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Frankenstein: A Fictional Narrative

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Former Lieutenant S. James Bentley kicked off his black Crocks. He removed his beat up baseball cap and threw the hat at the ground with all his force, just because he could. His therapy dog, Krugle, stared at him with a concerned expression that shouldn’t be possible for non-humans. James scowled at the dog. “Shut up.”

He stomped into the kitchen and retrieved a bottle of Alexander Keith from his fridge. Bottle in hand, James walked to his living room and flopped onto his worn out plaid couch with a loud sigh. He opened his beer. He didn’t bother to follow the cap’s path through the air. As he took his first sip, he noticed a black shape watching him from a dusty corner.

He frowned. “Leave me alone,” he snapped at the French Bulldog. …show more content…
“Tell me what you are!”

James yanked the creature’s clawed hand away from its face. Those glowing red eyes were revealed again, this time wide in… fear? Well, the expression on its skull-like face seemed to indicate such an emotion.

“I’m just a regular ol’ demon, Sir! I was just tryin’a do my job, honest!”

“A demon?” That didn’t seem possible.

“Yeah! I-I used to sh-sharpen the pitchforks, ya see, but then Boss started automatin’... Those Satan-blessed machines stealin’ our jobs. I got put on nightmare duty a-and I’m really n-not very good at it at all. I’m just a pitchfork sharpener from a lil’ town in the Second Circle! I ain’t even handsome enough to be an incubus. I really don’t want to do this job. Please, h-have mercy!”

James raised an eyebrow, thoroughly confused. “Why? You’ve been tormenting me for how many nights, now? Why should I let you go, huh?”

“I was just doing my job!”

James was far too tired to deal with this now. “Will you promise not to come back?”

The demon frowned. “B-but… You’re an easy target. Making nightmares for you’s a piece of cake; your life is a nightmare already.”

James mirrored the demon’s facial expression. “It is, isn’t

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