Bath Tub Blocked !!better!! File
He sat back on his heels. The logical part of his brain—the part that priced used paperbacks and alphabetized Vonnegut—screamed hair trap. Soap scum. Call Keith . But the animal part, the deep, mammalian hindbrain, whispered something else. Something lives in the pipes. Something that was here before Harold. Something that feeds on what washes away.
His knuckles scraped against the curved pipe. Then, his fingertip touched something soft. Organic. He pinched. Pulled. bath tub blocked
A single, pale, finger-length tendril—not hair, but something more like a root, or a whisker—pushed up through the grate. It twitched, tasting the air. Tasting the soap. Tasting him . He sat back on his heels
The water swirled once, a weak, apologetic half-circle, then gave up. It sat there, grey and slick, a tepid mirror reflecting the cracked ceiling of Jasper’s rented flat. The sponge bobbed listlessly, a defeated starfish. Call Keith
“Oh, for the love of…” Jasper nudged it with his toe. Nothing. Just a greasy film and the faint, sour smell of old soap and something else. Something deeper.
He knelt on the bathmat, the cold linoleum biting his knees. He rolled up his sleeve, took a breath, and plunged his hand into the murk. His fingers found the drain, a metal starfish of grime. He pushed past it.
A long, dark rope of hair emerged, slick as an eel. Then another. But these weren’t his. They were far too long, with a strange, reddish tint. The previous tenant, he’d been told, was a man named Harold who’d worn tweed and collected stamps. Harold had been bald as a billiard ball.