A few minutes later, the doorknob rattled, and the door to the stairway was thrown open. Jack Torrance rested his foot back on the carpet, and stumbled into the freezing corridor. The roque mallet dragged along the floor in his hand, painting a line of crimson. He breathed heavily like a boar ready to charge. Sweat dripped from his dangling hair, falling down his forehead into a pool on his upper lip. Taking the handkerchief, he wiped his lips, and put it back into his chest pocket.
The boy was running, but he couldn’t hide. He would catch him. The boy was being disobedient, he knew. Probably breaking something of value, or spilling something else on his property. He needed to be taught right from wrong. He was a naughty son who did not listen to his father’s commands. Jack began his march up the stairs.
“Danny?” he called, “Danny, come here son, I need to talk to you. I need you to be a good boy and take your medicine. Danny? Danny!”
*
Blonde hair clinging to her forehead, her fingers etching in new scars, Wendy panted on the mauled mattress. Her eyes fluttered open and she tried to sit up, but pain struck her ribs. She moaned, and her eyes welled up as she dug her fingers into the sheets. She had to get up.
(Lay here on this bed no one can hurt you here)
Danny needed her help. He was out there, all
(You need to do is lie here forever)
alone. Wincing and shrieking at every shift, she managed to roll over onto her back. Where was Jack now? Did the motor she heard earlier even exist? It had to; someone had to have come. This nightmare couldn’t possibly go any longer. Be it a ranger or Hallorann, it didn’t matter. They needed come to help them escape from the depths of the frozen hell.
Not knowing how she gained the strength, Wendy lifted herself from the bed and limped to the wasted door, nearly slipping on the earlier spilled change. She fell against the doorframe, gasping for air. Her lung was punctured, she knew it. It felt like inhaling flames every time she took a breath. A yelp escaped her throat while she clutched her chest. The smell of fresh blood and sweat filled her nostrils, making her stomach twist. She gulped down the bit of vile and hobbled into the hallway.
“Danny! Come here you little shit and take your goddamn medicine!”
The roar echoed from the stairwell, making Wendy jump. It was Jack. He wanted to find Danny. To find Danny and—and—
(And kill him)
With another moan, Wendy walked towards the stairwell. Footsteps thundered from down below, getting louder and louder and louder. She stared at the door, coiling away from it. Not a second later, the door flew open, smacking the wall beside it, the doorknob leaving a crumbling hole. Hunched over, Jack held the mallet in his hands in a ready-to-swing fashion. Wendy’s eyes widened. She squealed and backed away as his eyes wandered towards her scuffling motions.
“You. You little bitch! I’m gonna get you.”
His hands tightened on the mallet and he advanced towards her. She pivoted, trying to run from the approaching demon, but her leg wouldn’t let her run fast enough.
“You can’t hide from me now, I’ve got you.”
She let out a piercing shriek as she limped faster. The elevator was at the other end of the hallway. She had never dared to go down or up in that contraption the whole stay and now it was her only escape. Pain shot through her entire body, the pressure of the force pushing up on her leg from the floor was unbearable. Her leg was going to further break, snap right off. But Jack not far behind compelled her body to continue forward. She could hear him performing practice swings on the walls, preparing for its contact with her skull, preparing to bash her brains in.
Tumbling into the elevator, the grate rattled as she shut it. Jack’s hands squeezed through the holes and extended towards her. Seeing he could not reach, he lifted the mallet and beat it against the grate. She screamed, jumping with every bang, and fumbled for the lever. He beat harder and faster; the mallet cracked. The elevator shook violently, and Wendy slammed the lever down. Slowing descending, she wept as Jack flung his arms up in the air in a manic rage, his eyes wide and staring at her before he disappeared out of sight.
“I’ll bring your medicine downstairs to wait for you.”
She heard him mutter, and with a panic she lifted the lever up to a neutral position. The elevator jolted to a halt. In the dark, Wendy curled into a ball in the corner, hyperventilating rapidly and hugging her battered leg. The air was thick; the walls were closing in around her. She thought of Danny, wondering where he was running to.
(?? running at all ??)
“No!” she screamed, and jumped up to the lever. Grasping it with both hands, she pushed up with all her strength. It didn’t move. With a short squeak, she pushed again. Still nothing. Cursing and shouting at the top of her lungs, she throttled the lever ferociously, causing the elevator to bounce.
“No! No! This is not happen-- Help! Help! Somebody help me! Jack! Danny! Danny! DANNY!”
Something punched her in the chest, breaking through and squeezing her insides. She slammed her hands against her chest, stumbling down to the ground. The darkness enveloped her. Suffocating her, she cried for each breath, the pain coming down from above. Her muscles tightened. The pain leaked into her veins and spread throughout her body. An anaconda strengthened around her, constricting her chest from rising. White dots splashed her vision in the dark. Her body going numb, she whimpered before she fell from the living world.
“Danny....”
*
Coming out from the ballroom, Danny wandered towards the motionless body in the middle of the lobby. Its cheek belched blood, forming a pool around it, slowing growing with each passing second. Laying a hand on its chest, Danny rested his ear nearly touching its lips. He could hear nothing. His bottom lip trembled; he resisted the urge to breakdown.
“Danny! Where are you my beloved son?”
Jack’s voice boomed from a nearby hallway. Danny bolted up, staring at the doorway; his body went tense. Within a few minutes, Jack appeared in the doorway, looking more grisly than ever. The mallet in his hand was a splintered mess. With a wild expression, he charged towards his son. Danny panicked, and ran to the stairwell, bursting through the door. Tripping on the first step, he yelped and climbed to the next steps.
“Stop running, Danny! I just want to talk to you! DANNY!”
Danny scampered as Jack’s footsteps rumbled the walls. He thought back to his Looney Tunes, feeling like the poor cat racing away, yet the skipping Pepé le Pew was catching up. Turning the corner, he encountered the door to the roof. He rammed it, but the snow that had built up outside of it was pushing back. His feet slipped as he drove the door open a few more inches. Squeezing out of the space, he tripped into the snow face first. The cold struck him like a freezing needle, soaking into his skin and coating his face numb. The wind thrashed his hair as he stood up.
He didn’t look back as he barrelled through the snow that rose up to his chest, at least three feet tall. Everywhere he looked, all he saw was white. The snowflakes beat against his face, blinding his direction across the frozen wasteland. His face was wet, soaked in snowflakes, tears, and mucus from his running nose.
“Danny!”
Through the winds, Danny could still hear Jack shouting his name. With his red sweater against the white snow, there was nowhere to hide. His body was quivering, his teeth chattering. He couldn’t tell where he was walking, or feel it, since his feet were numb to the bone. As he turned to look back, pain struck him between his shoulder blades, not even giving him enough time to scream before he fell into the snow.
*
Grunting, Jack hammered at the ground, the drips of rubies increasing with every strike.
(TAKE your medicine LIKE A MAN)
He couldn’t hear the cracks, the snaps, or the tears, but he could feel it. Shock waves ran up the mallet and through his nerves. The feeling of power swept over him, causing him to laugh hysterically as he beat faster and faster and harder and harder. Soon he felt the mallet hitting only the cement of the roof, and drew the mallet back.
“I WIN! I WIN!”
He cried to the world as he continued his triumphant laugh, raising the mallet to the sky like a trophy. The snow had soaked up the blood like a dry towel, collapsing under its thickness. The stained spread to Jack’s feet, where he felt it absorbing into his shoes. It drew his attention down to the body, if it could even be called that anymore. The sight gave Jack a mental reality slap to the face, bringing a halt to his celebration. He fell to his knees, the mallet plummeting to the ground as his mouth gaped open. His bottom lip trembled, and he extended his hands toward the mess of red, but not being able to touch it.
“Wh-What have I done?”
His howls turned from those of success to those of distress. His heart panged as he howled with the wind, slamming his fists down into the snow. His boy, his son, the one thing he loved most, had been beat from the world with his own hands. Jack clawed his fingers in his hair, ready to tear out every last strand. He leaped up from the ground in a frenzy, using all the strength left in his legs to dash to the edge of the building. Without even taking one last look at the earth, he dove and connected with it instead.