Tormented

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Tormented Page 1

by Lee Mountford




  Tormented

  Lee Mountford

  For my beautiful wife, Michelle, and amazing daughter, Ella.

  Contents

  Free Books

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Horror in the Woods

  The Demonic

  The Demon of Dunton Farm

  About the Author

  Acknowledgments

  Free Books

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  And that’s just the start—as a thank you for your support, I plan on giving away as much free stuff to my readers as I can. To sign up just go to my website (www.leemountford.com) and get your free stories.

  1

  Adrian James looked down at the floor as the person at his feet begged. It was a person he knew well.

  ‘Please,’ the dying person pleaded.

  Adrian wasn’t listening—nothing was going to stop what was about to happen.

  Because it had already happened before.

  The act of taking the life was every bit as difficult and soul-destroying as he remembered it being the first time around: the pleading, the struggling, and the weak resistance which he easily overcame. Adrian snuffed out the flame of life, and the body lay still.

  The room they were in, illuminated only by faint candlelight, fell silent after the death rattle—the last wheezing breath—petered out of the corpse.

  After the deed, Adrian slumped to the floor, feeling incredibly drained. He studied his hands—murdering hands that he’d just used to kill.

  Was he a monster?

  Adrian felt something squirm inside, a knot in his gut that tightened and tightened. Then he purged, spilling the contents of his stomach across the dirty carpet floor.

  When his vision finally cleared, he looked up at the walls of the room. Once white, they were now dull and yellowed.

  Then the paint started to discolour even more before his eyes.

  Something was wrong here.

  This wasn’t how he remembered things.

  Dark pools of black formed in places along the walls, and from these pulsating pockets, sickly yellow tendrils ran free, weaving their way around the remaining space, spreading and covering the entirety of the walls.

  A sickness running wild.

  Adrian was crying now, wailing uncontrollably. What had he done? He was a monster, there was no question of that. A killer.

  A murderer.

  He hugged himself and fell to his side, curling up into a foetal position as he continued his sobbing, feeling the wet, sticky patch of vomit beneath him.

  Then he felt a breeze around him and detected a foul smell—worse than the one that already emanated from the carpet.

  Adrian looked up just in time to see the surrounding room completely disintegrate before his eyes like it was never there. Blown away as if made of smoke. And what lay beyond terrified him.

  He screamed.

  This wasn’t real—couldn’t be. It was madness.

  The ground beneath him—hard and black—stretched out, on and on, a seemingly never-ending landscape. It was a smooth, rocklike formation that secreted a thick red liquid beneath his weight. Enormous, jagged mountains broke from this ground and clawed up at the dark sky, and these themselves were dwarfed by terrible, perfectly cylindrical black towers.

  This alien landscape, however, was not bereft of life.

  Beings that defied sanity roamed, feeding off each other. Grotesque titans scooped up smaller, helpless monstrosities and thrust them into what appeared to be mouths. One being was so vast it stood level with the mountains as it screeched into the star-filled sky.

  Other creatures, which were closer to Adrian, emerged from the ground—large, moaning mouths on long bodies lined with rolling eyes. They devoured anything that was within reach. One of these snake-like beings was ripped from the ground by a rolling, formless mass, then mashed and torn apart inside the gelatinous thing.

  A screaming, humanoid figure—one that seemed human, only devoid of skin—was pinned down by a twisted horde of much larger creatures. Without legs, they pulled themselves along the hard ground on stumped midsections and toyed with the person—a man—tossing him around and dropping him from heights that should have ended his life.

  But he did not die.

  He simply moaned and screamed in agony. Then the monsters got to work. Not content with just pulling his exposed flesh from his body, they thrust engorged stalks that protruded from their underbellies into him, piercing him.

  Adrian watched this horror unfold and continued to scream at the madness that surrounded him. Immense noises echoed, booming through the air, completely drowning out his own howls.

  Then he heard something else amongst the chaos, something more focused. Something meant just for him.

  He felt it inside his mind.

  Something was communicating with him, and him alone.

  It was not via a language he understood, yet he could still detect the intent.

  This thing hungered for him and his fears.

  For his guilt. For his madness.

  Adrian felt this pull and turned himself around to face the direction it was coming from. A vast, raging body of thick liquid—a sea of boiling rage—was spread out before him. Whatever was communicating with him, he knew it was deep within that watery expanse.

  And it called to him and tore at his mind.

  Adrian fell to his knees, then rolled onto his back, continuing his screams. The sky above was a never-ending cosmos, and not one he recognised. Even the stars that sat high up behaved differently—pulsing, twisting, and moving. They coiled together, swirling and mixing to form something that was familiar to him somehow.

  The thing inside of his head now seemed fearful, scared of the cluster in the sky.

  He then realised what this formation of countless stars—the slightly elliptical shape that contained an iris within—reminded him of.

  It was an eye

  A great, cosmic eye.

  It moved, and Adrian knew it was focused directly upon him.

  ARLINGTON ASYLUM, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 1954

  Adrian James screamed out again, but this time he could hear himself cle
arly, no longer clouded by that sinister voice inside of his own mind.

  His panicked cries reverberated around him.

  The other nightmarish sounds were no longer there.

  He thrashed and kicked, but his arms and legs would not cooperate.

  Adrian then opened his eyes, immediately seeing different surroundings. No longer in that cosmic madness, he now recognised a more familiar environment.

  It was a small, dimly lit room containing only himself, the bed he was lying on, and a small, dirty toilet to his left. A single window sat directly above him lined with thick iron bars, and the dull light of the morning beyond seeped through. The walls were bare brick, grey and streaked with watermarks.

  He looked down, breathing rapidly, still fighting and squirming, trying to get his bearings which were slowly returning. He was dressed in ill-fitting cotton overalls, once white, now yellowed and damp with perspiration. His arms and legs were restrained with wide, leather straps.

  Memories started to flood back, finally overwhelming the lingering nightmare that refused to disappear.

  Adrian then heard a metallic sound from the iron door ahead of him as it was unlocked.

  The door creaked open and four men entered.

  Two were dressed in simple white uniforms and took their positions at each side of the room, arms folded across their chests. Of these two, the man farthest to Adrian’s right loomed over him, a giant looking down. He wore a sneer and his dark eyes bored into Adrian.

  That was Jones.

  The man to the left was Duckworth, less imposing, but still not someone Adrian wanted to cross.

  The other two men present were the more senior figures. One was a doctor—Dr. Reid. He was a serious-looking man in his early fifties who wore thin, round glasses and had a neatly trimmed goatee and closely shaved head. As ever, he wore a three-piece suit, this one a light brown.

  The other man was older and dressed in a fitted black gown, one that had a faint embroidered pattern. It also had a high neckline that was finished with a clerical collar. This man was well into his sixties, and his grey hair was combed with a neat side part.

  It was Director Templeton—the man who ran the facility.

  ‘Now, now,’ the director said. ‘All this screaming. What in the world is wrong, Adrian?’

  Adrian’s memories then flooded back completely, and he realised that the fantastical, horrific things he had witnessed only moments before were nothing more than a dream.

  A nightmare.

  He knew exactly where he was.

  It was where he was supposed to be—Arlington Asylum.

  ‘Nothing is wrong, Mr. Templeton,’ Adrian finally said. His strained throat—sore and raw—hurt when he spoke. ‘I’m fine.’

  ‘Good,’ Templeton said and stepped forward. ‘I’d hate to think our treatment was doing more harm than good. And I’m quite certain we are on the verge of a breakthrough with this medicine.’

  Adrian heard the screams of the insane rattle around from beyond his room as Director Templeton’s lips spread into a wide smile.

  ‘Now,’ Templeton went on, ‘tell me what you remember.’

  2

  ‘What I remember?’ Adrian asked.

  The director nodded. ‘Yes. You were screaming quite severely in your sleep. Bad dreams?’

  Adrian ran a hand over his face and could feel the dampness of sweat. He looked down at his palms to see them glisten. ‘You could say that,’ he said.

  ‘Then tell me about them.’

  Adrian looked up at the older man. Director Templeton had a gentle face with grey eyes set into skin that had started to sag with age. The man had a quality about him that drew Adrian to him, one he felt he could trust. This had been true ever since their first meeting, back when Adrian had almost…

  ‘Please,’ the director pressed. ‘It would help us greatly to know.’

  Adrian shrugged. ‘It was just a dream. Is it important?’

  ‘Why yes,’ Templeton replied. ‘The medicine we gave you often spikes the brainwaves, we believe. Dreams are a fantastic indicator of how well it has worked. This was your first dose, and I am keen to know how effective it was.’

  Adrian paused and shifted on the uncomfortable bed, going over the nightmare in his mind. Not that he particularly wanted to. ‘I dreamt that I killed somebody,’ he said, sombrely.

  The director nodded, and Adrian even saw Dr. Reid raise his eyebrows. ‘And how was that?’ Director Templeton asked.

  ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘What I say. How did it feel?’

  That was indeed an odd question. ‘Horrible,’ Adrian said.

  ‘Just horrible? Anything else?’ Templeton pushed.

  Adrian shook his head, but that was a lie. When he replayed the act of killing over in his mind, he could not deny that he felt a certain sense of power with it. His face flushed with shame. Was that actually how he had felt when he’d carried out the foul deed?

  ‘You can be honest with me, Adrian,’ the director said. ‘This will only work if we are honest with each other.’

  ‘I am being honest,’ Adrian lied. Whether he trusted Director Templeton or not, he was not going to admit to those feelings.

  He was not a monster. At least, he desperately wanted not to be.

  ‘Okay,’ the director went on. ‘Tell me, this dream. Was it a memory?’

  This man certainly didn’t miss a beat.

  Adrian looked down and nodded.

  ‘So, am I correct in thinking this was the incident that you have told me about already?’ Templeton asked. ‘The one with your father?’

  Again, Adrian nodded, even though it was not true. The dream was of a different memory.

  ‘Can you tell me about what happened when you killed him?’

  ‘I’ve already told you,’ Adrian said. ‘It’s why I’m here. You know everything about what happened.’

  ‘But what happened in the dream, Mr. James? I am keen to know how accurate it was.’

  ‘It was accurate,’ Adrian said, growing tired and annoyed. ‘It happened pretty much as I remember it.’

  ‘And what about the details?’

  ‘The details are the same,’ Adrian snapped, raising his voice. He shifted again on the bed. The restraints dug into his skin, and the mattress of the bed, thin and lumpy, was hard beneath him.

  ‘Okay,’ Director Templeton said, holding up his palms in supplication. ‘That’s okay.’ He then looked up to the large orderly. ‘Mr. Jones, could you please release Adrian here from these dreadful restraints? He is quite clearly uncomfortable.’

  ‘Are you sure?’ Jones asked, his voice deep and soulless. The man was well over six feet tall, possibly pushing six and a half, with a broad frame. He had short black hair to match his dark eyes, a misshapen nose, and he carried himself with authority. Adrian had wondered if perhaps Jones had a military background. The man nodded at the director and bent down over Adrian, engulfing the patient in his shadow. Adrian winced as Jones grabbed him, causing the bigger man to smirk. The restraints were released, and Adrian felt the tingle of blood coursing through his veins again as the circulation was able to flow unobstructed.

  ‘Better?’ Templeton asked, and Adrian nodded.

  ‘Thank you.’

  The director waved his hands dismissively. ‘Think nothing of it. Those straps were for your own good, I hope you know. The medicine has been known to cause extreme reactions. Dreams like the one you’ve had are common, but some are more potent than others. Some people have actually thrown themselves from the bed, such was the ferocity of what their mind was showing them.’

  Adrian nodded, rubbing his wrists.

  ‘Now, is there anything else?’ Templeton asked.

  ‘What do you mean?’ Adrian replied.

  ‘In the dream? Was that everything?’

  The older man seemed to know much more than he had any right to. ‘There was something,’ Adrian admitted.

  Templeton smiled and lean
ed forward eagerly, the flat springs on the bed squeaking as he did. ‘Go on,’ he said.

  Adrian realised that every eye in the room was focused on him, and Dr. Reid was looking less than impressed. Adrian had already had some dealings with the doctor and found him to be cold, but clearly the man was knowledgeable in his field. Adrian noted an ever-so-subtle shake of the head from Reid. Did he think this a complete waste of time?

  ‘Well,’ Adrian started, ‘after I killed… him, the room I was in changed, somehow.’

  ‘Please explain,’ the director pressed.

  ‘I can’t,’ Adrian said. ‘It just sort of, flaked away, like it wasn’t even a solid structure. And then I was somewhere else.’

  ‘And can you describe where you were?’

  A humourless chuckle escaped Adrian’s lips before he had a chance to stop it. How on earth was he supposed to describe the nightmarish vision that his mind had thrown up? He gave an attempt, regardless.

  ‘Well, the whole landscape was… different.’

  ‘Different, how?’

  ‘I know how this will sound, but I don’t think it was on this planet.’

  The director raised his eyebrows, but he did not look skeptical. In fact, he looked pleased. Dr. Reid, however, was visibly less-so.

  ‘Do we really have time for this, Isaac?’ the man asked.

 

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