I knew in an instance who was approaching me.
But this time, I refused to cower in fear and regret. No matter what he would
ask me, I would not let it stop me from burning this hotel to the ground…
“I am
Judgement Boy!” The monster descended from the ceiling once more with his roar
of: “JUDGEMENT!”
Its wide
grin stretched further when it saw Mabel, and it asked her the question: “You
find yourself in a hotel in another dimension. You learn that it was not only
your neglect, but also this hotel, that played a role in the death of your
brother, whom you love very much. The question is… Who killed your brother?”
“I did,”
Mabel said without hesitation. “I could have saved him if I had been a better
sister; if I had taken the time to listen to him, and help him, like he always
helped me. Even if this hotel didn’t exist, my brother would have still taken
his life… But that doesn’t change the fact that this place must be destroyed,
and that it still played a role in my brother’s death.”
“You have
chosen not to avert your eyes from the truth, but to meet it head-on,”
Judgement Boy’s tone of voice seemed different as he said this. Almost like he
was… approving of Mabel’s answer. “Yet instead of cowering in regret, you
decide to take action, and do what you can to make up for your role in your
brother’s death.”
This time,
the golden dollar symbol fell instead of the heart, and with that Judgement Boy
left.
Mabel
smiled to herself and continued going in the direction she had been walking in.
It didn’t
take long before she saw it; The Eternal Flame. There was no doubt in Mabel’s
mind that was what it was. She picked up the glass jar and released the orange
flame inside. It immediately began to burn its surroundings, and seeing how fast
everything was catching on fire, Mabel hurried away, knowing she still had to
leave the hotel.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It’s done. Soon the hotel will be no more. The
souls still trapped will, hopefully, be free. But even if that isn’t the case,
at least new souls won’t be joining them. I won… No, we won, Dipper.
Mabel
walked out of the hotel and began to make her way towards the forest, when she
spotted Cipher; he was walking out of said forest, only to get a look of
absolute fear as he saw the smoke rising from the hotel.
“What have
you done!?!” he howled, but didn’t wait for an answer. He broke into a run and
sped past Mabel, into the infeno.
Mabel
watched as he ran in there, wondering if perhaps he would try to put out the
flames. She wasn’t sure if that was possible, but she still preferred to wait
and see; none of this would matter if the hotel didn’t get destroyed.
Soon after,
Will came running out of the hotel’s front door. He looked surprised at seeing
her.
“Why are
you still here!?” he asked, his voice and expression full of panic. “Go!”
“I have to
make sure this place truly disappears!” she argued. “For everyone who ever died
there.”
“But…” Will
didn’t finish his sentence, as from the front doors, Cipher ran out, carrying
someone wrapped in a blanket. Cipher was covered in burn marks, but the blanket
was free of burns, meaning it was probably a fire-safe blanket. “Go.” Will
commanded her, but now Mabel was curious; why wouldn’t Cipher have used the
blanket on himself? What was so special about this person, that he had run into
a burning building to rescue them?
“Are you
okay?” Cipher asked the person as he placed them on their legs; which were bare
and wrapped in a few vines. Cipher’s voice was tender and full of concern; his
eyes looked like they were close to tears.
“Yes, thank
you,” the person said in a voice which Mabel recognized all too well. They
pulled of the blanket, but their back was turned to her, revealing only brown
hair which looked a little longer and wavier than Mabel remembered, also with a
few vines intertwined with the locks.
“… Dipper?”
Mabel whispered as tears began streaming down her cheeks. She almost couldn’t
believe it. She stepped closer and reached out a hand, just as the person
turned around to see her.
There was
no longer any doubt; it was Dipper. At first Mabel thought he looked younger,
but then she realized it was the absence of stress wrinkles and eye bags that
gave that impression. His skin looked pristine; almost as if it was carved from
polished wood, but it still looked soft and warm. His brown eyes now had a
vague glint of green in them, and he was wearing what looked like a cocktail
dress made from pine needles.
“It’s
really you,” Mabel cried and tried to get closer to him, but Dipper ran over to
Cipher and hid behind him; a look of hatred and disgust spread on Dipper’s
face. “Dipper? I-“
“You almost
killed me!” Dipper shouted, clinging on to Cipher like a lifeline. “If Bill
hadn’t saved me, I would have burned alive in that fire you started!”
“I- I
didn’t know you were in there!” Mabel tried to explain. “I- I thought- Dipper,
please! I’m so sorry-“
“Why are
you calling me that?” Dipper asked with an angry frown. “My name is Pine Tree.”
“Oh…” Mabel
shook her head. “What did Cipher do to you?”
“Why are
you saying it like that?!” Dipper, or Pine Tree, finally stepped out from
behind Cipher. “Bill has done nothing but treat me like a treasure. Then you
come along, nearly kill me, destroy our home, and try to what? What exactly are
you trying to accomplish here?”
“I… I
don’t,” Mabel shook her head. Her brother had still been there. She had almost
killed him. Why had she done that? She had a realization and turned to Will
with a look of betrayal. “You said my brother was dead! You told me to burn
down the hotel, knowing I would have killed him!”
“Mabel!”
Will shouted. “That’s not your brother! Your brother was gone the moment he
decided to stay at the hotel! All that’s left of him is that soulless husk!”
“How dare
you!” Cipher hissed and stepped in front of Dipper in a defensive stance. “You
don’t get to speak to him like that!”
Mabel
looked at the now burnt remains of Cipher’s House. She almost couldn’t
comprehend this; Cipher seemed to really care about her brother, her brother
seemed to like living in the hotel, and Will… the guy she thought had been
helping her, had lied to her and almost made her kill Dipper.
“Mabel,
listen to me,” Will implored. “You wanted to stop the hotel, right? You need to
leave now, or none of this will have mattered at all.”
Mabel
looked at her brother and Cipher; Bill was holding him close, softly stroking
his hair. Her brother seemed genuinely sad and betrayed.
“Dipper,”
Mabel stepped closer to her brother. “Or… Pine Tree… Were you really happy at
the hotel?”
“Yes,” he
replied.
“Are you
sure you don’t want to come with me? Back to reality?”
“No!” Pine
Tree reminded Mabel more of her brother than ever, now that it looked like he
was getting close to a panic attack. “All I remember about that place is pain!
I never want to back there!”
“Alright
then,” Mabel sighed with a small smile. “I guess this is my chance to finally
be a good sister.”
“You can be
that if you leave!” Will said, his voice full of panic again. “Let your
brother’s soul find rest-“
“No,” Mabel
said decisively. “I promised when I first got here that I wouldn’t leave
without my brother. I’m going to keep that promise. I’m staying here.”
With those
words, the hotel began to repair itself; it looked like the destruction was
happening in reverse, as all the fire damage was undone.
Bill and
Pine Tree looked on with expressions full of joy and happiness. Will looked
like he was filled with despair at the sight.
“We’re back
in business!” Bill yelled with a large grin.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
And so another cycle is completed, and the
hotel returns to normal. Another guest joins the ranks of the souls who will
never escape Cipher’s House. For no one can escape Cipher’s House.
Pine Tree
liked the hotel’s new permanent guest; her name was Shooting Star, and even
though the fact that she was made out of rocks burning in pastel colors meant
that her flames could accidentally hurt him, she was kind and energetic, and
loved spending time with him. The two of them seemed to have a connection that
Pine Tree couldn’t place, but he didn’t really care to analyze it.
The two of
them were sitting in the hotel lobby and having a talk, when Pine Tree’s other
favorite person showed up.
“It’s time
to return to your rooms soon~” Bill said as he stood behind Pine Tree, placing
one hand on each of his shoulders. “Our new guest is expected to arrive any
moment now, and we can’t have him see anything too… disturbing on his first
night.”
“Oh, but
Bill,” Pine Tree gave him an exaggerated pout and bit his thumb. “I still need
to do one more thing before going to bed.”
“Did you
forget to change the sheets?” Bill asked with a slight smirk; of course he
already knew Pine Tree would never forget one of his duties, especially not one
that was crucially to keeping the charade going for just long enough.
“Of course
not,” Pine Tree laughed and playfully slapped Bill’s hand.
A knock was
heard on the hotel’s front door.
“Oh!
Whatever it is, it will have to wait until I’ve shown our guest her new room!”
Bill said and swung over to the door.
Pine Tree
and Shooting Star both left for the door behind the check-in counter; there was
a small peephole through the wall in there that they could use to scope out the
new guest.
Pine Tree
looked through the hole, watching as a young, frazzled looking woman was helped
inside by Bill. She looked pale and her eyes were bloodshot.
“Who is it?”
Shooting Star asked, leaning over Pine Tree’s shoulder.
“Hmm, if I
remember the files correctly, she’s that one who was kicked out by her family
and lived on the streets,” Pine Tree said. He observed Bill talking to her and
escorting her to the guest room. “Alright, coast is clear.”
They both
left the backroom; Shooting Star made her way to her room, while Pine Tree
grabbed a tray of food and water he had left on the coffee table in the lobby.
He walked with the tray down the hall to a newer addition to the hotel; a big
steel door seemingly bolted shut, but Pine Tree retrieved his key to the door
and opened it.
“And how
are we doing today?” he asked sweetly as he stepped inside, shutting the door
behind him.
Inside, the
room looked a dungeon, with dirt floor and cold stone walls, with the only
light coming from a window with bars on it. Under this window, chained to the
wall, sat Will. His body looked beaten and malnourished, and his mouth was
partially sewn shut, only allowing it to open the tiniest bit. Various parts of
his body were also covered in random stitches, and even one of his eyes was sewn
completely shut.
“I have
soup,” Pine Tree said as he placed the tray on the ground and picked up a spoon
to feed Will.
“He used
you,” murmured Will in a weakened voice after a couple of spoonfuls.
“Huh?” Pine
Tree tilted his head in confusion.
“When he ‘saved’
you from the fire,” Will clarified.
“What?”
Pine Tree gave him a hard to read look.
“He doesn’t
care about you; he just knew seeing you would-“
Then Pine
Tree laughed. He let out a strong, cruel laughter.
“I already
know that!” Pine Tree said. “Whose plan did you think it was?”
“What?” now
it was Will’s turn to look confused.
“Yeah, the
whole get her to burn the hotel, almost kill me?” Pine Tree elaborated. “That
was my idea.”
“But… how-?”
“Did I know
you would suggest The Eternal Flame to her?” Pine Tree giggled. “What did I say
to you? ‘What if she burns down the building while Bill’s gone?! I would be
gone in an instance!’ Oh, don’t give me that look, Will; I already knew you were
a traitor. I might not remember much from my first days at the hotel, but I
remember you trying to ‘help’ me leave. Bill refused to believe that a member
of his family would ever betray him, so I suggested this plan to prove it. And
now, I just happen to have your old job, as I’m the only one Bill would trust
that position to~”
“But… Bill
is manipulating you…”
Pine Tree
laughed again. “Really? You think he’s the one manipulating me? I have him
wrapped around my finger. A little pout there, a wave with my eyelashes there,
and he’ll do whatever I say. So yeah,” he rose to his feet. “I manipulate him…
but I also really love him. He saved me after all. It’s your fault you can’t
understand the love we share.”
And with
that, Pine Tree turned towards the door.
“Don’t
worry; I’ll leave the rest of your food there,” he pointed to the tray sitting
about five feet away from the chained up Will. “In case you get hungry or
thirsty later.”
Will
snapped and tried to pull himself free of the chains, but it didn’t work, and
Pine Tree left him there; alone again.