Corgi
I am a Corgi *3*
Owen was sure to keep her close to him, his hand cupped around hers as he led her back down the hallway and into a large living area. It was hard to see in the dim light from the windows, but there were large stains under his feet, crusty from age. The smell and other clues left little doubt in Owen’s mind that they were blood. The corpse that laid propped up against the loveseat showed whose.
The male stiffened, immediately pushing Aubrey further behind him and raising his bat. However, the body did not move. The ache that had settled in his chest since he figured out whose house they were going to deepened. It was a woman’s form, obviously thin despite the damage and rot the house had caused. With a shaking hand, Owen reached into his jacket pocket and produced his cellphone. It was useless for the most part, but at least the blue light from the screen was enough to illuminate the scene.
The long hair was stuck to the mushy face. The cold winter had helped slow the decay, but the damage was obvious. A bullet hole shone from the middle of the woman’s forehead, the dried dark ooze of coagulated blood down her nose. The eyes were still open, somehow even more void of life than the milky white eyes that he was sure had shone back in undeath. This girl’s heart had stopped beating long before she was shot. Hesitantly, the large man leaned down to get a better look. Aubrey was frozen behind him, muscles tense in anticipation as her eyes flickered from the woman to Owen.
“Is… Is it her?” Her meek voice barely squeezed through her vocal cords as she gazed past his form.
“No.” He spoke with confidence. “It’s not.” The relief in his voice was evident. Even with the degeneration, it was obvious it wasn’t Charlotte. It had been a while since he had seen her last, but he would recognize her. The hair was the right color, but the face was the wrong shape. Her body was thin like Charlotte’s was, but not the same. A quick check to the back shoulder assured him it was also missing the tattoo that he knew to be on the back of her shoulder.
“Definitely not,” he assured her.
Aubrey sharply exhaled, relief taking shape in the form of tears, but they didn’t spill this time. The day was getting increasingly longer with each fright she experienced. She wasn’t sure how much more she could take- Owen and Nile returning, Colt leaving, and now this- it was overwhelming and exhausting.
“In fact,” Owen continued. “This one was one of the dead things, and unless Charlotte’s goody-two-shoes husband got really good with guns really fast, this is Charlotte’s kill.” Confusion threaded Aubrey’s brows together once more.
“Charlotte was good with a gun?” She questioned, reflecting back to the days before she left. She could barely imagine her little sister, the angel of the family, holding a gun.
“She liked to brag she was,” he muttered, remembering all the times she had waved one in his face. “Not important,” he said remembering that Aubrey knew very little of Charlotte’s life once their parents had passed. “She was here and she was alive. See that?” He asked pointing to the abandoned bottle of wine on the table, no glass to be seen with it.
“I only know one person who drinks wine right from the bottle.” He was growing more excited, realizing that Charlotte had likely been here.
“She was here Aubrey,” he assured her. “And that means at least while she was here she was…” Owen was going to say ‘Alive’ but as his eyes scanned the rest of the house, his gaze landed on two piles of dirt in the yard. The view was clear enough through the sliding glass door. They weren’t exactly freshly dug, but fresh enough that they stood out against the grass of the lawn.
Aubrey followed his line of sight to the backyard, eyes falling on the ominous mounds. The idea of everything she’s worked towards being buried six feet under enveloped her mind, knees suddenly weakened under the weight of her thoughts. “Do you think…?” The tightness in her chest stopped her from finishing the sentence, and a part of her was glad. It would become far too real if she did.
He opened the door, his large palm pressed against the glass, and sliding it open. The chill of the fall air invaded the small house, but the smell of grass and nature was welcome compared to the scent of death that clung to the walls. There were only two graves. One was much smaller than the other, in fact, it looked more like the grave of a pet than a human. His thoughts went back to the nursery, unfortunately, he knew exactly who that grave belonged to. The only question was the larger one. It could be Charlotte, he supposed. But something told him that wasn’t the case. There was too much evidence of her life in the house. It could have been her husband too. His stomach turned.
There was really only one way to know for sure.
“Why don’t you stay inside Aubrey.”
Collab: Maj (Owen)