop’s singular destination to the rhythm of their conversation as if trying to summon a counter melody from his drink. His eyes remained trained on hers’ as he stroked it back and forth, faster and firmer.
He’s doing that on purpose, she thought.
“I need to go to the bathroom,” she said. She took her napkin and placed it on top of her glass. As Lynette stood however, Peter reached forward and impeded her with his arm. Next, he leaned across the bar.
“Do you mind looking after these for us while my friend steps away?” he asked the bartender. He took the drinks, reached these to the woman who collected them and placed them onto her side of the counter, out of Lynette’s view. Then Peter came forward, closer to Lynette. “You don’t mind, do you? This is our first meeting, after all. Just so you feel comfortable. I mean, I could be anyone.”
#
Upon her return, Peter collected their drinks.
“Thank you, Tessie,” he said to the bartender, and then to Lynette: “Your wine is done. Shall we order another?”
“Okay. So I was thinking,” Lynette began.
“Let’s move over there,” Peter interrupted. He nodded behind her towards the back of the bar. “It’s getting loud in here, and I’d love to continue our earlier conversation, and it looks quieter over there.”
Lynnette looked behind her, focused on the haze of empty booths.
“Is that right?” she said.
Now his eyes were flitting over her figure, too. He was drinking her in, gawping at chest and thighs. And he didn’t seem to be trying to hide this. The alcohol was swirling in her thoughts, but she was enjoying his attention nonetheless. You’re not going to try and kiss me right here? she thought.
“It’ll be quieter,” he repeated as he began to tug her away.
“Shots first,” she said. Pulled back to the bar and drew the bartender’s attention. “Yes. Tequila. Tequila then booth.”
Tessie met Lynette’s gaze alone- she didn’t look at Peter. Nor did the woman smile again while they remained.
#
After Lynette settled their tab, Peter guided her by her arm, and they stumbled outside. A cat howled in dissent against the clanging sounds of formless city machinery. Darker now, the sun had sunk under the skyline behind batteries of tenements that extinguished the last of the daylight. A yellow medallion car purred by, its TAXI sign humming through the evening’s acrid air. Peter hailed the driver, but its light clipped off as it trundled away, another passenger in tow already. Dirt bloomed from under its wheels, dusting their legs.
“It’s not far. Plus I like to walk,” Lynette said.
They made their way toward Central Park West. She’d walk him to her nondescript studio, somewhere near Columbus Circle. He could feign interest in her until then. Then he’d deceive his way into her sanctuary before finally robbing her blind.
Peter’s concern grew. Lynette (or was it Lyne? Linsey? It didn’t matter anymore) was sober enough, at this moment, to lead him to her private grotto of trinkets and riches. Not that he had much idea what jewelry of hers’ might be of any value- that would be up to Tessie. And Tessie would arrive later, rucksack in tow. But he knew this woman wouldn’t remain upright for long, and if she collapsed in the street, this whole setup would be a wash. He wished he could have bundled her into that damn taxi instead. Then again, he was broke: the two cents he could rub together wouldn’t even fare them around the block.
Lynette led him towards the crosswalk where they came to rest. Cars carved past them by the brownstone buildings as they waited for the light to change. Where were they, around 80th Street? Central Park ran lengthwise. A carnivorous wound festering with evening joggers, dog walkers, and oddballs who solicited anyone who’d offer the scantest attention. Easy prey, all of them, he thought. He felt disdain for each.
“Yes, I like to walk, too. I love the city,” he said. “I never want to leave here.”
Lynette pirouetted on her toes to face him. He locked his grin in place and forced a sigh as he kissed her. Her passion would keep her coherent, he hoped. He could ferment this. Cupping her breast with one hand, he reached the other along the inside of her leg again and buried his fingers inside her dress. She gasped and tilted her head back, her pupils’ holes, threatening to devour him in their depths. She bit at his lips as he pressed.
If she did collapse before they reached her home, he’d flee. They were in a spoilt neighborhood: a squabble of Upper West lords and ladies would gather to guard their poor young kin as she drooled into the gutter like so much discarded litter. She’d awaken in an East Side hospital, a quick ambulance ride away, her memories of the evening torn from her by the drug. Discharged by this time tomorrow. But he was hardly being honest with his identity. Tying a name to a dating profile was trivial. Crafting a persona was not. And sure, the drug would rout her ability to associate memories and render any consciousness completely moot when it took her. But they’d find it in her blood for sure. Then he’d have to shed his skin again. Moreover, Tessie would be furious as the dose hadn’t been the easiest she’d procured for this grift.
Now Lynnette was kissing his neck. With one hand, she slid her fingertips between them, under the hem of his shorts. Her other thumbed at his crotch.
“Let’s get back to yours first,” he said, pushing her away.
#
When she reached the other side of the street, she knelt, focusing on something by her feet. She squealed with delight as she reached out to pet the orange shape. Peter saw she’d found a cat. It began to purr.
“Well, would you look at you! You’re so beautiful,” she told the cat. It stretched its front paws in front of her, hind legs upright, inviting her connection. With a long tentative meow, the animal pushed its head into her hand, prodding at her fingertips. As Lynette petted, it swished its tail from side to side as if sweeping the street clean behind them.
“Oh! Where did he come from?” Peter asked.
“I have no idea. She was just suddenly there,” Lynette said. She ran her hand along the cat’s length with care. It meowed, fur shimmering in the streetlight, responding to each stroke like a ripple in a river.
“You’re very brave,” she said to the cat. Then, to Peter: “They’re nocturnal. I wonder if she’s a stray. She must be looking for food.”
During these deductions, the cat purred in agreement. Lynette circled her fingers around its tail and, with one long stroke, disentangled herself from the fur. She grinned at Peter as she made this motion, her eyes peering at his crotch again.
“So you collect strays?” Peter asked. The cat danced between Lynette’s legs, its tail whipping at the hem of her dress.
Peter hated cats. He thought they were beasts. But he reached down to pet the dirty little thing anyway. At his approach, its ears twitched backward towards Lynette. Peter moved his hand a little closer to the animal’s face. The cat’s back carved into a lightning arch as it hissed at him. He recoiled and the cat ran from him, taking refuge behind Lynette again. It stood rigid and peered at Peter through her dress, its tail stuck upright in the air.
Lynette offered her hand behind her for the cat to sniff. It accepted the peace offering, rubbed its face against her fingers, and relaxed as it purred for her alone. Then it was gone, darting away from them to hunt at the shadows of the Park. Lynette laughed at Peter.
#
Having reached the foyer of Lynette’s apartment now, that laugh had become looser, her cadence less precise.
“I collected her whiskers as they fell out. Each time I found one I placed it in a tin. I was going to make them into a bracelet but they weren’t long enough so I made a ring instead. Little ring of white whiskers,” she told him. Now she slurred, he noticed: her last phrase pronounced “why whizzers”. She held her hand up to his face and waved her fingers for him to see. As if worried her nails would claw his skin, he pushed her away. “Oh, I’m not wearing it today,” she said.
“Show me when we arrive.”
“It’s a walk-up, just two flights,” she said, pointing towards the stairwell.
Peter glanced around the entryway. The building lacked a doorman. This was good; one less risk of identification. He held his head downwards in a furtive motion to stay hidden from any hallway cameras and wondered at the wealth he’d discover inside her home. Her reveal did not bode well. Homemade junk jewelry held no value other than the sentimental, and he couldn’t trade on that. She had a box of money hidden under her bed, he hoped, something stowed away from the prying eyes of student loan collection or whoever. He’d be sure to look.
“Then you can meet Eurus,” Lynette slurred.
Peter was relieved the drug had begun the blunt work of melting her mind to mush. This would be a quick process now, not immediate. But the dimming, fragile light in her head would soon flick out. By the door of her studio, Lynette fumbled at her lock, and they were inside.
“I’d give you a guided tour, but there’s not much to see,” she said.
“No, this is a lovely place,” Peter replied. Lynnette’s modest space lit up to reveal her in richer clarity. In the back of her room, thick, dark blackout curtains blocked the city. A large, antique wooden wardrobe stood open, and a tongue of clothes spilled onto the floor. Tessie would make quick work of these when she arrived later. This furniture propped up a figure-length mirror decorated with photographs of lovers or friends. An oversized OLED television stood on the other side.
“The bathroom’s by the door. I need a minute and I’ll be back,” Lynette said. Peter saw she was losing her footwork, her earlier grace now a listless drag. She swayed like a spinning top about to tumble to gravity, her energy almost spent.
“Take your time. I’ll be right here,” Peter said as Lynette shuffled into the bathroom and away.
Peter continued his audit. He spied a video game console by the TV. Excellent. At the back of the room, her bed stretched, opulent and tidy. Cartoon cats danced on the sheets. Similar sketched portraits of the things hung on the walls like claw marks. Thick sage scented the air, masking the smell of her cat. He’d forgotten about that damn cat. Could it be hiding? The room didn’t betray any signs of feline co-occupation. He couldn’t see a litter box anywhere. No cat hair flitting through the air’s musk.
By Lynette’s bed stood a table. A clean, lace sheet dressed its surface, lit white by an ornate lamp. On this table, two small black and white photographs framed Eurus. In the left photo, the cat sat upright, its expression alert. To the right, she lay on her back, trusting her belly to the air.
Between the pictures was a glass container, a thick golden rim balancing its base upright. He recognized the type immediately. Cloches like these lined 5th Avenue jewelry store windows and masked the loot of pawnshops everywhere. Covering this was a thick, red handkerchief, obscuring whatever jackpot hid within. Taking care not to disturb the photographs, he took a corner of this cloth and tugged it free. It drifted to the table.
Peter yelped and stepped back. A small skull grinned at him from inside the jar.
The skull glared upwards through empty ovals. Ridges of yellow jawbone chiseled against the glass. Frozen fangs were inch-long nails that bit the air.
What in the absolute living fuck is this, Peter thought.
Something brushed his shoulder. Fingertips came to rest on his skin.
“That’s Eurus,” said Lynette. “Say ‘hi’ to our guest, Eurus.”
“You have a skull in your home,” Peter said.
“That’s not weird, is it? I like keeping her close to me.”
Peter looked back to the table. The dead animal perched, considering him with deep, vacuous sockets. Not a single string of grizzle dripped from the bone. All skin long since sheared away, leaving Eurus’ polished head, tended after death with care, preserved in a snapshot of grief.
“It’s important you understand,” Lynette said. “Understand” spoken as a broken murmur. “Please be careful around her, okay?”
Lynette tried to pull him towards the bed. Her grip slid off his arm, and she tumbled onto the mattress. She breathed in long, deep strokes, sucking in the air in mechanical reflex. Her gaze glazed open as she stared above her into nothing at all.
Finally, Peter thought. He lifted her arm, held it aloft, and then let it fall to the mattress again. Next, he peered into her eyes for any glimmer of conscious recognition. Lynette had shorted out, completely. She marinaded in the drug.
“May your dreams be sweet, Lynette,” he said as he rolled her onto her side. Unconscious or not, he preferred she faced away from him. She could vomit in her stupor.
Next, Tessie. He found his phone in his pocket. A cascade of angry text messages demanded his attention through the silent relief of Do Not Disturb. Tessie’s shift at the Silent Harp ended soon; the phone’s clock read 7.30. Peter ignored the furious message history and cut to the matter’s quick.
“She’s unconscious. Second floor, no elevator,” he typed, “and no concierge either. Probably security cameras but I didn’t see any.”
“Okay,” pinged Tessie’s response a beat later. “Get started. I’m getting cut from here in an hour.”
Peter looked over to the skull that grinned at him from the corner of the studio. Silent laughing madness judged folly in reply.
“What will Tessie make of you?” he asked. She’d find some worth in the dead cat, he was sure. She’d make a vase. He’d buy her flowers to match, plant them in the brainpan. The cranium dared at him with a grin.
Peter relayed Lynette’s address to Tessie, then deposited the phone back in his coat. He found Lynette’s handbag lying by the studio’s door. He unzipped it and tumbled her privacy onto the floor: wallet, cigarettes, vaporizers, tampons, and keys. A book dropped and flopped open, revealing a well-read page. Paper-thin, dried red petals spilled out from its leaves like shards of stained glass. Lynette’s rose-gold wallet glistened among the debris.
In the wallet: a fifty, two twenties. He deposited them in his pocket. A credit card gleamed. As he turned the wallet over in his hand, a clawing meow announced itself from the corner of the room. Peter examined the back of the wallet for cash or a cardholder or anything else he could claim, when:
“Meow,” insisted the small voice.
Peter looked back over to the bed. Lynette’s vacant figure breathed, her chest rising and falling. Then he spied the table: the crumpled handkerchief, the pictures, the cloche.
The skull had moved.
Peter dropped the purse. An unwelcome shiver rose through him, licking at his blood. He started at the dead cat. Eurus’ skinless head hadn’t turned much, only by degrees. Like it had creaked towards him in a silent hunt while he’d focused elsewhere. He thought to where he’d been standing when he pulled the handkerchief from the table. He looked back to the entryway and retraced his steps. Then he turned to peer into those silent holes again.
A vehicle passing outside must have dislodged the thing. Vibrations shaking through the brick of the building, into the bone. These apartments were old, their foundations fragile. He could explain the meowing too, just wafting upwards from the street below, echoing through nearby rooms. Adrenaline was confusing his senses and that was all.
Unmoving in the glass, Eurus grimaced at him.
Kicking the contents of Lynette’s bag across the floor, Peter strode to the table. He peered back into each of the yellowed eye sockets in turn. Inspected the dark diamond symmetry of a nose. The lamp above dimmed down. Shapes sharpened in the shadows, coming into further clarity as he looked.
Then he was elsewhere. He saw long black scratches coil below him and distill like liquid into streets. Monuments of jade loomed, refracting into space above him, obelisks yawning at the night. A crisscross mesh of detail whipped into place and made real. Rusted vehicles lay dismantled in the dark. Embers of fire rumbled through ancient dwellings, each starving inhabitant long since immolated in soot. Road signs set in bite-marks: a bastardization of meaning for no one. Clad in the crooked torn metal: a U, an L, and a T. A broken H, worn away by time and neglect.
These patterns started to turn him, now- oriented him within this new space as he flew unmoored above. A tidal wave of movement poured underneath: the claws of a thousand hungry cats tearing at each other as they raced, tumbling through the streets of this dying, alien city. Somewhere below, someone was screaming as paws rent their flesh away. The flood of cats moved through the cobblestoned roads and red-tiled roofs. As one, they raced around a once ivy-clad tower, a black mass of moss mutating in the dark. Every night they ran, tripping and tearing as they went.
The scene dissolved. Eurus mocked Peter through gritted teeth. He rubbed at his eyes, willing these sights to fall away, scale-like, from his vision. A spittle of phlegm streaked along his chin. He’d been drooling, and his head throbbed through his temples. What was happening to him?
Peter lifted the handkerchief from the table and dropped it back on the jar to hide Eurus. Then he rotated the cloche away from him so that it faced the corner of the room and away. Fuck Tessie, he was leaving as soon as he could.
He dragged the game console from the floor and tugged at its cables until they clipped away from the television. He tossed this by the studio’s door. Next, the bathroom. Dirty towels lay strewn on the floor. A faucet leaked into the sink, dripping with an irregular timing. Elsewhere above, a mirrored cabinet caked in flecks of toothpaste and soap. Dust sprinkled across his warped reflection. He looked awful, he realized, red-faced and sweaty. Peter opened the cabinet. Safety razors, face cream, and a medication bottle. Opiates, he hoped. At least, that would be something. He lifted these and shook them, unrecognizing the brand name on the label. Tessie would know what these are. He placed the bottle in his pocket.
A long, bleating meow came from around the corner. Sustained in its pitch, it persisted, drilling into Peter’s ear.
The sound stopped the moment he stepped back into the bedroom. On the table, by the bed, the handkerchief had fallen from its mount. Eurus had turned around to face him again.
“I’m going to grind you down to dust,” Peter said. In three strides, he was by the table. He tore the cloche from its base and took the skull into his hand.
The bone was cold to the touch. Dagger-like fangs hung downwards from rows of jagged teeth. Then Eurus gaped open and sunk those fangs into his wrist.
#
Tessie hadn’t heard from Peter since her shift at the Silent Harp had ended. She found the place with enough ease, but Peter wasn’t answering the woman’s buzzer. His text messages, neither. His unresponsiveness wasn’t unusual, but she would make her frustration clear nonetheless. Their partnership only worked if they communicated which meant answering his damn text messages when he received them. They had read receipts enabled for a reason.
A passing neighbor allowed her access, thinking nothing of her backpacked, hooded figure as she squeezed past into the building’s foyer: another anonymous New Yorker, a thief passing in the night. As she mounted the stairs to begin her ascent, she thought she could hear the distant sound of upholstery torn from furniture. A long, low rip, like a knife taken to cloth. On the second floor, the lights began to flicker overhead: dull, fractured yellow casting the hallway in a sick, pallid glow. And the carpet under her feet began to feel unfirm, soggy like her footfalls were sinking into the staircase. She looked down and saw her shadow looming ahead of her, coiling along the dirty brown fabric as a cry called out from somewhere above.
As she turned the corner onto the next landing, she felt the wind whipping at her face. A window overlooking the street had shattered, sharp shards scattered across the stairwell. Tessie stepped over the glass. Peering through the window into the night, it struck her how dark the street had become outside, how distant the city looked, through rain now falling from the blackened sky like rivulets of crude oil spilling across burned paper. Another cry came from above, drawing her on: the shrill scream of a feral animal caught between fight and flight. Another tear silenced the sound, like a dagger through thin material.
This place is a fucking dump, Tessie thought as she made her way. But the thought was forgotten as a heavy wave of nausea rose from her stomach, drowning her throat with reflux. That smell! Something rotted here, sickened in these hallways, infecting the passageways with decay.
A sharp bolt of pain lanced across the back of Tessie’s ankle. She tripped forward. She had time to break her fall with her wrist before her head collided with the ground. Behind her, a black shadow blinked out of sight and down the stairwell in a shimmer of speed. As Tessie propped herself back up, she felt the wet fabric beneath her, staining her hand with that scent. Animal piss, she thought. The floor’s covered in animal piss.
A thick misery throbbed from the back of her ankle. Her blood was seeping down her sock and into her shoe. Something had cut her, something sharp and vicious, tearing into her tendon with a razor-sharp agony of rage.
She leaned over the stairwell’s railing. A cat stood below her on the stairs, glaring up at her with slitted eyes that glinted in the dark in a fury. It lifted its paw and swiped the air between them, wielding the claws that had torn into her skin just seconds ago.
“You’re dead meat, you little fucker,” Tessie growled as it darted down the stairs and out of view.
She was where she needed to be, at least. The woman Peter had marked would have something for her leg, most likely. That woman would pay for the pain Tessie was feeling now. A flash of anger replaced her nausea. The woman who’d been kissing Peter. Devouring him with her lips.
The hallway stretched beyond. Rows of crooked apartment doors stood locked on either side of her, obscuring the value within. Wealth, here?
She lifted her backpack from her shoulder and readied it for collection. Finding the door open, she stepped inside.
#
Peter writhed on the hardwood floor, pinned by a shadow clinging to his chest: another black cat clawing at his face with damp, crimson-matted paws. He squinted up at Tessie through a tussle of blood-streaked hair. With a swipe of the cat’s talons, his head swung aside as his cheek serrated open. The skin hung torn from his face in thick, wet strips that slapped against the floor with each paw strike. One of his eyes had become unspooled from its socket and twitched against his cheek, flapping on the nerve. Another claw cut it clean away to roll free along the floor toward Tessie, leaving a thin trail of liquid behind it before coming to rest between them.
“Tessie,” wailed Peter, his voice a panicked falsetto, through the smattering strikes as he kicked at a second cat, this one calico, that gnawed at his feet. A third flayed at his wrists, its white fur stained pink as it bit.
Where the hell did they come from? Tessie thought. And now Peter struck out at the animals as he drove his feet against the floor. His foot connected with the black cat, and it fell away from him. It hissed as it landed between Peter and Tessie, its back becoming a whip-like arch as it readied itself for a further attack. Then, the cat saw the eyeball that still looked up at Tessie from the floor by her feet. A paw swipe batted it away to roll like a marble under the bed upon which Lynette’s still unconscious body lay ignored, unaware of the chaos demolishing the room around her. The cat pounced after it, vanishing into the shadows beneath the prone woman.
“Tessie,” Peter pleaded again as he propped his shoulders against the wall, still kicking at the cats with his feet, reaching towards Tessie through the tsunami of movement.
Tessie gripped his outstretched hand and felt his fingers sticky with liquid as she pulled him free. Behind them, above the bed, the curtain began to move. The cloth separated as a cat squeezed through the open window. Followed by another. Then another. Then they were spilling through the gap like curdled milk.
#
She supported Peter’s frame as they stumbled back down the hallway towards the stairs. Perched above the apartment doorways behind narrow windows, Tessie could see stationary figures, each sitting alert and motionless, their expressions trained on their prey as she limped by. Peter’s weight labored against her injured ankle, her tendon seared with heat as they went.
Peter’s words lisped through his injured face. He made little sense.
“It made me see things, Tessie. Where everything had died apart from them, and now they’re here.”
“Help me,” she grunted, “I can’t carry you on my own.”
Peter steadied himself against the doorways. Something was scratching against those doors, the sound of sharp nails splintering the wood.
“But it was dead too. It bit me, but it was dead. She kept her cat in a jar but it was dead too,” he said.
“They didn’t look dead to me. You, on the other hand, we need to get you to a hospital.”
“Not the cats. Eurus,” he moaned. He smeared stains against the hallway walls. He’d lost a lot of blood.
“Eurus. Okay. Tell me when we get to the hospital,” Tessie said.
#
As they descended the stairs, lightning struck the black sky through the open, broken window. At the same time, the ceiling light above them surged out with a crackle, plunging the building into dark. Tessie tripped and fell free from Peter’s grasp. She tumbled forward onto the landing among the shattered glass that glistened below. And this was strange because two of those shards now merged with her hand: sharp, painful growths skewering her palm and wrist like slivers of crystal.
Tessie howled. She held her punctured hand in front of her toward Peter, like she presented him with a broken flower, a cruel reward for their evening’s efforts. Blood trickled into her sleeve. Their dark world was taking on a red tinge now; her vision filtered through danger and pain. They needed to escape this rancid building. Needed to find a hospital and soon.
At the top of the stairs, a small row of eyes lit the darkness, black daggered pupils glistening through illuminated grey. The formless shape of a cat hissed at Peter and Tessie.
#
“What’s happened?” Tessie pleaded as they spilled from the building and onto Columbus Circle. Because the city had become a cracked reflection of their home, warping their view across its surface like they looked into a broken mirror. The once opulent intersection now lay beseeched by a vast chasm that swallowed the statues and cut into the park ahead. A coil of black soot rose from that gap and plumed towards a distant tree line, where the thin shapes of dead branches curled like scar tissue across a fetid wound.
“Oh. Oh, I see,” Peter lisped.
Carcasses of rusted vehicles smattered the ruined street like metal insects- long since upturned, poisoning the atmosphere with coppery rust that corroded the air. A cat was perched atop the nearest, licking at its oversized paw. Its head hung downwards from a long sloping neck, its mouth agape as it drank in the air. The animal was so very big, Tessie saw.
“What do you see? You’ve only got one eye. What could you possibly be seeing?”
“This isn’t New York,” Peter said.
And the buildings that rose around them were no longer the grand skyscrapers that once stood as a testament to Manhattan’s excess. Tall monoliths replaced the lavishness instead- each towering above like tombstones, featureless and flat and green, angled upward and stretching until their tips disappeared into the night sky above. Red embers of a distant fire roared somewhere in the distance, painting the jade with orange gloaming as the remains of this new city burned away.
Tessie peered towards a nearby storefront. This had once been the entrance to a mall, a rich jealousy she’d delighted in thieving with Peter in their earliest days of conquest and grift. Formless shapes swirled within its open maw, its signage hanging askew and crumpled across the entrance. Cats roamed the blackness inside, she knew, dancing in the dark among the dirt.
That sign was written in a variation of meaning she could almost read, almost understand: semiotics not entirely her own that hurt her head as she scanned the symbols. She looked around at other unfamiliar shops- places she’d known and robbed for years. Each sign pattered with that same alien, illegible font: a language wholly ignored by the cats roaming the ancient streets around them.
“Where are we, Peter?”
“It’s called Ulthar. The place Eurus showed me when-” Peter began to reply before the long wail of an angry animal broke into his response, cutting off his words at the root.
More cats had appeared on the street. They peppered the cracked sidewalk ahead, scores of small black, white, and orange shapes, each standing alone but with shared intent. One of them, a tri-colored runt, began to hiss. The sound was met with another, and then another, until a chorus of buzzing cries advanced toward Tessie and Peter as the animals moved closer. The cats were stalking them now, rounding on the bleeding figures who had dared to invade this space.
Tessie looked behind her toward a street that led further into the burning city. More cats moved here, too, flanking their escape.
“This way,” Peter called as he grabbed Tessie’s arm and pulled her away.
#
A hole that had once been a subway entrance opened in the ground like a gaping mouth, its gullet sloping downwards onto weathered stairs. They ran into the depths while the ferals circled and pounced at their heels.
“They’re herding us,” Tessie called as Peter entered the station. But she followed Peter all the same as they stumbled into the earth. Fluid was trickling into his remaining eye, and all he could taste was blood seeping into his mouth from his wounded cheek. They needed to stop soon. Needed to find somewhere safe or he was going to die.
He heard a shriek coming from behind him. Tessie had fallen again and lay face down on the steps. She looked up at Peter. He saw the glass still embedded in her broken hand and heard the wail of her voice as she reached for him.
Then the cats were upon her. They flooded into the hole above like a pour of liquid, swirling through the station’s entrance. She became enveloped in shape, blanketed in a mess of fur and teeth. Her screams reverberated throughout the tunnel as they bit at her, their fangs gnawing at her feet, her flesh, her neck.
She screamed again as they dragged her back up the stairs and away.
#
Peter made his way to the back of the platform. He leaned against the wall and looked down into the tunnel that leered deep into the bowels of this alien earth. From deep within this hole, a breeze emanated, wafting towards him like warm breath.
Tessie was gone. He was alone. Alone but for the cats who had begun to descend again, slinking along the floor towards him. He was trapped, he knew, lost in the dark with the cats that circled his feet.
A cat glanced against his leg with a hiss. He tumbled backward, losing his balance as he fell from the platform onto the tracks below. As he lay on the tunneled ground, he looked up at the cracked stone of the ledge that jutted out above.
A row of eyes peered down at him, slowly blinking their dark little pinpricks as they watched him still. The horizontal pairs didn’t move. Not a purr nor a hiss leaking from their silhouettes. They were watching him die, waiting for their final prey to bleed out on the ancient tracks that hadn’t seen sentient movement in millennia.
Peter rotated his head to face the depths of the tunnel. That breeze licked his cheeks again, gently rousing him towards its depths, carrying with it its sour, metallic scent.
That air must be coming from somewhere, Peter thought. Shadows swirled in the gloom into the yawning distance that stretched away. But the air- it must be coming from another exit.
Peter rose. He found his cell phone tucked safely among the tatters of his coat. Then he flicked on the device’s torch and flooded the station with light.
The cats recoiled from the glow and scattered past the bloodstain: all that remained of Tessie. Then they were gone. Holding the torchlight in front of him, Peter ventured forth into the tunnel and beyond.
#
The damp, cold air swirled around him as he went underground. He could see stalactites drip down from the arched roof as drops of moisture formed puddles beneath his feet.
A solitary bone lay half submerged in the blackness of one such pool. Peter shuddered as he saw a thin strip of tattered cloth melded against its length. This must have belonged to one of the city dwellers, he thought. Someone who came before him, fleeing as the cats gave chase. Ignore it, he commanded to himself. Keep going. The gentle breeze invited him on with the promise of escape. He’d leave this tunnel, find his way back to Lynette’s squalid apartment, and figure out how to get home, still.
He limped on.
How sweet that breeze smelled now, he realized. Like a tang of sugar dissolved in water. Oh, what he wouldn’t give for something to drink.
His foot collided with something below him, kicking the object further down the cavern. He watched it roll into the gloom and saw eye-sockets, not quite human, as the skull came to rest against the wall. And now he could hear something slumping deep within the tunnel: a large, heavy drag pulling near. The warm breeze wafted towards him again, almost like-
Peter lifted his torchlight, illuminating the barest distance. A shape formed among the shadows, distinct in the dim.
Slump.
An enormous paw had appeared on the track, carpeted in patches of fur. It dragged behind it a terrible face that filled the darkness ahead.
Slump.
A second paw hovered into view, pulling toward Peter the giant that came into fuller focus now. A thousand dagger-like fangs protruding from its grin.
Slump.
Razor-sharp eyes the size of television screens glaring down at Peter. Ropes of whiskers brushing against the tunnel walls. Wave after wave of rancid breath.
Slump, slunp, slump.
#
Lynette woke the following day groggy and amnesic. The studio’s light stung her eyes. She was still wearing her dress, she noticed. Yesterday’s evening would take some piecing together. As she rolled from her bed, she smelled a sour, acidic flavor, lancing at her as she inhaled. The floor was sticky underfoot. Aside from the bloodstained hardwood and ransacked belongings, her home was empty of activity. From the corner of the room, Eurus purred.
Iain Maguire (he/him) is a short story writer born and raised in Scotland, currently living in New York. In the evening, he is often found taking long walks in Central Park in between coffee refills and bookstore deep-dives. By day he is a software engineer and technical instructor. As an avid fan of horror movies and literature, he endeavors to incorporate elements of his own experiences into his writing. He lives with his partner Kitty, their cat Priscilla, and an ever growing collection of books. He is currently working on his first novel.