Short Stories of the Horror and Bizarre

Author: Mychal Wilson Page 2 of 4

Glass Coffin

Word Count: 6,495

The myth of the magical city of Atlantis was passed down through the generations for thousands of years, maybe more. Since at least the time of the ancient Greeks, adventurers searched for and failed to find the splendorous city. Many explorers, anthropologists and archaeologists spent a large portion of their lives searching for something of legend. They died without ever finding it. 

It was said legend is born from the truth even if the legend is much more exaggerated and grandiose than the reality of the situation. My guess was a primitive civilization encountered another civilization with more advanced technology that seemed like magic to them. Someone who fishes with a spear may find drag nets to be something very highly technologically advanced. The people who never saw metal in their life may see a Roman Legionnaire as a god with a golden aura. Even a language with a written alphabet may seem like a magical way of transporting a message from one place to another.  

Who knows what people really think when they see technology that so greatly surpasses their own? 

Even now, I wondered what remote and primitive societies thought when they saw an airplane moving across the blue sky. Did they view it as some sort of gigantic bird god flying from one location to another?

My thought was they tried to equate it with something with which they were familiar. It was human nature to want to understand things, and when something was outside of their understanding, people compared it to the closest thing they knew.

I at least did not believe a place such as Atlantis was possible until several weeks ago. A team of divers discovered a road compiled of stones some weighing approximately ten times more than the stones used in the construction of the pyramids. Some weighed a few tons while others weighed in the hundreds of tons. Despite the variety of sizes, the stones fit together seamlessly. 

As an anthropologist, I specialized in obscure civilizations. Only a day after an amazing discovery was made, several government officials approached me in my lab. They told me they found something big, but they did not tell me what this discovery was. I was told I had two days to prepare, then I would be transported to the discovery’s location. I was not to speak to anyone about this, including my closest friends and family.

The agents told me I would be well compensated for my time and effort as I asked several times what the nature of the discovery was. These government officials refused to tell me, although they assured me I would not regret taking on this job. Even if I declined – by the way they spoke to me –I believed they would force me to go anyway. 

They put me on a flight to Italy. From there, we flew by means of a helicopter to an unknown location. I was then put in a windowless van, which took six hours to reach the next location. Again they put me on a helicopter and carried me to an island. From there these people finally transported me to the discovery site by ship. Obviously these government agents did not want me to know where I was.

A trainer gave me two days crash course lessons and scuba diving. Instead of an oxygen tank, I was given a square apparatus called a rebreather. Rather than allowing my breath to bubble up to the surface, this device scrubbed the air and put it back into circulation. This would allow me to stay underwater for much longer than any scuba tank. 

When the trainer explained the rebreather to me, I knew I was about to spend a lot of time submerged. One day later I was in the water. Anxiety filled me about spending this much time in the deep, but I was far more excited about what I was going to see. This may put me in the history books if these government people would allow it. Depending on what I found, they may wish to keep it top-secret. 

I could not help but be absolutely fascinated by the road leading from the small island deep into the choppy waters. Despite the years, the stones retained a polished surface. The type of rock was not one with which I was familiar, but I was no geologist. I did not know what type of stone it was, but erosion should have scoured this amazingly smooth surface by now. 

We used an underwater diver propulsion vehicle to speed our progress. One government agent rode with me; another agent road along with someone with whom I was not yet acquainted. I wondered if he had any more of an idea of the nature of our destination than I did. They chose me because of my knowledge of ancient civilizations. I wondered what this man specialty was. 

We traveled so deep, the light from the sun scarcely provided us with a view. At this point the agents turned on the lights at the front of the DPVs. We rode along for hours. All this long we passed over some areas where the road resurfaced from the rolling sand which kept it hidden for who knows how long.

Although we did not need oxygen for some time, the fuel in our transport had to be refilled. We arrived at a gas station of sorts, obviously installed by the government agents or prior recruits. Rather than waiting for our own DPVs, we dropped off the two we had and picked up two more. I wondered how much further there was to go as I had no idea of how many fuel stops we might make. 

Another hour to an hour and a half elapsed, and we reached an underwater headquarters of sorts. The agents brought me and the other gentleman to the entrance chamber. After sealing us in, they were back in the vehicles and disappeared into the darkness of the sea. It must’ve been an hour before the water level in the hatch began to lower, and that took another hour to complete. 

After the water drained, a voice called into the entrance hatch and instructed us to remove our diving gear. The special diving suits were quite difficult to get on and off by oneself, so the other gentleman and I assisted each other with the process. Our instructor taught us how to take off our own suit, but he also taught us how to properly remove someone else’s gear. I really did not understand the reasoning for the latter part until now. 

The voice instructed both of us to remove our wet clothing. Before my companion and I quite reached the point of being totally in the nude, a small panel in the wall slid open. Whoever it was at the other end of the intercom instructed us to put the wet clothing inside. When that panel closed another slid open, and we discovered we were being provided with new, dry clothing, 

As we dressed ourselves in our new gear, the voice told us it would be three hours before they could remove us from the chamber. A mixture of helium and oxygen filled the chamber with an almost imperceptible hissing. I was sure it had something to do with the pressure, but I could not say for certain. All I knew was the longer we sat there, the squeakier our voices became. Being no biologist, I did not understand why we went through this.

As previously instructed, neither one of us spoke to the other about what was going on or even what our fields of experience were. Whatever was taking place here must’ve been something major. All this cloak and dagger stuff was a bit too much for any normal sort of expedition. Instead, we tried to find some mundane topics to discuss as we waited for the pressure in the hatch to equalize with the air pressure inside the underwater structure. 

Finally, the inner hatch opened. Several government agents awaited us on the other side. Judging by the different diving suits they wore, I believed they were from different agencies, possibly even different governments. All of this hush-hush was starting to worry me. What did they find at the end of the road, and why did they need me? I asked them where they were taking me, but all I received were stern glares. It was obvious they knew where it was but would not answer me. 

We passed through multiple hatches leading different directions. This place looked a lot smaller from the outside, but with it so dark this deep it was impossible to view it all. We finally reached the chamber of our destination. When we walked into the spherical compartment, I found more agents and specialists from one field or another waiting inside. My current companion and I were instructed to sit down and say nothing. 

I could not say how much time actually past, not one of us was allowed a watch or other time piece, but eventually someone who appeared to be in command entered the compartment. He immediately began to brief us on the mission of which we were now all a part. As the others, I did not believe what I heard. Surely what this man said had to be absurd. Everything I knew and studied told me this information was very anthropologically impossible. Yet here I was. 

The government agents escorted each of us afterward to an individual sleeping compartment. Even though we all now knew the reason for our conscription, we still were not allowed to discuss it. Within twenty-four hours, we would load into specially designed submarines to get to the very depths of the sea. 

Ten hours until departure time, we were all taken to compartments where we were instructed on donning special suits. These odd diving suits, which to me looked like space suits, were designed to allow us to survive at incredible depths. The world record for the deepest dive was only 1,000 feet and we learned in our briefing we would be more than 17,000 feet below the surface. It was close to impossible to believe there was any conceivable way for us to survive that deeply underwater. 

Where did that road lead? How did it get so deep underwater? Why did they have six scholars with unrelated areas of expertise going down there? What were we going to find? 

No sooner was our crash course in our special diving suits over, they loaded us into a small submarine which proceeded to bring us into even deeper depths of the sea. As we traveled, the government agent escorts finally allowed us to discuss our various fields of expertise. I wondered how long we were going to have to remain complete strangers to one another.

I told them I was an anthropologist specializing in obscured cultures. One man was a chemist and another one was in architectural engineer specializing in massive buildings. We had a geologist. She specialized in crystal growth and technological uses for those crystals. We had a cryptographer so skilled, she was called in for government and civilian projects. The final member was by far the strangest to take this mission.

This lady, who far exceeded anyone else’s level of education, was a xeno-biologist. She studied theoretical ways life might possibly live in all different makeups of planet types as well as in the sea, but it did not make sense to me why we would have her instead of a marine biologist. 

The deeper we sank, the more helium was added to our air and the amount of nitrogen dropped. Our voices did not become squeaky as before. The steady rise in pressure kept our voices at a nearly constant tone. That was why, and it was explained in our briefing, it was going to take weeks before we could return to the surface. Normal rapid decompression could cause death. Rapid decompression in our current state would literally cause us to explode as the helium our system return to gaseous form. 

Eight hours into our underwater dissent, we began to see a faint light ahead of us. It was barely perceptible, but it was there. At first, we thought it might be simply a jellyfish or some similar creature. As we proceeded, our thoughts of it being a jellyfish were debunked. Instead, the light became ever so slightly brighter. This indicated the light was either moving or it was in some distance away. 

Our anticipation, excitement and fear grew the closer we approached our destination. Nothing said in the briefing prepared me for the scope of the newly rediscovered sunken city. It was nothing like I expected. I thought of remnants of structures and buildings buried deep in the sand. What I saw approaching from the distance was more than astounding. It almost appeared as though the buildings were only created yesterday. 

I understood now the significance of the geologist. It appeared every building in the city was made from unnaturally faceted crystal. Never in my life did I think such large quartz and other crystals  could even be possible. The conditions that would allow crystal growth of such immense proportions would take billions of years. Earth was in no condition to create such massive gemstones as it was. Something increased the speed of their growth exponentially to grow them this large. 

I expected to see only one, perhaps two sources for the light, but the entire city emitted a soft blue hue. It was still hard for me to believe this to be real despite the fact I was looking right at it. 

What in the history of our planet ever indicated something like this could even be? What people created this city? Why such a massive crystalline metropolis was created under water was the greatest question in my head at the time. 

Water appeared to fill much of the city, but some of it contained pockets of air. The vehicle slowed to a near stop. Our drivers cut the forward engines and we began our descent into this unusual world beneath us. One of the agents finally spoke. 

The female agent on board with us pointed out a large platform like area where we were to land. She told us to make sure the specialized suits were on correctly as that was where we were to exit the submarine. That was when the terror set in.

Why should I really trust the government with assurance of the ability of our suits?

At this step is seemed we would be crushed into a ball as soon as we exited the vehicle. Although I feared for my life, I could not wait to explore the wonders this place may hold. This may very well be the greatest discovery in human history. This discovery might even rewrite human history.

We were ushered into a compartment along with one of the agents where they had us attach thick, heavy hoses to connections on our suits. Water began filling the compartment, and I began to feel the squeeze of the pressure before the chamber filled completely. I began thrashing when a clear pinkish fluid filled my bulky suit. The others seem to take it a little better, although they struggled to fight their instinct not to inhale the fluid, to get past the sensation of drowning.

I fought for over a minute to hold in the last gaseous breath I took in. When I could no longer hold it, I thrashed even more. I tried to remove my helmet, but the government agent grabbed my arms to keep me from doing so. Eventually, I had no choice but to suck the pinkish fluid into my lungs. As I acclimated, I calmed down and stopped my struggling once I pulled the fluid completely into my lungs. 

I really expected it to hurt, to burn my lungs as liquid replaced air. As I recalled, one of the others told me it was essentially breathing embryonic fluid, for which my lungs were already accustomed. After finally inhaling the biological fluid into my lungs, I noticed the pressure I felt seemed to decrease some.

No one could speak because the fluid in their suits did not allow our vocal cords to function. The agent typed into a keyboard on her forearm. All of us had one of these on the arm of our off hand so we could communicate in more detail than we could with hand signals.

A moment after the agent punched in some letters, I could hear a computer generated voice ask “Is everyone okay?”

She made sure everyone gave a thumbs up or somehow otherwise indicated they were having no problems before she began the procedure of opening this compartment to the crushing weight of the ocean depths.

Having to essentially let myself drown was absolutely the worst part of this ordeal so far. Our suits could not be filled with air or we would pop like a soap bubble in the sun. Regardless, that was one experience I never wanted to have to relive.

The hatch opened, and I felt a small increase in pressure as the water outside finished equalizing with the pressure of the compartment. The increase in pressure was noticable, but not enough to make the tension much more than we already experienced. As we began exiting the outer hatch, I thought to myself we were the first people to see the city in thousands, possibly millions of years.

Our guide, a different government agent, escorted us through a corridor filled with water. I looked at my surroundings with amazement like a child meeting Santa at the North Pole. I could not believe the large crystals of varying colors were fused together to form every surface I could see. The tunnel eventually began to slope upward until we were finally out of the water. Small motors in our suits kicked in. Had they not, we would not have been able to remain standing.

The tunnel opened into a massive room filled with air. Moving almost as if in slow motion due to the bulk of his suit, the chemist used some tools of his to analyze the atmosphere and informed us the gasses filling the room were toxic and unbreathable. I could see an orangish haze in the room, but I thought that was simply an effect of the fluid in my helmet. 

The room was rectangular, but all the walls were slightly askewed. The crystal walls appeared to be perfectly parallel, but none of the corners were constructed at right angles. I was able to perceive light radiating from the incredible mineral walls. The light showed with such subtlty from every surface, but the accumulated effect had the whole room brightly lit. It was not too bright here in this room. As a matter of fact, the lighting seemed absolutely perfect. I did not have to strain my eyes to see clearly across the room, but I also did not have to shield my eyes at all. 

The chemist who was analyzing the atmosphere waved his hand wildly then stopped and stared at his device as if under some hypnotic trance. Before anyone could reach him, he began to unfasten his helmet from the rest of his suit. I tried to scream out to him to stop, but no sound eminated from my lips. The agent escorting us ran to the man as fast as possible as the chemist struggled with his helmet, but by the time the agent reached him the fluid was already spilling out from the seam. I thought perhaps his oxygen unit malfunctioned and he was beginning to drown inside his suit, but outside his vesture was certain death.

It was too late to get the man’s helmet back on as he had no more of the breathable liquid to fill his suit. He began to hack and gag as the fluid flushed from his lungs, but afterward he stood there panting with his hands resting on his knees. He could not explain what happened, but the room regulated itself to be ideal for our physiology. The air pressure and atmosphere both were at surface levels. It made no sense, the pressure should have killed the man, but he was breathing just fine as he now stood in front of us with no protective gear.

Appearing as bewildered as the rest of us, the chemist said “I don’t know what happened. I can’t explain it, but the air in here modified itself to be suitable to us.”

It was as if the room somehow analyzed our physiology and generated exactly what we needed to survive. After seeing the chemist standing there experiencing no issues at all, I followed his example and remove my own helmet. The pink liquid flushed from my suit and I began coughing up the fluid in my lungs. Expelling the liquid from my lungs was every bit as unpleasant as inhaling it in the first place. Eventually everyone else removed their helmets as well.

In the left corner furthest from our entrance sat a large array of crystals of verying colors, each one fitting perfectly with the others. Each individual crystal was faceted at the top with a slight slant. Some of the long slender crystaline rods stood higher than others; there if fact appeared to be four individual levels at which all the crystals rested. When the geologist, the government agent and I approached the apparatus even closer, we could see a single symbol etched on the slanted top surface of each gemstone shaft.

This was really the only feature in the room. There did not appear to be any exits in this room except for the one we used to enter and the walls were opaque enough to prevent us from seeing what was on the other side.

Our geologist, chemist and cryptographer spent the next five or six hours analyzing the alien apparatus. Eventually they came to a consensus that this mechanism of sorts was what adjusted the air pressure and the makeup of the atmosphere to be compatible with our bodies. To test this hypothesis, the geologist removed one of the flares from his side and struck it alight with a snap of the cap. He waved it in front of the array and something beyond amazing happened.

As smoke spewed forth from the sizzling flare, the long crystal rods began to move. Some raised, some lowered and some stayed where they were. When the apparatus did this, the smoke bellowing from the red flame simply began to vanish. This room, or this machine cleaned the air for us and kept it pure. At this time we did not know if only this chamber acclimated to our needs, or if it was the entire city. Now there was no doubt this amazing puzzle of faceted crystal rods adapted the atmosphere for us, removed the toxins in the air, and it made us all wonder what other things this amazing machine was capable of doing.

As the three of our team members analyzed the crystaline machine, the rest of us began to debate the origin and nature of the beings who created such a spectacularly advanced city. As much as we wanted to think they were humans, the very location of this city made that impossible. It was my assumption, and that of several others, that the atmosphere that was in the room when we arrived was the natural atmosphere of whoever constructed this massive place.

Our briefing told us very little about where we were, what part of the sea we were in, or even what see we were in. They seem to go to great lengths to keep us from knowing any of this. That was obvious by the complicated route the government transported me to this location. 

I thought perhaps this city once sat at the floor of what eventually became the Mediterranean Sea. I had difficulty trying to fathom an advanced civilization existing at that time. The flooding of that sea occurred somewhere in the neighborhood of 5.3 million years ago. Modern humans were not believed to exist until approximately 300,000 years ago or less, so the timing of the flood was much too early for humans to occupy any now submerged city. 

Someone examining the crystal apparatus touched one of the crystal rods which made it rise a few inches. Immediately several other mineral shafts changed position as  well. We all stood there in silence, afraid that we might be facing another atmospheric changed. Our government escort pointed at an opening that was beginning to grow in the same wall of the room as our entrance. The opaque crystal became transparent and began to retreat away as if made of some sort of fluid.

As we approached the opening so that we were able to peer around the corner, I could see this smaller room went back for a hundred feet or so before it ended in a back wall. What I saw inside this room excited me immensely, as I believed we were looking at something no human eyes ever saw.

A multitude of various items seem to be suspended inside the wall of this smaller room. By the way the items appeared to be placed, it seemed like they were in drawers. I checked the walls carefully and found no seams to support that theory.

As the others worked on trying to figure out what else the apparatus might operate, I turned my focus to this newly discovered room. By studying the items encased in the transparent wall, I hoped to uncover something about the civilization capable of creating such a splenderous city.

There were a variety of tools in one of the clusters of items. There was nothing with which I could equate them, as they looked like nothing I ever saw before this. There was what I thought might be jewelry in one of the storage areas, for lack of a better term. I could not know for sure unless I was able to get the items out and examine them more closely. The most exciting part might have been the material from which the items were created. 

Guaging by the gleam I could see coming off the surface, I initially thought it to be a metal of some sort. I could not say for certan from here, but the best way to describe the metal was as flakes of gold and platinum suspended in what I thought to perhaps be a glass or clear quartz. I was very anxious to examine these items in detail, and I was absolutely sure there must be a way to get them out. I returned to the other room to check on the progress of unlocking the symbols on the apparatus.

All they could tell me at this point was that it was the most complex computer system any of them saw in their entire life. This was something of which I was already rather aware, and I found it slightly irritating they even responded with an answer like that. I blew it off and went back into the smaller room. I would do as much of my examination through the transparent rock as I could.

The back wall of the niche was not clear like most of the walls. Instead it looked like ice. The wall was not cold to the touch, so for now I assumed it was crystal just as everything else. 

Although I could not see them, I knew the others tried to operate the apparatus that cleaned and properly pressurize the atmosphere. Whatever they did made this small room in which I stood become active. The hard mineral encasing the items withdrew from them like water draining. Every cache in the walls receded, exposing all of it. Of course that astounded me, but the back wall became transparent and revealed by far the greatest of our discoveries yet. 

I cried out to the others and told them not to do anything else. They had to come see what I found. They must have heard the urgency in my voice because they arrived very quickly. When they reached the opening of the small grotto, every one of them froze in their tracks. When they saw what was in the back wall, they were rendered speechless. 

Embedded in the wall we saw a body. Because of its condition, we were unable to tell if it was human. Whatever it was, it was obviously a humanoid of some kind. All of its appendages looked human. It even had fingernails at the tips of its fingers and toes, and its heads still had a full head of red hair. The feature I noticed almost immdiately was the thing in the clear crystal wall only had four fingers and four toes. For this alone I did not think this thing to be human, not a modern human.

I was facinated by this thing in front of me, and my attention was fully on examining it’s form. The body appeared dry and the skin leathery. Until I could examine it more closely, I could not say if that was its natural state or if it was the result of being sealed in this place for millions of years.

I was not paying any attention to him at first, but the geologist was calling my name, trying to get my attention. He found what he thought was lettering etched several inches inside the glassy crystal. After finally registering what the man said to me, I stepped over to look at his discovery. The cartogropher was on her way over to us as well.

They were very very faint, but there were in fact figures etched deep within the crystal corresponding to symbols on the crystal apparatus. Until we could find some way of translating what we were seeing, we were not sure if it was a combination or a warning. We made a paper drawing of each of the symbols so the cryptographer could compare them with their positions on the crystal mechanism in hopes of discovering their meaning.

As I continued to examine the creature inside the wall, I began to wonder if this was some sort of stasis chamber. It was my assumption the clothing and other items stored in the cubbies belonged to this being. It appeared this thing was intended to be revived, but whatever was supposed to come back to revive it never did. The creature still appeared very much life-like, but I was sure the thing I was looking at was dead.

Were there other bodies like this in other parts of this crystal city, or was this the only one?

The glowing crystalline city spread so wide, I was sure there must be others. I could not wait to explore the rest of this incredible metropolis. Who knows what wonders, what highly advanced technology was out there for us to discover. This find, this lost technology could change the world as we knew it, and I was right there on the inside.

I carefully examined each item from the storage units, taking great care to be gentle with them and logging where each item was found. Spreading all these things out as I did took up a lot of space in this smaller room, but everyone but the xenobiologist was still in the larger room trying to understand the apparatus. Despite having the items, most of them quite bizarre spread about, I was not really in anyone else’s way. The sheer number of  things and the fact I was going over each item carefully it took me hours to even get through the objects from the first cubby. 

With my excitement trying to discern something about the city and its original inhabitants, I did not notice the time clicking along until our second shipment of food and supplies. The two agents could not speak because of their suits, and they could not remove their suits until we got something in here to refill them with the breathable fluid. That equipment was scheduled to be brought in at a later time.

One of the two arriving agents typed into the keypad that was on all our suits, and the message came through our escorting agent’s radio.

“Why did you use no food or water” the simulated voice asked.

Our escort told them we were very busy with everything we had to analyze and we would eat in a few hours.

The other agent again typed into the keypad on his arm and the voice asked “How long do you think you’ve been down here?”

Glancing around to the rest of us for a moment, he shrugged his shoulders and replied into his radio “Eight hours or so.”

 Our supply runner stunned us all when he responded with “You’ve been down here for two days.” 

We probably would have laughed at this idea, but the look on his face told us he was not kidding around. None of us were tired or hungry. It did not take a scientist to put two and two together. Something about this place was sustaining us. There could be no other way we did not get sleepy, hungry or thirsty. The room not only allowed us to breethe, it appeared to be taking care of our bodies as well. Somehow in some way this place completely sustained us. 

At that point, our chaperone insisted we stop and eat. None of us were hungry, but we knew we should get some food and water in us. Perhaps this place only numbed the hunger and did not satiate it. If that was the case, we would need to make sure we continued to eat and drink as normal. Although we did consume some food and water regularly, we found sleep to be impossible.

Eight days later, I had almost everything in the storage cubbies inventoried and catalogued when I heard the others calling my name. I rose and rushed into the main chamber where the chemist, cryptogropher and geologist told me they thought they understood how to properly operate the machine now.

We were scared, but also elated to know more of what the apparatus could do. The three assured us what they were about to do would have no effect on our atmosphere’s density and composition. They were going to open the chamber holding the body of that ancient being so we could examine it more closely since the etchings in the transparent wall were how they were able to unlock the crystal array.

Every time they touched one of the crystals, it moved either up or down. Other seemingly random mineral rods either moved up, down or remained in place. It was like working some sort of insanely complex puzzle. We were all staring intently on the amazing machine until the rods stopped moving. When the fitted crystal shafts stopped, everyone looked around the room to see if anything happened.

The cryptogropher told us there would be several more steps before they could achieve the desired combination sequence. Disappointed, The xenobiologist and I went back into the room with the body. At this point she was helping me make notes on the items I still had spread about the floor. It was another hour before someone called out to me informing me they were ready to activate the last sequence to releaase the body from the crystal encasing it.

Everyone but the cryptogropher joined us in the smaller chamber to help when the body was released. She activated the final sequence and right there before our eyes the crystal hoding the corpse flowed away like water into apparent nothingness. The leathery mummy inside remained standing until all the flowing crystal pulled away from its body.

At this time it began to fall forward like a tree. We carefully caught it and placed it on a stretcher. As I assisted the others into transferring the body to a stretcher, I noted the body was much heavier that expected. As dry as it appeared to be, I expected it to be much lighter than it was.  Carrying it to a table set up in the main room, we gently rested the body on the flat surface.

The whole team was here for more than a week, and the supply runs brought us all manner of tools, gadgets and medical equipment. The xenobiologist was justifibly excited as this was what she wated her life for. We had everything we needed for her to perform an autopsy here. It took us a short while to get everything set up and adjusted properly, as the woman performing the autopsy was the only one with more than a miniscule amount of medical training.

The being was obviously not human, and I was eager to see what organs this creature had. I wondered how much it looked like us on the inside, if it was like us at all. When the xenobiologist began to make an incision in the leathery flesh, a small trickle of blood oozed out of the wound. God help me, blood dripped from this body that was very likely 5 million years old or more.

The terror of seeing the blood was replaced by a more intense horror when its eyes opened, and it glanced over our faces. The instant it opened its eyes, we could hear the crystal array become active, and we saw the rods begin to move without needing input. I was the closest to its hand, and the eons old creature reached out its discolored arm and grabbed me by the wrist. Suddenly my lungs began to burn as the smell of sulfur filled my nostrils.

I watched the dried flesh of the mummy returned to what I assumed was its regular skin tone as I felt the air pressure increase rapidly. The air filled with traces of chlorine, carbon dioxide  and various sulfur compounds. We suffocated as the intense pressure crashed our bodies from all directions. The agony was indescribable. There were no words to describe the feeling of one’s bones all crushing into small pieces instantaneously. 

The room automatically adjusted to create an atmosphere and pressure ideal for us, but the city did not belong to us. The city belonged to this thing, and the instant we revived it, the crystal apparatus readjusted to create the atnosphere this thing needed.

When it realized what was happening, it tried to help us. There was nothing it could do. The crushing pressure ruptured our eyes, crushed our bones and was squeezing our bodies into gelatinous masses.

The room sustained us during the entire time we inhabited it, but it was not built for us. It was built for that thing in the glass coffin.

Copyright © 2019

Views: 4

Dream House

Word Count: 6,500

I was so excited. My husband and I closed on an amazing house resting on twelve square miles of mostly forested land. We got a great deal on the real estate because the house was unoccupied for some time and needed a lot of cosmetic work. The foundation and frame of the home were strong and sturdy, but the outside of the house needed to be painted and re-sided in some places. 

It was going to take us a lot of work, but it was going to be well worth it when we were finished. We would have a nice two-story home with a partial attic as well as a large swath of land. It still astounded me that we purchased such a great piece of realestate, and for ten thousand less than what I recently inherited after my father’s passing. Here we were only now moving in and we almost owned it free and clear. 

The drive was a long one. We followed a highway to a smaller, local road, which we then took until we reached the long dirt road that was our driveway. The trees and the underbrush lining the semi-gravel road created a tunnel of vegetation which both amazed and scared me. It looked like something one might see in a horror movie. 

The long corridor finally came to an end, and we could see our house up ahead near the top of a gentle hill. My excitement amplified when I saw the house that was going to be ours for the rest of our lives. I looked over to my husband and I could see the joy on his face as he stared at the gray building ahead. 

Although we could have paid for everything outright, we decided to finance a small portion of the home purchase so we could keep enough money to buy all the things we were going to need to make this place look like a palace. This being our first trip out here since closing on the property, we had our truck mostly loaded with food, sleeping bags and other items one might take camping with them. We also had some of our tools as well as several firearms. Being out here in the forest along for the first time, we wanted to make sure we had protection from wild animals if we needed it. 

When we pulled up to the house, my husband and I unloaded everything in the truck. We brought all of the cleaning supplies to the room on the second floor that would become a guest bedroom. Making that room livable would be the first priority in turning this shell into a home. Once we had a room in which to live, we could continue our repairs on the master bedroom and the rest of the structure. 

One thing I thought very unusual about this house was that there were deadbolts with key holes on either side in every single door in the house. Even the doors to the closets had padlocks on them. I assumed the reason must be to keep out squatters and vandals that may cause damage to the building. Still, I could understand having locks on the exterior doors, and even the bedrooms, but it made no sense to me to have them in the closet doors as well. 

Before helping me with the cleaning, my husband went outside to get the generator set up and running. Until we could get the power company to run us some lines out here, we would be dependent on the two generators we had. One would last for sustained use, but the other was only meant to be used in small doses. Eventually, our plan was to have solar panels on the roof to help supplement our electricity usage. 

We spent the entire first day cleaning that one single guest bedroom. It would still need repainting, new carpeting, and furniture. Our bedroom furniture we would bring once the room was suitable for it. There was no point in bringing everything now as it would only become covered in dust as we cleaned. Our hope was to get the bedroom ready enough that we could at least bring up our bed. Although we had sleeping bags, I had no desire to sleep on the floor any longer than necessary. 

There was so much dust accumulated in just the one room, we had to replace the filter to the shop vac half-way through vacuuming as it became clogged. We were able to get the room clean enough so that, along with an air purifier we brought with us, the room was safely habitable for the night. 

We ate a dinner of sandwiches and chips from our cooler as we had no means of cooking until we were sure the gas lines and everything on the stove were in proper condition. We were a young couple, and this almost felt like we were out roughing it somewhere in the wilderness. It was rather romantic eating under the light of a kerosene lamp. 

Once we finished eating, I did what little cleaning up there was to be done as my husband went downstairs to lock all the exterior doors. By the time he returned I had our sleeping bags laid out and our pillows on the floor. He did not bother locking any of the doors in the interior of the house as we really did not think it was necessary. 

I was having a difficult time getting to sleep. It was probably because we were in a new and very rustic environment, but I could not shake the feeling we were being watched. I took my key – all the locks in all the doors of the house used a single key – and locked the bedroom door. I was not sure if my husband was still awake or not, but he did not move if he was still conscious. 

The moon was only a few days away from being full, and there was not a cloud in the sky. The bright moonlight shone into our bedroom through the curtainless windows. Since I was already up, I decided to go look out the window and look at the natural scenery in the bright light of the moon. Standing not fifty feet from our house was a large deer or possibly an elk. My husband and I were both hunters, and never in my life had I seen a specimen as large as this one. 

This massive deer appeared to be looking back up at me as I stood at the bolted window. It was just an animal, but I was positive it was aware of my presence. I was not sure if I wanted to know what it was thinking or not. As large as this thing was, I figured the animal must be an elk. They were not very common in this area, but they were known to be spotted here and there. 

The thing really gave me the creeps. I could not help but feel like I was looking at something intelligent, something sinister. I thought about waking my husband so he could see it too, but I decided against it. In all reality, I was fairly certain it was simply being in this old worn-out house for the first night that had me a bit skittish. There was no point in keeping my husband from getting a full night’s sleep simply because I was spooked by some animal in our yard. 

Climbing back into my sleeping bag, I tried to get the large animal out of my mind. It took me close to an hour, but I finally managed to get back to sleep. When my husband woke me it was eight o’clock in the morning. Apparently, he was up since before dawn. I wondered how long after I fell back to sleep it was when he awoke. 

As we were having some fruit and milk for breakfast, my husband began telling me about seeing something out the window this morning when he got up. He told me it looked like a large man wearing a helmet crafted from the skull of a large-antlered deer. When I told him I saw the same thing, but it was not a man. It was an elk. He told me that could not be it. Whoever this was stood on two legs and had some sort of sickle in its hand. I again told him what I saw, but he insisted what he saw was no animal. 

Could it be possible we were talking about the same thing, or did we see two different entities, two different beings out on our lawn watching the house? 

Eventually my husband began to doubt what he actually saw, as his version of what was outside was very peculiar. It made much more sense that it was an elk outside than it was a large man wearing a helmet made from an antlered skull. We stopped talking about the subject as we prepared to clean the entrance hall and living room. The movers would be here in two more days to bring us the rest of our belongings, and we had to have a clean place for them to put everything. 

The living room, along with a couple of other rooms, still had some furniture from the previous occupants. They were covered in sheets of cloth which were themselves covered in a thick layer of dust. As we got parts of the room cleaned, we removed the sheets so we could see what was underneath. Both of us were shocked to find the beautiful antiques hidden under the blankets of cloth. I was somewhat surprised the previous occupants did not take this furniture with them, but I guessed they were not as antique then as they were now. 

We worked through the day and did not finish until it was dark. Without electricity and working lights, it was simply too difficult to try to clean in the dark. Once again, we retreated to what would eventually be a guest bedroom for the night. Yet again we feasted on sandwiches and chips. I could not wait until we got our propane tank filled and the gas lines tested. There was no need for heat, but hot water and a freshly cooked meal would be so nice right now. Someone was supposed to come to work on the gas lines in three days and someone else two days after that to try to get the well running. Until then, we would continue to eat sandwiches, chips and fruit for every meal. 

We both woke with a jump and quickly climbed out of our sleeping bags when we heard something loud coming from downstairs. It was a loud bang, and we were not sure if it came from the inside or from the outside. Picking up the revolvers we were keeping beside us as we slept, my husband and I slowly walked to the window to see if there was anything out there. Before we reached the glass pane, we again heard the loud bang come from downstairs. This time we were both sure the sound was being made by something outside the house and not from the inside. 

When we finally got to the window, we watched a large bull elk backing away from our front porch. The animal was trying to bust down our front door. If the door was a modern one and not a thick, hand-made door, the creature probably would have broken it open by now. Scratching its feet on the ground, it looked as though it was about to ram the door for a third time. 

It must have somehow sensed us observing it, because the burly creature stopped kicking at the dirt and turned its head up to look at us. The bull elk stared at us as we kept our gaze fixed on it. I almost got the feeling the massive animal was trying to communicate something to us, but what that message was I could not say. 

Being caught up in the animal’s gaze, it was hard to say how long we stared at each other. The elk shook its head, waving its massive antlers through the air, let out a snort, turned and ran back into the forest. My husband and I continued to stand at the window staring into the dark forest. We were both in something of a daze, our minds struggling to comprehend what happened. 

When we finally came to our senses, my husband pointed out something I did not notice. It was approaching the middle of the month of May, and the elk still had its antlers. It should have shed them in the early spring, but here it was early summer and the elk still had not lost its antlers. 

For the next hour, we discussed what we thought might be happening. Trying to think of a logical reason a large animal like that would be attempting to break into our home was next to impossible. We could not come up with any good, rational reasons the animal acted the way it did. There was no way we could know if the creature was trying to harm us, warn us or simply scare us away. 

Whatever the animal’s reasoning was, we were both terrified. The thing was so large, I did not think it could even fit its rack through the front door if it did bust the door down. I could not imagine what could be inside the house that would cause it to try to break in. Bull elk were known for being aggressive, but that was always in the wild when someone invaded its territory. I never heard of one attacking a house. 

As frightened as we were, we were even more tired than that. Spending the entire day cleaning that one room and eating such meager meals had us exhausted. We set the cases containing our hunting rifles beside our sleeping bags and undid the latches so we could get to them quickly if we needed to. Our holstered pistols were already close to our pillows.

Pulling our sleeping bags closer together after my husband secured the padlock, we climbed back inside and allowed ourselves to drift back to sleep. I was glad to see that it was already daylight when I woke up in the morning. My husband was sitting on the trunk containing all the clothes I had with me, having carried it over to the window. He had his hunting rifle out and resting in his lap. When he heard me beginning to stir, he placed his gun in its case and came over to me. 

We were both frightened and searching for a rational explanation for what happened last night. There was simply no reason of which we could think that would cause that bull elk to try to break into our front door. Even if it was not trying to get into our house, we still could not find a reason for it doing what it did. Its behavior was very out of character for an elk. Being seasoned hunters, it deeply disturbed us to see the animal behave in a way so far outside of its nature. 

The best explanation we could conceive was that the animal was sick, perhaps even rabid, and this was causing its strange behavior. If that was in fact the case, we may be looking at an outbreak in the forest animals. For right now we were going to be careful to avoid straying too far from the house or truck, and making sure we had a pistol on our hip while we were awake. 

The damage to the door was not as serious as we expected. We thought we would find gouge marks made by the elk’s massive antlers, but there were no scratch marks at all. I did not understand how that hulking animal could bang against the door yet leave no signs of damage. It was almost like something was pounding against the door with fists rather than antlers. 

My husband was convinced the loud banging simply came from where the creature was landing on the front porch. That would make sense because the banging could be amplified by the hollow underneath the old wooden veranda. Although that was a believable explanation, I was still unconvinced. There was nothing outside our house that we could see, so we decided to continue working on getting the house ready to store our belongings. 

It took some back-breaking work, but we finally got the living room clean enough to store our belongings while we worked on the rest of the house. We were both very tired and weary from all the cleaning, but we moved into the entrance hall and started working there. There were only a few hours of sunlight left, so we did not get to clean for long before it got too dark to see what we were doing. 

Although we heard nothing strange during the night, neither of us slept very well. Every little creature outside making noise made us think that elk was back. It was difficult to drown out the nocturnal animals because we were so afraid of that large antlered creature returning. Both of us woke several times and checked the window to see if that giant stag was stalking us for a third night. 

As much as we wanted to sleep in the next morning, we had to get the entrance hall finished before the truck showed up with our things. We were not sure what time it would arrive, but it was supposed to be here sometime today. The living room was cleaned, and the existing furniture moved out of the way, but we needed to get the entrance hall clean so things did not get covered in dust as they were carried in. 

Working through until lunch without taking a break, we got the bulk of the cleaning done. The ice in our large coolers was all melted, and we finished off what luncheon meat we had remaining. I hoped the movers would show up in their truck soon because one of us was going to have to go into town to get some more food and ice. It was quite dreadful living out of ice chest like we were, but hopefully we would not have to endure it for too much longer. Our gas should be fixed in a few days, and we could run a small refrigerator from the primary generator. 

When two o’clock in the afternoon arrived and the truck was still not here, we decided to go ahead and drive into town. I did not want to stay here by myself, and my husband did not want me driving all the way to town alone. We left a note on the door and the key under a rock for them if they arrived before we returned. 

After driving all the way to the end of the road leading up to our house, we turned onto the paved road and began driving to the nearest grocery market. We were only on the asphalt road for ten minutes before we discovered why the moving truck had not yet arrived. The truck was jack knifed and in the ditch. I supposed we were fortunate the trailer was not overturned. We simply had to hope they had our things strapped down securely enough for the accident they experienced. 

The three men driving the truck saw us coming and began waving their hands in the air. My husband pulled over and the two of us got out to make sure the men were okay. None of them were injured, so that was fortunate. One man told us they already called for someone to pick up the trailer and take it the rest of the way, but it was not going to be until tomorrow before they arrived. 

Another one of the men, a tall slender fellow, said they had rooms reserved at the motel in town, but as of now they had no way of getting there. My husband told them we could give them a ride since we were already going to town, but they would have to ride in the back of the pickup. They had no problem with this as they were beginning to think they were going to spend the night sleeping in the slanted truck. 

Before we got back in the cab, the first man asked if there was some kind of carnival going on around here. He then began to tell us how they ended up perpendicular to the trailer facing down into the ditch. He said he was driving the truck, and this man ran out into the road and stopped. The man who came running out of the woods was wearing a helmet with antlers that looked like it was made from the head of a large deer. 

The driver did not have time to stop. He slammed his brakes as they were heading into a slight curve, and the truck jack knifed. The next thing they knew they were in the ditch and the large man was nowhere to be seen. That was three hours before we found them. 

Neither my husband nor I said a word for the rest of the drive into town. I now began to think my husband was telling the truth when he said he saw a man standing out on our lawn that first night. I was sure he saw the large elk because that was what I saw, but these men confirmed that there was someone running around this forest wearing furs and a helmet made from the head of some antlered animal. 

First we dropped off the three movers at the only motel in this sparsely populated community, then we went to the grocery store. It was not until we were loading the groceries into the truck that we began to talk. As we made the hour-long drive back to our house, we discussed the strange situation in which we found ourselves. I wondered if there might be a wild man living in the forest, and perhaps our arrival upset him for some reason. Maybe since the house and land was abandoned for so long, the wild man got used to having the run of the area undisturbed. My husband said that, if we had any more strange occurrences tonight, we would get the authorities to come out here to see if they could find anything. 

When we got back to our house, we carried in the coolers and took them upstairs to our bedroom. My husband then went back downstairs and locked every single door from the exterior doors to our bedroom. I was beginning to wonder if we were going to find a reasonable explanation for things or if we were going to have to live with this fear and anxiety for the rest of our lives. 

This time we hung a large sheet over the window . It would not provide much protection, but it would keep anything from watching inside. As we did before, we kept our pistols and hunting rifles next to our sleeping bags in case we needed to defend ourselves. I would not worry about an elk coming into the house and making it up the stairs. There is no possible way the animal I saw could fit with those massive antlers. If it was a person wearing a mask, that was something that could get into our house to cause us harm. 

I woke once during the night, and I felt incredibly tempted to go peek behind the sheet hanging over the window to see if anything was outside. As difficult as it was to fight the urge to look, I remained zipped up in my sleeping bag unmoving. I drifted back to sleep sometime later, but how long I could not say with any sort of certainty. When I again awoke, it was light outside. By the deep orange tone of the sunlight, I would say it was only minutes past dawn. I laid there in my sleeping bag until my husband began to stir. 

Afraid to go outside by myself, I had my husband walk me to the outhouse. It would be several months still before we had indoor plumbing. We had a water pump and sinks, but no toilets in the house. There was no man or giant stag waiting outside for us, but there were elk tracks that appeared to circle around the house multiple times. As I relieved myself in the old wooden outhouse, my husband looked for any tracks indicating where the elk approached or departed from the house. The only tracks he found ran in circles around our new home. 

We were incredibly on edge as we waited for the movers to bring our things so we could start making this house our own. For the most part we continued cleaning the living room and entrance hall, keeping our long guns close at all times. I nearly jumped out of my skin when I heard the horn of the replacement truck as it pulled up to our house. They would not be here long, but I felt a lot better having three more rather large men with us. 

As they relocated the contents of the moving truck into our large living room, I worked on doing what cleaning I could. I did not really want to open another room and let the dust it contained into the hall until I could close the living room first. Until then, I located as many of the boxes for the bedroom as I could and began to unpack the things we needed to have out for our use. 

Once the movers got the bed and the dressers up the stairs to the guest bedroom, I started getting the room situated and organized. Finding the curtain rods and curtains, I was more than eager to get them hung. I knew the thicker curtains would not provide any more protection from something coming in the window, but it gave me a small measure of comfort at least. 

It took me an hour to get the curtain rods hung, and as I was sliding the curtains on, I gazed out the window to the far edge of the clearing. Standing there was a large man dressed in animal skins. On top of his head rested a helmet made from the skull and antlers of a deer. He was very far in the distance, all the way out to the tree line, but I was sure that was what I was seeing. 

Yelling out to my husband, I ran down the stairs with my pistol in my hand. Dashing out the door, I quickly made my way to the end of the porch. From there I should be able to spot the man again. My husband and the three movers ran outside with me, but when we got out to the porch there was nothing to see. The man yet again vanished without a trace. 

Everyone was on edge as we all returned to our work. The movers saw the helmeted man standing in the road; he was in fact the reason for their accident. When I described what I could see, I literally saw shivers course down the spine of the driver. It was clear that my description of the strange man fell in line with what the movers saw. My husband looked like he saw a ghost as well. What I described was what he saw standing on our front lawn that first night we slept in this worn-out house. 

This creepy figure was enough to encourage the movers to pick up the pace and get everything unloaded quickly. I did not really want them to leave when they were finished, but it was not like we had anywhere here for them to sleep. It was late afternoon when the three men climbed back into their empty truck and headed back towards town. The men acted as though they were trying to beat dusk, but I knew they were really eager to get away from our house and that spooky man who was apparently stalking our forest. 

I was so glad to have a refrigerator running in the house finally. I was tired of eating from waterlogged containers floating in a cooler of melting ice. Someone should be out here from the gas company in two days to check all the lines and connections, and we had someone else who was supposed to come get our well running again. 

If we did not get running water soon, I was going to have my husband drive me into town. I would rent a room at the motel if that was what I had to do to get a hot shower. We were here for three days already, and I had not showered since we left our former apartment. How people survived before running water is something I will never understand. I almost felt like going to take a bath in the pond that rested about a hundred yards from the house. We cleaned off the same way we did the last few nights, by wiping down thoroughly with a wet towel. Hopefully that would be the last night we had to do the sponge bath.

I felt a lot more comfortable sleeping in our own bed with nice thick curtains covering the window. Until we got heat and water, we used some older sheets rather than our newer softer ones because we did not want to get them filthy. Even though the sheets we used were older and rougher, it still felt a world better than being zipped into a sleeping bag. 

My husband and I both were having difficulty getting to sleep, as neither of us could shake the urge to look out the window to see if that elk or if that barbaric man was standing out there. My husband, who normally fell asleep within minutes of hitting the bed, even stayed awake for nearly an hour before I began to hear him snore lightly. I was awake for at least half an hour longer than him. 

We were awoken again by the sound of a loud bang. Unlike the noise we heard the previous night, this sound came from the roof. My husband and I were on our feet and armed in only seconds. I was clutching my revolver, but my husband grabbed his shotgun. He waved his hand abruptly in the air indicating to me that he wanted me to get lower to the floor. Once I was squatting on my feet, he knelt down to one knee and kept his shotgun pointed at the roof. 

Trembling, I leaned my back against the side of the bed to help steady myself. We both expected to hear another loud bang on the roof, but we heard something else instead. Whatever landed on our roof began to walk around. It sounded as if it had a stride similar to that of a person, but we did not hear feet. We heard hooves. Something with hooves got onto our roof, and it was not difficult to notice there were only two steps, not four. Whatever was up there walked upright. 

How it was walking on our slanted roof with hooved feet was something I could not say, but it terrified me beyond belief. There was a thud as the thing took a pause in its steps. When it again started walking, we could hear something scraping against the roof. In my head I saw the sickle-like weapon my husband saw that man in the horned helmet carrying scraping against the worn-out shingles of the roof. 

My husband gently took me by the arm and helped me to the wall furthest from the window. I wanted to cry, but I kept myself composed. I could not aim my weapon properly through tear-filled eyes. Looking over to my husband, I could see he had his eyes focused intently on the curtain covering the windows. If the thing could get onto the roof, it could certainly get to the ledge right outside this room. 

The thing continued to walk around on the roof for fifteen minutes or so and then stopped. As soon as we began to think it might be safe, the hard clunky hoof-steps resumed. Whatever was up there on our roof, I had no doubt it was playing with us, taunting us. This thing seemed to take joy in terrorizing my husband and me. 

I could not help but wonder if this was one being, one creature doing this, or if there were many of them. I did not think there was really much of a possibility that this was one shape shifting entity stalking us, but I would not think anything with hooves would be able to walk on a roof with a pitch as steep as ours. 

We endured this terror for perhaps thirty minutes or more before the hoof sounds finally came to a stop. My husband and I stayed where we were for at least another ten minutes as we waited for the hoof-steps to resume, but the silence continued. My husband was about to get up and check outside the curtain when we heard a loud thud on the other side of the window. I aimed my pistol at the heavy curtain, and my husband stood there with his shotgun planted firmly in his shoulder. 

A few more minutes passed, and we began to hear the sound of metal tapping lightly on the glass. It did not sound like it was trying to break the glass or even testing its strength. I truly believed the unholy thing outside was deliberately trying to stike fear within us, as if it gained some sort of sick pleasure from tormenting others. Whatever the thing was, and whatever reasons it had for doing what it was doing, I was certain now that being was not human. There was no way a normal person could walk around on the steeply pitched roof as this thing did. 

Suddenly there was a loud thud on the window, as if someone slapped it with their hand. That was the final straw for both of us, and my husband and I unloaded our weapons into the curtain. Something inhuman shrieked seemingly more from surprise than from pain. I dropped my pistol and picked up my husband’s as he reloaded his shotgun. 

To my horror, my husband ran over to the window and pulled the curtain aside. All he saw was a large elk running in the distance, illuminated by the light of the full moon. I begged him to come away from the now shattered window. I begged him to come out of this vulnerable room to get to a safer room, but he was sure the thing was now gone. I told him it was gone at the time, but it could return, and would probably return with others. 

After thinking about it for a minute, he agreed and we started gathering what we needed. I reloaded my pistol and handed my husband’s back to him. I threw my rifle over my shoulder and grabbed my shotgun. With our hands full and me carrying just about all the weight I could, we grabbed our sleeping bags and pillows. We could not carry any more than that. My husband unlocked the door, and we quickly made our way to the master bedroom. 

It was rather pointless for us to bring our sleeping bags, as neither one of us could sleep after the ordeal we endured. We were so terrified something was going to now come into the house through the shattered window, it was impossible for either of us to get any rest. We continued to watch the locked door, waiting for something inhuman to force its way into the room in which we had ourselves barricaded. 

Neither of us could talk. We could not think of anything to talk about except that thing or things that were terrorizing us so deeply. Both of us sat in absolute silence for the next several hours as we awaited the next sunrise. It was not until the sun began to peek over the distant horizon that we finally said anything. 

We both agreed that whatever this thing was, whether or not it be animal or man, it was never going to leave us alone. That was probably the reason the previous residents abandoned the house with so many of their belongings still inside. The thing did not attack us directly, at least not yet, but it was probably only a matter of time before its actions became more violent. As much as we loved the house and the land, it was not something worth dying over. 

Gathering what few things we could, my husband and I decided we had enough. Whatever this thing was, it was capable of feats far beyond the capabilities of any human. I was sure we would be unable to kill the beast. When we unloaded our firearms at the window, there was no way we could miss the creature. Even still, we did not appear to cause it any harm. 

When we stepped out the front door, we could see that massive elk in the distance standing at the edge of the tree line. My heart raced and my stomach sank as I looked at the unnatural animal. I began to grow dizzy, and my husband had to assist me the rest of the way to our truck. As we climbed into the cab of our vehicle, more animals began to emerge from the dark forest and moved to join the elk in watching our exodus. 

Within three minutes we were heading down the hill where the ground rose up on one side obscuring our view of the strange animals. Once we were to the bottom of the hill, we could see the tree line once again. Instead of seeing a motley group of animals standing there, we saw approximately a dozen people. All of them were dressed in animal skins and wore helmets made from the heads of animals. Terrified beyond measure, my husband drove us along the long driveway so fast I thought he was going to run us off the road a few times. 

Never again did we return to that house. We tried to get the movers who brought our things out there to go and pick them back up, but the drivers refused to return to that place. Only having owned the land for slightly over a week, we put it back up for sale. Never again did we return to what was supposed to be our dream home. 

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Animal Instincts

Word Count: 15,962

It was in the middle of the summer of 1876 when we received word gold was discovered in the Black Hills of South Dakota. I was currently in St. Louis, Missouri getting supplies for a journey to Nevada after a failed gold hunting expedition in the Smoky Mountains. There I hoped to strike it rich along with four other prospectors. We missed the big Virginia City gold rush by decades, but the land we were going to purchase was rather remote and no one ever tried mining it as far as we knew. 

Three of us, Maurice, Jonathan and I, sat having drinks in a cheap pub discussing the trip we were about to embark. The dark, windowless pub was illuminated by only a few lamps burning animal fat. This created a massive buildup of soot on the ceiling and the posts helping hold the ceiling aloft. It also produced a pungent smoke that slightly stung the nostrils for the first half hour of exposure. 

 Jonathan and I met when we were a few years short of being teenage boys. Since then, we did almost everything together. Our previous expeditions cost us more money than they earned us, and this was going to be our last attempt. 

Maurice was a large Frenchman who was heafty in stature with a bushy brown beard. For the last decade, Maurice worked as a trapper along the banks of the Mississippi river, and he was looking for that big score that would allow him to finally retire from his difficult profession. Although we planned this trip almost a year ago, Maurice was not a welcomed member of the group until a month ago. 

Arden, who Jonathan and I met during our last expedition came into the pub that night and informed us someone struck gold in South Dakota. The four of us discussed this new development until the fifth member, O’Doyle arrived, and we continued talking until we were ejected from the dank pub. 

The five of us continued to talk about this new opportunity as we walked along the empty dirt road to the neighborhood in which we all lived. Jonathan, Arden and I were currently renting a small apartment and Maurice and O’Doyle both rented rooms at a boarding house a little further to the edge of town. 

We had this expedition all planned out, but Arden insisted his source was one hundred percent reliable. We discussed it much over the next few days. The trip would be about the same length of time, we would just be heading north-west instead of south-west. The big problem here was Arden knew his way across to Arizona, but he did not know the landmarks traveling through Iowa and Nebraska to get to South Dakota. 

Making our way to Omaha City should not present too much of a challenge for us. We were going to pass multiple settlements, towns and outposts along the way. It would not be until we set out from Omaha City that we would be traveling in extremely unfamiliar terrain. Our hope was to retain the services of a guide to get us to the Black Hills. 

We all knew it was a terrible gamble, but we ultimately decided to make the journey to South Dakota to get in on the gold rush early. If we could get there and stake a claim before people from around the country showed up to try to make their fortune, we would have a much higher chance of striking it rich. Each one of us could stake a claim then we could work them together. 

When we set out from St. Louis, we were in three wagons. Although we still needed to procure more mining equipment, we decided to wait until we reached St. Joseph. That was far enough from any mining operations to keep the prices of the equipment to a minimum. It may take a bit of shopping around to find everything we needed, but it should save us money in the long run. 

By our estimates, the journey should take us approximately eighty days to complete. I just about had enough of living on the road, and if we did not strike gold this time, I did not know what I was going to do. All I ever did was small jobs here and there to fund my mining expeditions. If I did not find gold this time, I did not think I would ever find it. 

The four-week trip to St. Joseph went by with little trouble. Other than reshoeing our horses, and a few minor repairs to O’Doyle’s wagon, we made it to our first major destination without notable incident. We passed through several small towns and outposts along the way, and we were a bit taken aback by the size of St. Joseph. All of us were under the impression the city had a population no larger than several hundred. Instead, we found it boasted a population of several thousand. 

It did not take us as long as we anticipated to gather the remaining mining supplies we needed, or at least those we could afford. It was only mid-afternoon by the time we procured the pickaxes, sifters and so on to complete our collection of gear. Upon purchasing the items we needed, there was no money left to hire a guide. We would have to rely on maps and our own skills to get us to where we were going.

It would have been nice to stay in a hotel and take a hot bath, but any hotel within our price range was full. We decided instead to continue on our journey and sleep in the wagons or on the ground as we had thus far. Every day we delayed was another day someone might discover the gold we were supposed to find. 

The next stretch of our journey was to Patterson Mill, Iowa where we would cross the Missouri River into Nebraska. None of us knew very much about the state of Nebraska. Most of us spent our time in the southern states and in mountainous regions. I always heard people speak of The Great Plains of America, so I think we were all anticipating finding an endless flat land filled with grass and flowers. 

When we reached Omaha City, seven weeks after setting off from St. Louis, we found a land sparsely covered with trees and filled with grass-filled meadows that seemed to dance in the moderate winds. Many young trees, planted no more than a decade ago, hinted at what might one day become a beautiful forest. 

We were no more than a third of the way into Nebraska when the land became much hillier than on the eastern side of the state. These hills quickly became nothing more than endless sand dunes covered in sparse vegetation. Several times we had to backtrack because we hit an impassable gorge costing us more than a week. A guide for this area would be a great benefit, but we simply could not afford to retain someone for such purposes. 

After many frustrating days, we found what appeared to be a road working its way through and around the large dunes that covered the landscape. We thought we were dead for sure when we rounded a hill to find ourselves face to face with a camp of Indians. None of us had many dealings with Indians up close and personal. Maurice was the only one with any experience dealing with the native savages. 

We had no idea what tribe these men were from, so Maurice first greeted them in English hoping they would understand. Maurice, who spoke five languages of which I was aware, then greeted them in two native tongues with which he was fluent. They did not seem to react much to this either. Finally, Maurice greeted them in French. To our shock, the eldest of the group responded. 

Maurice relayed to us these men had no intention of harming us, and even invited us to join them for the evening. Because the sun was beginning to set behind the scantly vegetated hills, we gladly accepted their invitation. Since there were virtually no trees in this region at all, the Indians gathered a heap of dead and dry plants. Their woody stalks would provide fuel for a campfire for the night. 

Maurice and the Indian elder were the only two able to communicate with the other, which caused a bit of frustration in the rest of us. It was easy to become irritated waiting for Maurice to tell us what the elder said. Maurice explained to the Indian man we were going to push our course to the north and head for the Black Hills. 

The old man stood up and began saying something rather urgently. Even though I could not understand what he was saying, the countenance of the man’s face told me he was showing great concern. The man continued for several minutes before he stopped. Maurice began to reply but I demanded he tell us what the man said first. 

Maurice explained that the man said if we went where we planned to go, we would not all make it there alive. He said the spirit of the wind told him it was bringing in an early winter storm that would cover that whole region in snow. The elder told us to go back and wait for winter to pass before trying to complete our journey. 

There was simply no way we could do that. We had no money left to house ourselves, our wagons and our horses for six months. I heard these people thought they were in touch with the elements and what not, but I had no intention of changing our plans because some savage thought the wind was talking to him. I, along with the others, voiced the same basic opinion on the matter. 

I was not really sure what Maurice said to the man. He told us he was going to tell him thanks and we would take it under advisement. 

We shared some of our food with them, and they shared some of their food with us. They were not the bloodthirsty barbarians the stories always made them out to be. Even though we were not able to communicate with words, we still did a good job figuring out what the others were trying to convey through movements and facial expressions. 

Eventually we all laid down for the night. To be honest, I was a bit worried the Indians would kill us in our sleep and take our stuff. After a while my sleepiness dominated my fear enough to let me drift off into a slumber. 

I awoke the next morning as the sun was first beginning to rise. Arden and three of the Indians were already awake. By the time the sun fully rose above the horizon, everyone else was awake as well. Maurice talked to the elder for a bit longer before we finally parted ways and went our separate directions. 

Maurice explained to the rest of us what the elder told him. From what he was able to discern, the elder was convinced an early winter storm was going to cover the entire region which we intended to enter. The Indian was adamant that most if not all of us would die if we insisted on heading that direction. 

The elder already knew we were not going to heed his warning, so he told us to keep our course as directly north from here as possible. That would keep us east of the heaviest part of the storm. It might keep us on the east side of the snowfall, but that would also have us entering South Dakota much further to the east of our destination than we wanted. 

O’Doyle was the superstitious sort, and he thought we should listen to that old Indian man. He was convinced these people knew more about how nature worked than we did, and we should heed the man’s warning. 

Arden, Jonathan and I all thought it was a part of the old man’s imagination. These people had this notion they were more in touch with the earth than other people, but they were only people. They were no more in touch with the world than anyone else. Regardless, O’Doyle thought we should take the advice to heart. After much discussion, we decided to continue about our way. It was only September, and it was difficult for us to believe there was any possibility of snow in the near future. 

This state was a very difficult one to transverse indeed. There were no rivers running north to south for us to follow. The only rivers that split through the sandy dunes ran from west to east. After having to backtrack yet again several more times, we decided to start having two people riding ahead making sure our routes did not end up in dead ends. 

Transversing the Sand Hills proved more difficult than crossing most mountain ranges. Deep gullies cut between many of the hills leaving soft sandstone trenches winding through the dunes. Trapped between many of the sandy hills were narrow but deep ponds. We found some to contain salt water and some to contain fresh. It was almost impossible to tell without tasting it first. 

The vegetation provided enough food for the horses at least. If nothing else, we had that going for us. There were many plants here with which none of us were familiar, so we took our chances and allowed the horses to choose their own meal. To our fortune, the plants they chose were not poisonous. We tried to pay attention to what they did and did not eat for future’s reference. 

Game was common enough to provide us with meat to compliment the dry beans and rice we brought with us in bulk. Unsure of what we faced, we loaded all three wagons with beans and rice to ensure we would have enough food. Finding water became a worry as we encountered no rain since entering the Sandhill region. Fortunately for us the multitude of ponds provided plenty of water with which to cook our food. 

Three weeks after meeting those Indian fellows, the light steady wind that blew across the area at least since we entered began to pick up. It only took one day to go from a soft wind to actually blowing things out of our wagons. More than once we had to stop to fasten something down or try to use heavier items to keep the lighter items from blowing away. 

The wind berated us like this for three days before it finally came to a brief end. I thought I might go insane if I was to have to endure that kind of wind for any length of time. Tolerating it for a few days was enough to annoy and irritate all of us as we tried to make our way through the plant spotted dunes. We all began to regret our entire decision to try to get a jump on the Black Hills gold rush. 

That evening, the temperature began to drop, and it began to drop rapidly. Without a sun in the sky, the weather quickly turned very cold. Since our original estimation placed us in the Black Hills shortly before winter, we did have sufficient clothing to protect us from this cold. We kept as many blankets as we could on our horses. No one particularly wanted to use their own blankets on the beasts of burden, but we had to protect them from this incredibly abrupt cold snap as they had not had time to grow in their winter coats. 

Keeping a fire burning through the night could possibly mean the difference between life and death, but if the winds picked back up the cinders could be blown everywhere. Finding some flat stones, we buried them straight up in a circle and placed a larger rock on top of that. Inside of this we built our fire. It would help keep the wind from blowing away the coals and stop the wind from exhausting our fuel too quickly. 

Temperatures fell below freezing during the night as was made evident by the frost on the ground and the thin sheet of ice covering the pond by which we set up our camp. The morning was not any better. Every word and every breath out of our mouths were visible in the frigid air. A bright sunny day would help to warm things up a bit, but I began to worry when I saw scattered clouds in the distance. The wind was blowing them in our direction. 

Perhaps we should have heeded the warning of that Indian elder. It was hard for us to believe it would actually snow on us here at the beginning of October, but now his warning continued to play in my head over and over. Maurice told us the man said one or all of us would die if we did not heed his warning. 

Why did we not listen to him? 

As the morning progressed, the sun did help warm the air a bit. Unfortunately, the same wind began to pick back up. What the sun did to warm the air, the wind did the opposite and made it colder. I did a lot of traveling in my life, and I believed this had to be the harshest terrain I ever encountered. 

Two days later the snow began. No light snow fell to announce its coming. Instead, when the flakes began to fall, they began to fall heavily. The large clumps of snowflakes quickly coated the ground making it difficult to locate rocks and small ruts cut out by the rare rainfalls that hit the area. Within the first few hours of the snowfall, the clouds released more than a foot of snow from the sky. Now it was even difficult to see some of the larger gullies as they began to fill with snow. 

We had no means of keeping the horses warm enough, even using our blankets to cover them. Two more days after the snow began, one of Maurice’s horses died from exposure. The unfortunate animals did not have a change of seasons when they would normally grow in their winter coat. The weather went from early autumn to the dead of winter in less than a week’s time. 

Neither of my horses could get up the next morning. I tried rubbing them with my hands to warm them up, but it was to no avail. I could not get the beasts to move. It was only a matter of time before the other three horses froze to death. Given the depth of the snow, we knew there was no possibility of pulling wagons through it.

I decided to put my horses out of their misery before they froze to death. Their hind quarters we removed to take with us for meat as none of us knew what hunting would be like in this unforgiving weather. We decided to allow the other three horses to go free in hopes they might find somewhere to survive this onslaught of icy white powder. 

We all donned as much clothing as we could and took what few supplies we could with us. We were going to have to set out on foot and pray we found an outpost, a cabin, anything. Without shelter we were not going to survive for long out here. Since we anticipated a lot of hiking once we reached the Black Hills, all five of us had backpacks in the wagons, so we were able to carry some food, canvass for makeshift tents, and whatever else we could carry. Our clothing was adequate to keep us warm as we were moving, but we quickly grew cold when standing still or resting. 

In less than twenty-four hours following the release of the remaining horses, the clouds dumped almost three feet of snow on us. It was packing as it accumulated, so we were walking on and not through most of it. For the next several days the snow continued to fall. We knew if we did not find or fabricate a structure of some sort to protect us from the blistering wind, we would find the old Indian man was correct in his predictions. 

Eventually Arden called out to us that he located a place where we may be able to hunker down and try to allow this snow to pass. When the rest of us reached Arden’s location, we saw he located a gorge that seemed to be protected from both the wind and the snow. It was not very wide, and looked as if it would provide a large measure of difficulty. Arden, being the tall, skinny fellow he was offered to go down first. 

There was nowhere to drive a spike into the ground to which we could secure a rope since all the stone around here was sandstone. We simply did not think the soft stone would hold the weight of one man, much less five. Instead, we found the top of a small cedar tree protruding from the white surface. After digging down into the snow so as to allow us to tie the rope as close to the base of the tree as we could, we gave it several firm tugs to make sure the rope would not slip, and then Arden began his descent down the steep slope into the gorge. 

We lowered Arden’s backpack down to him before O’Doyle began his climb down the steep crevasse. We got his backpack lowered down and, one after another, we made our way down into the gorge. I was the last one to make his way into the small snowless canyon, and by the time I arrived the others already began to construct a crude structure from canvass, rope, snow and rocks. It was not much, and it was crowded, but it would at least allow us to stay out of the snow and wind for the night. 

Our meager shelter did allow us room for a little fire. It would do little to provide any warmth for our cold bodies, but we could at least cut the horse meat into strips and cook it over the flame. The slanted canvass roof allowed the smoke to rise and exit our makeshift tent and prevented the damp plants from choking us out. 

For three days the five of us stayed hidden in that cramped area as we waited for the snowfall to finally come to an end. We emerged from our shelter that morning to see the sun shining brightly in the morning sky. That was the first time we saw the sun directly with our own eyes for nearly two weeks, and its warming rays felt heavenly against the small amount of exposed skin on my face. I never thought I was going to feel that soothing sensation ever again. 

Now we were faced with getting back out of the gorge. Maurice thought there might be an easier way back up the steep slope if we followed the canyon a little further, but doing so would me we would have to push our way through the snow that accumulated in the rest of this ravine. He offered to walk ahead at least around the next bend while the rest of us got our backpacks ready to go. 

Fifteen minutes passed after we lost sight of Maurice, and we began to wonder if he may have fallen. We did not want to shout for fear of loosening the snow teetering over the edges above, so all we could do was wait. A few minutes later we saw our large French companion emerge from behind the gorge wall. It took him another fifteen minutes before he made it back to us. 

We were all disappointed when he told us there was nothing but a dead end in that direction. We were going to have to climb back out that narrow gouge in the sandstone and continue our journey from there. A lot of snow accumulated on top of our rope and hung over the sides of the gorge. The valley by which we entered was also capped in snow. It would not be safe to climb until that snow was gone, so once we were safely backed away Jonathan fired a round into the snow on both sides. The bullets did little, but the loud blast from the rifle made everything come falling into the crevasse. 

Climbing up the loosened snow was not as difficult as I anticipated as it was heavy and densely packed. We ascended the same way we came down, one person at a time. Maurice came up last so the rest of us could pack the snow down even more to support his large frame. It took us more than an hour to get everyone and their packs out of the gorge, but we eventually made it back to the top. 

Since we did not know if there were any towns or settlements around here, or for that matter where we even were, we continued to head to the northwest. We were fortunate the next few days as the temperature rose slightly, the sun was shining brightly during the day, and the wind was blowing very lightly. 

Travel through the snow-covered Sand Hills was beyond difficult to say the least, but two important things we had to survive were food and a means of creating fire. We still had our beans and rice, but consuming the horse meat we brought with us first would keep the meat from spoiling beyond the point of being usable. 

Five days after leaving behind the gorge that sheltered us for several days, we came around a small valley to find our only option was to climb a moderately steep incline in order to proceed. There was no way of us discerning how much snow was built up on the slope until we began to make our way up the rise. 

I made my way up the hill first, using a stick I acquired along the way to test the depth and pack of the snow. I could not tell how deep the snow was, as it was up to my waist, and I was still not touching solid ground. O’Doyle waited until I was fifty feet ahead of him and then he began to follow my path, widening it as he did. 

We thought we were topping a hill, but the other side of this dune had an eighty-degree slope. We did not have the climbing gear necessary, not since abandoning our wagons, to make that kind of a climb. The only choice we had was to follow the ridge where it adjoined a red sandstone outcropping a few hundred feet from our current location. 

Continuing to work together to help build a walking path for those behind us, we took turns taking the lead so no one man bore the burden the entire time. When we finally reached the large sandstone bluffs one whole side of it was completely free of snow. We took this opportunity to rest and sun ourselves on the rocks for at least a brief time. 

Arden decided he was going to walk around the bluffs a bit to see what he might find. Less than five minutes later we heard him begin to scream. The other four of us jumped to our feet to run and see what was happening, all of us with a firearm in our hands. Rounding a large formation in the bluffs, we realized we were not the only ones sunning ourselves on the rocks. Arden was running from a large black bear who made a small nearby cavern its home. 

We did not even have time to aim our weapons before the bear lunged at Arden. Both Arden and the bear tumbled down the steep rocky slope to crash into the valley below. When their bodies finally stopped rolling, neither Arden nor the bear were moving. It appeared the rocky fall killed them both. We screamed down to our companion in hopes of rousing him, but it was to no avail. 

There was no way for us to get down there to him to see if he was in fact dead. I could not see how someone could survive such a fall; we did not have enough rope between us all to climb down there where his body rested. Our friend Arden was dead, and we all knew that without having to say anything. 

We stood there for at least ten minutes before anyone said anything. Jonathan finally broke the silence and said what we were all already thinking. Arden was dead. There was nothing we could do for him, and we needed to find a safe place as nightfall would be upon us soon. 

Saying a brief prayer for Arden’s soul, we went back to where we left our backpacks leaning against the rocks. Going through Arden’s pack, we took everything he had inside. I took his rifle, but he took his six shooter to the bottom of that ravine with him. Some may think it morbid to plunder a dead man’s things, but our highest priority was staying alive. If that meant stealing a dead man’s belongings, then so be it. 

The heaping snow made it impossible to go around the other way, so we had to return to the scene of Arden’s death. We did not know if there would be any more bears around this ledge, so we all four kept our firearms at the ready. Keeping as quite as we could, we slowly made our way around the red sandstone bluff remaining alert for any dangers that may be waiting for us. 

It was hard for me to focus on what may lie ahead as I could not stop thinking about Arden. We were friends and companions for nearly seven years, and now his corpse lay at the bottom of the steep incline. We could not get down there to him to give him a proper Christian burial, and even if we could the ground was frozen solid. There would be no possibility of digging him a grave until the snow melted and the ground thawed. I despised the idea of leaving him down there to be torn apart by wild animals, but there was simply nothing I could do for him. 

We eventually made it to the far end of the bluff and found the land became much more level than the hilly terrain we traveled for the last month. Maurice insisted on backtracking to see if we could reach Arden’s body from our current location, but after ten minutes Maurice returned and said there was another gorge preventing him from making it across. Arden’s body would have to remain where it fell. 

The remaining four of us were silent for some time as we forced our way through the snow. I think we were all in something of a state of shock after watching our companion roll down that eighty degree decline along with that black bear. Splitting up Arden’s belongings felt wrong, but we could not waste any supplies. I supposed it was not like he was going to need it anyway. Still, I felt like I was robbing a dead man. 

We were fortunate not to encounter any more snow for the next week. Our hopes were raised when we saw a river cutting through the Sandhills. As far as we traveled, I was sure that it must be the Niobrarah River, which meant we were almost to the border of South Dakota. Without knowing what part of the river we found, it was uncertain how much more traveling we had to do before we finally reached the Black Hills. We could be days or we could be another month from our destination. 

We did not finally reach the river until well after noon the next day. Large ice flows made their way east as the water pushed them down river. There was no possibility of us crossing here; we were going to have to travel along the bank until we found a bridge or some other place we could safely cross without having to get into the icy water. With us being in what was apparently a very remote location, I did not think our chances of finding a bridge were very good. 

We tried to remain as close to the river as we could, but the hills made that impossible in some areas. More than once we had to climb the steep snow-covered hills in order to make any form of progress. Our food supply was running very low, and if we did not find civilization soon, I feared that old Indian man’s prediction was going to come true. Arden was already dead, and the rest of us did not have much hope unless we could find food soon. 

Our fortune turned around a few days later as we rounded a bend in the river only to spot a small herd of white-tailed deer drinking from the trickling water. Moving very slowly, the four of us aimed our firearms at the unsuspecting animals. When Maurice gave everyone the signal, we fired in unison. Instantly two of the deer fell to the ground, and we gravely injured another. 

The surrounding land was not particularly steep, so we did not think an avalanche was even possible at this point. We were wrong, dead wrong. More snow than we realized fell in this area, and when the sound of four rifles firing simultaneously echoed across the surface, it dislodged a massive sheet of icy snow. I dove behind a nearby rock, but I did not see what happened to the others. 

The small boulder miraculously shielded me from the tons of packed snow that slid its way into the river. The sound was deafening, and I had no doubt this was when I was going to die. When the roaring finally came to an end, I was buried underneath several feet of the avalanche. Trying not to panic, I used what space I had to begin digging my way out. I was afraid I would run out of air by the time I finally breached the surface. 

O’Doyle somehow managed to keep from being buried, but all I could see of Maurice were his feet sticking out of the white debris. I did not see Jonathan anywhere. As I pulled myself out of the hole I was in, I could hear someone screaming, but very faintly. Jonathan was pushed into the river by the massive slide, and he was unable to fight against the current. He was in cold shock and was barely able to call for help. 

My oldest friend needed my help, and I was having a difficult time pulling myself out of this small cavity. Every time I tried to pull myself to the surface, the snow gave way underneath my hands. Although this area was somewhat stable, the snow sheet a little further down the river continued to slide down the gentle hill. Jonathan did his best to hold on, but he was holding the edge of the flow. Before I could get out of the snow and over to him, Jonathan was in the river, buried under several feet of snow. I ran as fast as I could over the unstable snow to the last place I saw him. Desperately digging for the one person who was at every expedition with me since the beginning. I did not know how long I tried digging for my friend, but eventually Maurice and O’Doyle grabbed me by the arms and forced me to stand. 

I looked at Maurice and told him we had to dig Jonathan out, but he gave me a saddened look and gently shook his head. I knew he was right. There was no way he was still alive in the water after all this time. I wanted to cry but my face was too cold. I could not believe our lust for gold now resulted in the death of the one man who was with me for seven years and another who was with me more than seventeen. 

If we only knew, only a few more bends around the river was a bridge. It was obviously a well-used bridge as it was virtually devoid of snow, and the road leading to and from it were only a foot deep in snow at most. We were so close to making it across the river, but Jonathan and Arden never made it this far. Dragging our kills behind us, we made our way toward the first sign of civilization we saw in more than a month. 

Within an hour of reaching the road, we encountered a small team of military wagons. As soon as they saw us, the commanding officer ordered the wagons to a stop. Four men jumped out of the wagons and made their way to us. 

Immediately O’Doyle, excited to have the rescue, told the men we were lost in the Sand Hills for more than a month. As he explained to them how we got caught in the snow, the men helped us off with our backpacks while some other men took our kills to the last wagon. 

We were less than a half-day in the wagon away from Fort Randall. The soldiers were happy to give us a ride to the fort. What we would do from there we would have to figure out when we had some adequate food and sleep. I was more than thankful to finally have the rescue, but if it only came two days sooner Jonathan would be alive. 

The colonel in charge of the fort offered us board for one month in trade for the large, white-tailed deer we killed shortly before running into the wagons. The rest of our stay we would have to work; this meant earning money to repurchase wagons and supplies would take us much-much longer. There was not enough work in this snowy weather to justify paying civilians more than room and board. If things did not turn around for us soon, it would be mid-summer by the time we reached the Black Hills. 

We were stuck with performing the least desirable tasks, unless there were soldiers being punished for whatever reason. In that case, they were stuck with the jobs that would otherwise be reserved for the few civilians inside the fort walls. Fortunately, there were enough soldiers sleeping too late, performing their duties poorly or otherwise finding themselves in disfavor of the fort’s command. 

We were into our fourth week residing at the fort when the lieutenant approached us with an offer to join the patrols outside the fort walls. He informed us a small patrol went out a week ago and never returned. Another patrol was sent out to search for the first, and what they found chilled them to the core like the snow never could. The bodies were mutilated, like they were mauled by some kind of bear. Since we had experience with the terrain and the wild animals found therein, he wanted us to join the next patrol which would leave early the next morning. 

When we showed reluctance, he offered to pay us each a dollar and a half a day if we would agree. Stepping aside, the three of us mulled it over for a moment. The offer was not great, but it was better than nothing. At least this way we could save a little money to fund the rest of our expedition. Losing our supplies, horses and wagons was a serious blow from which we thought we may never recover. Now we had the opportunity to bounce back from the devastating setbacks we suffered. 

After a few moments, we turned back to the lieutenant and told him we would agree to go out on patrols, but we all lost our rifles when we were caught in that massive snow shift. This being a military fort, the man told us it would be no problem to arm us before we set out. He told us to stop at the armory in an hour to pick up our firearms. 

“When, when do we get paid?” O’Doyle inquired. 

The lieutenant informed us pay would be on the Saturday of each week, and we could collect our earnings then. The three of us were so glad to get this news, as we did not think there was any way we were going to earn enough to get us to the Black Hills before the summer was over. We knew with the lead of Maurice, we could make a fair living hunting for and trapping for fur and meat, but that was only going to get us so far. This was going to help us meet our new goal of making it to our destination by mid-summer. 

Agreeing to the man’s terms, he told us to finish what we were doing and start getting ourselves prepared. This was the first time since our arrival we were going to have the opportunity to take a hot bath. Not having bathed in several months, the three of us were excited to finally be able to scrub the accumulated filth from our bodies. Once we were bathed and redressed, Maurice, O’Doyle and I reported to the armory to receive our issued weapons. 

The rifles were adequate enough, but the firearms we lost in the shifting sheet of snow were much better. I was not sure if these would kill a bear or serve only to make it angry. I hoped the soldiers would at least carry something a little more powerful than the lever action rifles we had. These were fine for shooting at other men, but I did not have much confidence in their ability to fell a large animal. 

The three of us retired to the cramped quarters we were given and laid down for the night. The beds were small and had only straw-filled mats. For O’Doyle and I it was not too bad, but I felt for Maurice trying to sleep on one of these small beds. He hung off the bed from his mid-shins to his feet. Hopefully, if we continued to help out on the patrols, we would be upgraded to something a little better than the lowly servants’ quarters. 

I awoke first the next morning. The sun was not yet showing itself over the horizon, so I did not wake my two companions until a little later. Instead, I spent the next hour thinking of the two friends we lost along the way. If we had only listened to that Indian, we would probably all be sitting somewhere nice and warm right now sharing a round of ale. I still could not believe I watch both the men with whom I worked for so long perish in the ways they did. 

Finally, I woke Maurice and O’Doyle so we could all start getting ourselves ready. Although all three of us already had our six-shooters loaded, we decided to wait until we were on the wagon to load our rifles. We stepped into the courtyard to find the soldiers were only now leading the horses out to the wagons. Since we did not want to sit around and wait until they were ready, the three of us joined the soldiers in getting the horses hitched to the wagons. 

By the time the sun began to peek above the horizon, the three-wagon caravan was headed out the wooden gates of the fort. Our primary mission for today was to retrieve the bodies of the dead soldiers found during a patrol yesterday. It was more than a five-hour ride before we located the carnage that was once a military patrol. 

The first soldiers to come upon this scene gathered the bodies and laid them out in the snow, but they did not have a wagon to transport the corpses back to the fort. I could not believe what I saw. During all our time working in the outdoors, none of us ever encountered anything like this. 

There were four men in all. One of them was missing his head and his entire leg quarter all the way up to the hip. One more was missing both a leg and an arm and the remaining two looked like something disemboweled them. Many of their internal organs appeared to be missing. 

I saw the aftermath of more than one animal attack in my life, and I never once saw anything as gruesome as this. The bodies were covered in the massive clawmarks of a bear, but I never saw anyone dismembered the way these men were. When a bear dismembered someone, there was usually a lot more torn tissue than found on the bodies in front of us. Although the wounds were filled with claw marks and torn tissue, the overall wounds seemed to be too precice for those one would sustain in a bear attack. 

Now equipped with snowshoes, most of us fanned out in search of the missing body parts. None of the soldiers were found in the same place, which did not make much sense, and the missing limbs were not found with the corpses. A bear would not gather up parts and carry them away, so the missing limbs and the one missing head should be here in the snow somewhere. 

There was not much fresh snowfall since the foot patrol went missing, so any stray limbs should be easy to find. The blood would stain the snow and make it easy to locate. Eleven of us searched for three hours, essentially covering the area with our own prints, and found no signs of any of the absent body portions. We continued to search for a little more than an hour before we finally had to leave. 

The three men waiting with the wagons already had the corpses of their comrades loaded into the flat bed wagon when we returned. We had to give up the search because we had to beat the sunset to the fort. I do not think any amount of searching the area was going to produce any results as we searched virtually every square inch of the area well beyond the location of the original location of the bodies. 

As soon as we returned to the fort the captain called us to his office. He wanted to know exactly what we discovered with the patrol. Maurice described the condition of the bodies when we found them, and which the captain already saw for himself, then explained what made the wounds so unusual. Although there were gouges from the claws of a bear in the wounds, the way the body parts were separated almost seemed like the work of a professional butcher. 

The fact there seemed to be no blood on the snow to indicate where the missing parts of the men fell meant the bodies were dead for some time before their dismemberment. There was some blood where the bodies were originally found but not enough to account for a person bleeding out from such horrific wounds. 

When the captain asked us what kind of animal we thought was capable of doing such a thing, we were at a loss to give him any sort of answer. None of us ever encountered or heard of anyone encountering any animal capable of doing such a thing. There was no wild animal that surgically removed body parts in such a manner. If a large animal dismembered someone the limbs were ripped free, not cut free using sharp claws like we saw with the bodies of the soldiers. 

We went over the specific condition of the bodies with the captain several times. It was growing irritating with the captain asking us the same questions over and over, but I know the military man was only trying to get to the bottom of things. He lost four of the men under his command, and he wanted to know why. As adventurers, we wanted to know what kind of animal could dismember someone that cleanly. 

By the time the captain released us from his office, rumors spread around the camp about what was discovered. Soldiers already began to make up mythical creatures that could kill humans in such a manner. For some reason they appeared fearful of approaching me and my companions as if what happened was somehow our fault. Not much change happens in an area like this in the winter, so our arrival may have set their superstitions in motion. 

The next morning the captain again summoned us to his office. He had a new proposal for us. According to him, there was a small ranching settlement a five-day ride from here during the warmer months, so the road leading into the hills was probably still covered in several feet of snow. We would leave the fort with a small unit of soldiers who would accompany us all the way to the settlement road. From there the three of us along with five soldiers would have to travel by means of snowshoes the rest of the way. 

With a fort full of trained soldiers, I was a bit perplexed by the captain’s request for us to take on this expedition. He claimed it was because my companions and I had much more experience traveling difficult terrain than most of his men who were used to training on dry ground. I could not help but wonder if it was because he did not want to lose any more of his own men, so he hoped we would accept the task. 

We already lost two of our friends on our voyage to this location, and we had no desire to risk our lives hunting down some unknown beast. The captain, sensing our apprehension offered to pay us each an additional dollar a day while we were on this particular expedition. Two and a half dollars a day was simply too much money to pass up. If we could keep earning money like this, we could completely resupply by the time the snow thawed for the year. 

Maurice insisted we be equipped with more powerful firearms than supplied to us the previous day. If we were going to be facing some unknown animal capable of causing the carnage we witnessed with that missing patrol, we needed weapons capable of killing it. The guns we had yesterday would only serve to anger something that large. 

The captain said he would summon us to the armory in the afternoon to allow us to select what arms we wanted to take with us, and asked if that would suffice. Maurice told him, if he let us select what we wanted, he had a deal.  

Another matter to be resolved before setting out was who would be in charge of whom. O’Doyle insisted we assume command once we left the wagons and set out on foot. The captain was only sending five soldiers with us, and we needed to know they were going to support us and not be a point of contention. The captain did not seem very pleased with O’Doyle’s demand, but he understood our reasoning. We could not do what he wanted to do if we could not get the cooperation of the soldiers sent along with us to the ranch houses. The captain told us he would hand select the group of men to accompany us from the main road to the settlement. 

Having finally agreed on the terms of our services, the captain walked over to the armory with us and allowed us to sign out the weapons we wanted. The three of us already had six-shooters, but we lost our rifles when the shifting snow buried Jonathan under the surface of the river. Maurice and I opted for .50 caliber Old Reliables, but O’Doyle chose to take a bolt action Mauser instead. We were also each issued a Winchester lever action rifle as a backup, along with plenty of ammunition. 

At that point, the captain excused himself and had one of his sergeants take us to get whatever other gear we still needed for such an expedition. As we only planned on being gone for a few weeks at most, we did not have to overload ourselves with things like beans and rice. Our backpacks and some of our other gear was also destroyed when we were caught in the massive sheet of snow sliding down from the hills, so we needed to replace those as well.

To our surprise, the captain had us moved to larger quarters. Granted, it was not much larger than the previous room we were given, but there was at least enough room to store our gear. We each went ahead and got our backpacks loaded while it was still daylight. As soon as the sun began to set for the evening, all three of us got to bed. 

The next morning we woke up only half an hour or so before the military men going on this journey with us began to rise. Maurice, O’Doyle and I assisted in getting the wagons prepped and ready to head out the gate. It was easy to see the men going along on this expedition with us were very well trained by how methodically they performed their tasks. At one point it seemed like my companions and I were only getting in the way, so we stood aside and allowed the soldiers to do their job. In less than an hour after I awoke, we were headed out the heavy wooden gates. 

The temperature was extremely low, but at least the wind was not blowing. The heavy gusts that usually blew relentlessly across this region during the winter were being kind to us, and we only experienced a small breeze. The captain sent five wagons in all, with a total of twenty-five men.

I rode in the front wagon with two of the men who would accompany us from the main road to the ranch settlement. O’Doyle and Maurice rode in the second and third wagons respectively. The sergeant driving this wagon was in his mid to late forties, but the other fellow did not look like he could be any more than twenty. The ride was long and monotonous, and this gave me plenty of time to get to know two of those who would walk with us to the ranch homes. 

I found out the sergeant was finishing out his time so he could retire with a pension. He chose to accept this post because it was notorious for being the least active garrison in the army. With nothing out here, the was not really any point in having a fort. The only reason one existed was to protect the surrounding settlements. He figured it would be an easy last few years before he returned to take over his family farm. 

The younger soldier was from Nebraska, in the southern region of the Sand Hills. This type of weather and terrain was what he was used to, and that was how he ended up with this assignment. The lad was from a family of ranchers who tended a herd in the open ranges of the Sand Hills. The terrain was not good for farming because of the minuscule amount of precipitation that came during the summer. Virtually all of the water that fell from the sky here did so during the winter in the form of snow. 

After chatting with the two for several hours, I understood why the captain chose them for this mission. The sergeant was an experienced hunter and highly trained in hand-to-hand combat. The younger soldier spent virtually his entire life in the Sand Hills, and he was very knowledgeable about as to how to locate edible plants and spot the hidden burrows of grouse and other fowl. 

The other three men who would go with us to the settlement were accomplished marksmen. Although two of them were experienced trackers, my companions and I were much more adept at tracking as we spent virtually all our lives in the wilderness. It did feel like being on another world out here in the Sand Hills as there were the only the occasional trees to be found, and they were either evergreen or diminutive for their breed. 

Three days later when we reached the turnoff for the settlement, there was very little evidence the road even existed. The snow here was three to four feet deep on average. Now we had to leave the comfort of the wagons behind and walk to the ranch homes by means of snowshoes. What would normally be a two day wagon ride would probably take us close to a week to complete on foot. 

We all carried as many firearms as we could as well as pouches full of ammunition. Our packs were already loaded with food, flint and tinder, tents and the other various things we needed to survive in this open wilderness. I could hear the mumbling of the other men; they were all glad they were not going with us. That was fine enough, so long as they were waiting here when we returned. Too many men, especially if they were not trained for this kind of thing, would hinder us more than they would help. 

We ate before we left the wagons so we would have the energy we needed to start this arduous trek. Walking with snowshoes was not easy, and it could be downright difficult for those unaccustomed to them. It was fortunate for us all the men the captain chose were from areas that saw heavy snow during the winter months. 

Starting on the third day we began to see bare ground. It was obvious cattle were roaming in this area, and where they roamed, they trampled the snow to the ground. People around here did not fence in their cattle, but rather allowed them to roam freely. Rustling cattle with someone else’s brand on it was punishable by hanging. The ranchers did a rather good job at policing themselves in such matters; the fort was around more in for cases of Indian attacks than controlling the cattle. 

Early in the morning of our third day into our walk to the settlement, the wind began to pick up. Clouds already filled the skies when we awoke, and I was sure we had more snow blowing into the area. By the time midday came around, the wind was blowing with such vigor, it was becoming difficult to stay standing. 

Finally, Maurice stopped us and said it was time we started digging a bunker in the snow where we could ride out the bad weather. Using the small shovels we brought as part of our equipment, we set to digging a hole large enough to hold all eight of us but narrow enough that we could use our canvass tents as a cover. 

In less than an hour, we had our shelter built. It could not have been soon enough as large flakes of snow began to appear in the blowing wind. By the time nightfall came, there was already a foot of snow accumulated on and around the top of our shelter. 

Although we had flint and tinder, we had no wood to burn. The only trees available for cutting were cedar, and burning cedar would fill our meager bunker with soot and smoke. We were going to have to suffer through this night with no fire. At least we had shelter to protect us from the wind and adequate clothing to prevent us from freezing. 

The next morning it took us a while to dig our way back to the surface, as more than two more feet of snow fell during the night. Unfortunately, the wind was still blowing, but not as strong as it was yesterday. Although clouds still dominated the sky, only small flurries speckled the air. I suspected this was more snow blowing from the ground in the strong gusts of wind rather than new snow falling from the sky. 

If we became delayed, we would run out of rations. We only brought enough for two weeks because our loads were already so heavy. So far we saw no wildlife to hunt. We did see several small herds of cattle a few days ago, but there did not appear to be any sign of them we could see from here. Shooting someone’s cow was not ideal, but the fort would compensate the rancher for the lost head. 

Finding a large white-tailed deer was our most hopeful option, but in this snow they were probably sheltered somewhere in the hills. The young soldier with whom we shared a wagon told us he could catch us some grouse or pheasant if we gave him time to search as we walked. Every so often, the young soldier would get down to his knees and put his head as close to the ground as he could. 

At first I thought the soldier was trying to listen to the ground, then I realized he was watching the surface of the snow. He did this a few times before he finally told us to stop and wait. The young man walked about fourty feet from our location and again got down on his knees. Instead of putting his head near the ground as before, he plunged his arm into the snow and jerked a bird out of the ground by its neck. In one swift motion, the young soldier removed the grouse from the ground, snapped its neck and killed it. He looked around for another ten minutes and repeated his actions, getting us two birds that would be large enough to keep us fed for one day at least. 

I asked the young soldier how he did that, but he would not tell me. I tried not to pester him about it, but that was a skill I would very much like to learn. I finally got the obviously skilled hunter to explain to me how he managed to pull a large bird from the snow when none of the others were close by. He said to watch from ground level, and if there were any grouse or pheasant in the snow, you could see tiny puffs of steam rising from the ground. 

Apparently, the birds would allow the snow to build up around them while keeping it pushed away from their bodies enough to give them a little wiggle room. The birds would stretch their neck up as the snow got deeper until their beaks were pointing straight up. The steamy puffs were the fowl inside the snow breathing. He also said you could locate them if you could find the small holes, no more than an inch or two in diameter, they created with their breath. 

I thanked him and asked him if there was anything I could do for him in return. He shrugged his shoulders and told me no. The young man just ask that I not share this information with the other soldiers. His ability to locate wildlife hidden in the snow was one of the things that made him a valuable asset. Because we would be moving on in the spring, and because of everything we endured getting here, the young soldier did not mind sharing the information with me. 

Eight days after we left the wagons, we finally came to the small collection of houses everyone kept calling a settlement. There were only three houses, three barns and a scattering of other shacks and sheds. Some cattle grazed some of the more exposed areas, but we did not see any people moving about.  

When we got a little closer, the sergeant called out to see if anyone would answer. By this time, the sun melted the snow enough for us to find the road that led to the center of the homes. We followed it into the middle of what one could scarcely call a settlement, and the captain called out several times again. When no one replied, we all got our weapons ready for whatever we might encounter. 

At this point we allowed the sergeant to take command of the group. This was a situation more suited to his training than to ours. He sent Maurice and two of the other soldiers accompanying us to one house, The third solder he sent with the young man and O’Doyle to another house. He and I went to inspect the third. 

It did not take us long at all to discover whey no one replied to the captain’s calls. As soon as we stepped inside the door we saw four bodies lying on the floor, or at least what was left of them. There were two clear blood trails leading in from other rooms, which meant whatever was killing people in this region had the wherewithal to gather the bodies in one area. Bears and mountain lions, the largest predators in this part of the country, would not do such a thing. This thing that was killing and mutilating the bodies of its prey was something much smarter than an animal. 

I turned and looked outside out of disgust, and I saw the young soldier outside of another house on the ground vomiting. I did not know if he was told what to expect or not, but clearly it was more gruesome than he ever anticipated. If the scene in that house was anything like this one, they walked in to find the bodies of these ranching families collected in the front room. They were missing their limbs, and several of them had their heads severed. 

We took a little time to compose ourselves, then the captain had O’Doyle and three of his men, including the talented young soldier, outside to keep a guard from there as the rest of us performed a sweep of the first house. In the children’s bedroom we discovered the beds were covered in blood. It was obvious the young ones were slain in their beds, most likely as they slept, then their bodies were dragged into the front room where their carcasses were dismembered. 

In the master bedroom, the scene became even more grizzly. The mother’s head was still in the bed and judging by the amount of blood spray on the walls and floor, someone put up a struggle before succumbing to whatever devilish beast was roaming these hills. With small variations, we found this to be the case in every house. 

As with the missing patrol, the arms and legs were severed from the bodies by something with razor sharp claws. They did not look to be ripped apart by a wild beast though, as the wounds of the severed limbs seemed to be removed with the skill of a butcher. 

There was another very curious thing we noticed about the bodies. Only a few of them contained any claw marks on the bodies. There were clear claw marks around the severed limbs, but very few if any on the bodies. If these people were attacked by a wild animal, there would be gouges all over the corpse, not just around the limbs. 

Once we cleared the houses and made sure nothing was still lurking inside one of them, we divided into two groups of four and began to search the surrounding buildings. Inside the barns we found horses still alive, feeding on the copious amounts of hay stacked near the back. None of the cattle, none of the horses seemed to be harmed. It was only the people. This thing appeared to have a taste for human flesh. The idea sent shivers down my spine as I pondered the possibility of something hunting me down and eating me. 

The captain had us finish searching the immediate area. We found no injured animals, and no human body parts laying around. Maurice and the other group did locate something as one of the soldiers began yelling for the sergeant to come over to their location. If we got here a day or two sooner, we probably would not have found it. Since the sun melted away the freshly fallen snow, we could see the tracks of something leading away from the settlement. The tracks were obscured because the thing dragged a canvass or sack behind it which obviously contained the missing body parts as made evident by the blood on the ground. 

Following the trail, we found the blood eventually stopped. It was probably because the limbs either bled out by this point or dragging along the snow caused them to freeze slightly. It was a horrible thought to consider, but there was no time for sugar coating anything.  

Anxiety was running high as everyone kept an eye out for whatever otherworldly thing that killed at least four soldiers and everyone in that ranching settlement. We did not know if one creature was doing all of this or if we faced one or more of the abominations, so we stayed very alert to our surroundings. Continuing to follow the trail left for us to find, it became obscured and outright disappeared because of the sun melting away the snow. 

Before the sun began to set, we found a strategically defensible place near the top of a large hill and set up camp there. The night would be divided into three shifts so we had someone awake and guarding at all times. Again, we started no fire, but this time it was because we did not want to alert anything malevolent that could be stalking us in the hills. 

The wind was blowing, but we chose the face of a hill that protected us from the bulk of it. The wind did not make keeping our tents in place and that sort of thing difficult, but it did make trying to listen at any kind of distance impossible. The moon was shining bright, so we had that going in our favor. The full moon illuminated the hills so well I could see more than a hundred yards away. The only problem was the shaded side of the hills were almost jet black, which could allow for all manner of things to hide. So long as something stuck to the shadows, it could move about unseen. 

I would not feel comfortable enough to get any measure of sleep if it were not for knowing one of my friends would be on each one of the shifts. I did not know these soldiers enough to trust them with my life as we slept, but I knew my companions would be at the ready during their round at keeping guard during the night. 

Occasionally the wind blowing through the hills would cause an unusual echo-like sound that I found quite unnerving. I was keeping watch with the sergeant at the time. He explained to me he received reports and encountered for himself these strange noises in the past. According to him, it was simply caused when wind became trapped in the lower sections of the hills by heavier gusts from above. It did not matter if I knew the explanation, I still found the haunting noise to be very unsettling. 

I was thankful when the sun rose from behind the eastern hills after a night without incident. No one wanted to talk about it, but none of us could stop thinking about it. If we let our guard down and that thing or things killing people in this region could leave us behind as it took our limbs with it. The thought of being dismembered and likely devoured was enough to make even the most durable man uneasy. 

Following a quick breakfast of bitter, lukewarm coffee and jerky, we were packed up and on our way. Continuing in the direction the path led before we lost sight of it, we made it no further than a couple hundred feet when we saw the prints of some large beast. What kind none of us could say. They somewhat resembled the footprints of a black bear, but the arch of the foot and the placement of the claws did not look right. I believed we were hunting something similar to a bear, but in all my years in the wilderness, I never saw tracks that looked quite like these. 

The sergeant had his men fan out a bit and secure the area as we examined the tracks to see what we could make of them. Whatever the creature was, it was obvious it walked on two feet. Although bears could walk on two feet for short distances, at some point they always dropped back to all fours. This thing appeared to remain standing at all times. That ruled out any animal with which I was familiar, nor was anyone else. 

The stride appeared to be similar to that of a man, but the feet were much larger. I would expect something like this to leave heavier footprints in the snow and frosty ground than it did. These tracks did not go much deeper than ours did, so the creature could not be much heavier than the average man. At most I would expect the thing we were now hunting to be no bigger than Maurice. 

The most disturbing part of this discovery was that the tracks we found led toward the location of our last camp and not away from it. That means this thing was stalking us, watching us in the dark last night, probably waiting for us to be off our guard so it could lunge into our camp and dispatch us with its razor-like claws. 

It did not matter now which way the tracks went, if we did not lose them again, we should be able to follow the course of these footprints back to the creature’s lair. As we followed the prints back to their source, the sergeant had the young soldier searching for some fowl hidden in the snow, but since it was days since the last snowfall, most of them were out of their shelters and would likely be found wherever we could find liquid water. 

We got lucky an hour or so later when we saw a gaggle of wild turkeys sheltered between two steep hills. O’Doyle held his hand up indicating to everyone to be silent. Maurice, O’Doyle, the young soldier and I raised our rifles. Taking careful aim, Maurice began to silently count to three, and all four of us fired. We managed to fell three birds, but the rest of them fled before we could chamber another round. 

If that creature stalking the hills did not know where we were, it did now. There was no missing the loud blast of four rifles firing at once. The last time we pulled such a stunt, I lost my friend I knew for close to twenty years. We had to take our shots at once or the chances of us bagging more than one bird would be pretty slim. 

At this point we not only had to worry about hunting this creature down, we had to make sure we did not run out of food. The dried provisions we brought with us from the fort were not going to last us until we returned to the wagons. It already took us longer to reach the settlement than we anticipated, and now we were a day and a half on the other side of that. We brought enough food to last us for two weeks, and we were almost to our tenth day already. These birds would only feed us for a day or two. Our most optimal situation would be to take down a deer or possibly an elk. It would be a lot to carry with us, but it would keep us fed until we returned to the wagons waiting at the main road. 

As the day drew to an end, we could see some sandstone bluffs possibly ten miles or so away. It was too far for us to reach before the sun set, and there was a distinct possibility that creature’s lair may be in a cave or fissure in the sandstone. We lost our friend Arden when a bear emerged from its lair before taking itself and our friend down the bottom of the steep slope at the base of those bluffs. 

This was our call to make and not that of the military men. It was too dangerous to approach the bluffs at night, even if the moon was going to be mostly full. Anything making its home in the stone faces of the bluffs would certainly be very familiar with the area, and this area was completely new to all of us. Our best bet was to go ahead and find a securable location and set up camp. 

This time we chose a location at the end of a narrow valley that came to a dead end at the base of a circular hill. Tonight we would divide our sleep shifts into two so we could keep four men on guard at all times. If we were close to this creature’s lair, it may come after us in defense of its home. Were that to be the case, we needed to make sure we guarded any possible paths of approach the thing may use. 

This time I kept watch with O’Doyle, the skilled young hunter and one of the other men who accompanied us on this expedition. The wind began blowing as the sun set, so it made staying at the top of the hill for very long next to impossible. The blistering gale was more than we could bear even as prepared for the cold as we were. 

The location we chose, we chose not only because it was very defendable, but it also shielded us from that unrelenting wind. At one point O’Doyle and I climbed the hill to keep a watch from up high for a short time. I could not believe we were here hunting something that was probably hunting us. We were supposed to be in the Black Hills by now staking our claims. Instead, Jonathan and Arden were both dead, and if we were not careful, we would be next. 

The young soldier keeping watch with us began to yell out the name of the other man. O’Doyle and I got down the hill as quickly as we could. The young soldier said his comrade was there one moment, but he turned away for only a second. When he turned back, the other man was gone. The yelling woke up everyone who was sleeping and in no time we were all armed and scouring the area. 

The man’s lifeless body lay no more than a hundred feet from where he was last seen. Something slashed his throat and drug him away from the camp. We must have startled it or something since it did not appear to finish the job. The dead soldier still had both his arms and legs, although his head was nearly severed from his body. 

Our attention was drawn away from the unfortunate soldier lying in front of us when a bright light erupted from our camp. Running back as quickly as we could, we found our tents in flames. We managed to rescue a large portion of our gear, but we did lose both tents that were set up along with the bedding or anything else inside of them. 

What kind of demonic beast could we be dealing with? 

It seemed like the thing killed this soldier and drug him off only to lure us all away from our camp. Somehow it circled around, or it had the help of others, and set both tents we had set up on fire. By the time we got back to our burning camp, the creature was nowhere to be found. 

Maurice, the sergeant and O’Doyle went to retrieve the body of the dead soldier, but they returned less than a minute later and said the body was gone. We were dealing with something much more intelligent than a bear or mountain lion. We were dealing with something unheard of. No rumors of such a creature circulated around the region, although I am sure they would now. There was nothing to give us any indication of what this could be. 

If things were not bad enough, the roaring winds began to drop snow on and around us. There were still no clouds in the sky we could see. The groundspeed of the wind was so strong, the snow got to us before the clouds did. This was not good, not good at all. Our best chance to catch this thing was to follow the tracks it left tonight, but the snow grew heavier and heavier. Any tracks it left behind for us to follow would be covered by the time the sun rose. 

Moral was low, and there was talk of turning back. We could not come this far and turn away to let this beast continue feeding on human flesh. It had to be stopped no matter what it took. 

The snow was still falling heavily when the orange sun appeared from behind the eastern hills. With the wind still blasting through the area, visibility was low. I said we should tether ourselves together so no one could be snatched away while the others were not looking, and the sergeant agreed. Keeping in a tight formation, we walked back out of this shallow valley to the open area from which we saw the sandstone bluffs. 

Without any tracks to follow, that was still our destination. If this was one or more wild and semi-intelligent creatures hiding out here in the Sand Hills, that was the most likely place we would find their den. The thought of there being many of these creatures sent shivers down my spine the cold could never match. 

I could only hope we were even traveling in the right direction. Visibility was nearly zero, and all we had to go by was what we remembered of the hills and the bluffs beyond the valley. There was no sun that we could see, but the wind was still blowing the same direction as last night. Comparing the direction of the wind to a compass, we got our bearings as best as we could and began walking. 

O’Doyle thought we should wait until the snow stopped before we tried tracking this thing in its own terrain, but Maurice thought the horror would continue to pick us off one by one until no one remained. The sergeant and I were both inclined to agree with Maurice. As long as we stayed tethered together, we could not be separated from one another. 

Progress was slow as walking across this freshly fallen snow, even with snowshoes, was quite difficult. We walked for hours before the falling snow began to let up enough to allow us to see we were indeed headed in the right direction. The soft snow now covering the ground added additional drag to our snowshoes, making the trek extremely difficult. We had to stop several times to rest, and we only had ten or less miles to travel. 

The bluffs turned out to be larger than we thought, and therefore further away. Our original estimate of the distance to the bluffs was eight to ten miles, but it turned out to be closer to fifteen. It was midday before we finally reached the red sandstone formation rising like a mountain in the midst of the Sand Hills. From the direction we came, we could see no way we could climb the slope without proper climbing gear. Our only chance to search the bluffs was if we could find a slope gentle enough for us to ascend. 

As we made our way around the bluffs, one of the soldiers told us he spotted something in the distance. He pointed out what looked to possibly be a house or cabin at the far end of the sandstone rock formation. After walking for another ten minutes, we were able to get a much better look at what was ahead. 

There was indeed a cabin in the distance, possibly another thirty-to-forty-minute walk from our current location. Smoke rose from the chimney of the large cabin. Our initial supposition was that the cabin was long abandoned, but the chimney emitting smoke told us otherwise. 

O’Doyle suggested we may have passed the lair of the creature that seemed to crave human flesh. If someone was alive here, the creature either did not get to them yet or it was outside of its territory. To me the first seemed more likely. Perhaps the beast was waiting, leaving these poor people until later as it probably knew they had nowhere to go. Both the sergeant and Maurice agreed we should check on the people in the cabin as they may have no idea what was stalking the hills. 

I did not know why someone would want to live this far from civilization. Perhaps these were ranchers who did not inhabit the area all year. That still did not make sense. If someone was only going to stay out here part of the year, it seemed like they would do so when the ground was not covered with snow and the air was not below freezing. 

Although we carried many weapons with us, I wielded my Winchester, as did Maurice, but O’Doyle opted to carry his revolvers instead. Along with the armed soldiers, we carefully made our way up to the cabin. I worried about how agressive our stance would look to someone inside, and I hoped they did not fire at us because they thought we were bandits. Normally the soldiers’ uniforms would make it obvious who we were, but at the moment we were all wrapped in pelts and furs to keep us from freezing to death. 

When we were about fifty feet from the building, the sergeant announced our presence and identified himself and the young soldier that accompanied him. We waited close to a minute before the sergeant announced our presence for a second time. When no one answered the second call, we assumed the cabin must be empty at the moment. Holding our firearms in a less aggressive manner, the sergeant and I approached the home. Maurice, O’Doyle and the young soldier stayed fifteen feet behind us, and the other two soldiers ten feet behind them. 

I knocked on the cabin door, but again we received no answer. Reaching down and grabbing the knob of the door, the sergeant turned the handle and found it was not locked or bolted. Switching to our revolvers, which would be much easier to use in the confined space of the cabin, we walked into the building one after the other. 

The cabin looked heavily used, but very well kept. In the front room there was nothing more than a single chair with a side table next to it. Something was cooking on the wood burning stove in the kitchen, and it smelled delicious. We survived on rations and foul for nine days now, and the aroma of a freshly cooked meal made my stomach rumble. 

Distracted by my appetite, I almost missed something crucial. Among the items covering the side table was a revolver, a revolver I recognized. The revolver was a Colt Patterson with a mother of pearl grip. The handle was riveted with silver rivets, and the flat sides of the flat barrel were covered in intricate engravings.  I saw this six shooter many times in the hands of my late friend Arden. 

Whoever lived in this cabin must have found Arden’s body and taken anything of value he had. I could not blame them for that. Wasting anything was not an option for people trying to survive in the harsh environment of the Sand Hills. When Arden and the bear that tackled him fell down the slope to their deaths, the rest of us divided up the supplies in his pack before proceeding with our journey. 

The sergeant went to the front room and told everyone else to begin circling around back. The three of us inside the building were going to go through the kitchen and come out the back door of the cabin. 

“Keep your eyes open and keep an eye on each other,” he instructed them. 

O’Doyle stepped out the back door and I followed. Maurice and the young soldier were both already at the back corner of the cabin. They stood there as if they were frozen, the countenance on their face displaying the absolute horror they appeared to be viewing. A storage cubby, most likely used for storing firewood, or possibly even coal, protruded from the back wall of the cabin, and that is where Maurice and the young soldier’s gazes were affixed. 

Stepping out further from the building so I could see what was in the hold, what I saw made my blood run colder than ice. Instead of wood or coal, the cubby was filled with a five foot tall pile of human bones. They appeared to have been cooked and picked clean. Virtually all the bones were arm or leg bones, but there were a few skulls in the mix as well. 

Every single one of the skulls had gunshot wounds to the head. All of the bodies we discovered thus far were missing limbs, but some of them were decapitated as well as being dismembered. We assumed this entire time that we were dealing with some sort of wild animal, but now it made me want to vomit when I thought of what was inside cooking in that pot. 

Four shots rang out in the cold windy air. The young soldier was hit in the back and the head, and he was dead before his body hit the ground. A third shot grazed Maurice’s shoulder, but the fourth missed. As we tried to seek cover, we turned and got off some shots of our own. 

Everything happened very quickly, but as soon as I turned around to fire at our assailant, I instantly recognized the face. Somehow, some way Arden survived the tumble down the hill with the bear. He was wearing garments made from the hide of a bear, most likely the very one that tried to kill him. Although I recognized the man as Arden, I did not know this thing in front of us. 

Arden’s eyes were large and sunken. A thick unkempt beard and shaggy mustache could not obscure his inhumanly overstretched jaw as he cried out with a voice that did not belong to the man I knew. Firing the last round in each of his revolvers, Arden threw them to the ground and began to bound at us on all fours. I never saw any animal, especially a human, move in such a fashion. He lunged with his legs, landed on his hands, and then swung his legs wide to come ahead of his hands before lunging once again. 

We fired another volley of rounds at the creature that was once my friend, hitting him multiple times. That did not stop him. Arden screeched like something from the pits of Hell as he sprung twenty feet through the air to land on top of the sergeant. When Arden brought his arm up into the air in preparation of striking the sergeant, I could see long, sharp talons protruding from the tips of his fingers rather than having fingernails. Long hair grew on his arms and the back side of his hands. Arden had become a wild beast. 

The rest of us fired again at Arden hoping to get him off of the sergeant. We had to be very careful so as not to hit the military man. I know at least four rounds entered Arden’s flesh, but it was not enough to stop him from swiping his hand across the sergeant’s throat, tearing a large handful of flesh loose. 

There was nothing we could do for the sergeant now, so we all unleashed with everything we had. When I exhausted my Winchester, I removed my Old Reliable from where it hung around my shoulder and fired three times with that. Arden, somehow still able to function, poised himself to leap at me. I knew I was going to die if that happened, but Maurice finally fired the shot that put our old friend down for good. The Frenchman blew most of the top of Arden’s head into a spray of fragments of bone and blood. 

Although we were quite confident Arden was dead, we still approached the body with extreme caution. We stood over the body looking at what was once a human. His eyes were like that of a cat, slitted rather than circular. The mouth on this thing was much larger than a normal person, and his teeth were sharp and pointed. 

Eventually, O’Doyle knelt beside the body and undid the bindings keeping the bear skin that kept Arden warm. Everyone gasped in horror when they looked at Arden’s torso. He was covered in long, thin hair. His ribs were thick, grotesquely creating one-inch ridges from underneath the muscular flesh. The skin was light brown and covered in large orange freckles. The man that was once our friend became something that was no longer human. 

At one point I had enough of looking at this unholy thing, and I went back into the cabin to see if there was anything that could explain what happened to Arden. Searching through the rubbish that filled the cabin, I finally found a single sheet of paper that appeared to be crumpled up and thrown to the floor. The letter was pinned in Arden’s handwriting. 

“My friends, may they burn in Hell, stole my gear and left me to die. I traveled for weeks, surviving on the meat from the bear that took me down the hill. I carried with me as much meat as I could. I was sure I was going to die when I found this place. The occupants would not help me. We fought and I had to kill them both. They survived by hunting, and had very little food in the house. I ate what they had, but soon was left with nothing, nothing but the bodies I stowed outside. 

“I wasn’t going to die after everything I survived, so I started eating the corpses. Quickly I found I preferred the taste of human meat to all others. I began craving it, unable to think of anything else. I managed to kill a deer, but when I tried to eat it, I felt as though I would be sick.

“I fear I do not have much time left. I can feel myself slipping, my beastial instincts are starting to overwhelm my sense of reasoning. I wanted to get my last thoughts down when I still had the where with all to do so. When I come back from my next hunt, I fear I will probably be no more than some kind of wild thing. I would become a slave to my animal instincts.” 

Copyright © 2024

 

Views: 8

In Front of Me

Word Count: 13,950

I sat near the edge of a tall cliff, watching the sun break above the tree line. The glorious orb cast its orange light on the underside of the early morning clouds. I gazed upon the wonderous sight as I struggled to recall the events of the past few days. It all seemed like a horrible nightmare from which I would awake, but there was no waking from the reality I was in. 

Glancing down to my hand resting in my lap, I looked over the length of my hunting knife. Crimson blood dried and adhered to the blade and handle. The red blood stained my jeans and tattered shirt as well. 

It was just supposed to be a fun week of camping with my and two other families. We planned this trip for several months, wanting to get our children away from the television and off of the grid for a while. The little ones were spending more and more time playing games or texting on their phones, and all of the parents wanted to get them to spend some time in the out of doors. We thought a camping trip in the Ozark Mountains and a canoe trip down the Buffalo River would do them some good. 

Views: 5

Old Country Church

Word Count: 5,802

Several friends and I, inspired by some videos we watched online, decided we were going to try our hand as amateur ghost hunting. There was an area at the end of a long-abandoned dirt road where several buildings, including two churches, still remained standing despite the fact all the other buildings there collapsed years ago.   

The ghost town was one we visited on many occasions while we were growing up, but that was always during the daytime. Although we frequented the desolate hamlet many times, none of us ever had the nerve to step inside one of the buildings. Never in all the years I lived near this long-deserted village did we ever explore the overgrown area at night. Now we decided we were going to do both.   

We planned our excursion for more than a week. Anthony came from a wealthy family, and it was not difficult for him to take several video recorders and cameras without being noticed. His parents were rarely home, and when they were home, they paid little to no attention to him.   

Terry was into music, playing guitar in a band with some of the other local teens, and he had various audio recording devices he planned to bring with us. Some of his equipment would take a little setting up once we got there, but he had several handheld recording devices for us to use as well. We would have to get out there several hours before dark to make sure we had the time we needed to get everything prepared for our night in the small, deserted town.   

I did not have much to provide as my family was not as well to do as those of my friends. One thing I did have was some good flashlights and a shotgun of my own. A gun would not do us any good if we really did encounter a ghost, but bobcats and such were known to roam the area. My shotgun would come in very handy if we were attacked by a wild animal.   

All three of us were juniors in high school, and we were waiting for this last week to come to an end. As soon as our summer break began, we wanted to play our little game of ghost hunting in the old ghost town.  We originally had our excursion planned to take place several weeks ago, but the seasonal rains ruined our plans. Since it was so close to the end of our school year, we decided to wait and do our investigating during the first week of our summer freedom.   

No one was really sure why the small collection of buildings came to be abandoned. Families who lived in the region for generations all gave differing accounts. Some people said there was a sickness, and the people of the town thought it was something in the soil. Following several deaths, the rest of the townsfolk left. Others said it was something more sinister, a curse put on the town because of some evil they committed. Another rumor said the people simply began to move away. With no one moving in, the unused buildings began to decay, driving out the remaining residents.   

Whatever the reason for the exodus of the town’s members, the crumbling buildings, small scattered trees, and tall grass made the place a creepy one to visit during the daytime. This was going to be the first time we ever went there at night. The anticipation made this last week of school pass miserably slowly, and it seemed like our vacation was never going to begin. The day finally came though, and we were already prepared to spend the night in the empty town.   

We loaded all our equipment in Anthony’s truck and drove down the long-abandoned dirt road that headed into the center of the forgotten town. It was a rough ride and there was no way my or Terry’s cars would ever make it. Being that we walked the road as many times as we had, we knew how rough it was going to be. Everything was strapped down and cushioned to prevent anything from being damaged on the drive.   

We chose a small house close to the two churches we decided previously would be a good place to set up our equipment. This house was constructed mainly using huge cedar logs and chiseled granite blocks making it probably one of the most stable buildings in this abandoned village. Most of our time would be spent in this building monitoring our equipment, so obviously we wanted to make sure we chose the safest building possible.   

Anthony set up the cameras and video recorders and Terry set up the audio equipment in the same areas, running the wiring to our computers in our base camp. From there we could monitor multiple locations at once. As they set up their equipment, I strapped my father’s hunting cams to trees on opposite sides of the village. It was not difficult to set them so they were both looking down the middle of the ghost town.   

Several hours passed as we got everything set up and working. We had to change out some of the cables after a frustrating hour of trying to figure out what was wrong with some of the connections. We did not get everything working as it should until thirty minutes before the sun set behind the tree line. I was glad we got everything working before dark. I did not want to have to bother with running cables through the grass filling the once populated roads of this old town in the dark. The task was difficult enough to pull off during the daytime; doing it at night would be incredibly frustrating.   

Our night began with all three of us monitoring the audio and video surveillance we had set up in key locations throughout the town. Terry kept an eye on the audio readings while Anthony and I watched the computer screens for any sign of movement. We could see most everything on the outside, but we only had equipment set up in two of the buildings; the jailhouse and one of the two churches.   

None of us knew what difference there was between the churches, such as the denominations or if one was for whites and one was for blacks. The two buildings were close to being identical, and the front entrance way to both were facing each other no more than twenty feet apart. We always thought that to be the most peculiar aspect of the whole town. The one notable difference between the two was one had an exterior basement door while the other was built completely above ground. 

On one side of them, and behind the churches were the remnants of the homes that once held the residents of the town. On the other side was a wide courtyard with the jailhouse being opposite of that. It was our assumption this courtyard was probably where the gallows once stood. It was the only place in this town for something as large as that, but it seemed very odd the gallows would be right in front of the two town churches. There was one camera between the rows of houses looking toward the churches and another in front of what we think was a shop of some sort. This second camera watched the courtyard ranging from the churches to the jailhouse.   

For the first hour following dark all we did was monitor the cameras and audio for anything. We were not only looking for things out of the ordinary. Our hope was to catch plenty of ordinary things to have to compare to anything we discovered outside the realm of ordinary. After that hour passed, we drew straws to see who was going to be the first one to walk around the town with a handheld video camera.   

Anthony drew the short stick and therefore had the honor of being the first one of us to walk around this long-abandoned hamlet at night. We would not be able to review the contents of the handheld camera until we could remove the memory card and place it in one of our laptop computers. Terry and I kept an eye on the multitude of night vision cameras set up around town while our friend left to take his solo walk around the grass covered roads.   

Keeping a red filter on the flashlight he was carrying so as not to interfere with the resolution of the night vision cameras, Anthony could not see very far, but it allowed him to see much better than having no light at all. Terry and I watched Anthony as he walked between the buildings, snaking up and down each passable road. We saw a few small animals on the monitors, some birds and several rabbits, but nothing that could remotely be called paranormal.   

Anthony was far beyond relieved when he finally returned to what we called our base camp. He told us about how nervous he was walking around in the dark like that, not very able to see what was around him. He said he could swear he heard some voices coming from some of the buildings as he walked past them. I took the memory card from his camera and had its contents downloaded to my computer within minutes.   

We spent the next half hour discussing what we wanted to do next. Watching through the footage Anthony captured in fast motion, we did not see anything unusual there either. This time we flipped a coin, and I was the loser. This whole expedition was initially my idea, and now I regretted ever having the thought. At first, I was sure there was nothing really out there, but I was beginning to doubt myself.   

Was I only being brave until the day finally arrived?   

Regardless of how scared I was, I could not let on to my friends or they would never let me live it down. I took the camera Anthony used on his excursion, and Terry prepared for me a small audio recording device I could carry with me. If Anthony really did hear some voices out there, we thought it might help to pick them up if I had an audio recorder with me. I really did not want to go out there walking around this place at night, but I did not feel I left myself with much of a choice.   

Stepping out of the cobblestone house we were using as a base, I walked out into the dark night. I wished we were going out two at a time, but we needed two people to watch all of the audio and visual recorders we had set up throughout the small, abandoned town. I could not even say how many times I came to this village during the daytime, but the darkness made the crumbling buildings and weed filled roads seem so much scarier.   

There was no moon shining out tonight, and the red filter on my flashlight did not allow me to see very far. The stars brightly filled the sky, but it hardly did anything to illuminate the ground. We planned for our little ghost hunting project for the darkest night we could.   

Swallowing my mounting trepidation, I started out on the preplanned walking route. Every time I heard a frog croak, or a bird take flight, I nearly jumped out of my own skin. Throughout my childhood I spent plenty of time in the woods, even during the dark hours, so I should be used to the noises of the nocturnal animals.   

Slowly strolling along the overgrown road, I scanned around the nearby buildings with my flashlight. I would feel much more comfortable without the red filter on the lens, but Anthony insisted it would blind the night-vision cameras. We spent too much time getting all that set up to go and blind everything with an unfiltered light.   

It was rather hot out, and I would prefer to be wearing shorts. Out here at night though, I was afraid of getting ticks. My jeans, thick socks and heavy boots should keep the little blood suckers off of me. If we were only spending an hour or two out there, I would not worry about it. As it was, we were going to be out here all night, and that simply gave the pesky arachnids too much time to feast until they nearly popped.   

My thoughts were interrupted when I thought I saw something moving to the left of me. Scanning around the area as best I could with the dim red flashlight, I did not see anything out of the ordinary. I was sure I saw something, but I assumed it must have been a bat fluttering down quickly to catch itself a snack. Possibly it was a moth I just happened to see momentarily out of the corner of my eye.   

Continuing my walk through the town, I tried to pay as much attention to my ears as I did my eyes. Growing up in a small rural community, I spent more time in the woods than I did at home. I trained myself years ago to pay attention to my other senses, especially when in the woods at night. There were more than a few animals out here capable of mauling and killing three young men, which is why I was so glad I brought my shotgun with me.   

Anthony did not want to carry it with him when he made his rounds, but I was not going to venture into this foreboding ghost town without some kind of protection with me. When I reached the far edge of the town, I felt like I was walking for hours. Looking down to my watch, I saw only ten minutes passed since I left the base camp.   

I began to wind my way around some of the buildings. I knew this place quite well, but it was still difficult to get my bearings. Occasionally gazing up at the stars to make sure I was heading in the right direction, I weaved my way up and down the overgrown dirt roads in much the same manner as did Anthony. Some of the roads were buried underneath debris from the buildings, logs that somehow made their way into the edge of town, and brush growth. This made it feel more like walking through a hellish maze than it did during daylight hours.   

I began to try and picture what life must have been like for the people of this small town. The oldest of the buildings were the ones that were still standing. Those were constructed from stone and large cedar logs. The newest buildings, the ones in the worst shape of all, were built sometime later from cut wooden planks. The latter just could not stand the test of time and collapsed, often falling over into the road. Thorns, vines and other vegetation grew out of the debris of these buildings, the foliage so thick in some places it completely obscured the rotting wreckage underneath.  

What really made those people abandon their town like they did? Could it really simply be a matter of all the residents moving away and no one moving back in to replace them? Was it possible it was really something sinister like a curse on the town?   

It would be impossible for me to count the number of times my friends and I discussed this. We shared all the stories we heard, and many times we added our own theories to the mix. I heard so many different tales about this crumbling place, I did not know what to think.   

Raising the handheld video recorder up to my face, I wanted to get a circular scan of the area before moving on to the next abandoned street. Walking around here in the dark watching through the eyepiece of the camera would surely get me hurt, so I only held and scanned around with it until now. I nearly dropped the expensive video camera when I thought I saw something moving in between two of the still standing buildings.   

Quickly, I removed the camera from my face to try to get a look with my naked eyes. There did not appear to be anything moving. The only thing between the two buildings was a tree whose branches shaded the roofs of both the decaying structures. Raising the eyepiece to my face once again, I examined my surroundings with the camera some more. Even with the night vision capabilities of the camera, I did not see anything between the walls of the buildings.   

My heart was racing; the rush of blood caused my ears to roar, and sparks floated in my eyes. I needed to calm myself back down, but doing so in this setting was not easy. Finally convincing myself I probably saw an owl flying behind the other side of the structures, I continued along my way. Regardless of how many times I told myself there was nothing there, I could not get past that feeling I was being watched. I tried to explain that away as Anthony and Terry watching me on the monitors.   

When I saw a light in the window of a two-story house, tilted and half covered in vines, I decided to head back to base camp. My full hour was not up yet, but I wanted to go see what was going on. We agreed when we first started planning this that only one of us at a time would be out walking around the town. It would be too easy for us to lose track of one another if two or more of us were away from base camp.   

Once the building we used to house our equipment came into view, I zoomed in with the camera I carried to see if I could see anything going on. It was too difficult to say which, but I saw one of my friends run out of the base camp heading in the direction of the house with the illuminated window. Something had to be wrong. Relying on my own eyes once again, I tried to increase my pace as much as I could without serious risk of falling and hurting myself.   

The light jog down the grass covered road felt like it took forever. As much as I wanted to get to my friends to help them with whatever was wrong, there was nothing I could do for them if I broke my leg. My whole body trembled with anxiety and panic as I reached the structure and turned into the door of the base camp. My breath was heavy and labored as I looked into the building to see both Anthony and Terry sitting there in front of the monitors. Both appeared as though they were a bit shocked over my abrupt return. Simultaneously my friends asked me why I came running back like I did.  

“When I saw someone come running out of here, I thought something was wrong,” I replied in a quivering voice.  

There was a brief pause, then in my confusion I asked them who it was that came running out of this building. Now sharing in my confusion, they both insisted there was no one else there; we were the only people in that building all night. They did not believe me that I saw someone, or something come bolting out of that door and down one of the crossroads. Despite my insistence, they simply did not believe me. They thought I was joking with them.  

They were not going to listen to me, so I took the memory card out of the camera and put it in one of the computers. Skipping ahead to the last part of the video, I showed them what I saw when I came around the corner with the camera. This time Anthony and Terry both saw the clear image of a humanoid figure appear to exit the base camp and run south down the remnants of what was once a road.  

All three of us stood there in silence for how long I could not say for certain. Almost as if on cue, all three of us looked out the door and then back to the monitor. We simply could not believe we actually caught something on camera, something that shows the image of someone who was not there. It was not there in any way we could understand.  

“M-maybe someone should go check out that light you saw,” Anthony suggested.  

“Hell no,” Terry whispered loudly. “There’s no way I am going out there by myself now.”  

I offered up the option of all three of us going to check out that leaning house. That appeared to be, at least in that direction, where the spectral image was running. Terry was worried about leaving his and Anthony’s expensive equipment unattended, but it was either we all went, or no one was going to go. No one wanted to stay behind, and no one wanted to go out there alone.  

I had no stake in the equipment, so that was not a worry of mine. We found something out here, and we knew where we could probably find it again. I insisted the equipment would be fine for the short time we would be gone. Each one of us was taking a camera and an audio recorder, so the only things we were really leaving behind were the computers.  

As we slowly walked down the road, heading south toward the house in which I saw the light, each of us scanning with night vision cameras in search for anything our eyes could not see. I remarked in a soft whisper that we would need to go back over the other footage and see if Anthony and Terry missed anything on the monitors. Surely if my camera caught the image, so did the others. Neither one of them answered me, but that was probably because they were too scared to speak.  

I had my shotgun tucked under my arm. The barrels were loaded but the chamber was not closed. I do not know what I thought it was going to do against a ghost, but I felt a small measure of security having it with me. I wished my friends were armed as well, but neither of their fathers hunted, so neither did they. I was the only one of the three of us who owned his own gun.  

I thought I heard Terry whisper something to me from my right side, but I could not hear what he said. I got much closer to him and asked him what he was saying. He shrugged his shoulders and shook his head, very quietly telling me he did not say anything. I was sure I heard him say something, but I let the matter go. We were only a block away from the leaning house when I asked him what he said. I did not want to continue talking if I did not need to.  

Thus far we did our best to stay as near the middle of the road as we could, but when we approached the leaning house, we veered in a little closer. I was walking in the center, more focused on holding my shotgun at the ready than looking through the camera. There was no longer a light on inside, at least not that we could see. I did not believe a light as bright as I saw earlier could be glowing and us not see it, even from outside.  

Positioning ourselves in line with the front door of the tilted building, we slowly and cautiously made our way forward. At this point I had the barrels of my shotgun closed and ready to fire if necessary. It was difficult for me to carry my gun and look through the eyepiece of my camera at the same time. I wished took a camera with a display screen and not an eyepiece, but we were afraid this would produce too much illumination and give away our position. Using the night vision cameras seemed to be the only way to see the specters that appeared to roam the ruins of this old ghost town.  

The doorway was quite narrow, and the building looked as if it could fall at any moment. With the mass of vines covering nearly half the structure, I am surprised it remained standing this long. With speed that bordered on the edge of stillness, we slowly crept forward, everyone watching with their cameras for anything out of the ordinary. The doorway was narrow, so if we were going to go inside, we would have to do so single file. At this point I really wished my friends were armed as well, because the gun should probably go in first. There would be no room to step past anyone to shoot otherwise.  

It was not easy trying to keep my shotgun at the ready while holding the camera up to my face. The floor was a lot more solid than I expected it to be. It appeared the first story of this building was constructed from cedar logs, and perhaps the upper level was added later using cut wooden planks rather than logs. While the top of the house was obviously leaning, the lower floor seemed to retain its form.  

I was happy when my friends entered the building with me. For at least a little while I was going to have to rely on what they could see and strapped the camera around my arm. It was much easier for me to hold the flashlight and keep a proper grip on my firearm than when trying to hold the digital video camera. As dark as it was in the building, the red filtered light provided me with plenty of light to see.  

At one time this was probably a very nice home, even for its time. Cobwebs filled the entrance room and dust coated the hardwood floors. There were still paintings on the walls and decorations on the mantel, like whoever lived here fled and left everything they owned behind. Although the paintings, upholstery on the furniture and leather chairs all succumbed to the ravages of time, the overall structure seemed to be quite sound. I turned my shotgun toward the ceiling and was about to tell one of them to lead the way into the next room when they both ran.  

They did not shout out any warning to me at all, they just turned and ran. It took me a few more seconds to react since they gave me no warning. By the time I turned towards the door, I saw both of them disappear down the old dirt street. When I started to run, something caught my left heel and pulled me hard to the ground. I tried to get back to my feet, but this unseen force instantly pulled me back to my face. When the thing began to drag me into the other room, I almost lost my shotgun. Scrambling as I was being dragged across the dusty room, I managed to gain a grip on the butt just as I was almost out of range.  

When I again came to a stop, I tried to get back to my feet. This time I felt something pressing on my back, like someone’s large booted foot was holding me down. I tried to plead for help or mercy, but the dust stirred as I dragged across the ground choked me and made it impossible to speak. Something grabbed my hair and pressed my face into the splintery floor.  

“They went off and left you,” I heard a hissing voice say into my ear. The hate and malice inside the voice was more than obviously apparent, and it made my bones turn cold with terror. “Friends? They left you to die.”  

Suddenly the pressure on my back vanished and I no longer had anything holding my face to the ground.  

I scrambled to my feet and ran out of the building as fast as I could. When I reached the grass and brush covered road, I could see my so-called friends in our base camp. It looked like they were trying to get the equipment together so they could leave. They were more worried about taking their precious computer equipment with them, but they did not care if they left me behind to die. Whatever tossed me around in that dark room surely had the strength to rip me apart, and they left me there.  

A scowl covered my face as I began to walk towards the two people I never thought would leave me behind. Anthony and Terry were my friends since we were in the first grade, and when I was absolutely reliant on them to tell me if anything was coming, they fled and did not say a thing. Moving at a rapid pace, I managed to keep a solid footing even though I paid no attention to what was right in front of me.  

When I was about fifty feet away from the base camp, I raised my shotgun and planted the butt firmly in the socket of my shoulder. Rage filled me as I thought about that melevolent force pulled me to the ground and drug me through the house. Pain from the splinters burned my stomach and chest, and I was not going to let these two get away with it.  

Anthony was the first to see me. Initially he looked relieved, but then he saw the gun I had pointed directly at his chest. He began to explain that they did not know what to do, and they were so glad to see me okay. Although it was very hard for me to accept it, I can understand how they would feel completely helpless in that situation.  

“Do you know what I could have done to you,” that sinister voice whispered seductively in my ear. “DO YOU!”  

When that thing spoke to me again, the burning fury and hatred filled my soul once more. They were not going to get away with abandoning me and leaving me to whatever horrible fate awaited me. When that voice again shouted in my ear, I raised my shotgun and pulled the trigger. I watched Anthony’s sweatshirt tear open as the shot ripped at the flesh and bone in his chest.  

I let his lifeless body crumple to the ground, and as soon as I had an opening, I let the second blast hit Terry in the lower chin and throat. The blast nearly severed his head from his body. Somehow, he managed to remain standing for a few seconds as his blood sprayed the inside of the base camp.  

As Terry’s body finally toppled backwards, I quickly reached down and grabbed the camera Anthony dropped on the floor when I put a large gaping hole in his chest. Reluctantly raising it to my eye, I looked into the room in which the bodies of my former friends lay. Hunched over Anthony’s body was something, but what I could not say. It was not human, and I did not think it was a ghost because it did not look like it was ever human. The body was narrow, and its limbs extremely long. It glowed brightly under the night vision of the camera, and I was sure I could see what looked like fur outlining its body. The unholy creature had large eyes, and a gaping maw full of needle-like teeth.  

“A-are you going to kill me now?” I inquired of the inhuman beast, my voice wavering as I tried to make myself breathe.  

The invisible entity grabbed Terry by the foot, and using its other massively oversized hand, took Anthony by the head and started dragging them toward the door. I stepped out of its way to give it plenty of room, and when I did, I lowered the camera. There I saw my former friends’ bodies being taken away by some unseen force. I raised the camera back up to my head in time to see it turn and look back at me.  

“You brought me these, so you can go,” it said. “I will let you live, but you can never tell anyone what you saw here.”  

Every word the ghastly beast spoke stoked the flames of my anger, my rage. I was glad to see him dragging away the bodies of those two cowards who left me for dead. It was not only what the creature said. There was some power, some energy that increased my hate for those two beyond the scope of normal human emotion. 

I knew from the tone of the creature’s words that this was not just a warning. It was telling me if I ever revealed what happened here tonight, it was coming for me next. Already once having the honor of feeling the super-human strength of this thing as it tossed me around like a rag doll, I took its warning very seriously. 

I was furious my friends made me kill them like that, I was furious that thing was dragging them away, and now I was furious I was going to spend the rest of my life in prison for this. I considered taking my own life as I watched their bodies drag away into the night. That was when I glanced down and noticed the drag marks from the two corpses the demonic thing carried began to fade away. I turned to look around the base camp only to find the massive amounts of blood that spilled from the large wounds I gave my friends appeared to be absorbing into the walls and floors. It was as if the events were somehow covering up what happened. 

Around the doorway of the base camp and beyond my footprints began to disappear. Now I finally knew what happened to this town. The invisible demon coaxed the people into killing one another. Those it let leave the town, it made sure to keep quiet. As was the situation with me, those people whose life it spared never told anyone what happened here. We were all afraid that, if we even uttered one word about it, the creature would take its revenge. That eldritch being told me it was letting me go, and it did. Before retrieving my trail cameras and walking through the forest to go home, I watched the thing that haunted this town for centuries drag the two lifeless bodies into the basement of that old country church. 

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Covered in Kudzu

Word Count: 8,937

I lived the entirety of my life in the steaming humidity of Louisiana, leaving the swampy state only on two occasions. An uncle in Mississippi passed in 1980, and I went to attend his funeral. The only other time I crossed the borders of my home state was to attend my cousin’s wedding in Arkansas. I never really figured I had any reason to go anywhere else; everything I knew and everything I needed was here. 

Now, for most people, Louisiana seemed about twenty years behind the rest of the country. Most folks down here were set in their ways, and these values were typically instilled in their children as well. Racism and segregation were still quite prominent in my home state. Blacks stayed away from whites and the whites stayed away from the blacks.

Several colored fellows worked on the farm, but I did not care for them much. I never did. One of them always whined about reparations and his forty acres and a mule. Why should I owe him reparations? My family was poor up until the last few decades. My ancestors did not own any slaves, so I figured I owed them negros nothing. The only thing I owed them was a paycheck at the end of the week. Holiday, personal, and sick time were bonuses not rights. 

Although I saw little change in race relations, or even the size of my town, I saw plenty of change in the forests. Kudzu vines took over acres upon acres of land killing everything in its path. It spread slowly, but it never stopped. Herbicides did not work and neither did fire. There was only one way to be rid of the engulfing plant. The roots had to be dug up, and this stuff rooted deep. 

Areas where I used to hunt and play were now fields of vines. Snakes loved to nest in these areas, so it was always best to avoid them whenever possible. It was not easy to watch the country around me be overrun by the invading plant. Louisiana was flat enough without taking away all the forest lands. Some fool found the vine in China or something and brought it to the United States. The problem with the plant was that there were no animals and very few insects that fed on it here, so it grew unchecked. That damned idiot had no idea the plague he unleashed upon the southern states. 

My father, a negro, a white fellow who worked on our farm, and I all spent the last week fighting back the vines with bush-hogs and controlled brush fires. It took a lot of work to keep the vines from overrunning our crops. Constant maintenance was required to keep the encroaching plant in check. If the problem continued to grow worse, we might need to hire some new hands just to deal with the vines. We did not turn a great profit every year, and hiring more workers would be a crippling financial slap in the face. 

After showering that evening, I went downstairs where Momma and my sister had dinner ready. During the blessing, I could not keep my thoughts on the prayer. My mind drifted off to the days when my best friends, Scottie William, and I ran around playing in the woods. Much of that forest no longer existed, having been destroyed by the invading kudzu. I was so wrapped up in my thoughts, I almost missed the ‘amen.’  

After I went to bed, I still could not get our childhood excursions into the woods out of my mind. Something within me clicked today as we fought the vines away from the corn fields. Something in my past wanted to come back to me. It was a sensation very similar to déjà vu. A memory was trying to resurface about something that happened in that forest, but I spent so much time romping around in the woods, it was impossible to pinpoint what was nagging me. 

I tossed and turned all night. Normally I was a still sleeper, but when I woke up the next morning, my sheets were pulled loose and tossed around the bed. For the first few seconds after I awoke, I remembered my dream vividly. Before I was fully awake, I only remembered bits and pieces. By breakfast, I could not remember anything at all. 

I spent most of that day driving the dirt roads that bordered our farmland. With it being early summer, the kudzu grew absolutely wild. We could not allow it to reach our fields, or we would never get rid of it. I found several places along our property that would be problems very soon. I called father on the CB radio to give him the locations where the creeping vines threatened our fields. 

Tomorrow, we would have to spend the day cutting and burning the stuff. That meant taking even more people from their farming duties to fight away the increasingly problematic vines. If this kept up much longer, we might not be able to pull a profit this year. In my opinion, the state should be paying to deal with the problem. If it let the farms go under, Louisiana would go bankrupt. 

All the while, that elusive thought nagged at me. I found it difficult to concentrate on anything else. Whatever memory was trying to resurface never made it from subconscious to conscious thought. I did not know how I knew, but I knew it somehow involved Scottie and William. 

Could it be something we found? Could it be something we did? 

The memory tried to break through, but I could not conjure up the images. It drove me crazy. By the time I got home for the evening, I was stressed out and the muscles in my neck felt stiff with tension. All I did was drive all day, but I felt like someone had taken me through the ringer.  

My mind wandered all throughout supper, and I found Father snapping at me several times. He wanted me to detail the kudzu problem around our fields; I just could not keep my mind on the conversation. That elusive memory tried to push its way out of hiding but could not quite get there. Dad grew impatient with me, slamming his hand on the table once as I began to drift. 

I finally managed to get the ungraspable thought out of my mind long enough to give Daddy the location of the problem areas and the areas that needed the most immediate attention. My thoughts were otherwise occupied while I drove, and I was not sure of my memories. I told Father everything I remembered. I knew Saturday morning I would have to drive the dirt roads around the crop land perimeter to double check what I missed today. 

On Monday, we pulled six men in all out of the fields to help us cut up and burn the vines. The kudzu wanted to take over, and we would fight it back to the bitter end. At twenty dollars an hour the task was going to be very expensive. In addition to that, there were a dozens of man hours diverted away from their regular duties. That put us even further behind and we had to get this harvest in on time. We still had another entire crop to plant after this one. Having to hire six more hands was really going to nip at our profit margins. 

That annoying thought never left me alone. For more than a week, I tried to remember. Call it paranoia, but I was sure something strange was at work. I did not know what my two childhood friends did these days. I did not even know if they still lived in the state. Whatever it was my mind would not let me remember, I was sure they were somehow involved. I knew tracking them down was something I had to do. 

I began to ask around. Scottie, William, and I shared a lot of other common friends. I still kept in contact with many of them. No one was sure what happened to them. The only information I did obtain always began with, “Well, I heard….” I uncovered no reliable information from anyone in town. The only thing I could think of to do was to call information and hope they were still in the nearby area. 

It took me a lot of calling around, and I knew I would run up one hell of a phone bill, but I had to find them. After days of calling, I located my friend Scottie. He moved to Baton Rouge where he ran a modest but successful restaurant. William, I eventually found out, was doing time in prison. Apparently, he went to jail shortly after moving away from here. 

William was being housed in a medium security prison located only forty-five minutes from the house. I called the unit to find out about their visitation hours. Visitation was only held on Sundays, so I planned to go see him after church this week. I hoped he could help provide information on my obscured memories. Perhaps he would tell me something to dislodge the thought from its niche in my subconscious. 

That Sunday after church, I filled my thermos with coffee, ate a few buttered biscuits with jam, and got on the road. I wanted to make sure I did not arrive too late. I could not wait another week before I got the chance to talk to him. In the meantime, I tried calling Scottie. I spoke to his answering machine once. Every time I called after that, I let the phone ring five times and then hung up. If the phone picked up on his end, I had to pay the long distance charges. 

William was shocked to see me, but I was not surprised. We had not seen each other in more than a decade. I only got one hour to visit with him, so I got straight to the point. I told him how fighting the kudzu seemed to pry loose some hidden memory. He gave me a quizzical look when I told him I thought he and Scottie were somehow involved. William tried, but he could not come up with anything helpful to tell me. 

I asked him if he remembered seeing or doing anything that I would want to forget. He assured me we never saw any UFO’s or experienced any paranormal events my mind would want to hide. He did say something about the kudzu though. 

Recently, William had a dream the vines climbed up to his cell and tore the metal mesh from his window. I did not get to ask him about anything else before an officer informed him his time was up and escorted him back to his cell. 

What was it with the kudzu? I lived around the merciless plant my whole life, so why now did it take on a deeper significance? Why was William dreaming about it? What correlation did the vine have to do with my locked memory? 

During my drive home, I felt a churning in my gut every time I passed an area defeated by the broad-leafed vines. The plant held significance of some kind. I found out only several years ago that snakes terrified me. A run in with a six foot long cottonmouth water moccasin nearly scared me to death. If someone else had not been there hunting with me, I would have probably been bitten and died. I became paralyzed with fear, and my hunting partner shot the snake before it could strike. 

I called and left one more message on Scottie’s answering machine the following Tuesday. This time, I stressed how important it was that I speak with him. I had to unlock this puzzle, this mystery that rushed in on me like a tidal wave. If they did in fact have something to do with my strange feelings, I had to know what it was. 

I had no appetite, so I skipped supper that night. Instead, I drove around the perimeters of our fields trying to somehow dislodge my memory. The setting sun painted the clouds a beautiful orange. I was fixated on the sunset when a significant memory returned to me. 

I remembered emerging from the forest when I was a child. Scottie and William were there with me. We were running, terrified, but I could not recall why. I did not remember being chased. I did remember being terrified. We ran out of the woods and did not stop until we reach Scottie’s house. We hid in the closet of his room for the rest of the night. 

My recollection ended there. I could only conjure that little piece of memory. I knew there was more, but for now it was still locked away in the back of my mind. What occurred before we emerged from the forest gasping and terrified, I could not remember. The weeks that followed were also lost to me. Why that was I did not know, but I knew it was very important that I remembered. 

The next morning I received a welcomed surprise as I had my morning coffee. The mailman dripped our parcels through the slot in the door. When Sis walked by, she gathered it up and brought it into the kitchen. I thumbed through the envelopes she gave me when I saw one stamped with a prison unit number. William mailed out a letter to me only two days after we talked. I ate as quickly as I could without being rude and then took my mail out to the front porch. 

As I anticipated, William wrote that he thought of more after I left. He too recalled the three of us fumbling out of the marshy forest and running along a gravel road. William was certain that we were running from something, but he could not remember what. Also in his letter, he talked about hiding in Scottie’s house because we were terrified that something was going to get us. He apologized because he could not remember more than this. If he thought of anything more, he would write me again. 

I tried to remember where it was, what forest we were in when the event occurred. If I could find the location, I might just figure this all out. I went to see William again the following Sunday. I asked him if he could recollect where the incident happened. William said he was trying to make himself remember, but the location would not come to him. He realized he had gaps in his memory just as I did, so William and I kept in contact through the mail during the week. I began to visit him every Sunday after church. We hoped that, by working together, we would figure out what happened on that day. 

When I came home from work Wednesday, Sis told me I missed a call from some guy named Scottie. I began to lose hope that I would ever track him down. Scottie told Sis he was in Germany for the past two months and called me as soon as he listened to my messages. I tried to call him back that night but he did not answer. We played a game of phone tag for the next ten days. Finally, I caught him at home. 

We talked for close to an hour, mostly about what we have been doing over the last ten years. Finally, I brought up the topic and asked him if he could remember anything. He thought about it for a while, and I tried helping him along by telling him what William and I remembered. For a while, we talked about other aspects of our childhood, and then Scottie thought of something significant. 

He told me that running out of the woods did not ring a bell, but he did summon up the images of hiding in his closet. Many nights, Scottie was terrified of falling asleep. He said he remembered always feeling like something was watching him at night, something dark and evil. 

That was not all. Scottie could not remember why, but to this day he felt ill every time he went near what we used to call Baker’s Woods. He said even talking about it gave him the chills. Whenever he went anywhere near that area, he always had that sensation of being watched. 

That must have been the place. Baker’s Woods was only located about six miles or so from Scottie’s childhood home. It seemed an awful long way for us to run, but children do have that energy and vigor that adults do not. I supposed if we were terrified enough, we could have run that distance without stopping. What we were doing out there, none of us could remember. 

I began to think that something intelligent intentionally placed blocks in our memories. I found it very difficult to believe we all three forgot everything that happened in Baker’s Woods and for the weeks that followed. I thought possibly, if whatever we experienced was traumatic enough, we might have blocked out the memories on our own. That seemed very unlikely though. 

I remembered emerging terrified from the forest, and William recalled hiding in Scottie’s closet from something we thought followed us. Although he could not say why, Scottie said Baker’s Woods terrified him to this day. In bits and pieces, I began to put that period of time back together. 

The following morning I was to run some errands. The ice box and pantry were nearly empty. Normally Momma and Sis did the shopping, but there were other things that needed to be done. Parts for some of the farming machines waited for me at the hardware store. The parts had to be special ordered, and they were supposed to be here several days ago. Everything seemed to want to work against us trying to get this harvest in on time. 

It took me about half an hour out of my way, but I decided to drive by Baker’s Woods while I was out. I passed Scottie’s old house and knew I would reach my destination soon. No one must have bought the house after Scottie’s family moved out. The roof fell in and weeds cracked and destroyed the concrete driveway. 

I found myself subconsciously slowing down as I proceeded along my way. A dizzying sensation came over me, and butterflies filled my stomach. It was a long time since I came to this part of the parish, and I found an unknown fear overtaking me. I did not care. I had to put that day back together, and nothing would stop me from reaching Baker’s Woods. 

Three miles before reaching the edge of the aforementioned section of forest, I noticed that damned kudzu taking hold in the area. That terrible plant was no less than a plague in this state. The wet, humid weather of Louisiana provided the perfect environment to allow the vine to thrive. Nothing fed on the vine; it was like a demon unleashed upon the south. 

I reached the remnants of the wooden fence that once marked the edge of Baker’s Woods, and chill bumps covered my skin. Several acres of the forest succumbed to the kudzu, but a large portion was still heavy forest. I knew the key to unlocking those lost memories must lay out there somewhere. I wished Scottie and William were here to take this step with me, but I was going to have to go at it alone. 

I pulled my truck over to the side of the road and parked. Removing my hunting rifle from the rack in my back window, I loaded it and threw the strap over my shoulder. I filled my pocket with what shells remained in the box and locked up the truck. Hesitantly, I crossed the road and entered that terrifying forest. 

Wandering around for hours, I tried to relocate some of the landmarks I knew as a child. So much changed over the years, I could not tell one location from another. After several hours, I found the most unusual things. Lying on the ground, as if waiting for me, laid three objects at the base of an ancient maple tree. All three were cut from precious stone.  I saw two small obelisks and a grayish colored pyramid. 

Stone collecting was a hobby of mine, so I recognized the three items in front of me. The obelisks were cut from aventurine, one blue and one green. The pyramid was by far the most valuable of the three. This object was cut from a large piece of flawless larvakite which is more commonly called Nordic Moonstone. I never recalled seeing these before, but something about them seemed too familiar. 

I reluctantly gathered the three precious stone items. Each one of them carved with designs, with some sort of artwork I never before saw. Examining them for a few minutes, I tried to figure out a way to make them fit in my pocket. The obelisks were every bit of eight to nine inches tall. At the base, the objects stretched three inches from one side to another. They were simply too large to fit into the pockets of my pants. 

I removed my sweat drenched T-shirt and wrapped the items in a bundle. I did not know what I was looking for, but these objects were not here by accident. They sat atop recently fallen leaves, so they must have been put there very recently. 

I was a seasoned hunter and a rather damn good tracker. I searched for signs of the individual who placed the artifacts for me to find, but I saw none. I saw no footprints or any disturbed leaves on the forest floor. After a thirty minute search, I found no broken twigs or bent branches on the underbrush that indicated anyone came through here recently. I found no trails leading to or heading away from the area. There was absolutely nothing that indicated anyone but me was here for a quite a long time. That was not right, and it greatly disturbed me. 

It was well past noon, and I had not even begun my work tasks for the day. I took the bundled objects under my arm and started back to the road. Another hour elapsed before I finally found the road and reached my truck. Giving up on the search, I went to town to take care of my errands. 

Daddy was furious when I returned with the parts. One of the machines was out of commission without the new parts. Because of my extended delay, we lost a whole day of work. We paid the two guys who run the machine to fart around all day doing nothing more than busy work. I tried to tell Daddy that things simply took a lot longer than we expected, but that was not enough for him. He kept me up that night until I finished replacing the damaged parts. 

The sun set four hours before I finally finished the work. I took a long, hot, soapy shower to get the grease and grime off of my body. I do not know what time I made it to bed, but I passed out as soon as I hit the sheets. Thirty minutes after sunrise, Daddy woke me up and told me to come down for breakfast. He was not punishing me for yesterday; he only expected me to get up and do my job today. 

That was one long workday, and I was glad when quitting time came. Momma told me I got some mail, and that it sat on the lamp stand by the front door. Before washing up, I went to grab my letters. Two pieces were junk mail, but the third envelope had a large stamp of a prison unit number along with the facilities location. It was another letter from William. 

In his letter, he asked me if I ever remembered calling him White Willie. I could not imagine why we would have referred to him that way. He stated in his letter that one of the Negro images in his dreams called him by that name, and it brought in for him a rush of memories and emotions. He swore that we all called him that once, but I only remembered ever calling him William or Willie, not White Willie. It was my guess that he was called that sometime while in prison and the Negro in his dream only brought that memory back to the surface. It made no sense for Scottie and me to call him that. It was only the three of us running together as kids, and all three of us were white. I read over the letter several times, but no memories resurfaced of having ever called William by that name. 

Scottie may have had some Mexican in him somewhere, but he looked like a white guy with dark brown hair, brown eyes, and well tanned skin. William was about as white as they came. His blond hair, blue eyes, and greater than normal height made him look like a Viking. I had some American Indian in me, somewhere around one quarter, but it did not show in my appearance. It simply made no sense for us to call William, White Willie. 

Everyone spent the week putting in overtime. That included Daddy and me. Five days passed before I went back out to Baker’s Woods. I tried thinking, I tried sitting and writing, and I tried driving the roads around the fields again. Nothing helped to jar my memory. Something happened, something Scottie, William, and I all three forgot.

What could possibly be so traumatic to make three of us block it from our minds? 

Sunday, after church and dinner, I drove back out to that place. The thought of venturing into the forest again terrified me much more than it did a week ago. This time, I wore my Smith and Wesson .357 magnum in a holster on my belt. My hunting rifle hung down my back held in place with a leather strap. In an old backpack, I carried the three stone objects, some granola bars for energy, and three bottles of water. I stood at the edge of the forest for fifteen minutes before I finally made myself enter. 

The sun blazed in the cloudless sky, yet the forest was darker than on a heavily overcast day. I had a keen eye, and I kept a good watch all around me as I walked. Although I could not see anything, I could not shake the feeling I was being watched. I heard squirrels running through the dry leaves. I even heard a deer gently snooping in the distance. Other than my own, I heard no other footfalls that indicated someone was stalking me. 

Rather than wandering around without aim as before, I headed straight in the direction of where I found the artifacts. I had a keen sense of direction, and it did not take me long to find my week old trail. I followed that straight to the former resting place of those three objects. I found the stirring I created as I searched for the person who put the objects for me to find. My tracks around this small area were clear as day, but I still found no tracks from the one who placed the items of precious stone. 

I walked more than a mile further into Baker’s Woods. Suddenly, I saw something very familiar to me. A large circular area, probably fifty feet in diameter, sunk in the center eight feet from the ground level. Squatting in the center stood an ancient oak tree. This tree was unlike any other oak I ever saw. At its base, the trunk of the tree was five feet in diameter but only four feet tall. Large, thick branches sprouted out from the trunk, curving slightly so they remained four feet off the ground all the way around. As the ground sloped upward, so did the thick branches. An odd array of thick branches snaked out from the tree’s center. This was the perfect climbing tree for the three of us back in the day. 

I clearly remembered the three of us kicked back resting in the tree. We played around in the woods and, when we grew tired, we came here to rest. The oak was every bit as large as I remembered it. It did, of course, have fifteen years to grow since I last saw it. Although I remembered spending a lot of time hanging out on this tree, nothing significant came back to me. Whatever happened that day, it did not involve our favorite tree. 

As I began to walk away, an obscure memory came rushing in on me. Although I knew it was only ever Scottie, William, and I playing together; I seemed to have vague memories of a fourth friend. We never brought any of our other friends out here because we did not want to let the location of our hangout becoming public. I knew something was wrong. I had a strong feeling of a fourth member of our group, someone the three of us blocked from our memories. I turned back to look at the tree once again. 

The way the sun beamed through the treetops, contrasted by the shadows of the branches, filled me with a terrible sensation of dread. Looking at the branches of the old oak, I was sure there was one more child that ran with us back when. That must have been the memory we all subconsciously forgot. Something happened to that fourth friend, of that I no longer had any doubt. 

I recollected us carving our initials one of the branches, so I walked back to the tree and searched for our markings. I saw my initials, Scotties’ initials, William’s initials, and the initials of one other person. The unknown set of initials were marked W-J. Could this friend also have been named William? There was absolutely no denying there was one more child who ran with us when we were young.

Who was this fourth person and why didn’t anyone remember him? 

After looking over those initials for several minutes, something in the back of my head told me to alter my course to walk to the South-West. I still did not know what it was I was looking for, but I knew it would be in that direction. Memories only returned in small bits and pieces. My memory of the fourth child and what lie ahead of me continued to elude any clear thought. 

Before I continued forward, I removed the rifle from my shoulder and scanned ahead using the mounted scope. For a brief second, I thought I saw a Negro dart from the cover of one tree to another. I watched for a while, but I did not see him again. I through the high powered rifle back over my shoulder and removed my six-shooter from its holster. The pistol would be much easier to fire on the spur of the moment. Firing the rifle took some time to aim. 

I approached the trees where I saw that black fellow, but I could not find any tracks at all. I thought perhaps that Negro was nothing more than a figment of my imagination. It was probably only the result of seeing that fourth set of initials. I tried too hard to remember our other friend, and now I was seeing people who were not there. 

Then again, it could have been the person who left the three objects in my path for me to find. I never knew anyone light-footed enough to move around the leaf covered forest floor without leaving some sort of a sign. 

The underbrush began to grow thick as I walked, and wild blackberries plucked on the threads of my clothing. These blackberry bushes were really only that in name. The berries that grew on these wild, thorny bushes were no larger than a pencil eraser. These were much more bitter than the cultivated blackberries that grew around the house. I made it about half of the way through the thicket when I though I heard whispers coming from behind me. I turned to see and old black man standing at a distance. 

“Hey, you,” I yelled. “Hey, who are you?” 

The man gave me no answer. He did not seem to react to my words at all. The old Negro looked like he could be the grandfather of the boy I saw earlier. I yelled at him again, asking him who he was. Again, the man made absolutely no reply. 

I slung my rifle from my shoulder and planted the butt against my shoulder socket. I did not plan to shoot the man; I only wanted to get a good look at him through my scope. I shuddered when I saw the man’s magnified face. Something about him seemed more familiar than it should. I did not know many colored fellows, and I knew none that old. Still, somehow I knew that I knew him. I lowered my fire arm because I did not want to make him think I was going to fire. Using a gun’s scope to look around was not an uncommon thing to see around here. You just do not keep the weapon trained on the other person for very long. It was best not to give the other person the wrong idea. 

When I brought my weapon down, the man was gone. I must have scared him. That was not my intention; I only wanted to get a better look at him. I yelled out that I meant no harm and apologized for pointing my gun at him. I told him that I only wanted to get a better look at him. I never got any reply from the man. 

I waited another five minutes to see if I saw the man again. Eventually I gave up and continued through to the other side of the berry thicket. Once on the other side, I looked back once more. The old man was no where to be seen. 

I wondered if maybe there was a colored family living in a house somewhere in the forest. Very rapidly, a feeling of paranoia built inside of me as I realized I was being watched. Did these people know something? If they did live out here, they would know of anything strange. Everyone around here tended to be superstitious people, especially the blacks. If there was something supernatural happening around here, they would surely have plenty of stories to tell. I found myself hoping I could get the chance to speak with them. 

With no others within view, I continued my walk through the forest. I wanted to carry my rifle in my hands, but I did not want to appear threatening. I left my revolver in its holster as well. Having one of my weapons at the ready would make me feel much more comfortable. With these light-footed coloreds running around, having a gun ready would make me feel safer. If one of them wanted to shoot me though, I would never hear it coming. Anyone who could move around the forest like that could easily get the jump even on a seasoned hunter as me. 

Keeping too much of my attention on what was around me and not in front of me; I tripped over a large stone and fell. It took everything in me to hold back my screams. I broke my big toe, and it hurt like hell. If I was carrying my rifle in my hands, it would be broken as well. I fell hard to the ground, hard enough to knock the wind out of me. With my rifle in front of me, I would probably have broken some ribs in addition to my toe. 

I rolled over in a seated position. I was not too surprised when I saw a man about my age, another Negro, standing a hundred-fifty yards away. He stood almost directly in the way of my path. The man closely resembled the two other colored fellows I saw earlier. He must be the father of the boy and the son of the old man. The resemblance was so uncanny, there was no doubt they were closely related. When I rose to my feet and dusted the dead leaves off my clothes, the Negro was gone. 

Those people were beginning to scare me. Why were they taunting me like this? If their intention was to make me worry, they most definitely succeeded. I wondered if they were trying to get me lost, trying to keep me off track. Maybe they were trying to walk me until I passed out so they could rob me. This was a thousand dollar rifle. That was a lot of money for these back woods blacks. Folks like these lived the same way they did a hundred years ago. A thousand dollars would go a long way for them. 

That made me wonder if the boy really did leave these engraved objects for me to find. They had to be worth several hundred dollars apiece, if not more. I could not imagine them giving up such valuable objects if they had any inkling of what they were worth. Surely even these back-woods coloreds would know the objects were valuable just because of their beauty and flawlessness. 

I wondered if they in fact did plant the objects for me to find. Maybe they wanted to draw me so deep into the forest, they could kill me and no one would ever find out. The animals would pick my body apart long before anyone could find me. If they did mean me harm, I resolved that I would not make it easy for them. 

I went back to my thoughts about what William said in his letter. He thought we called him White Willie when we were kids. I wondered if that fourth kid, the kid with the initials W.J. was a colored kid. If his name was William too, we might have called him Black Willie. That could help explain why we called William what we did. That man, the one around my age, could possibly be Black Willie. Perhaps that was why he seemed so familiar to me. 

I still had no recollection of a fourth friend, and I found it hard to believe that I ever had a colored friend at all. Regardless, something strange was going on here. I did not want to leave this forest until I figured out what that was. 

Walking to where I saw that middle-aged Negro, I began calling out in a regular speaking volume.
“Willie, Willie” I said several times. 

As before, I received no reply. They were really starting to piss me off. I grew very weary of this game of hide and seek. The next time I saw one of them, I would not take my eyes off of him until we were face-to-face. 

I knew I only had an hour or two before I had to turn back. I was not going to get caught here in these woods at night. I needed to reach my truck before the sun set. I picked up my pace at the cost of making more noise. Trotting through the woods, I again found no tracks or footprints left behind by that colored man. 

After another twenty minutes of walking, I saw a clearing in the forest up ahead. I got there to find the clearing was created by that plant from hell, kudzu. As much as I wanted to learn the truth, I decided this would be a good time to turn back. 

When I swiveled about, I did not see any tracks. I saw no trail made by others, but even worse than that, I did not see any trail of my own. I gave up being quiet and careful, and I made a very obvious trail as I quickly walked the last part of my sojourn. A sense of horror filled me. It was as if nature herself worked against me. Perhaps these coloreds used some kind of voodoo magic to manipulate the forest into carrying out their bidding. What if they wanted me for a sacrifice for some pagan ritual? 

I leapt back and involuntarily whimpered when the elderly Negro man appeared right before my eyes. One moment he was not there, and the next moment he was right in my path. He did not slop from behind a tree or brush; he appeared out of thin air. 

I trained my high-powered rifle on him and yelled, “Don’t move old man.” 

Despite my warning, he started to slowly walk toward me. 

With my scope pinpointed on his chest, I yelled out again, “I mean it boy. I’ll blow a hole in your chest.” 

He did not stop. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw someone else. It was the little black boy. He too slowly walked in my direction. I checked to my right and, sure enough, the middle aged Negro came toward me from that direction. I did not know what to do. I could not murder three unarmed people, especially not the child. 

It soon became apparent they were not walking directly toward me. Rather, they appeared to be walking more toward one another. Being careful not to get too close to the vine infested area, I slowly stepped backward. The three really did not seem to be paying any attention to me. All three of them stared at the point where they would meet. 

What happened next scared me more than ever before in my life. The three colored folks walked directly into one another, passing into each other like ghosts. This could not be possible, and I began to realize just how terrifying Baker’s Woods were. The three Negros merged and became something, something not human. It was difficult to explain or even believe. They stood inside one another, reminding me of those wooden Russian dolls. It was the most unholy thing, and now it walked directly at me. No wonder Scottie, William, and I ran out of here like maniacs all those years ago. 

I fired two rounds, but the shots simply passed right through them. I fired two more shots and turned to run. The only place I had to go was in that kudzu filled clearing. I decided I would rather face snakes rather than the thing coming toward me. 

The ropey vines caused me to trip several times. I could not run; I had to high-step my way through. At first, I thought it was a result of my panic, but I realized the stone objects were emitting a slight vibrating hum in my backpack. The closer I got to the center of the clearing, the louder the humming became. Eventually, it sounded like my pack was full of swarming bees. 

The next thing I knew, the world instantly rose up around me. It became obvious I fell into a hole when I hit the hard floor below. Now, a radiance shone through my bag. I removed the two obelisks and the pyramid from the backpack to find all three of them glowing brightly. The relics produced enough illumination to light up the whole chamber. 

I found myself sitting up in a large stone chamber. I glanced around the room and saw no other way out. The only apparent exit was through the opening above me. I tried to stand, but the pain in my right leg was unbearable; I broke it in the fall. Fear numbed the pain enough to keep me conscious, but there was no way I could stand. I did manage to pull my way out from under the hole above. I sat the items on the backpack and pulled that along with me. 

I removed the remnants of my expensive rifle from my back and tossed it to the ground. The butt cracked and the barrel bent when I hit the floor. There was no fixing the gun at this point. Before tossing it away, I checked to see if the scope made it intact. One or more of the lenses shattered leaving the high-quality sight completely useless. At least I still had my revolver at my side. 

Strange etchings covered the walls on either side of me. They did not resemble any American Indian symbolism that I knew, and I knew a lot on the subject. The beings depicted in the images appeared to be some form of two-legged, upright walking lizards. They did not look like alligators. They did not look like any reptile that lived around here. The creatures looked more like dinosaurs than anything else. 

The scene seemed to depict some procession of the creatures. Above the creatures, carved among the clouds, were what I could swear were flying saucers. Along both sides of me, the lizard-men appeared to walk toward the back wall. 

I tried to look behind me to see what was carved on the back wall. I involuntarily screamed. As I turned to look back, I twisted my broken leg. The excruciating pain was so intense, I thought I might black out. One thing and one thing only kept me conscious, and that was terror. I slid a good fifteen feet from the opening above, trying to reach the back wall. Following only seconds after my scream, the young black boy jumped down into the hole with me. He fell fast, but not as fast as he should. It almost appeared that he drifted rather than fell. 

The boy slowly stepped toward me, and I moved away from him as quickly as I could. I did not know where I was going. Twenty more feet and my back would be against the wall. The boy was not three steps into the chamber when the younger man dropped in behind him. A moment later, the elderly Negro followed. I didn’t know what I was looking at. They were obviously not normal, but they looked every bit as human as me. 

They drove me on backwards toward the wall behind me. None of the three moved any faster than I did. It felt like I shuffled my way back for eternity before my back hit a solid surface. I could go no further. I knew there was no escape. When I stopped, so did the boy. My body trembled with agony and fear. The younger man moved a few steps closer until he stood in the same space as the boy. The elderly man joined them until all three occupied the same place at the same time. Although they were not transparent, I could still see each one of them inside the other. 

For the first time, I heard them speak. The three voices spoke in unison. 

“Hey Bryan, where’s Scottie and White Willie?” the young boy asked. 

At the same time the middle aged man said, “Why didn’t you guys ever come back for me?” 

In a bitter and hateful tone, the elderly man said to me, “You sons of bitches. I guess it was okay to leave the black guy behind. You guys never did like hanging with a nigger did you?” 

It was almost too much for my mind to take in. All three of the spoke different words, but I somehow knew they were all the same person. Black Willie, our old childhood friend, stood in front of me in three different stages of life. My brain found it difficult to process this paradox. Logic told me this could not be, yet there it was. 

Black Willie, one of my best of friends, never came out of the forest with the rest of us. We left him here to this strange fate. 

“I remember you now,” I said. “None of us could remember you. We tried, but we could not recall you ever having existed.” 

All three Willies spoke again at the same time. 

Just as hateful as ever, the elderly man said, “We agreed to put the keys in place together, but you honkeys chickened out.” 

“I’m trapped here,” the middle aged Willie said. “This place is a doorway. When you guys didn’t put the other keys in place, it suspended me in this state. I have been trapped in this forest all these years.” 

“Where did you guys go? I thought we were all spending the night at Scottie’s tonight,” the youngest Willie asked. 

Every memory of our childhood chum returned to me. The four of us were best friends. We never did anything without the others. I remembered us playing in the woods and happening upon this chamber. The kudzu vines were not here then. We spent weeks trying to figure out how to get down there. Eventually we stole a long rope from one of the neighbors. Tying it firmly to a tree, the four of us climbed into the chamber. I remembered the four objects were the first things I saw, two pyramids and two obelisks. 

The objects glowed like lamps; they glowed just like they did now. We examined the chamber, excited that we found something amazing. Black Willie said we would become famous because of this discovery. In the back wall – the wall upon which I rested – were four equally shaped holes as the artifacts. 

The engraved murals on all of the walls showed an ancient race that used this room as a doorway to travel to another place. We argued and debated for a while, but eventually our curiosity won out. Each one of took an artifact and carried it to the back wall. We all agreed to count to three and then slide the keys into place. Scottie counted off for us but, when the time came, everyone hesutated but Black Willie. When he pushed the pyramid into place he became like a ghost. He was no longer solid. He was not there, but he was still there. 

I remembered the room filling with a dozen or so ghostly images of the lizard beings. Scottie, William, and I dropped our keys and ran. We climbed up the rope as fast as we could. When we got back to ground level, we ran. We ran and did not stop until we reached Scottie’s house. We hid in his closet, but at that point none of us could remember why. It was as if our other friend was erased from existence. 

Terrified, but not sure why, we hid in the closet for hours. Scottie’s mother eventually made us come out and sent White Willie and me home. By the next day, no memory of Black Willie or fleeing from the forest remained. We did not forget him; he no longer existed in normal time-space. 

“What can I do?” I pleaded. “I’m so sorry. We didn’t come back because none of us remembered anything. I’m sorry my old friend, so-so sorry.” 

“Hey, that’s cool,” the youngest Willie assured me. “You’re here now.” 

“The other three keys must be put in place,” the Willie who was my age said in unison with his younger version. “If all four keys are put into place, the door will open and everything will go back to the way it was.” 

Apparently, the three versions of Willie always spoke over one another. It strained my mind to comprehend what I experienced. 

“You didn’t give a damn about me before. I’ve been trapped here for eighty years and now you suddenly care.” 

I scooted my body around so I could see the back wall. The four holes were right above me, one of them plugged with a sunstone pyramid. I took the blue obelisk from the top of my backpack and reached up to slide it into place. 

“No,” the youngest Willie yelled. 

“All three keys must be put into place.” 

“It’s about time you man up and do what you agreed to do sixty-eight years ago.” 

Without hesitation, I slid the object into place. I felt the bonds holding together the atoms of my body break. In an instant my body became immaterial. I reached for another of the keys, but my hand passed through it like it was an illusion. Like Willie, I was no longer a part of the physical world. 

I looked to Black Willie in hopes he could help me. My childhood friend was gone. Somehow, simply by conscious thought, I drifted upward out of the hole. I tried to run to my truck, but the farther away I made it from that chamber, the harder it was to hold onto my existence. 

A few days later, Scottie received a phone call. 

“Hey man, it’s me, Black Willie” 

“Damn, I haven’t talked to you in ten years. What’ve you been doing all this time?” 

“Listen, I have a strange question to ask you. When we were kids, do you remember ever having a friend named Bryan?” 

“No, it was always you, me, and White Willie.” 

No one remembered me. I was erased from normal time. Until Scottie and White Willie put their keys into place, I was doomed to this pit, this chamber covered in Kudzu.

Copyright © 2019

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Once Like You

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Since waking up a few minutes ago, I seem to be unable to recall anything about myself, how I got here and why I was completely nude. A quick look at my surroundings told me I was in the valley of an enigmatic mountain range. The mountains rose so high I could scarcely see their sharp jagged peaks. Patches of lush green grass scattered about the valley floor, but pristine snow still covered part of the ground and most of the mountains. How I was not freezing, being as I was absolutely naked, I did not know. 

I did not feel the merest discomfort from being unclothed. The temperature seemed perfect. The grass was very soft and even seemed to impart some sort of energy into me as I walked through it with my bare feet. No insects swarmed in the air, ready to bite or sting me for whatever their reason may be. I did not walk for long at all before I realized even the sharp rocks making up much of the valley floor caused me no pain at all as I trod over them with my exposed feet. 

I walked for days without seeing any sign of others. I was scared of dying of thirst and hunger, but even after three days I felt no need to eat. I had an appetite, but I was not hungry at all. In all that time, I did not sleep once. I had no idea what was going on, but I knew things were not right. 

I finally decided to attempt to climb up one of the mountains in order to try to get a better look at my surroundings. Without any sort of gear to aid me, I found it to be exceedingly easy to scale the steep slopes. I felt like I did this my whole life. Sharp jagged rocks that should leave my hands and feet damaged at the least did not harm me at all. I jumped from handhold to handhold with the skill of a mountain goat. 

I was not sure how long it took me to meet the summit. Feeling no hunger, no exhaustion, no pain and the fact the sun never seemed to fully set behind the horizon before sunrise came from the other direction left me with very little with which to calculate time. 

From this ice-covered mountain peak, I saw the massive mountain range continuing as far as the eye could see in one direction, but they appeared to level out into plains possibly a ten to twelve day walk from here. I scaled back down the steep mountain slope with the same ease with which I ascended it. I knew there was no possible way I could climb that kind of mountain so safely, quickly and effortlessly, yet there I was. 

I walked through the long dusk-to-dawn phase of the day until several hours after full light. I climbed through rock outcroppings, snow that came up to my knees, and beautiful patches of soft lush green grass. Suddenly the ground began to quake causing a rockslide to come careening straight to the valley I happened to currently occupy. 

The roaring boulders rolled straight down the mountain to stampede right where I was standing. I knew I had no hope and death was an absolute certainty. I do not know by what miracle I was saved, but the boulders hardly gave me a nudge as they bounced off my exposed body. At that point I was sure this had to be a dream. 

Two solar cycles – I hesitate to call them days any longer – before my estimated arrival at the edge of the mountain range, I saw the first people since the moment I became conscious a week or so ago. Their society was a magnificent thing to behold. Giant evergreen trees grew generously on the side of a steep slope in this section of the valley. These people built a civilization in the branches of those trees. It appeared they moved from tree to tree and to various levels my means of rope elevators, pulley and basket systems and a series of ramps and walkways. 

I approached the enigmatic mountain forest and before long I could see dwellings built throughout the trees, from their roots to their branches. The closer I got, the larger the trees became. I thought it impossible such trees could grow to this size while clinging to the side of a mountain, but there it was. 

I guess the inhabitants of this city in the trees saw me coming, because as soon as I reached the shade of one of the gigantic evergreens a giant woven basket began to lower from above. When it reached my level, I was rather taken back due to the enormity of the thing. It did not look at all that large from a distance. It could easily accommodate several dozen people. Without further hesitation, I walked into the opening of the basket. Once I was safely inside the basket began to rise. 

It reached a large rope and plank bridge several hundred feet off the ground and came to a stop. Clearly no one was getting on, so I assumed that meant this was where I was supposed to exit the lift. I climbed out of the basket elevator and onto the bridge. Not sure which way to go, I picked a direction randomly and began walking. I walked from the branches of one tree to another before I finally came upon someone. 

Standing in a large open platform area I saw three beings. I don’t know what they were, but they were not like me. These things stood half my height over and were covered in a slightly shaggy, green fur. I assumed these must be the ones who created this magnificent treetop city. The size of the elevator-basket made more sense after seeing these people. I suppose I should have been afraid of such strange creatures, but I sensed absolutely no danger to myself at all. 

One of them said something to me. He held up one hand and repeated a fairly long statement twice. I assumed he must be greeting me, as he made no hostile moves toward me. I was afraid of getting the statement wrong and somehow insulting them, so I decided to speak in my language and hope they understood. 

I held up my hand as they did and greeted them. I told them I had no idea where I was, and that I wandered the rough landscape for several weeks now. I explained I had nothing to eat since I came around and wondered if they might have some food to share. 

“If you desire food, the trees bear many fruits, nuts and berries,” the second one said. 

“This is wonderful,” I said with excitement. “I hoped you would be able to speak English.” 

“We can now,” said the third, the only female present. “But we are not speaking your language. You are speaking ours.” 

“How could I speak your language?” I asked, but this time I listened closely to what I said. I indeed spoke the statement I intended to speak but found the sounds coming out of my mouth did not correspond to English at all. I was really speaking in their language with no effort; I did not even notice that was what I was doing. 

“All here in Ivory Plains are able to communicate with all others,” the second of the large green humanoids said. As his eyes scanned over the treetops and continued, “If you listen long enough, you can even hear the voices of the animals and trees.” 

“Ivory Plains?” I inquired. “I don’t know who I am, and I don’t know where I am.” 

I explained my situation to them. I told them about everything that happened since I became conscious those weeks back. I explained everything up to the point of meeting them. 

The first of the three and the female exchanged glances before again turning to look at me. 

“You know what’s going on here, don’t you?” I asked. 

“Yes,” the female replied. “But we cannot tell you.” 

I knew I should feel anger, frustration, anxiety or something, but instead I retained my cheerful attitude and hopeful spirit. If they said they cannot tell me, then I believed them. Not wanting to be a bother to my hosts, I did not press the issue any further. 

I spent a full day in their company. I enjoyed some delicious fruits and nuts they made available to me. I was not hungry, not even after all this time and walking, but it was still nice to have a full belly and a satiated palate. 

Eventually the Randu, as I came to learn the green humanoids called themselves, lowered me back to the ground in the massive woven basket. When it reached the ground, I exited, and the basket was immediately raised behind me. With a wave goodbye, I continued my journey to the open plains. 

The one thing that did bother me was not knowing who I was. Did I only begin to exist such a short time ago, or did I exist prior to that? I could not remember anything before being here, but I had a sinking feeling that I was not from here. Something, actually many things just did not seem right to me. 

Four more solar cycles later I finally reached the edge of the mountains. No foothills filled the region. Instead, the mountains ended abruptly giving way to a great open plain. The grass grew consistently six inches in height. I expected it to make me itch as it scraped against my still naked body, but like so many other things it did not cause me any discomfort at all. As a matter of fact, it felt soft and comforting. 

Far beyond the plains I saw more mountains. Immense mountain ranges created a horizon line at the opposite edge of the vast, open grasslands. Everything seemed so incredible, like it was pulled from the pages of some fantastic storybook. 

The grass was not so evenly tall as I first suspected. The ground sloped ever so gently but the tops of the grass remained at a consistent level. Only a few hours into my trek through the tall blades and I was more than half my height below the point where the grass terminated at its tips. Despite the taller, denser growth I found I still had absolutely no difficulty pushing my way through. 

I traveled this way for two days, and on that second night another quake shook the entire landscape. This time there were no boulders to roll down from the mountains. It’s not like it mattered anyway. When I was caught in the slide of massive boulders, the stones glanced off me leaving me unscathed. It did seem like this earthquake was more intense and lasted longer than the previous event. 

After spending two more days walking through the grass, suddenly I stepped into a clearing. It was not really a clearing per say. It was a small village woven completely from the large grass that filled this part of wherever I was. At least a dozen of these domed grass structures I could see occupied the area. The walls were thick from the extremely numerous layers of the tall broad blades. The grass was still attached to the ground and a living vibrant dark green. The lengthy blades in between the buildings twisted and wove into freestanding pillars which created pathways resembling the part in someone’s hair. 

I did not see any of the village inhabitants for a few minutes, and it is no wonder why. The beings were only about three feet in height. They resembled a mix between a monkey and a human, but their entire visible body was covered in green scales with black around the edges. Their scales were the same color as the grass that seemed to cover these plains allowing them to blend in easily. 

Three of them approached me, and what I saw should have scared me, freaked me out or something. Instead, I reacted very calmly and collectively. The beings had no mouth or nose. Gill-like slits on their necks acted as breathing organs. As they looked at me inquisitively, I had the feeling they were trying to tell me something that I could not hear. 

The three turned to each other and appeared to be having a silent conversation. After a few minutes, two of them began to walk and motioned for me to follow. The third took hold of my wrist with its six-finger hand and led me behind them. 

As we walked, I came to realize this was more of a city than a village. The thick buildings and the generous number of pillars prevented me from seeing very far, so I only had a rough guess as to how large this place actually was. My greeters walked me in between the buildings and pillars for twenty minutes before we finally reached our destination. 

This structure was larger, and more fancily designed than the others. The outer weaves of grass created depictions of the life of these beings. The walls were three feet thick, being comprised of many layers of sheets of woven grass, still attached to the ground and living. Inside the depictions were larger and of better quality than those on the outside. 

Did they weave all of this by hand, or did this species somehow have the means to coax the grass to grow as they wish? 

Small stools, yet again made from the live woven grass, spaced evenly around the room. Others joined us and began taking seats. I was not sure what to do. The two who led the way here were no longer in the room. A couple of minutes later those two returned carrying what essentially looked like a bean bag and put it on the floor to give me a place to sit. Their stools were simply much too small for my larger frame. 

Once I took my seat, they began tracing what I would call runes into the air. A faint trace of smoke followed their fingers as they wrote these words into the air. I didn’t know what to do, so I did not do anything. I watched and took in the wonder of what I was seeing. This went on for several minutes, and then I thought I began to hear voices. Actually, it was more like I was seeing images in my head of what they were trying to tell me. 

I tried opening my mind to their communications, and it worked. Suddenly the images became clear, but I still heard no sounds. These creatures had no mouths, and I saw nothing on them that looked like ears. I think they were deaf-mute. 

Even though this image communication was something to which I was absolutely inexperienced, it did not take me long before I was fully proficient. I explained my situation to them from the time I woke up to now. I told them I did not know where I was, and I was on a quest to find out. 

Suddenly I saw the image of a group of about 300 humans making their way across the plains. They were clearly a nomadic people as they pulled skids loaded with their belongings behind them. I did not think, after as long as I already traveled, there would be any humans here, but finally I knew I was not alone. 

In what I guess could be called their language, I asked them if they knew where I could find these other humans. They traced some more runes in the air with their fingers. The images I saw now were from the perspective of the top of one of the nearest mountains. It showed the nomads were not too terribly far from me. 

I told them I had one last question; could they tell me how I got here. Like the others, they said no. I did not even bother to argue. As with the Randu, I believed them when they said they could not tell me. 

The little, scaled beings invited me to spend the night in their hamlet but told me I needed to leave in the morning if I wanted to catch up to the other humans. 

My hosts were ready to see me off bright and early. They had for me a gift of a shoulder sack made from thin strips of the grassy reeds. Inside they placed six pieces of fruit. Three were golden and somewhat resembled pears, and the other three looked kind of thorny with a coloring of beautiful pinks and purples. 

Since they could not communicate with me on any higher level without the combined power of their minds, I could not ask them what they were. To be honest, I was not sure why they were even giving me food. Since I woke up in this place, I never had any actual need to consume anything. The ground itself somehow imparted the energy into me to keep my body sustained. 

I thanked them for their gifts, although I did not know if they understood what I was saying. Several of the beings escorted me through their city for thirty minutes before reaching the edge of their woven city. From there, they pointed me toward the direction of the other humans and gave me a gesture I assumed was bidding me farewell. A small mountain peak off in the distance was slightly off from the direction I was given. I made my way toward it keeping the peak slightly to my right as I walked. 

The continually sloping ground and steady level of the grass began to give me the sensation of traveling underground. Even though the grass was much denser here than any place I encountered as of yet, it conveniently bowed and curved in groups so as to produce something of a cavern network. I was deep in the darkness created by the dense foliage when the ground again began to quake. 

In the grassy plains I did not have to worry about boulders coming from the mountains, but I never really had to worry about that anyway. So far nothing in this place seemed to have the capability of injuring me in any way. The rumbling thrashed the ground beneath my feet, but I had no difficulty remaining standing. The first two quakes after my waking scared me as I worried about serious or even deadly injuries, but this time I felt no such fear. Instead, I rather enjoyed the thrill of riding the thrashing ground as I easily remained erect. 

Once the event was over, I decided to take a seat and try a piece of the fruit my most recent hosts gave me. I chose a piece of the golden fruit, which I found to have a flavor more like that of ripe berries than that of a normal hanging tree fruit. It was quite tasty and fulfilling. For whatever reason, I had no need to eat; but it was nice consuming such a delicious piece of fruit. 

No sooner did I finish eating the scrumptious golden fruit did I find myself becoming sleepy. Since I was able to remember, I never felt any need for sleep. I could sleep if I wanted to, but never once did I feel it necessary. That was until now. I could not say for sure, but I was quite positive the gift from my most recent hosts had some sort of sedative effect on me. I became so used to not needing any slumber, I found myself afraid of falling asleep. Struggle as I might, it was a losing battle. Before I knew it, I drifted off to a strange dream world. 

I could see nothing but a faint white blur. I heard noises of various sorts. Some I seemed to recognize while others I did not. Every few seconds or so I could hear a beep. There were voices that sounded as if they were amplified producing something of a hollow sound. Several other voices nearby spoke unintelligibly for how long I don’t know, but it seemed like forever. A louder voice cut through theirs, and all went quiet except for the steady beep I heard every few seconds. 

When I awoke from my dream it was sometime during the dark period of the day. Buried eight feet below the surface of the grass, the darkness was almost complete. Before it faded away from memory, I tried to take note of the details of my dream, but the harder I tried to remember the quicker they slipped from me. I was not positive it was the fruit; but if it was, I had two more chances to dream. 

I wanted to eat another piece immediately, but what if this was all I got? Would I have to go back to those strange, reptiles I will call them for a lack of a better word, if I wanted to dream after this? Would they even give me more fruit if I asked? 

As much as I wanted to dream again, I was afraid this fruit was my only chance. I did not want to eat them all right away and never be able to dream again. I was sure, in this strange place, I did not have to worry about the fruits going bad. Now my biggest question was, what do the other fruits do? 

By the time I got back to my journey, I retained only vague glimpses of the bizarre dream. I remembered beeping and muffled voices, but that was about it. I shrugged my shoulders and continued on in the direction the small, scaled creatures told me I would find more people like me. It was very interesting meeting beings of such varying sorts, but I could not wait until I once again saw some other humans. 

After several hours of effortless travel through the tall, sturdy grass I encountered something new. A mound rose from the ground standing twenty feet in height and eighty feet at the base. None of the tall grass grew on the mound. In fact, the thick grass seemed to stop a few feet from the base all the way around. Instead, a very short, matted grass covered the mound. 

Night time, or whatever equivalent there was of that here, was setting in so I decided to climb up the hill and see what I could see. 

I was not sure what was happening, but I actually found it a little difficult to climb this hill. I scaled a mountain like it was no problem, but I was having difficulty getting up this grassy knoll. It took me a few minutes, but I eventually made my way to the top of the rounded hill. This placed me above the top of the grass line, which seemed to maintain a constant level despite the contour of the ground below. 

There were other hills similar to this one scattered about in the distance, but something else took hold of my attention. In all the time I was in this place, I never got a really good look at the sky. Something was always blocking me from seeing too far in any direction. I never understood why there was not a full night with each day, and now I knew why. 

The firey ball I saw in the sky and thought it was the sun, well it might be a sun, but not the sun. The illuminating sphere passed by and continued on in a straight line. Far beyond it I saw a dimmer, then a dimmer light which seemed to go on for eternity. If that was not enough, this was not even the only series of stars. Lines of ever dimming lights created a stelar grid as far as I could see. I stared in amazement until the new sun broke above the high, craggy mountains behind me. 

I found me a comfortable spot in the grass to lay back and took a bite from one of the pink and purple fruits. It was a little tart but very delicious. It almost seemed to melt in my mouth, and it did not take me long at all to eat the whole thing. 

I heard that familiar beeping very softly, moments before I fell to sleep. Once I began my slumber the sound became much clearer, but that made no sense for me to hear it before I fell to sleep. Perhaps I was simply anticipating it, so my mind made me think I was hearing it. What could that sound be? Every few seconds I heard the beep. For some reason that made me think of the way the “suns” in this strange world worked. 

I could see nothing but a bright blur, so I tried to focus on what I could hear. There were two voices, that was for sure. I was unable to hear what they were saying though. It was as if my ears were somehow muffled. I could not move at all. It was if my entire body was paralyzed because I was unable to make even the slightest twitch. 

Suddenly and unexpectedly a wave of indescribable pain shot through me. It was a pain unlike any I ever experienced. The anguish felt as if my skin were on fire and every major bone in my body was broken. I wanted to scream out, but I couldn’t. I could not even move enough to ask for help. This dream lasted much longer than I wanted it to, and when I did finally awake, I remembered every detail as if it happened in real life. 

For a moment I considered throwing the other two pieces of the pink and purple fruits away, but I eventually decided against that. Granted it gave me a horrible nightmare, but I don’t think my last hosts would give it to me if there was not some reason for it. I thought perhaps I had an adverse reaction to the effects of the fruit, but I did not really believe that. I believe it did exactly what it was supposed to do. Why they wanted me to go through this I did not know, but there had to be some purpose behind it. 

I once again, and with moderate difficulty, climbed the hill carpeted in the short, matted grass. I wanted to get my bearings by finding the mountain I was using as a landmark. I had no difficulty locating it, but there was a problem. I was quite sure it was much further to the right than it was when I first set out. That could not be, but there it was. After I made it back down the hill, I started walking further to the right of the mountain peak to compensate for the mountain being in the wrong place. 

In my time here in this strange place, I encountered some most unusual situations, but I do have to say a moving mountain was by far the oddest thing I saw as of yet. Perhaps the land masses were somehow floating on a massive ocean. Could these frequent quakes be the result of such islands colliding as they drifted about. If so, that raised more questions than answers.  

I pondered over the meaning of those two dreams as I continued along my way. I did not know what they were trying to tell me. Why I could hear, but only muffled voices, and why I could see but only a blurry white light I also did not understand. I wondered what effect eating both a gold and purple fruit at the same time would be. That was not something I thought I would actually want to attempt. 

A few more days passed as I traveled through the grass forest and wondering about the moving mountain. I ascended one of the carpet-like grass covered hills any time I came around one. Each time I found the mountain that was once my landmark was indeed moving further to the right. I simply could not comprehend how this was even possible. 

If I knew where I came from, how I got here and how long I was here, perhaps that would provide me with some answers. As it stood I knew no more about this place than what I experienced since waking up here. I did not know where I was, but I was positive this is not where I was from. I began entertaining the notion I somehow shifted or was abducted to some other world. That was the only explanation that seemed to make any sense. That was such a crazy notion though. 

I hoped I was still traveling in the right direction. With the mountains moving, and the outlandishly tall grass that did not allow signs of usage, I figured I could be off by tens of miles by now. I just had to keep the faith and trust my instinct to allow the mountain landmark to continue moving off to the right. 

With two more days of hiking, I finally located the camp of nomadic humans. I was beginning to think I missed them completely. No one was wearing any clothing. I was naked since I got here. I wondered if that was what happened with them too. None of the beings I met since my awakening wore anything, anything at all. 

I stood there for a moment, but as soon as someone spotted me they began to call out and becon me to them. 

People of various races and ages made up this piece-mail tribe. It really was an odd mix of people, but that was of no consequence. I was elated to find other humans besides myself. It was so good to know I was not alone. They did quite overwhelm me at first. 

Everyone wanted to introduce themselves to me, and to ask me a bit about myself. At some points I probably had ten people asking me questions. Finally someone stepped forward and moved everyone away from me. 

“Please, you must forgive us,” the aging man said. “It is not often, not often at all that we come across other humans.” 

He then gave me an open-ended invitation to join the caravan. The old man told me not to give an answer now. Instead he invited me to stay with them for a while. When they found this clearing they decided to take a break from their wandering and remain in one spot for a while. Some of them were already at work weaving the grass around the clearing into huts. Tents made of bundles of the dry reeds were set up in the clearing. 

Far on the other side of the encampment were multiple four legged creatures I did not recognize. They looked sturdy and strong, so I figured they must be the beasts of burden these humans used. If they were nomadic, they needed something to haul their wares. I figured I would learn what they are soon enough. 

A banquet was held that evening after the last sun passed by. The celebration was one of new life and rebirth. Apparently this was a holiday to them. I felt bad because everyone brought food but me. I really felt out of place with them. Their customs were obviously much different than my own. I found the whole thing had a pagan-like quality. 

Finally, after nearly two hours of prayer, everyone began to eat. I was reluctant since I brought nothing to contribute, but several of them told me not to worry about that and to go get myself some food. 

When the celebration ended, I stayed up for a while talking to one of the elders in the group. I told him what I experienced since waking up that day. We talked about some of the other species that inhabit the area. When I finally asked him if he knew how I got here, the conversation came to a halt. 

“You don’t know yet?” he asked me. 

I told him no, but I keep trying to figure that out. I then asked if he could tell me how I got here. 

“I’m sorry, but I cannot tell you that,” he replied the same reply the others gave me. 

“Why? Why won’t you tell me?” 

“It is not that we won’t. When we say we can’t, we really mean that we cannot tell you,” he explained. 

That did not make sense to me at all. They all seemed to know the answer to my question, but no one would give it to me. He acted as if everyone were physically incapable of telling me. It was as if it were more an inability than a reluctance to do so. I knew I would get no more information from him on the matter, so I pressed it no further. 

When the elder excused himself for the evening, I reached in my sack and pulled out one of the shiny golden pears. I rolled it around in my hands for several minutes, debating whether or not I should eat it. I was just about to take a bite when I heard a few people approaching me from the side. I returned the fruit to its carrier before they reached me. 

I hoped they would pass by, but instead they asked if I minded if they joined me. Why not? I wasn’t going to dream, so I might as well have the company. I guess I was visibly upset, because one of them asked me if I was alright. Initially I shrugged my shoulders and told them I was fine, but after a little prodding I began to open up. 

I explained to them everything, just as I did the elder. I told them how incredibly frustrated I was becoming because no one would give me a simple answer to a simple question. 

“That question is not so simple here,” one of them told me. I was about to say something in reply, but he continued talking. 

“Travel out to the edge. You will know it when you see it,” he said. “Rest and dream once you are there. That is how we both remembered.” 

The two gave me more information on how best to reach ‘the edge’ but neither would tell me what the edge was. We talked all the way until morning. I found out they never met the Randu, and they described several I had yet to meet. 

When the new sun appeared for the day, the two led me to one of the hard-to-climb hills to show me my destination. They pointed out the mountain I originally used as a landmark to try to find them, and told me to follow it. I thought they may be joking, but the looks on their faces seemed sincere. I thanked them, told them to say goodbye to the others for me, and set off in that direction. 

Each day I could see the mountain moved to the right some, but I continued to follow it as instructed. The grass became significantly shorter, and I encountered no other beings. After following that mountain for nearly two weeks, I reached a point where the grass stopped, only to grow in small tufts here and there, and the ground became rough and rocky. Even though I fell victim to no injury for as far back as I can remember, I took care walking over the sharp rocks. 

I was a day into transversing the rough ground when the next quake hit. This time it tossed me around much more so than any previous incident. I was not hurt, but I could not gain my footing for several minutes. This stony surface must be more susceptible to these tremors. 

Midway through the second day I believed I was coming to what the two people kept calling the edge. It appeared the landscape ended in a cliff or a steep dropoff. When I finally reached my destination, I could not comprehend what I saw. This simply could not be real. What I saw was impossible. 

The mountain I selected as a guiding landmark was indeed moving, as was every other mountain range for as far as I could see. They were not floating, they were not drifting, they were walking. Creatures unlike anything I ever imagined, creatures with bodies hundreds or even thousands of miles across roamed across an infinite ivory colored surface. The quakes were not what I thought at all. The enigmatic creatures walked on eight legs, and they walked very slowly. Each time one of the feet came back into contact with the ivory plain, it sent a shockwave through the creature’s shell. 

Three days I spent frozen in that spot, trying to comprehend what I saw. There spread out before me were an innumerable amount of walking, living mountain ranges. I wondered if they all had the same sort of surface as this, or if each one was totally unique. 

Finally on the evening of day four at the edge, I decided to eat a piece of the golden fruit and dream. It was quite refreshing. The flesh was tender, and it contained no seeds or fiberous core. It was not long before I was asleep on the rough ground. 

This time the dream was different. I was standing in a strange room. Odd devices filled the room, and several people in white were tending to a body lying on a bed. I turned to see a lady enter and approach the person who appeared to be in charge. She was asking about the man in the bed. 

That lady, I knew her somehow. She was my wife. I had a wife. So what was she doing here? 

I looked at the bed, at the body laying still with tubes running into it and wires connected to it. I looked at the familiar ring on the right hand, and I began to understand. The body was me. I ran to my wife and tried to tell her I was alright, but she could not hear or feel me. For some reason her words came out garbled and backwards. 

I tried to give my wife a hug, to embrace her one more time, but the dream wore off. I was back on the stony ground. I wished the details of this dream would go away, but I remembered it like it actually happened. I remembered it because it was real, but this was real too. 

Where was I? This helped me answer where I came from, but not where I was. It obviously wasn’t hell, but it surely did not seem like heaven. I had to get back to the elder. I was ready for answers. 

By the time I got back to the location where I met the humans, they were gone. I thought about the man’s invitation, and suddenly I knew exactly which direction to go. I walked for several days and caught up to my fellow humans. I quickly sought out the elder. 

When I found the aged man, I told him everything I discovered. 

“Good, then you know,” he said. 

“Am I dead?” I asked. 

“No,” he said as he looked down at my fruit sack. “As long as you try to hold on, you will remain in both worlds. He meant I had to give up my last two dreams; he meant dying. 

I pleaded with him to tell me where I was. 

“Now you know the truth, I can tell you. Every possible concept of a universe exists, an infinite number universes exist, thus every dream world is real. This was the dream you went to when you had your accident,” he explained. 

“But can I wake back up?” I asked in a pleading tone. 

Shaking his head the elder explained, “No. The fact you’ve been here so long means you are not going back. The most you can do is hold on and dream, but that will not last you long. You are almost out of fruit.” 

“What were those things, what is this thing we are riding? I’ve never seen or heard of any such magnificent creatures before. What are they?” 

“We call them the megaliths. I don’t know if they have a true name, but that is what the dwellers of the Ivory Plains call them.” 

“How many of them are there?” I asked. 

“The Ivory Plains go on for eternity, so I suppose the total number of them would be infinite,” the elder explained. 

“Is it possible to travel to other megaliths?” 

“Oh yes,” the elder replied. “When two come together, it is possible to move from one to the other. 

“So long as you stay on your monolith, you are immortal. Nothing can harm you and you’ve no need to eat or sleep. You will stay young forever. If you travel to another megalith, you will begin to age once again,” he told me. 

“How do you know this?” I inquired. 

He looked at me with a smile and said, “Because, I was young once like you.”

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Lake in the Mountains

Word Count: 5,772

As a child, I remembered watching the armored soldiers return from their campaigns carrying treasures beyond imagination. The sound of their horns signaling their return always drew me running out to the marble balcony. It was incredibly awe inspiring to watch the giant wooden doors slowly open until the men came through them marching in unison, their armor shining bright in the sun. Although they always entered the city with the recently won treasures covered under heavy drapes, I always hoped I would get a glimpse of what they were carrying one day. 

Once the last of the soldiers entered our majestic mountain city, the cranks would then begin to turn the other way and the colossal doors would slowly swing closed. Two teams of horses were required to operate the city gate, which became every bit as impenetrable as the sky-blue granite walls for which it was a portal. The soldiers did not march very far before they stopped and set their burden on the ground. There they would stand at the ready until the gate was closed, and the first locking bar was in place. When that massive passage was open, it was the only time our great city was vulnerable. 

The treasures were taken to a processing area where it was sorted and sent to various areas of the city. Precious metals were melted down and reforged into what the people of the city wanted or needed. Gemstones were used in artwork, jewelry and the like, while harder gems were used to create extremely effective cutting utensils. Anything that could not be reused, such as wooden idols, was burned once any precious stones and metals were removed. The ashes would then be taken to the far end of the lake where it was at its deepest and poured in as a sacrifice to the spirit of the lake. 

Seven smaller cities within a ten-day travel range surrounded Argon. These cities provided our shining city with the food necessary to sustain such a large population while being paid handsomely for their agricultural products. At the same time, they enjoyed the security of having the army of Argon within only a few days march. No other kingdom dared to threaten Argon, and that immunity spread to its neighbors. 

The power and success that came to the city of Argon was solely due to the discovery of how to mold and shape marastine into the desired form. The strange metal, which appeared almost to be crystal filled with tiny flakes of gold and silver, was only ever found in the form of artifacts from some long-lost civilization. It was fashioned into armor that could not be penetrated by any known weapon. Weapons made from the marastine retained a keen, razor-sharp edge indefinitely. The metal absorbed heat while always remaining at a cool temperature. 

Equipped with such armor and weapons, the army of Argon conquered one land after another. Nothing could stop our forces. Kingdoms who surrendered and pledged their loyalty to Argon were given quarter, their lives and buildings spared. Those kingdoms who chose to resist were crushed under the strength of our mighty warriors. 

Precious metals such as gold, platinum and marastine decorated the buildings and statues of the city making it shine as a warning to the world to not dare attempt marching on Argon. Every building in the city was constructed from marble stone blocks mined from the southern tip of the mountain range. The light-blue granite walls almost blended in with the sky on a sunny day. It truly was a place fit for the gods. 

I was excited and ready when the birth month of my ninth year arrived, and I was conscripted into the military. All young men began their military training when they reached their ninth year. Many, including myself, began training and preparing for our military service years before then. I could not wait to wear that glorious armor and wield one of those gleaming weapons as my own. That would not happen until the birth month of my fifteenth year. Until then I would spend almost all of my time training, learning to master the weapon of my choosing. 

For my first year, I participated in rigorous physical exercise and unarmed combat. It was a few months into my second year before I began training in melee combat. I proudly trained vigorously with a multitude of weapons working to find the one that would suit me the best. We continued daily training with various implements of war until the winter of my third year of training arrived. 

Being large for my age, and anticipating growing much larger, I selected the bardiche as the weapon upon which I would focus the remainder of my training. It was a weapon that required both hands to utilize properly, so I would be unable to carry a shield. The long shaft of the weapon and oversized blade would allow me to defend myself from those who might try to stand against us. 

I was under the impression our training would begin with our marastine arms, but we started with crude wood and iron weapons instead. These were much heavier than the gleaming weapons Argon’s warriors carried, and the armor was so heavy it made staying standing erect and balancing quite difficult. The armor we wore during our daily workout routines was not too cumbersome, but this iron armor was much heavier than I ever expected it to be. 

Combat training in iron armor did not begin until six months after it was issued to us. Until that time arrived, we performed exercises, went on long hikes through the mountains and performed drills. To me the most difficult part of this training for me was getting back on my feet after being knocked prone. It was a struggle, but I was determined to master this skill if I had to train with every bit of down time I had. 

My strength increased by the day it seemed, and after many months of intense practice and training, I did something that astonished my superiors. When the two men barreled me in the chest with the relatively small battering ram to knock me to the ground, I maintained my footing. I was just as shocked as they were. I never saw anyone take that ram to their armored chest and not be thrown to the ground. 

Soon after that I was taken out of the normal training program and was instead placed in a training program for Argon’s elite forces. My iron armor was taken away, and I was fitted with a customized suit of marastine field-plate. I was also given a weapon worthy of my growing might. Having become so accustomed to the iron weapon and armor, this new equipment felt virtually weightless. This armor did not even weigh as much as the leather armor in which we trained. 

I continued to grow in stature and in skill. My new training took on new aspects such as mountain climbing carrying my armor and weapon on my back, traveling through mountains streams so as not to leave a trail, and close quarter combat. The latter was difficult because of the size of my weapon. In total my bardiche was more than four feet in length including the spike at the butt end. It was difficult, but not impossible. Soon I became quite adept at dominating the space inside of tunnels and narrow hallways. 

When graduation finally came, I graduated as unit commander for the new elite unit. I had twenty-five specially trained soldiers directly underneath me. My hope always was to excel in training, but I never imagined I would be the commander of the most recent elite unit. 

I saw my parents for the first time in six years at the end of the ceremony. They were so proud of me and the strong man I became. I only had a week to spend with them before I had to report for duty. It was a pleasant surprise to find out I had a baby sister born with the same birth month as me. We were all overjoyed as my sister took her first steps in the week I was home. It made me feel good. Keeping her protected and providing her with a good life was what my service was all about. That was what I thought at first anyway. 

My first mission was expected to take eight to ten weeks to complete. We were going to provide the local government, loyal to Argon, from constant bands of raiders terrorizing the region. This city paid its dues to Argon, so as promised, Argon sent them much needed military support. Five units composed of 26 men in each unit and my unit of myself and thirteen men handpicked for this mission set out early in the morning. 

This time I was the brave soldier in the gleaming armor and the large polearm gripped tightly in my hands as the children watched us march beyond the boundaries of the magnificent gate. I marched proudly with my unit as my parents and young sister watched from the stone balcony. Ever since I could remember, I could not wait until it was my turn to march from the city to bring back to it the riches of the world. 

Our expedition took us through the southern edge of the mountains, which was a ten-day march on its own. Once we reached the base of the mountains, we traveled past one of the cities that provided Argon with food. It was smaller than I expected it to be. It paled in comparison to the majestic city in which I was raised. I knew other cities were not as wealthy as Argon, but I did not think they lived in such old and dilapidated structures as I now gazed upon. 

We marched for most of the day, every day for another two weeks before reaching our destination. This city of Drawnbrass was no more than a collection of a gross of buildings at the absolute most. Most of the people were dressed in rags and stared at us as we marched to the city office. I stood with the rest of the soldiers as our commander went inside to announce our arrival and receive a briefing on the current situation. He would apprise me and the other sub-commanders of the condition in the region so we could begin discussing our strategy. 

The expedition commander informed us armed bandits attacked several transports making off with anything from gold to fermented drink. These raids were beginning to have a devastating effect on the population of the city and those living in the surrounding countryside and forest. Using maps of the area provided to us from the city officials, we began to devise our plot to crush the band of raiders and ease the burden of the local population. 

Our blond hair and tan skin clearly set us apart from the locals with their red hair and freckled skin, so attempting to use a decoy transport to draw them out would not work unless we had some of the locals assist. The worry was if we told any of the locals of our intent, they may get word back to the bandits. We decided to keep the reason for this visit a secret, and after a few hours we departed carrying a sack full of mundane items we received from the city office. 

We backtracked for a full day before we stopped. Our plan was to have some of us return as travelers passing through in hopes of drawing out the bandits. Once we accomplished that task, we would track them back to their hideout and await the return of the rest of our forces. With our forces recombined, we would put an end to the bandits. 

First, we had to obtain a wagon. There was a farm house another half-day of backtracking away, so we sent a group of ten men to go purchase a wagon from that family. They were instructed to say we needed it to help some of the wounded return to Argon. The commander gave them ten gold coins, but he instructed them to begin the offer with only two coins. Ten coins was an outrageous price to pay for a wagon, but the group had to make them believe they were headed away from Drawnbrass. 

When dawn came the next day, the main body of our forces marched back to meet up with the men tasked with obtaining a wagon. Only two hours into our march, we met up with the others. They purchased the wagon and two horses for a total of seven gold coins. 

It only made sense to send in men from the elite unit as reinforcements would be half of a day behind. As commander of the elite unit, I took charge of this mission and picked five other men to join me. It was a tarped wagon, so four men and our weapons had enough room to fit comfortably. The other two of us sat at the front of the wagon, our eyes constantly on the watch for any movement. 

Early the next day we passed Drawnbrass and headed down the road said to be most terrorized by bandits. I was armed only with a dagger since my bardiche was much too large to conceal from view. I had seated next to me the best swordsman in the entire expedition. The two of us only wore our basic clothing covered with robes, so we had to remain unarmored. The four men in the back of the wagon were armored and ready to attack should melee ensue. 

Wearing hooded robes to hide our identity as Argonites, we returned through Drawnbrass in the wagon we purchased and headed down what should be the most dangerous route. We were nearly an hour past Drawnbrass when six robbers jumped out of the bushes to rob us. One wielded a sword, and one wielded a bow, but the rest of them were armed with meager farming tools. I noticed one affixed a hook on the back of a rake. That was a wise idea. Such an implement could be used to drag armored men off their horses quite easily. 

We pleaded with them not to hurt us, and we turned over our purses just as they demanded. I begged them to please not hurt my daughter in the back. I explained to them she was sick with a pox, and we were trying to get her to a physician. This was enough to dissuade them from wanting to go rummaging through the back of our wagon. They took our two purses full of coins and left. 

The attack was nothing like the city officials in Drawnbrass described. They were not well-armed, and they did not appear to have the discipline and coordination as a group to call them well-trained. These so-called bandits took only the money we tossed to them and left. None of them made any truly aggressive moves. These were ragtag farmers. This was no armed and trained militia. I did not understand why soldiers of our caliber were brought in to deal with hungry peasants. 

Despite my feelings on the situation, I had my orders to carry out. I was a soldier, and I did not get to make up my own orders. We gave the six thieves an hour to get ahead of us, then our best tracker, our most stealthy man and I set off after them. Tracking them was not difficult. It seemed them men simply ran off into the forest making no attempt to keep their tracks hidden. At one point the paths converged into what was already a well-worn trail in the forest. 

Their flight clearly took them to a small cluster of farmhouses along with several barns nearby. I had my two men stay hidden and I carefully made my way to a barn in whose windows several lamps could be seen. Using my training, I quietly crept up to the barn as I kept myself hidden by the multitude of objects and haystacks between me and it. No one was guarding the barn or any of the other buildings for that matter. I saw no one watching for intruders, and I easily made my way to the barn window without being seen. 

I was somewhat taken aback by what I saw transpiring inside the building. It appeared the building was transformed into a crude temple. The men who took our purses were handing coins to everyone inside. They were nothing but simple farm folk dressed in tattered clothing and appearing quite malnourished. As the men distributed one coin to each person present, the man at what could scarcely be called an alter prayed to their god for forgiveness for the bad thing they had to do so they could feed their families. 

This was definitely not what I was told was occurring during the briefing before leaving Argon. I expected to face organized forces outnumbering our own, but instead I found hungry peasants trying to make sure their families had something to eat. During his prayer, the man pleaded with their god to have the people of Drawnbrass ease off on the heavy taxes imposed upon the farmers. Without those crushing taxes, he said, there would be no need to resort to the lives of thieves simply to survive. 

Making my way back to the two men waiting for me in the forest, I informed them of what I observed. They both had the same reaction as me. They both expected a small army, not a bunch of hungry farmers. Carefully, we made our way back to the other four waiting with the wagon. I explained to them what I saw and instructed two of them to take the wagon and return to the main force to inform them of our discovery. I gave them orders to instruct the other units to halt their march as the threat was not what we were told it was. 

The remaining four of us stayed hidden as we watched for any further activity from the thieves. Morning came and we saw nothing more of the ragtag bandits. I was a bit shocked when the rest of our forces arrived at our location. With no more need to stay concealed, myself and the others came out of our hiding place and joined the main group. 

I immediately approached the expedition commander and told him my men should have informed him there was no genuine threat to Drawnbrass. The commander said my men did indeed inform him of the specifics of the situation, but that nothing in our objective changed. Our orders were to locate the criminals plaguing Drawnbrass, and that was what we were going to do. 

Despite my protests, the commander began instructing the other units to flank the cluster of buildings and attack on his command. Again I objected to what would be nothing but a slaughter of simple people who were only trying to survive. The commander had orders to locate and neutralize the threat, and I had my orders to obey the expedition commander. 

I provided the commander with the intelligence we gathered and even went so far as to lead him and his unit to the hamlet. Once there I informed him my unit’s part of the mission was over. We located the thieves, and the specialized skills of my unit would not be necessary for the final part of the mission. Needless to say the expedition commander was not happy about this, but as commander of the elite unit I was well within my power to make such a judgement. 

At the expedition commander’s signal, the other five units converged on the small congregation of homes. This was not the glorious conquest I was always told was the goal and pride of the army of Argon. This was the senseless slaughter of helpless people. The people of the hamlet had absolutely no chance against the armored soldiers of Argon, and the slaughter was over in less than ten minutes. 

When the unit commander finally came out of the barn, he was leading a group of men carrying two poles with a tapestry stretched between them. This was the usual method we used for transporting items, but there were no items of value inside that barn for us to take. The group got closer, and I could see they took all of the wooden idols inside the makeshift temple. The only time the armies of Argon took items of religious value was when they were adorned with gold and jewels. 

Wooden idols held no value to us, so I did not understand why we were taking them. The expedition commander was already very upset my unit did not take part in the slaughter of those hungry farmers, so I did not press him on the issue. I wished I did, but despite my strong feelings against his actions, I kept my mouth closed. 

I was happy when we reached the watch towers jutting out of the mountains on either side of the road and heard that so familiar sound of the horns informing the gate we were returning from our mission. When the expedition commander had the items pilfered from the farmers covered with blankets, it made me wonder what those soldiers were actually carrying all this time. 

Were they really bringing nothing but gold and riches, or did some of them also return with worthless wooden artifacts? Was that why they always returned with everything covered? 

The items were taken to the sorting center despite the fact none of them contained anything of value to Argon. It was almost as if the expedition commander was trying to hide what he did outside of Drawnbrass. I could not help but wonder how often this same scenario played out right in front of everyone. 

Was this really the army I was so anxious to join? 

It made me feel ill to think that I idolized these soldiers all this time thinking they were fighting in battles to rid the world of evil. Now it seemed our armies were the evil that plagued the surrounding lands. Believing in what Argon stood for was easy while I lived virtually my entire life behind its protective walls. After seeing the world outside of my home city, I began to have serious doubts in the city’s leadership. 

There was no reason for us to take and destroy those wooden idols. It was not bad enough that we went in and slaughtered those helpless people, we had to destroy the idols of their gods as well. The only reason I could see for doing this was to eradicate the memory of their gods from history. We had no right to perform such a blasphemous act. The gods were there, and it was not up to the soldiers of Argon to decide which ones were to be forgotten. 

If I thought it would accomplish anything, I would go to the high commander with my report. I did not think he would listen either. In fact, I was quite sure he would not hesitate to have me killed if he thought I was going to expose to the citizens what the army was really doing. I found it impossible to believe that atrocities such as occurred on my first expedition could go unnoticed by the one man in charge of the entire army of Argon. 

Never feeling so conflicted in my life, I went to one of the altars on the shore of the crystal lake in the center of Argon. Asking the Spirit of the Lake for guidance was the only thing I could think of to do. I never actually prayed to the Spirit of the Lake before, so I was not sure if it would listen to my words or not. Either way, I had to try. I could not continue to stand by as innocent people were being slaughtered and their gods systematically erased from the memory of mankind. I could not betray my city either. No matter how much I disagreed with the officials, I swore an oath to stand and defend the city and its allies. 

Stuck between the proverbial rock and a hard place, I hoped the Spirit of the Lake could provide clarity. On my way I observed a team carrying a covered load out of the sorting facility, and I was sure it was no doubt the wooden idols the expedition commander had the soldiers steal, no doubt on their way to be burned. I was absolutely appalled that they were going to destroy what may be the only representations of those gods, cursing those gods to be lost to the obscurity of man’s past. 

I reached the lake and found an altar that did not yet have anyone praying at its base. I got on my knees and bowed my head. I never did this before, so I was not sure how to do it. After considering it for a few minutes, I simply began to talk. I told the Spirit of the Lake what happened and how it made me feel. Regularly checking to see there was no one close or approaching me, I continued with my prayer. I asked the Spirit of the Lake to give me guidance on how I should handle the situation. 

I waited once I ran out of things to say, unsure of what was supposed to happen next. I continued to wait, and nothing happened. The gods were notoriously unreliable in terms of listening to the prayers of their followers, so I had no reason to believe the Spirit of the Lake would be any different. 

Finally returning to my quarters, I removed my armor and hung it on the stand in the corner. That glorious, impenetrable armor that was a recognized symbol of the city of Argon, and what did it protect. It made trained soldiers invulnerable against the rakes and pitchforks of starving peasants. Making a half-successful attempt to put those thoughts out of my mind, I laid in my small bed and tried to get some sleep. 

I was plagued with nightmares all through the night. I stood on the shore of the lake watching boat after boat filled with the ashes of burned idols. They carried the ashes to the far side of the lake and dumped the ashes into the water. Ghostly spectres swirled around each ship until the ashes were deposited into the water. At this point, the ethereal forms themselves sank into the water. 

I do not know how, probably because it was a dream, I could feel the Spirit of the Lake grow angrier each time the souls of the idols absorbed into it. 

As I stood on the shore and observed the surreal scene playing out in front of me, I watched the last of the boats unloading the spirits of those needlessly destroyed idols. The boats were not returning to shore, but rather sailing up the hill and into the sky. Suddenly the water began to heave as if something underneath was trying to break free. The surface began to boil as a giant, oozing black mass rose from the center of the lake. 

The darkness began to spread across the water and up the shores on all sides. It continued to creep up the hills until it reached the walls of the city. Engulfing everything in its path as it made its advance, for some reason the black sludge left me untouched. 

I could hear the people of the city screaming as the dark slime enveloped their bodies melting them away almost instantly. Horns sounded from all directions warning the population of the deadly threat, and people fled to the massive doors. They were too late, and the flowing darkness consumed them all. 

As appalled by the whole thing as I was, I continued to stand there doing nothing. Once the flowing ooze reached the height of the city walls, it stopped its advance and began to retreat back into the once crystal-clear waters of the lake. When the water once again settled to be smooth as glass, I awoke from the terrifying dream. 

My first reaction was to jump up and run to the small window in my quarters, lean out and take a good look at the lake. A shudder passed through my body as I saw a crew loading ashes into a boat. It was only one boat, and not a whole string of them as in my dream, but it still brought that strange image clearly back to mind. I wanted to run down to the pier and tell the men to stop, but I know that would only make me appear crazy. 

It was only a dream, but was it really? 

Never in my life have I had a dream so extremely vivid that I could remember in full after waking. I did not think it could be a coincidence that I went down to the lake to pray only hours before having such a disturbing dream. Not one time in my life did I ever go down to the lake to pray, and the one time I did I seem to have had some prophetic vision. Nearly in a panic, I tried to figure out what I should do. I could think of nothing. 

I knew I could not get anyone to listen to me if I tried to explain my dream to them. If someone came to me and tried to get me to leave the city because they had a bad dream, I would probably have them put somewhere they could be safe from themselves. That would probably be the same reaction if I ran through the streets yelling for people to flee the city because the Spirit of the Lake was angry. 

Being the commander of an elite fighting unit, I was aware of secret tunnels exiting the city of which most others were unaware. I knew of many tunnels, but only a few people in the city knew of all of them. I did not want to abandon my city, but there must be some reason the black oozing mass did not wrap around me and melt me as it did the others. 

Could the Spirit of the Lake be giving me a chance to flee an impending doom? Why did it choose me to warn out of all the people in the city? 

Surely there had to be people more worthy of survival than me. If I fled the city, and my dream turned out to be nothing more than a dream, I could be brought up on charges of treason and desertion. If my dream was indeed a warning from the Spirit of the Lake, then I believed staying here would mean my death along with everyone else. 

Anxiety caused my hands to tremble the longer I took to make up my mind. My mind and my heart were both telling me to listen to the dream the Spirit of the Lake sent me. The gods may not list to everyone’s prayers all the time, but maybe our god listened to me this time. Finally, I could take it no longer and I got myself dressed in my gleaming armor. Taking my bardiche from where it hung on the wall, I headed for one of the nearby hidden tunnels. 

Being careful not be seen, I slipped through a narrow alleyway and into a small cubby. There located on the ground was a switch disguised as a crack in one of the foundation stones. Pulling the lever, the back wall of the cubby opened up to reveal a tunnel hidden between the tenements. Taking one last look around, I slipped into the hidden passage and shut the door behind me. 

I followed the corridor as it winded through the adjoined buildings until it finally joined with a natural cavern in the stone of the mountain. That was where I was when I heard the screaming begin. Horns blew throughout the city, drowning out the cries of the people as they tried to flee the fury of the lake. Knowing there was nothing I could do to help anyone, I increased my pace and got away from the city as fast as I could. The screams of the doomed souls inside the city echoed through my head over and over even after I exited the tunnel and could no longer hear them. 

I was not sure if I could not hear them because of the city’s walls, or if I could not hear anyone because they were all dead, as in my dream. I wondered when I could go back in, if I could ever go back into the city of Argon. After leaving everyone behind, I did not know if I had any right to reenter the city. 

As I stood there in a state of shock, I watched as a small flock of birds flew over the pristine granite city walls. They made it perhaps fifty feet past the wall when they suddenly began to fall right out of the sky. It was like the air of Argon became poisonous. Not even birds flying over the city could survive. 

In its wrath, the Spirit of the Lake made the very air of Argon toxic to life. I knew at this point I would not be able to reenter the city any time soon, if I was ever able to reenter. The reality of the situation still had not caught up with me as it all seemed so impossible. Argon, the city that remained a shining beacon in the mountains for centuries, was wiped out in less than twenty minutes. 

I do not know why the Spirit of the Lake spared my life. Perhaps it was because I questioned the acts and motives of the city’s rulership. Perhaps it was because I refused to allow my unit to be a part of the slaughter of those poor people past Drawnbrass. Whatever its reason was for warning me, the Spirit of the Lake left me as the sole survivor of the once majestic city of Argon. With all of its riches now guarded by air that even kills birds soaring above the city, no one would ever again look upon that majestic city surrounding that crystal lake in the mountains. 

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When the Birds Fled

Word Count: 5,954

The sun scarcely peeked over the horizon when I heard the blasting off in the distance begin for the day. Several years ago, work on the railroad began in this region. More recently the demolition crews began to create a pathway through the mountains which would allow the trains to travel further east. I awoke to the sound of dynamite exploding every day for more than two months now. It was beginning to seem like they were never going to finish that daunting task. 

We had to relocate our cattle to the land of another rancher because the stress of the constant noise was causing some of them to fall ill. Our laying hens were producing a fraction of their normal yield, but we were not able to travel every day to collect the morning eggs. My family was going to have to make do with what food they did provide us. 

On this particular morning it did not take me long to tend to my daily duties. I got what livestock we still had at home fed and then pulled weeds in the garden with a couple of hours left until mid-day. I pulled a few carrots and other vegetables per my mother’s instructions and brought them in with me when I went in for dinner. My mother and sister took them to prepare the vegetables for the supper meal as my father and I ate. As soon as we finished up, it was back out working in the garden again. 

Normally during the summertime, we would nap after the midday meal, but no one could get any sleep with those deafening detonations going constantly. Instead, I helped my father hitch the horses and get the wagon loaded with hay to bring out to the cattle. Once he set off to the neighboring ranch, I started getting a recently cleared section of the garden ready for another planting. 

It was shortly after noon when the loud explosions from the demolitions happening only a few miles away stopped. I kept waiting for the unnerving blasts to resume, but they never did. I was glad to have at least a short break from the constant noise of the dynamite tearing apart the mountains. I did not know why they stopped, but I hoped it was not because of a fatal accident. Three people already died in the two months since the workers began. 

My father returned home several hours later, and he was as surprised and relieved as I was the noise of the blasting ceased, even if only for a few hours. Normally the explosions stopped a bit before sunset, so we hoped the crews were done for the day. I was helping my father unhitch the horses when they began to grow jittery and unsettled. As my father and I tried to calm the horses so we could get them disconnected from the wagon, the chickens began acting up as well. These horses were very well trained, but we could not get them to settle down at all. 

Finally, my father told me to help him get one unhitched and then we would take care of the other. As soon as the animal was free of the wagon, it ran off like a bat out of hell. This only caused the second horse to act up even more. We finally got him loose, but not before it damaged the wagon wheel. It was not until after the horses ran off and things got quiet when my father and I both noticed a deep moaning which seemed to come from the very earth itself. 

Why did the blasting stop all of the sudden? What did they do? 

Mother ran outside to see what was going on. She said the dishes were dancing on the shelves from the vibrations. We were just as baffled as she was, and we could provide her with no answers. Almost as if on cue, the sky became dark as countless birds burst forth from above the forest. All different species flocked together as they fled the distant mountains. The sounds of their collective cries were almost deafening. 

My father ushered my mother inside and came back out a few minutes later with a rifle for each of us and both of our six shooters. I did not know what he thought these were going to do against millions of birds, but I was glad to be armed anyway. We watched the spectacle unfold for more than half an hour, and when the birds were gone the groaning in the earth seemed to be stopped as well. 

We were both in something of a state of shock as we watched the black stream of birds fade off into the distance. Neither of us knew what to say, so we just stood there in silence for a bit. Eventually I was able to muster up the words to ask my father what was going on. He had no more of an idea of what was happening than I did. After another half an hour or so, he told me to go inside and keep an eye on my mother and sister while he tried to go and round up the horses. 

I could not see the horses anywhere around, so I hoped they did not run off too far. It was not an ideal situation for my father to go off by himself at the time, but someone needed to stay with the womenfolk just in case. My father was a tough man and was perfectly capable of taking care of himself. I did as he said and went back into the house with my mother and sister. 

I closed and barred all of the windows except for one, in front of which I slid a chair where I could sit and keep an eye for anything outside. My little sister was terrified, and my mother was doing her best to keep her calm. I am sure my demeanor was not helping them at all, but I had to keep my focus while I stood guard. 

It was almost dark when my father finally returned home with the horses. Luckily, they did not run off too far, and he found them drinking from a stream about a mile into the forest. By the time he came home, my sister already cried herself to sleep, and mother finished up cooking supper. With my father back, mother woke my sister and the four of us sat down to eat. 

Once the blessing was said, everyone was quiet through most of the meal, including my sister. As we ate our supper, I waited for my father to tell me about getting the horses, about anything to help me understand what was happening. Finally, I asked him if he saw anything out of the ordinary, but he said no. Hoping for a little more than an abrupt, one-word answer to my question, I wanted to probe him for more information. I knew my father though, and that would only serve to irritate him. 

Father began to talk once he finished his meal. He explained how he tracked down our horses and found them drinking from one of our best fishing streams. He did not see anything out of the ordinary. As a matter of fact, he did not see anything at all. Not only were the birds gone, there were no other animals to be seen with the exception of our horses. He was not sure if they were hiding, if they fled or if it was some of both. Father did not have a good feeling about the whole ordeal, and neither did mother nor I. 

The only one who slept well was my sister. Exhausted from all her crying earlier, she slept through the night. The rest of us could not stop wondering what was going on, what happened in the nearby mountains. 

Father woke me about an hour after sunrise. That was the first morning in months I did not wake to the sound of dynamite blasting away at the stone in the mountains. If it were not so disturbing, I would have found it a relief. I really had to wonder what happened up there. I could not imagine what would make them stop their demolitions after continuing day after day for months. 

Could they have caused a landslide or possibly an earthquake, and that was the moaning that seemed to be coming from the ground? 

Out of all the possible scenarios I could conjure to my imagination, those seemed to be the most plausable. I shared my thoughts with my parents, and they both agreed those seemed to be logical possibilities. They were not able to offer up any better explanations than those. Still feeling uneasy about the situation, we had chores that had to be done. 

After getting the chickens fed, I went back over to the wagon where my father was attempting to repair the damage caused by the horses the previous day. We were fortunate that the only damage they caused was to one of the wheels. There were two extras inside the shed, so I went to retrieve one of them. 

As I was in the shed moving things out of the way of the spare wagon wheels, one of our neighbors, Mr. Schmidt came riding up on his horse. I could not hear what he and my father were discussing, but I assumed it had something to do with the cattle we were keeping on his land. The instant the man rode away, my father began yelling frantically for me to hurry. Forgetting about everything else, I pulled one of the wheels free and let everything on top of it fall where it may. 

Why my father was yelling for me like this, I did not know. Never in my life did I ever see him in a state of panic such as he was in now. As I was running back to the wagon carrying the cumbersome wagon wheel, my father ran inside the house and was shouting something at my mother. Going back to the wagon, he told me to hurry as he waved his arms through the air. 

I was running as fast as I could, but that was not fast enough. Having waited only a few seconds for me to arrive, my father finally ran to me to help me carry the large wheel to the wagon at a more rapid speed. We immediately started changing the wheel, my father being blunt in his instructions as he told me what to do to help. My mother and sister suddenly came out of the house carrying jarred vegetables and preserves. Loading these into the back of the wagon, the two ran back inside to grab more supplies. 

Trying to ask my father what was happening did me no good at the time, as every time I spoke my father gave me more instructions. No sooner did we get the wheel replaced, than my father told me to go get the other spare wheel while he took care of getting the horses. Whatever was going on, I hoped the horses did not go crazy like they did yesterday. All this effort in a frantic rush would be worthless if our animals acted up again. 

My mother and sister were still loading the wagon with whatever supplies they could. Father was already at the wagon with both horses by the time I returned with my charge. I got the weel mounted on the back of the wagon as my father finished up with the horses. We helped my mother and sister finish loading the wagon and we left everything else we had in the world behind. 

Once we were going, Father finally began to explain why he just had us load the wagon with all the essentials and leave our poultry and livestock behind. The neighbor told my father the blasting crew from the railroad unearth something ancient, something evil that was imprisoned in the stone. I had a hard time believing it, but Schmidt said a lot of our neighbors were evacuating the region. This unknown horror consumed everything in its path. Mr. Schmidt sent his family ahead and was going around the area warning the neighbors. 

My father did not say what it was the demolition crews set loose because he did not know. Schmidt did not get into too much detail, but apparently, he was very convincing for my father to have us pack up and leave like that. He was a good person and allowed our cattle and few sheep to graze his land so they could be further away from the constant explosions. There was no reason for us not to trust him. 

Several hours before dark, we saw two more wagons ahead of us in the distance. The road was very difficult to see because it was overgrown with grass and other foliage, and in some places one had to know where the road was to find it. I recognized the families in the wagons. The lead wagon was that of a family who lived closer to the mountains than us. The second wagon was that of Schmidt’s family. Mr. Schmidt caught up to us as the sun began to set behind the trees. 

Unfortunately, he was not able to convince any of the other families in the area to flee their homes. They thought he was being hysterical and overreacting. Everyone in the region who knew Mr. Schmidt knew he was a good and honest, God-fearing man. He was not the kind to spread a panic just because of a simple overreaction. I had no real evidence to draw this conclusion, but I could not help but believe those families that did not heed their neighbor’s warning would be dead soon. 

When darkness came, the earth again started to moan as if the very land itself was in tormented agony. Somehow it seemed closer than it did yesterday, but that could be my terrified imagination deceiving me. I could not hear any insects in the grass or in the forest located only fifty feet away on either side. Everything seemed absolutely quiet except for those cries of pain coming from the ground all around us. We pulled two of the wagons abreast then had the women and children get in between. The men sat either in the wagons or on the ground outside of them. 

Everyone including the women, but excluding any children under nine years, were armed. Women out here had to learn to shoot every bit as good as a man with the wild animals, bandits and occasional vagabond. I had my rifle in my hand and my six-shooter on my hip. I carried as much ammunition as my belt would hold. 

The moaning in the ground stopped after two hours, so the men began taking turns sleeping, while the others helped keep each other awake and on their guard. The women did the same. Only the smaller children were permitted the luxury of sleeping through the night. 

I was still terrified when my turn to get a few hours of sleep came, but I was so exhausted both physically and mentally that I had no trouble drifting into a slumber. 

The sun was minutes from peeking over the horizon when my father woke me. There were already some eggs and coffee made. I had nothing to eat since breakfast the day before, and the food smelled absolutely inviting. It was of course an extreme relief to know nothing happened, not to us, during the night. 

We could all feel it. No one was talking about it, but we could literally feel the unholy aura of something that was supposed to remain buried. As soon as everyone ate and the horses were tended to, we were again on the move, taking the most direct path away from the mountains as possible. 

I hated when we had to pass directly through the forest instead of alongside it. At least when the road passed through a field, we could see almost to the range of our firearms. In the forest, something could be hiding behind every tree, underneath every rock. If something attacked our small caravan, we might not ever have time to react. 

We finally exited the timberlands and were about to rest our horses when the moaning once again emanated from the earth. Several of the smaller children began to cry as we continued forward. We were simply going to have to work our horses a little longer. Everyone here was experienced with farm animals, and we knew when they were almost to their limit. 

The crying of the earth did not last as long this time, but it sounded even louder than before. Whatever came out of those mountains appeared to be catching up to us. When the moaning stopped this time, we took the time to water the horses and let them graze. I pointed out to my father my observation, and he pointed it out to the others. While we gave the horses some much needed rest, all three families began going through their wagons and discarding as much as they could. If we could lighten the loads, the horses could travel longer and at a slightly faster pace. 

Leaving behind some of the cast iron pots and pans would greatly help reduce the load, but none of the women would agree to be the one to leave hers behind. The same went for several things for both the men and the women. No one wanted to agree to be the ones to part with what few things they had remaining in this world. I was afraid that, if we did not pick up the pace, all this fleeing would be in vain. Hopefully the adults could come to an agreement on who leaves what before it was too late. 

Around an hour before sundown, we met up with two more wagons, two more families fleeing from a south-western facing direction. The members of one family claimed they saw the ancient entity with their own eyes. According to their account, a giant black mass flowed down from the mountain consuming everything organic in its path. 

Everyone still wanted to make some distance before dark, so the other two wagons joined ours and we traveled for another hour. Once we stopped, we got the five wagons in a circle and started a small campfire in the center. Men were keeping guard from each wagon the entire night, sleeping in shifts as we had before. The O’Riley family, the family that saw the dark abomination, told us it would not do us any good to use guns if that thing caught up with us, but we all stayed armed nonetheless. 

Mr. O’Riley waited until the young children were asleep before he got into the specific details of what he saw. He watched as the flowing darkness burst through the forest line and into the field housing his flock. The unburied horror was engulfed in massive whisps of black smoke that seemed to appear and disappear constantly. The sheep began to melt as the thing approached them, with very little being left of them when it arrived. It was not only the sheep either. O’Riley said even the trees and bushes melted as the thing approached. 

I did not want to hear anymore, so I went to join someone in one of the wagons keeping a watch for the rest of us. There were fifteen fighting aged men now, so we would be able to take shorter shifts and sleep a little longer. I joined another young man my age, and for the first hour neither of us spoke. He was one of the O’Riley kids, and one of the few people here to witness what came down from the mountains. 

The O’Riley boy did not want to talk about what he saw, and honestly, I did not want to know. If we got away, I would never have to know those details. If we did not get away, I guess it really did not matter. Instead, when we finally started talking, we discussed where we thought we might go if we could not go back home. I mentioned going west where the government was handing out homesteads to whomever wanted it. There was not enough open land left to settle in the east, and none of our families had anything of value with which to start life over. 

That thought made us take a pause to think about everything we lost. We lost our livestock, we lost our land, we lost our homes and we lost most of our belongings. I wondered if those neighbors who did not believe Mr. Schmidt’s warning were still alive, or if they melted away like the O’Riley’s sheep. The thought made me want to vomit. I tried to think of something else, but my mind kept going back to those who stayed behind. I never asked the O’Riley boy about their neighbors, and he never brought them up. 

Thank goodness I knew better than to hold my rifle with my finger on the trigger, because my father came up behind us and told me to lay down and get some sleep. I jumped and almost fell to the ground. Once we climbed out of the wagon, my father climbed in. 

I thought it would take me some time to get to sleep, but I again fell asleep very quickly. The exhaustion and anxiety wore on me more than I thought, but in this case that was a good thing. I did not want to lay there for hours wondering if something was going to get me during the night, so drifting into unconsciousness quickly was a blessing. 

I awoke minutes before the sun broke the horizon when the ground began to groan and vibrate underneath me. Everyone was up with their firearms in hand faster than a jackrabbit with its tail on fire. We all circled around the inside of the wagons protecting ourselves from every direction. Minutes passed and the sun began to illuminate the new morning. No one saw anything out of the ordinary, but we kept on our guard for ten minutes after the moaning stopped. The womenfolk got breakfast ready as the men took care of getting the horses hitched back up to the wagons and the gear packed again. 

We ate quickly and loaded back up into our wagons. Some of the children would not eat, as children sometimes do, so the parents finished feeding them as we were on the move. The moaning in the earth that morning was louder than it ever was, and everyone wanted to put as much distance between us and the mountains as we could. 

When the wagon train stopped to allow the horses to eat, drink and get a bit of rest, we started going through the wagons and settling on who was going to leave what behind. The women did not want to leave their cast iron cookware behind, but there was no point in having all five wagons weighted down with them. Despite all the arguing the first time this proposal was made, the adults were able to come to an agreement rather quickly. 

As we continued about our way, we left a whole wagon’s load of things behind. That should allow our horses to move a bit faster and for a slightly longer period of time. As far as we knew, only five families managed to escape the horror released up in the mountains. 

How many people were going to die in the name of progress? 

I wondered if that thing, that mass of black the O’Riley’s saw descending from the mountains was following us. There was so much in the way of livestock for it to eat, it seemed rather foolish to think it was following us specifically. I tried to tell myself that, but every time we heard the moaning in the ground, it was louder than it was the time before. Every instinct in me told me whatever this thing was, it was pursuing us. 

Did it see the O’Riley family and was following them? Could it be they led the thing to the rest of us? 

Trying not to let such paranoid thoughts build up in my head, I turned to the back of the wagon to see if there was anything I could do to help my mother. That was when I saw it off in the distance. Initially I thought my frightened mind was simply playing tricks on me, but after a few moments it became clear I did indeed see a dark mass headed in our direction. 

I screamed out to everyone what I saw, and once they turned and looked at it for themselves, the drivers spurred the horses as fast as they could get them to run. The thing was just as the O’Riley father described. It appeared to be a mass of fluid darkness with giant whisps of smoke forming and quickly dissipating. To me it seemed like the ebony horror was trying to create tentacles, but they continued to dissolve as fast as it could make them. 

Everything, every tree, every shrub, anything that was alive or once alive melted away as the thing from a time long before man approached it. By the time the main body of the thing reached a location, absolutely everything organic was gone. It was almost like this thing was digesting its food even before it reached it. 

Everyone began throwing whatever they could out of the sides of their wagons hoping to gain a little more speed. The dark terror was still a long way behind us, but it was moving very fast for something of its immense bulk. After unloading virtually everything but our food, we began to put some extra distance between us and the black mass. That thing from the netherworld was moving almost as fast as we were, and we were driving our horses as hard as we could. 

I was sure our horses would reach the point of exhaustion before we could put a safe distance between us and that thing whose name was lost to time. The rail-road demolition crews never considered what they might be unearthing with their constant dynamiting of the mountains. There was no doubt the reason they stopped blasting is because this thing ate them first. Now the few surviving families from the region were fleeing for dear life. 

Suddenly something quite unexpected happened. The large mass slowed and eventually stopped its progress. Giant ripples rolled across its entire form as it slowly began to sink into the ground. As it slowly faded from view, the earth all around us began to moan. It was almost as if the earth was groaning with pain as this thing sank down into it. When the last of the mass disappeared, the moaning ceased. 

Now we knew this deep sound meant it was going dormant for a time. Everyone assumed this entire time the moaning meant the thing was on the move, when it turned out that was when it was, for the lack of a better phrase, going to sleep. Perhaps it could only stay active for a certain time, or perhaps it reached its feeding limit. Whatever its reason for sinking into the ground was a mystery to us, but everyone felt a large measure of relief when the thing vanished. 

It would be counterproductive to continue pushing our horses at this speed. We would literally drive them to death if we did not stop. The men were trying to remain calm, or at least put on the façade of being calm, but the younger children were in hysterics. As the women tended to the little ones, the men tried to decide what to do. We let the horses rest and graze as we debated our options. 

Eventually it was decided it would be best if we left two of the wagons behind. The Schmidts already had three horses for their wagon. If we took four off two of the wagons and put them on the remaining two, we could greatly increase our speed. Keeping the oats, grits, and meat and vegetables that were dried to preserve them, we ate everything we could of the jarred food and left the rest behind. Only keeping enough water for drinking, we had to hope we could find some fresh water with which to cook when it came time. 

Praying the reduced number of wagons and continually decreasing weight of the wagons we kept would give us the boost we needed, we were on the move once the horses were sufficiently rested. All of us could not help but wonder, since the moaning occurred when the monstrosity sank into the earth, would we have any warning if it became active and came for us. 

Only keeping the horses at a slow run, the idea was not to drive them too strenuously so we could make the greatest distance possible for the day. If we disabled the horses, that would be the end of us all for sure. There was no possible way we could travel fast enough on foot to stay ahead of that thing, that entity that killed everything it approached. 

Fully aware of the direness of our situation, no one spoke for some time. I thought everyone was in a mild state of shock. I knew that to be the case for me. My mind was almost a complete blank. I could not think of anything but the image of the flowing mass of black death. The sight of it was vividly burned in my mind, and I could now understand why the O’Riley family did not like to talk about it. 

When we stopped again to allow the horses some rest, we stopped by a nice clear stream. I looked around at everyone, and all of us except the small children were holding one or more guns. For a moment I thought I was literally going to chuckle. I could not imagine what we thought we were going to do with that flowing horror with these tiny weapons. 

A sickening dizziness washed over me when I realized there was another very good reason to keep our guns very close. It was an idea I did not want to consider, but if I was ever going to consider it, this was the time. Having witnessed the way living things melt away like ice in the hot sun in the path of the approaching wall of death, it would be wrong of us not to spare the women and children that gruesome fate. 

It felt like I should cry over the thought of having to carry out such an action, but I was far beyond the point of terror. It was almost as if I felt nothing at all. I looked at my little sister standing next to my mother and tried to resign myself to the fact that I may very well have to carry out this act. My father was standing close to them with his rifle in hand. 

As I stared at them, my father turned and caught my gaze. He patted the butt of his gun then turned his head to my mother and sister. I put my hand on my six shooter and nodded my head, indicating to him I understood what he was telling me. I could not believe my father and I were having such a cold, silent conversation as this. 

Less than two minutes later the men started to gather together rather than getting the horses hooked up to the wagons. I reached the group in time to hear them agree, we were not going to get away from whatever this giant horror from inside the heart of the mountain was. We had to do the merciful thing and spare the women and children the fate that would be coming upon us very soon. 

The conversation came to an end, and each man went to his respective family. I looked at my beautiful little sister, and it saddened me deeply that she would not grow up to have children of her own someday. I could tell she was scared, even though she was not saying anything. Mother told my sister to stay calm, that everything was going to be just fine. Grabbing a blanket, my mother draped it around my sister so she would not see what was about to happen. 

With tears streaming down her face, Mother mouthed the words “I love you both” then turned her head to the ground. I raised the barrel of my rifle, and my father did the same. Someone pulled the trigger and fired off a shot, igniting a volley of gunfire all around the camp. In three seconds it was all over with. 

All the men stood in absolute silence except for one man who was cursing God at the top of his lungs for making him do what he just did. My mother and sister lie there on the ground as my mother still had her arms wrapped tightly around my sister. Nothing seemed real anymore, this all seemed like some horrible nightmare from which I would soon wake. 

Suddenly I felt a searing stinging sensation on my right arm. I glanced down to see what it was. It appeared to be some sort of insect or arachnid. It only had four legs, and its shiny black body reminded me of the look of shattered obsidian. It bit a salt grain sized piece of my flesh loose and flew away. Almost immediately I felt another pain in my ear, and in seconds I had dozens of these things biting me. 

The other men in the camp were being eaten as well, with most of them screaming and trying to swat the carnivorous bugs off their bodies. I dropped my gun in a futile attempt to rid myself of the flying pests. We never saw whisps of smoke coming from the creeping mass; we saw swarms of biting bugs engulfing the black horror. 

That was why it looked like everything melted as the eldritch monstrosity approached. These tiny bugs consumed everything bite by bite and returned it to the main body. The ebony horror was made up of an unfathomable number of these small mineral-like insects. 

More and more of the biting creatures arrived, and my whole body felt like it was on fire. Piece by piece they pulled me apart. My father raised his gun to end the pain for me, but the gun fell from his hands as the diminutive monsters rapidly consumed his fingers. Although the pain did not last any more than a few minutes, it felt like an eternity. As these things carried my body away in small bites to feed the main mass, I tried to think and take comfort knowing my mother and sister were spared this horrible death. 

My family, as did others, assumed the blasting in the mountains stopped because there was some sort of major accident. It was disconcerting when the explosions we became so accustomed to hearing suddenly ceased, but we still did not have any reason to believe we needed to evacuate. We did not pay attention to nature, and now we had to pay the price. There was a good chance we could have escaped the flowing hoard if we had left when the birds fled. 

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That Thing in the Woods

Word Count: 4,299

Because of one careless person, hundreds of square miles of beautiful forest were now charred and black. Someone was carelessly burning leaves near a dead tree, cinders blew onto the tree and in minutes it was on fire. The rotting, insect infested trunk lit up like a torch and fell into the forest setting the dry leaves covering the ground ablaze. Having had no rain for more than a month, the anhydrous autumn leaves quickly spread the flames. The fire spread so rapidly there was nothing he could do to stop it. Within fifteen minutes ten acres were on fire. 

Underbrush no longer existed in most of the area as the vast majority of it burned away completely in the forest fire that raged through the region one week ago. The news and other media warned people to stay out of the forest for the next several weeks as fires could still be burning. Rather than heeding their warning, I ventured into the timberland anyway. I wanted to see how extensive the damage from the fire actually was. 

My backyard bordered the large forest, but firefighters were able to battle the blaze enough to keep it from reaching the houses in our neighborhood. The trees along my fence remained undamaged, but only thirty feet away the trunks were black and soft ash covered the ground. I was sure our house was going to be destroyed when the authorities finally made us evacuate. It was a relief to my whole family to find out our home remained intact. 

There was a distinct possibility of burning cinders even a week after the inferno ended. To avoid burning my legs, I wore jeans and my hunting boots along with a denim jacket. Hopefully, that would be sufficient to protect me from any rogue cinders drifting about the air or being stirred up from the ground when disturbed by my feet. 

Luckily for me, the weather was rather cool that day, so the heavy clothes were bearable on that late autumn morning. The sky was clear, and there was very little wind. Regardless, I still took some things with me like two canteens of water and a cloth to wrap around my face if the wind were to begin blowing and stirring ash into the air. Normally, I could find my way around the forest simply by looking for familiar landmarks. Being the fire may have destroyed many of those landmarks, usually oddly shaped trees and such, I decided it to be prudent to bring a compass along with me as a precautionary measure. 

Checking first to see if either of my parents were home from work yet, I saw the coast was clear, so I set off into the blackened forest. Following a five-minute walk, I reached the peak of the hill behind our neighborhood. I was dumbfounded to see the devastation that crawled through the area; I could not believe what I was seeing. 

The entire valley, with the exception of a few fortunate spots here and there, was charred and scorched black. As I gazed over the seemingly endless devastation, I could see small plumes of white smoke still rising gently into the air. It was clear there were things still burning out here, and I was going to have to be mindful of possible dangers. It was difficult to comprehend how all the things in the forest I developed a familiarity with since I was a small boy no longer existed. If not so shocked, I probably would have cried. 

Once past the initial shock of seeing the wilderness that was my childhood playground in such appalling shape, I set out across the valley. From the top of the far ridge, I could see for at least ten miles when the trees were thick and full. After seeing how bare this valley appeared to be, I guessed I would probably be able to see much farther than normal. 

Even though things did not look like they once did, I was still able to follow one of my regular walking paths through the smoldering forest. I could see one of those white plumes of smoke billowing from the ground not too far ahead of me. Initially my intention was to try to steer clear of it, but when I noticed the smoke seemed to be rising from a hole in the ground, I decided to take a closer look. 

Smoke was indeed rising from a large hole in the charred earth. As I slowly made my way closer, I wondered if I was about to look into the gates of hell. When I was about three feet away from the smoldering cavity, I felt the ground beneath my feet begin to sag. Carefully taking one small step after another, I backed away from the smoking hollow and the collapsing ground surrounding it. 

It finally dawned on me what happened here. This was once a large stump I used as one of my landmarks to help me navigate the forest. Underneath the ground, the roots of the old stump continued to burn creating the creepy smoke that made the opening in the earth look like a gateway to the underworld. 

It was no wonder why they were still warning people not to come out here into the forest. It was very possible the ground underneath me could have given way, and I would have fallen into the cavity, however deep it was. There was probably a fair chance the earth around the hole could fall in and bury me alive in the smoldering pit. I knew from here on I needed to try to avoid any areas where I saw smoke ascending from cavities in the ground. 

Continuing along my way, I kept my sight on the far edge of the valley. Like the giant stump, I imagined a lot of my landmarks no longer existed. I did not typically use the trees since so many of them looked so much alike. Instead, I used things like large fallen logs, that giant stump, and other obstacles on the ground which were easy to see from surface level. Most of the trees remained, but all the old dead wood on the forest floor along with the underbrush burned away completely. I did not need landmarks now since I could see through the blackened tree trunks all the way to the far ridge. 

As I walked between the charred, leafless trees I still had a difficult time comprehending the scope of the devastation. Things I was familiar with, places I frequented since first being allowed to play in the woods were gone. It almost felt like my childhood burned away with the forest in which I spent the majority of my waking time. All this destruction because one person did not have enough sense to burn leaves at a safe distance from an old dead tree trunk. 

I really did not want to think about this, but I could not help but wonder how many animals were unable to escape the blaze and burned to death. It made me want to vomit. Sure, I was a hunter. I killed all sorts of game animals in my time, but we always ate what we killed. I never shot anything just for the fun of it aside from cans and other inanimate targets. To think about all the poor animals that died in this fire amplified the magnitude of the devastation in my mind by tenfold. 

Many of the hardwood trees still had branches, although the smaller limbs burned away. The pine trees looked like giant black spikes protruding from the ground; their needles and limbs completely burned away, but the thick bark shielded the living cores. It was a haunting sight indeed. I had hopes at least some of the trees would survive. The hardwood trees would probably come back, but I did not think as many of the pines would recover. 

Finally, I made it to the top of the far ridge. I could not believe my eyes. As far as I could see was nothing but burned timber. I took a few drinks from one of my canteens and continued my journey. There were a few houses not too far from here, so I decided to head in that direction. Most of the phone lines were still down. I never got a chance to talk to any of my friends to see how they fared in the blaze, but I did not hear of anyone getting hurt or dying. That kind of information spread quickly in a tight knit community like ours, therefore I was confident there were no human fatalities. Regardless, I wanted to go check to see for myself if they were okay or not. 

As I walked across the ash covered ground, I noticed something glimmering in the bright late-morning sunlight. Curious, I went over to see what it was. It looked like a transparent gelatinous blob of some sort. Since I could not pick up a stick to poke the object, I decided to give it a tap with the toe of my boot. It was solid whatever it was. 

Getting down close to the object, I got a much better look at it. It was a soda bottle someone left littering the forest at some time. When the inferno raged through the area, it was evidently hot enough to melt glass. Not really thinking about what I was doing, I reached out to pick up the deformed bottle. Even after a week the glass was still hot enough to cause my hand to sizzle when I made contact with it. 

Abruptly tossing the molten bottle back to the ground, I quickly poured some of the water from my canteen on my throbbing hand. Simply by looking at it, I could tell my left palm was going to blister. My skin charred white in two places, and I could visibly discern the change as my palm began turning red. 

Retrieving the cloth I brought to protect my face if the air became too ashy; I wrapped it around my burnt hand instead. Normally I would be able to pick one of several plants to help ease the severity of my wound, but alas the fire destroyed everything growing at ground level. There was nothing left with which to medicate my palm. 

Given my injured status, I pondered over whether I should go ahead and turn back or not. After a few minutes of musing over my options, I decided to roam on a little further. I did not think my hand was so severely burned that I needed to seek out medical attention; it would do fine enough for me to tend to it when I finally made it home again. Explaining the injury to my parents would be difficult; that’s for sure. 

Continuing my trek through what was once a full, thick forest, I veered away from my course when I saw something else gleaming on the forest floor. Whatever this thing was, it was much larger than the molten soda bottle I burned my hand on earlier. The closer I got, the better I was able to get a look at the object. 

The thing appeared to be made from some sort of metal, copper perhaps. I remembered this location because of a huge mass of vegetation that accumulated over the decades, and I was sure this object is where that ancient heap of vines and other plants once rested. All these years we played around that mass, we never stopped to consider there might be something inside of it. The fire burned away the concealing foliage exposing this artifact that was hidden for who knows how long. 

It was large. Three feet of the irregularly shaped object with its faceted-like surface protruded from the blackened earth. I could not guess as to how much of the relic remained buried. It was indeed made from some sort of metal, but of what kind I did not know. It almost looked like glass filled with little flakes of gold and platinum, but when I tapped it using my canteen it made a distinct metallic sound. 

I did not feel any heat radiating from this strange object even when I got up close to get a better look. I could not see any seams to indicate this was formed from multiple components, but I was sure it sounded hollow when I tapped it with my metal water vessel. As I walked in a circle around the mysterious object, I noticed some strange symbols or chevrons on the sides and front face. These symbols were very faint and could only be seen when I was standing at a certain angle from the sun. 

Wanting to feel the relic with my own hand, I first poured a bit of my canteen water on it to see if it steamed or sizzled or anything. I already burned one hand; I did not want to burn the other. The water harmlessly rolled down the object until it reached the base and absorbed into the ashen soil. Repeating the process, I received the same results as the first time. The thing was not even hot enough to affect a thin stream of warm water. 

Getting much closer to the object, I wanted to look at the metal as closely as I could. Never in my life had I seen or heard of any metal that looked like this. It appeared to be uniform in color, although the smooth surface was very sparkly. From the proper angle, I could see the shine of the metal seemed to take on a slightly varying tone, which is what created the obscure symbols on the thing. 

Very cautiously, I reached my hand out, quickly touching the object then withdrawing my hand. I did this a few times before I maintained contact for a second or two. This did not seem possible. Even days after the fire burned out, that glass bottle stayed hot enough to badly burn my hand, but this alien thing in front of me was cold. The blaze that ripped through the forest burned away the centuries of plant growth that covered the strange object. If that thing was metal, as it appeared to be, I would think it would still be at least warm to the touch. 

There was no scorching on the frigid artifact protruding from the ground either. Even if it did not heat up enough in the fire to warp the metal, there should still be black soot and smoke residue built up on its surface. Instead, the thing looked like someone finished polishing it only moments ago. I could not imagine how something could stay in such pristine condition after having suffered through the inferno that destroyed so much of these rolling hills.  

I probably spent at least an hour examining the peculiar artifact before deciding to try touching it again. When pushing it over with my foot did not work, I knelt down and tried lifting it. Since I could not use my left hand, I pressed the inside of my forearm against it and using my right hand, I tried lifting it. A surge of energy passed through my body, and I fell backward onto the ground. 

It did not seem like I lost consciousness, but when I touched the object, it was around ten in the morning. When I stood back up after the jolt of energy, the sun indicated it was closer to two in the afternoon. Already having burned my hand and receiving a shock from that unusual metal object, I decided it was best not to push my luck any further. I could come back and examine the object further when the forest finished smoldering. 

Something did not seem right. Feeling very disoriented, I began to experience a churning in the pit of my stomach. I continued a little further before I realized I was walking in the wrong direction. The valley ridge was behind me, and I should have been heading towards it. Whatever that shock I received was, it must have seriously knocked the sense out of me. Even with most of my landmarks gone, I still knew this area very well. I did not understand how I could walk in the wrong direction for nearly twenty minutes. 

Making my way back to the cryptic artifact, I continued on until I reached the valley ridge. When I stepped over the top of the hill, I grew dizzy and confused. I walked this route many times, but there was undoubtedly something amiss. An emergency room visit may be prudent after receiving that strange jolt of energy. Nothing seemed right ever since I tried to pull that artifact from the ground. 

Stopping to drink the remainder of the first canteen of water, I looked around for any remaining landmarks nearby. I saw nothing that looked familiar anymore; the fire destroyed virtually everything on the ground except for the trees. While most of the trees looked like they would recover from this disaster, the same could not be said about the dead logs, tree stumps and underbrush. 

I was happy to finally reach the other side of the ridge, because my home was not far beyond there. Cresting the hill, I could see our house a short distance away. I continued to get those overwhelming feelings of confusion and dizziness as I had since making an attempt to lift that cryptic artifact. As I came down the hill, I noticed something that stopped me dead in my tracks. I was indeed looking at my house from behind, but it did not take me long to realize everything was inverted. Everything was there like it should be, but it was all reversed. 

Could that mysterious object I found have shocked me so bad that I was seeing things backwards? 

That might explain the confusion, disorientation and how I managed to walk in the wrong direction for nearly half an hour. It was difficult for me to accept this possibility because everything otherwise appeared in perfect clarity. I would think if that thing jolted me hard enough to make me see things backwards, I would have issues with blurriness and double vision. 

This could not be happening. I must still be unconscious on the forest floor dreaming up this whole thing. This simply could not be real. Everything was exactly as it should be, but as a mirror version of itself. I would swear this was a dream if it were not for the pain I felt in my hand, my right hand. 

My whole body began to tremble as I was overcome with panic and anxiety. Holding my hands out in front of me, I could see there were no blisters on my left hand anymore, and my right hand was wrapped in a cloth to help protect it. It was not only everything around me that was a mirror image; I was a mirror image of myself. 

What could be going on here? Did that mysterious artifact I found in the forest do something to me that scrambled my mind, my memory? 

No, it could not be. Apart from the intense trepidation I was now experiencing, I felt otherwise normal. I could not believe that my brain could be zapped so hard it made me remember everything in reverse without otherwise somehow affecting me. 

Was I in the wrong place? Was it possible the artifact was some sort of key or doorway that sent me to a world that mirrored my own? 

That made more sense to me than to think I was just crazy enough that I remembered everything backwards. That strange metal that was frigid to the touch was like nothing I ever saw or heard of before now. Those runes, chevrons or whatever they were must be some sort of instructions or a warning perhaps. I needed to get back to that object and use it to return to my own world. 

Turning around, I ran back up to the valley ridge as quickly as I could. I did not want anyone to see me because I was afraid they would figure out I was an alien to this world. Once I crested the ridge, I knelt down for a moment to catch my breath and take a few sips of water. 

Trying to take into consideration everything was the antithesis to what I knew, I started down the ridge and into the valley. Making my way back to the relic protruding from the ground might not be as easy as I initially hoped it would. 

As I was walking back across the blackened forest valley floor, I encountered a small bit of fortune when I came across the path I made through the ash covered ground earlier. Now I did not have to try to think backwards to find my way to the artifact. All I needed to do was follow my tracks across the valley and over the far ridge. 

I looked up toward the sun to get an idea of the time. According to the position of the blazing orb in the sky, it was close to eleven o’clock in the morning. It was positioned at two in the afternoon when I got back to my feet, so that meant even the sun moved in the opposite direction in this world. In that case, it was sometime around one o’clock in the afternoon. 

I thought four hours lapsed between my touching the artifact and regaining consciousness. Now I realized no time passed at all. The sun moved, as I knew it, from two hours before noon to two hours after noon. 

I still wanted to tell myself this was a terrifying dream, but I knew better. It was not only the pain in my hand that made me believe this was real. The bitter taste in my dry mouth, the smell of the burned vegetation all around me, and the vividness of the scorched forest indicated this was all without a doubt real. 

The excursion seemed so much longer than it did earlier, and I was pushing myself at a faster pace. I wanted to get back to the artifact and try to get back home, back to the world in which I was born. The distress of the whole situation made the journey seem much longer than it was. 

Both a sense of relief and of dread passed over me as I saw the strange object protruding from the ground. Although everything in this world was a reversed image to my world, the relic in the ground remained exactly as it was when I first found it. I tried reading the symbols hidden in the shine of the metal again, but they meant nothing to me. None of them was even close to something I could recognize. 

Standing in front of the thing for at least ten minutes, I pondered over what to do. I was sure the thing would activate if I wrapped my arms around it like I did the first time, but I had no assurances at all it would send me back to where I belonged. 

Carefully I tried to position myself in front of the artifact just as I did before. The problem was I was not thinking about it then, so I could not remember exactly how I approached it the first time. Doing the best I could to copy my earlier actions, I wrapped my arm and my hand around the object and pulled. Again, a surge of energy coursed through my body which again threw me to the ground. 

The very first thing I did upon regaining my senses was to raise my hands before my face. To my unending relief, the burn and bandage was once again on my left hand. The sun was where it should be in the sky, and the forest was still a charred disaster. I was not sure if I was back in my own world or not, but it felt right enough. Nothing about that other world felt right at all, but this place did. 

Heading back toward my house, I knew it would almost be dark by the time I got back. I was being careful as I walked since it was becoming difficult to locate the smoldering cavities in the ground. Walking through here was dangerous during the bright of day, but it would be downright treacherous in the dark. 

Arriving at the valley ridge behind our house, I saw everything looked like it was supposed to look. Before going any closer, I examined the houses and lawns of the neighbors, even going so far as to make sure the bicycles in the back yards were the right color.  

I made a futile attempt to level my breathing and stop the trembling in my hands, but the anxiety was simply too much to suppress. Looking at the back of my house, I could not help but wonder if this was really my house, or simply another reflection of it in the universe. My feet felt like lead as I tried to push myself forward to what was hopefully the comfort and safety of my own home. I climbed atop some milk crates to look inside the window to see if it was indeed my family inside. 

Before looking into the window, I had to wonder. If this was not my native universe, was I ever going to find my way back home? Would it do me any good to return to the forest and continue trying to properly activate that thing in the woods? 

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