Many thanks go out to Onkar for featuring my story today!
https://literaryyard.com/2020/06/18/too-many-masks/
Here's the story if you don't want to use the link:
Too Many Masks
Bam! Bam!! Bam!!!
"Open up, it's the police."
Oh, shit, thought, Bryan, what have I done now? He got
out of bed, stumbled over a shoe and fell to the floor. Shit. He got up cursing
his fall and, while he was at it, his hangover. "I'm on my way. Hold
on."
"Hurry
up," came the voice outside his apartment. Impatient was putting it
mildly. The guy sounded mad and pissed off. "We need to talk. Now."
As Bryan crossed the living room he tried to piece
together last night. It only was coming back in fragments. Oh, yeah, the
Halloween party. The last party in a long line of parties he'd attended wearing
a mask.
Wearing masks. Once he'd gotten in the habit of doing it,
it really wasn't really all that weird, wearing, say, a Tricky Dick Nixon mask
to a party. His friends even thought it was pretty cool, saying, "Man, you
are some strange dude, you and your masks. The next party is in two weeks. Will
you be there?"
The crowd he hung out with liked weirdness so he was
happy to oblige. "Absolutely," he told them. "No problem." It
was nice to be well thought of. Besides, it was a perfect opportunity to hide.
Put on a mask and be someone different. What was not to like?
For one whole year he'd done that, worn masks to parties,
and by now had accumulated quite a drawer full of them: a ghoul, Yoda,
Frankenstein, Elvis, a unicorn, Tricky Dick Nixon, even a parrot. It had been
fun hiding behind whatever mask he'd chosen to wear, acting out and being crazy.
But it all had came to a head last night.
He'd gone to a friend's Halloween party wearing a mummy
mask he'd bought a local novelty store and wrapped in strips of a sheet, which he
thought had added a nice touch. Once at the party everyone thought he looked
great. Even that lady he'd met, Batgirl. Then they'd started drinking, the two
of them, and partying hard. Then this, the aftermath. He couldn't even remember
how he'd gotten home, or, for that matter, where his strips of sheet had ended
up.
If it had been a nightmare or even a bad dream, that
would have been one thing, but it wasn't, it was real, and that made it even
worse. He'd awoken in the early dawn, dragged himself from bed and made his way
shaking to the bathroom where he'd fallen to his knees and thrown up into the
toilet, flushed it and threw up again. Nice way to start the day, he'd thought
grimly. What a credit to the human race you are.
Then he'd made his way to the sink where he splashed
water on his face. His mouth felt drier than the desert, his swollen tongue
stuck to its roof. He took a gulp of water, swirling it around but it barely
helped. He swallowed and fought back a dry heave. Then he dared himself to look
at the mirror, horrified at what he saw - puffed up face, dark bags under
bloodshot eyes, hair a mess. Himself a mess. One more night of drinking. One
more day looming ahead hung-over and wasted. He couldn't go on like this. He
had to clean up his act. He had to quit pretending and hiding behind a mask and
face himself for what he really was - a poor excuse for a human being.
More pounding brought him back to reality. Bam! Bam!!
Bam!! What was this all about?
He finally got to the door and opened it, hanging on the
frame for balance. "What's up?"
A large policeman with a handlebar moustache stood in the
door way, frowning, "We understand you were with a girl last night. We
need to talk. She's missing."
Holy shit. He stepped back. "Sure," he said,
voice shaking. "Come on in."
The cop was just stepping inside when he received a phone
call. He listened for a moment, then said, "Okay. I'm on my way." He
turned to Bryan and said, "We don't need you. She's been found. She was at
a girlfriend's."
He looked hard at Bryan, then took a quick look at his
apartment: dirty clothes on the floor, crusted dishes scattered everywhere, a faint
aroma of vomit in the air. He shook his head sadly and said, "A word of
advice? You better clean up your act, buddy."
Bryan closed the door
and looked back into his disaster of an apartment. The one bright spot was the
framed picture of his parents he kept on his desk. It had been taken at his twenty
first birthday almost two years ago, just before they'd been killed by a drunk
driver on a busy stretch of highway on a local interstate. He owed them better
than this.
He noticed his mummy mask on the floor and picked it up.
Then he went to his desk took a pair of
scissors from the drawer and methodically cut the mask to shreds. It felt good
to destroy it. He had to get his act together and this was the only way he
could think of to begin. A plan developed. He reached in the drawer for another
mask and started cutting. He'd destroy them all. Then he'd figure out a way to
live without them. Hopefully his friends would understand, but if they didn't,
too bad. This was something he had to do. It wasn't much but it was a
beginning. He felt better already.
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