Billie vs. Frankie, chapter 2
Judging by the surroundings Frankie concluded that he was drifting somewhere in space, days seemed like minutes, months seemed like days and he felt weightless. He could see many transparent beings floating, gliding through the never ending mist and darkness. Nobody spoke. Frankie tried to ask for help, direction, an explanation at least but there wasn't any reply. He began to lose hope that someone would wake him up and he would find himself about to go out clubbing with Summer and Billie. But in the back of his mind he knew that he must be dead. He had thought of Billie as a friend, he couldn't believe Billie was going to be his best man when really he had been plotting to kill him all this time. He should have known, should have realized that all along but he had been foolish, well now he was going to make Billie pay. He'd regret sending Frankie Iero to the Spirit Plane. Oh yes, he would regret that.
He would regret that forever.
Back on Earth, Summer would act sickly sweet and with an unrelenting cheerful approach to all things. Though in Summer's mind her thoughts were getting wild and she was beginning to believe that it was possible to bring Frankie back. To do so required an immensely complex spell and most terrible dark magic but she would do anything to save him, anything at all. Even if it meant sacrificing her best friend. She would use witchcraft to bring Frankie back. The spell must be performed at midnight on the winter solsist and the blood of the sacrificee must be drained; every last drop, the body burned on a stake and then the remnants destroyed when the conductor makes a deal with the devil; a life and a soul for a life with no soul.
Because all Summer could think about was getting Frankie back she failed to realize that she would only be getting a shell of him in return. His soul will be lost on the spirit plane forever; he would be violent, careless and dangerous to anyone around him. He would not recognize friend from foe and would not even remember Summer. But the devil is tricky and has his ways of convincing people. He was slowly poisoning her mind while she slept; telling Summer that Billie had killed Frankie on purpose, that he laughed as he did it, that he had brought Frankie over under false pretences and that he must pay for the pain he had caused Summer; he must pay with his life.
Billie however, was unsettled. He wondered why Summer was acting so cheerful when days before she had been refusing to open the curtains and leave her bedroom. He wondered why she often was staring into space or at him with a hungry look upon her face.
He would regret that forever.
Back on Earth, Summer would act sickly sweet and with an unrelenting cheerful approach to all things. Though in Summer's mind her thoughts were getting wild and she was beginning to believe that it was possible to bring Frankie back. To do so required an immensely complex spell and most terrible dark magic but she would do anything to save him, anything at all. Even if it meant sacrificing her best friend. She would use witchcraft to bring Frankie back. The spell must be performed at midnight on the winter solsist and the blood of the sacrificee must be drained; every last drop, the body burned on a stake and then the remnants destroyed when the conductor makes a deal with the devil; a life and a soul for a life with no soul.
Because all Summer could think about was getting Frankie back she failed to realize that she would only be getting a shell of him in return. His soul will be lost on the spirit plane forever; he would be violent, careless and dangerous to anyone around him. He would not recognize friend from foe and would not even remember Summer. But the devil is tricky and has his ways of convincing people. He was slowly poisoning her mind while she slept; telling Summer that Billie had killed Frankie on purpose, that he laughed as he did it, that he had brought Frankie over under false pretences and that he must pay for the pain he had caused Summer; he must pay with his life.
Billie however, was unsettled. He wondered why Summer was acting so cheerful when days before she had been refusing to open the curtains and leave her bedroom. He wondered why she often was staring into space or at him with a hungry look upon her face.
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