4
As Ron was driving home
there was another car pulling out of its driveway. There was a sharp screech of
the tires as the Toyota Camry came to a halt and then sped off into the night.
A few blocks away a man sitting in his back patio looked up from his book,
startled by the sound. “Damn kids.” He said, returned to his book.
Molly Amberton used her
hand to brush the hair from her face as she sped down the street. Mr. Giggles
was in the passenger seat. She pressed the ON button on her phone to check what
time it was. It was nine fifty PM. The Wal-Mart closes at midnight. That gives
me plenty of time, she thought. She was hunched over in front of the steering
wheel as she drives at break-neck speeds down Arlington Ave. There will be
enough time. There will be enough time. Molly keeps repeating this thought over
and over in her head. As if repeating the thought might somehow make it true.
In a small way it did calm her panicked mind. She pushed down on the gas pedal
a little more. There will be enough time, but there is still so much to do. So
much that needs to be prepared. And you just can’t know how much time there is
left.
The Toyota was now
traveling at about sixty five miles an hour past the Riverside Airport. At the
intersection where Arlington and Van Buren meet she made a sharp left turn and
headed south. The Traffic camera flashed in her rear view mirror. Molly did not
give a shit; she was NOT going to stop. If there had been twelve police
cruisers behind here all whaling for her to pull over on their loud speakers,
she would have just flipped them the bird and hit the gas. Too much left to do
fuckers! She would have cried out.
The right turn that
lead to the Wal-Mart parking lot was coming up fast. She took the turn with the
tires of her car screeching again as the rubber ground against the asphalt. The
Toyota drove right up to the entrance of the store and parked in the handicap
spot closest to the door. She was thrown a little forward as she hit the brake
hard to stop. Her seatbelt came off and she reached over and grabbed the teddy
bear that was in her passenger seat. Molly bit down on the cheek of the brown
bear and moved her head back while she pulled down using both hands on the bear’s
arms. The head of the bear tore from its neck with a ripping sound as the
stiches gave way. She spit the head of the bear out of the driver side window
then reached into the hole where the head had once been. Her thin pale hand
reached past the stuffing and grabbed hold of what is was looking for. She
pulled out a rather large wad of assorted bills of money. It was held together
by three red rubber bands.
Molly had started
saving this money three years back. About a month after she had started her job
at Wells Fargo. Back then she had been saving the money to buy herself a new
car. She had still been driving the old eighty nine Ford Aerostar van she had
gotten from her mother so that she could drive herself to school. Molly had
never liked that old van. So as soon as she started working, she started
saving. She was about a month away from buying the car when, for her birthday,
Molly’s parents surprised her with the Camry. She had been overjoyed. She then
planned on spending the now extra savings on some new earrings, or maybe a
necklace, and why not?
Molly had used a pair
of scissors to cut Mr. Giggles’ head off. She then placed all of her saved
money into the bear. Taking great care, she had sewed the head of the bear back
on and put the teddy at the foot of her bead with all her other stuffed
animals. Molly had done this to keep her money safe until she decided what do
with it. Now at this moment, she knew where this money was going to go. She
stared at her hard earned money for a second. The night was hot, and there was a
sheen of sweat on her face. Molly got out the car and headed for the door. She
stepped on the head of Mr. Giggles as she went. Molly didn’t notice.
She ran for the automatic
doors of the large store. As the Molly entered she ran to the shopping carts
and pulled one free. The two cashiers both gave a curious look as Molly almost
ran by their stations. The panic that she had felt in the car was slowly
getting stronger.
Molly, unlike Ron, had come
to the realization that something was wrong soon after the strange events
started happening.
She was a person who liked to play Internet
card games. A few months back she had gotten somewhat addicted to a two player
monster and magic card game called Duel of Worlds. When you started playing you
had to sign up for an account using an e-mail address. From there you signed in
and started preparing your two decks for gameplay. One deck was comprised of
creature/monster cards like the Red God Tree, or the Armor Lion of Flame, and
the other spell/magic cards. The object of the game was to overpower your
opponent. The first player to lose all of their creature cards loses the game.
The spell cards where used to weaken your opponent’s creatures or to strengthen
yours. In the game, the more wins you rack up, the stronger the creatures you
can unlock with your account. Needless to say, Molly had spent a great deal of
her spare time playing this new game.
Like with all games of this sort, at first you
lost to almost every player you face. But after a while you started learning
which cards work best, which combinations to use and how to set up your two
decks. When Molly encountered a card that she liked and worked well, she would
write it down and add it to the appropriate deck later, using the online card
search engine. Slowly but surely Molly moved up the ranks, facing stronger and
stronger players from around the world. This was one of the wonders of the
digital age. She could be sitting in her little home in sunny California and be
battling a person online who lives in Japan.
While you played there was a little chat bar
on the left side of the screen. The players used this miniature chat room to
explain their moves to each other to avoid confusion. They were also used to
call in administrators if one of the players is suspected of cheating. Although,
the chat box was very often also used to sling profane insults at one another
when the game wasn’t going in a person’s favor. Posts like-
You
fucking shit hole!
Go
suck monkey dicks!
Or.
Drink
bleach you fucking bitch!
Were often left for the winner as the loser quit the
match and left the game. Despite many sore losers Molly thought the game was fun.
And it was through the game that MollyKills951 had come to know ShellyBird112.
Molly
tore through the store pushing here blue shopping cart. She ran for the Drinks
isle, and made a sharp left into it. She grabbed all of the cases of bottled
water that she could and filled her cart until no more would fit. The cases
where stacked six high, with two stacks in the cart. Molly then turned and
pushed the cart as fast as she could without knocking over the cases of water.
She stopped in front of one of the registers. “This is all mine.” Molly said,
pushing hair out of her face. She was a little out of breath. “Are you alright
miss?” The cashier asked looking a little worried. The cashier was a blonde
woman who appeared to be in her later thirties.
“I’m
fine, I gotta go get more!” Molly called out as she grabbed another cart and
headed off again. This time she was headed for the canned goods isle.
ShellyBird112,
Shelly Mitchell, or Shells as Molly had later come to know her was a twenty six
year old dental assistant. At least that is what she had told Molly. One day they
had been randomly selected to play against each other. The match had been
terribly difficult and had dragged on for over an hour. Shells was good. She was
VERY good. Her spell deck was flawless and her plays were brilliant. Molly narrowly
lost the first game. Molly cried out for a rematch, as at this point in her
Duel of Worlds career she was no longer used to being the loser of a match.
Shells was happy to give her a rematch. This game had taken longer than the
first, but this time Molly had come out on top; but just barely. Shells said
through here chat box that she was surprised that she had lost. She hadn’t lost
a single match in weeks. Molly replied that really, they were tied, and that
the third game would be the tie breaker. Shells agreed on the third match but
said that she had to go run a few errands. They would probably take about an
hour. Molly agreed to come back and have their third match. Shells said to look
for her in the player pool in an hour. They both signed out.
Molly
was in the canned foods isle, dropping can after can of food into her basket.
She wasn’t really looking at what she was getting, nor was she checking the
price of any of the items. When the cart was filled to capacity, Molly pushed
it to the blonde’s register, next to her first cart.
“Can
you start ringing me up please?’ Molly asks the cashier. She still looks a
little worried. “Sure, honey. No problem.” She begins scanning the cases of
water. Molly grabs a third cart. “Just a few more thing that I need.” She says
as she pushes the cart away from the register. “Ok, honey.” Is all the cashier
says as she begins scanning the cans. This time Molly runs to the pharmacy isle.
From the selves she grabs several boxes of bandages, gauze, medical tape, aspirin,
and other pain relievers, cough syrup, rubbing alcohol, hydrogen peroxide and
finally vitamins. She moves on and adds several boxes of tampons, toothpaste,
soap bars, and about six bottles of shampoo. All these things had brought her
cart to about a quarter full. She grabbed a giant pack of toilet paper and
shoved it into the rack under the cart. Molly headed for the last stop.
Molly
sat in front of her computer and waited about two minutes. She then logged back
into her Duel of Worlds account and opened up the card search engine. Molly was
going to fine tune her game decks to give her an advantage in the third game
against ShellyBird112. She was a very strong player and Molly thought that she
might need some kind of an edge to win. ShellyBird was a fan of using extra
draw spell cards in combination with counter defense spell cards. Most of her
creatures were deceptively weak, probably so that her opponent would be
compelled to attack. At which point she would use the counter defense. This was
a very good strategy, as it had pinned Molly in a corner in their first game. A
good strategy, but not one Molly couldn’t get around with some creativity.
Molly spent the hour adding spells that could counter ShellyBirds’ play, along with
a few different creatures to throw her opponent off. She then removed all
useless cards like summon creatures, and potion cards. They would be no good
against ShellyBird112. MollyKills951 was ready.
When
the hour was up Molly and ShellyBird both joined the player pool. Molly sent ShellyBird
a match request. It was immediately accepted. They were both brought to the
game screen and their decks were reset and in starting position. In the chat
box ShellyBird wrote GL, which means Good Luck. Molly replied HF. Have Fun. The
game was on!
Molly could never
remember playing harder than she did in the tie breaker match against ShellyBird112.
About five minute into the game, Molly was completely stunned to see that ShellyBird
had also updated her deck. And just as Molly had done, she had added spell and
creature cards to counter act her attack style.
Run errands my ass!!! Molly
types in the chat box. LOL, your one to talk love!!!! She responds back. And adds
an emoticon smiley.
The game was tough, and
it lasted almost two hours. Molly carefully thought through her every move, trying
to consider every possible outcome and eventuality. ShellyBird did the same. Both competitors employed brilliant plays and
counter attacks. Both praised each other’s successful moves, and clever
reversals. The match dragged on, with neither
player refusing to give in. Towards the end Molly had developed a headache.
Finally, it came down
to one creature card each. Molly had the Blue Wolf of Fate and ShellyBird had
the Chaos Raven. ShellyBird had one unused spell card. Molly had none left.
Whosever creature died in this round would lose the match. It looked like
MollyKills951 had the upper hand, as her creature was by far the strongest of
the two. Molly could feel the swell of her imminent victory in her chest. Her
hands were sweaty and there was an almost crazy smile on her face as she sat of
front of her computer. Molly declared the attack and her opponent would then
have to declare defeat. But ShellyBird did not. She used her one remaining
spell card. Molly looked at her screen, her mouth hanging open.
The card was Attack
Destruction. This cards effect was that if one creature attacked another,
regardless of the creatures attack strength, both creatures were destroyed
instead of just the weaker one, at the same time. Both of their creatures where
destroyed. This was a tie. ShellyBird112 adds another emoticon smiley to the
chat box, but this one with its tongue out.
Molly beat down on her
computer desk with her fist. “AAAARRRRGGGHHHH!” She screamed into her empty
living room. She hit the desk with her fist again and then shoved the hair from
her face. After all that? After I played as hard as I could? A tie!? Molly’s
mind raged.
Then, looking at that
little face with its tongue out, instead of screaming again, Molly started
laughing. The laughter started slow then rose. It came in rolling waves that
made her midsection hurt. She laughed long and hard. Tears rolled down her face
and for a second she thought that she would fall from her chair. She was
laughing at herself for thinking she had won, and for her crazy response after
they tied. Molly laughed, and somehow she knew that, wherever ShellyBird was, she
was laughing too.
From that day on Molly
and Shells, even though they would never meet, became best friends.
Molly pushed her blue
shopping cart and headed for the sporting goods section at the back of the
store.