Short Stories of the Horror/Bizarre

The Vastness of Reality

Author: Mychal Wilson Page 1 of 2

The Bone Yard

Word Count: 6,612

I truly loved to spend time reveling in the magnificent beauty of nature. Being social was a skill I possessed in very small quantities, and for me making friends was far from being an effortless task. Sequestering myself in the wilderness to go fishing, hiking or camping were the things that gave my otherwise hollow life meaning. 

Since I worked four days at ten hours a day, I almost always had a three-day weekend. This gave me a lot of time to spend engaging in the things I so loved. On this particular occasion I decided to go for a hike in a rather familiar area of the Smoky Mountains 

I brought my fishing rod and reel along with a small tackle box containing the basic items I may need. Along the path I chose on which I was going to take my hike, I knew I would pass several streams. The streams meandered around the forest, and I knew where I would pass several of the crystal-clear waterways. Because of the way the streams twisted around the terrain; I would pass some of them multiple times. I planned to visit some places of which I knew that were great fishing holes. 

Waiting until late morning to leave on my hike, I knew the sun would likely be down by the time I was ready to return home. I brought with me a flashlight and a large lamplight. I also had a smaller back-up flashlight that stayed in my tackle box. My familiarity with the terrain was not an issue. I knew my trails well enough to navigate them under the dim moonlight. The function of the large flashlight was to watch for snakes and other wild animals native to the area. 

I reached a bend in the closest stream and was dismayed to find nothing but a small trickle in an otherwise empty waterway. Dead fish lay scattered in the mucky stream bed which indicated the water-flow stopped abruptly. The poor fish did not have time to escape downstream with the last of the water. Since the fish were not fully dry, I knew it also happened recently. Hopefully, it was nothing more than a dam of logs, sticks and leaves I could possibly dislodge on my own. 

There was obviously no point in stopping here, so I continued my walk. I hoped to find the clog in the stream and jar it loose. I reached the second elbow along my path, and the stream was empty here as well. I wondered how far up the way the clog occurred. At the end of a trail branching from the main path was another stream in which I liked to sit underneath the cool shade of the large trees to fish. 

I decided to head down this path and go to fish in that stream. Even though I still could not yet see this stream because of the trees and a slight hill, I was able to hear the rushing water. The closer I got, the louder the churning water grew. What I heard sounded much more like a river than it did a stream. I was shocked when I finally saw my auxiliary fishing spot. 

Normally, the stream was twelve or so feet wide and ran in a three-foot rut the water dug into the ground over the years. Now this stream filled the rut, overflowed from there and now spread thirty to forty feet wide, so much water forced its way down-stream, it looked more like something for rough river rafting. Fishing here was pointless. 

It became quite obvious to me the clog in the first stream diverted the flow of water to this one. If I wanted to find a place to fish, I had to continue on until I was above whatever caused the dam. I would not find any water deep or tame enough in which to enjoy one of my favorite outdoor activities here. 

It was a beautiful day. The walk was scenic, but I was still in the mood for some fishing. I hoped I would not have to hike too much further before I found stiller water. I could not fish in an empty stream like the first or in a torrential river like the second. 

An hour later I finally saw what stopped one stream and directed the water to the second. I was not near enough to see the clog yet, but I could see the cause. An incredible mass of rock and dirt fell from the almost mountainous hillside. The mudslide covered one stream for hundreds of feet. 

A moderately sized pond formed where the slowing water shifted to merge with the torrential stream. There was no way I would ever unclog it; the course and speed of these two streams changed forever. I hoped the newly formed pond would make a good fishing spot. Walking for an hour and a half to get here each time might get tedious after a while though. 

Getting myself across the flume turned out to be much more difficult than I anticipated. My feet sank in the thick dark-red mud, and some sections still shifted when disturbed. Several times I fell and almost broke the rod and reel in my hand. I slipped on the loose mud at one point and dropped my tackle box. The latch holding the box closed unsnapped, and the contents spilled out all over the soft dirt. This was obviously a very recent mudslide as the debris appeared not to have settled at all yet. Disappointed, I decided my best course of action was to pick up the spilled contents of my tackle box and turn back. 

As I gathered my scattered tackle, I glanced up to see the mudslide exposed a rocky opening to what appeared to be a cavern. I lived my whole life here and explored virtually all of the terrain within a day or two’s walk from my house. I knew of some small cavern networks, but I knew of none near my current location. I wondered as to where, if anywhere, the open aperture might lead. 

Once I finished gathering my tackle, I very carefully made my way off of the mudslide and back to solid ground. It took me longer to get back than it did for me to get where I took my spill as I was now being very cautious. I did not want to fall again and dump out my tackle, or even worse break my expensive fishing rod. 

I found a good spot to stash my fishing gear, made sure I had my flashlights and two large spools of fishing line, then began to climb my way up the mountain. Living in the mountains my entire life and spending so much time exploring the wilderness, I became a rather skilled climber. As long as I was not trying to scale a cliff, if the slope was seventy degrees or less, I could make it without the use of climbing gear. 

I chose a climbing spot several hundred feet from the obvious edge of the mudslide. The earthen cavity was not too high up the small mountain, and it only took me about twenty-five minutes to reach it. Scattered stones rose from the grass and moss covering much of the hill which made the climbing much easier. 

When I peeked my head into the cavern and gave my eyes a moment to adjust to the dark, I thought I could make out a very dim glow emanating from inside. I thought it might simply be the sunlight illuminating a cloud of mist or dust. Perhaps it was a bio-luminescent mold or bacterial growth in the damp cave walls. 

I checked my flashlights to make sure I did not damage them when I fell. The bulbs shined brightly in each one, so I felt confident I would be fine. Turning the lights back off, I stepped a little deeper into the cave and further away from the warming rays of the sun. As my eyes progressively adjusted to the dimmer light, I steadily made my way in a bit deeper. 

I did indeed see a dim yellowish glow coming from deeper inside the cavern. The tunnel was natural, and very irregular in shape, so it was not possible for me to see the source of the strange light. I heard of luminescent plants, fungi and even some deep-sea animals producing their own light, but this appeared much too bright for something like that. 

Before I lost sight of the daylight, I tied the end of my fishing line to a small rock outcropping. If my lights failed, or if I got turned around the wrong way, I could use the line to find my way back out of the ground. I learned this life saving lesson the first time I went into a small cavern with so many branches, twists and turns I found myself lost. Luckily that time I found my exit before the battery in my flashlight was exhausted. 

I slid the red filter over the bulb of the lamplight, adjusted the dial to the dimmest possible setting then closing my eyes tightly, I turned on the lamplight. Confident I had it on the lowest setting, I slowly opened my eyes. I was cautious not to blind myself before exploring any deeper, and with the light on dim the batteries would last longer. The red filter would allow my eyes to stay adjusted to the very low level of light. 

Some places in this crude passageway were tall and wide enough so as not to cause me any problems. Most of it though was short and narrow. In these places I had to crawl or even shuffle forward on my stomach to get through. I felt relieved any time I found a larger opening. In these places I knew I could turn myself around. It was very comforting to know, if I hit a dead end, I would not have to back myself up all the way to the surface. 

Progress was slow, but that was to be expected. In such small passages of jagged rocks and rugged ground, I needed to take a lot of care to avoid seriously injuring myself. Almost half an hour into my trek, I stopped to rest for a moment. In order to preserve my light’s battery, I turned it off as I set there to rest. 

It was not so obvious with the light on, but with my light off that slightly green tinted, yellow glow appeared to be getting brighter. I was not sure if it was because I was in absolute darkness or if it was brighter than it was when I was still near the entrance. I sat there for five or ten minutes. Glancing further into the cave, I tried to find a source. Too many twists and turns remained ahead of me to get a clear look. 

After climbing, walking and crawling through the bowels of the earth for nearly two hours, the small capillary in which I traveled spread into a larger cave. Unfortunately, a fifteen-foot rock facing separated me from the opening. I had to climb up the damp rock to continue my journey. 

I turned my light off and sure enough I found the strange glow to be even brighter here. It was even bright enough to allow me to climb without the use of my flashlight. First, I tugged and shook on the stones of the wall to make sure they were good and stable before I began my ascent. 

At the top of the rock face, the ground leveled out into a large grotto. I crawled into the large space and quickly brought myself to my feet. Finally, I found the astounding source of the strange light. I could not wrap my mind around what I saw. The grotto was only a niche in a much-much larger cave. 

Covering the walls and ceiling were hundreds of thousands of insects twice the size of a man. The creatures crawled about, and the whole place seemed to sparkle as the giant bugs turned on and off luminescent bulbs at the end of their abdomen. They produced a yellow light, but occasionally and very briefly some of their wings flashed a bright green. 

Fear wrapped its strangling fingers around my throat for a moment. I could not breathe. Seeing such massive insects shook me and left me unable to move. I did not know what these things ate, but I certainly did not want to be on their menu.  The giant insects clung to the ceiling and walls, crawling around the stone and over each other. When I finally decided it appeared the massive bugs had no interest in me, I continued to move forward. 

The grotto in which I stood was far above the floor of the giant cavern, so I was unable to see what was below. I slowly moved forward until I could see what was at the bottom. I was most assuredly afraid, but I believed I made an astonishing discovery. In the luminous cave, I found something no other human in recorded history ever set eyes on. 

Illuminated by the swarm of insects above I saw mushrooms the size of trees covering much of the cavern floor, and giant stalagmites rose into the air. I heard of fossils of mushrooms this size being found, but no reports in modern times of any live fungi this large were ever made. None of the insects appeared to be on the ground. Apparently, they stayed on the walls and ceiling. I thought perhaps they consumed the mushrooms, and I wanted to get down there so I could take a better look. 

Something of a ramp ran along the wall connecting the grotto to the lower level. Some of the bugs crawled on and around the ramp, but this appeared to be the only way down. If I wanted to explore the bottom, I had to get through the giant beetles. This was something I definitely did not want to do, but I had no choice if I wanted to see more. 

Very slowly, I began to take one tiny step after another. To my relief, the enormous insects stayed safely away from me. Whenever I approached one, it would slowly scurry out of my way. They seemed to be leery of me, but not afraid. 

The ramp was long, and moving as slowly as I did, it took me nearly an hour before I could better see what was below. Here and there I saw the beetles feeding on the top of the mushrooms. An amazingly large variety of mushrooms grew in this strange place, but the creatures appeared to be particular in what they ate. Displaying none of their bioluminescence, the beetles chewed the tops off what look like morels. 

The bugs quietly descended from the walls or ceiling landing on these thirty-foot-tall mushrooms. They did not fly down; it was more like they were gliding as if to make no sound. For only minutes at a time the giant insects fed. As they abandoned their eating spot, they ascended quickly into the air. Fluttering about for several minutes, the beetles then found a landing place on the ceiling or walls. 

A ridge varying in height from a foot to fifteen feet tall stood between me and what was beyond in the cave. Initially I thought it was some natural rock formation. Upon closer inspection, I found the ridge to be composed of feces. The massive lightening bugs crawled on the walls and released their droppings from there. I started to worry a massive dropping from one of the huge things from that height might kill me. I found the shortest place and as quickly as I possibly could I jumped across. 

I still landed at the edge of the fecal ridge and almost lost my balance. When my feet shifted slightly under me, I came close to falling backward into the pile of insect dung. It did not stink that much at even a short distance, but the discards held a deeply pungent odor up close. I nearly vomited at the thought of almost falling into it. 

My first spool of fishing line exhausted shortly after I reached the grotto. I looked for a good place to tie off my second spool, but I changed my mind. With the yellow lights crawling about, the ramp was obvious and visible. I decided to hang on to it for later use. 

The fungi forest was comprised of mushrooms varying from an inch to thirty feet in height. Feeling the stalks, I found them to be at least as hard as wood. Some mushrooms grew in tight clusters, reaching a height of only six feet or so with much smaller caps and tender stalks. 

Because of the size of the mushrooms and their caps, seeing into the fungal forest was nearly impossible. Only specks of light from above found its way between the caps and onto the cavern floor. Given the near absolute darkness of the forest, I found a narrow, five-foot-tall stalk to which I could attach my fishing line. 

I had to use my flashlight if I was going to go any further. I made sure I still had the red filter in my powerful lamplight. Keeping the power adjusted to the dimmest setting, I turned it on and allowed my eyes to acclimate to the darkness. Using a bright white light would keep me blinded to everything on which I was not shining it. 

An amazing number of different mushrooms filled the area. Some of them resembled mushrooms with which I was familiar, but many more were much stranger. In this subterranean world, plants did not have the necessary sunlight to develop. The fungus here was allowed to evolve and grew much more so than on the surface. 

I tied off my line, and after scanning the area for a good five minutes, I slowly and cautiously began to enter the mushroom forest. Fecal material from the insects dripped off the caps here and there, but not too frequently. When I looked at some of the shorter stalks, I saw many of the round caps were concave and not convex. It appeared these mushrooms evolved to absorb nutrients from the top rather than what was on the ground and below the slick, thin soil. 

Slowly I scanned the area with my flashlight and then began cautiously moving into the fungi forest. Thus far I saw no forms of animal life beside myself with the obvious exception of the giant insects. I was sure I would see rodents and possibly common insects, but there was nothing but the colossal mushrooms. 

I had to be careful to watch my step. The cave was probably at one-hundred percent humidity, and although the ground was mostly rocky, it was very slick. I did not know if it was fungi, a sort of algae or simply the dampness, but I almost slipped on the slimy surface several times. The last thing I needed was to injure myself and be unable to get back out. 

At one point, the ground began to slope. It only dropped gradually at first, but the floor became steeper and steeper. I tried to find a way around it, but the slope seemed to cover the whole ground area. With the rocks so slippery, I almost turned back. Right before I turned to go, I noticed the sloping ground turned into what appeared to be another ramp leading even deeper into the earth. 

I decided to proceed and see where this new ramp led. Something suddenly dawned on me and left my head spinning. It became obvious to me this was not a natural ramp. Clear tool marks scoured the wall and floor. I would think perhaps it was carved by primitive man a long time ago, but there was a dry trail leading right through the middle. Something used this ramp often enough and maintain a worn path. 

I would think the narrow trail worn through the slime on the floor to be made by some animal, but the tool marks proved otherwise. At this point I really thought about turning around and running back to the exit. This was quite terrifying, but it was also exhilarating. I was probably about to discover an intelligent species no human ever encountered. I could only hope they were a benevolent race. 

They did seem to be completely isolated from the rest of the world, so it was very possible they never encountered someone from the human race in the past. There was a possibility that could make me seem very frightening to them. 

I carefully made my way to the ramp. With the steady drop of the slope, I still feared the danger of slipping and falling. I made it about twenty feet down the ramp when I heard a loud hissing sort of screech far behind me. I could hear the frantic fluttering of wings. It suddenly occurred to me, the reason the giant insects descended quietly, fed for only a few minutes, then fluttered loudly back to the upper section of the chamber. They were avoiding and warning the others of a predator. 

Now I did not know what to do. I wondered if I walked past or right under whatever just attacked that giant bug. If I did encounter something, I had no idea what to expect. If I did pass one, why did it not attack me? 

Then it dawned on me. The reason I saw no other animal life here on the ground was because everything was overhunted to the point of extinction. There was nothing at the ground level for these predators to eat except for the occasional unfortunate insect. Terror washed over me as I realized I may be their next meal. 

Horror coursed through every nerve in my body making me shiver with fright. Standing there at the top of this ramp, I realized I would assuredly become food if one of those predators found me. I was not sure if I would be safer in a clearing so I could better see something coming, or if I should go back into the forest of mushrooms. There I may be more concealed, but so would anything out there hunting me. I now deeply regretted my decision to explore this wondrous world on my own. 

Moving very slowly, controlling my breathing, and otherwise trying to remain silent, I used my fishing line to lead me back to my original location. I maybe made it a hundred feet when I felt a forceful tug pull on the plastic line. Nothing else happened for a few minutes, then I felt the fishing line begin to twitch and vibrate. 

Whatever the thing was, it was following the line and could be making its way to me. Now I was faced with one of the greatest challenges yet. I could keep following my line and hope whatever held it would let it go, or I could move deeper into the haunting, fungi forest and take the chance of becoming hopelessly lost. 

I could hear nothing. Whatever was following my line made no sound I could hear. The tugging on the string told me whatever it was, it was getting closer. I resolved to the fact I had to let go and hide amongst the giant fungal stalks. 

It was not possible for me to turn off my light. Without it, I would do nothing but stumble around in the darkness. I kept it dim and left the red filter in place. I hoped, since whatever this was lived in a subterranean world, it would have very poor eyesight at the least. 

If this thing did have poor or no eyesight, it had to rely on other senses. At that moment I noticed how loud my breathing seemed to be in the silence of the cap covered forest. Each step I took now sounded to me like a bolder hitting the ground. 

I tried to calm myself and ease my breath and took great care in keeping my footfalls silent. Slowly I moved away from my lifeline and stepped further into the fungi forest. I did not know what was coming toward me, but this was its world. If I did not keep quiet, this thing was sure to follow me. 

If one of these creatures was near, it only made sense to reason that more of them would be stalking about. I could be surrounded by these predators and not even know it. I truly wished I never came to this subterrainian world, especially not alone. No one else knew I was here. If something was to happen to me, my body would probably never be recovered. 

I stood with my back against one of the giant fungi stalks and watched for whatever followed my line. Finally, something came into view. It was like no creature I ever saw or heard of. It appeared somewhat human, but its features were grotesquely distorted. Its arms and legs stretched a foot or two longer than a normal person. It crawled on all fours, plucking at the line as it went. The torso was short, and its neck was afixed to the back of its head instead of below the jaw, making it face straight forward in a terrifyingly distorted way. 

Suddenly it stopped at the point where I let go of the line and stepped deeper into the forest. Sniffing the ground, it began to follow my scent toward my current position. With it coming toward me, I got a better look at the hideous face. Its eyes appeared a milky white giving it the appearance of a corpse. Its nose was long and sharp, which it used to track me. The ears were massively oversized, which told me it could hear very well. 

I tried stepping backwards, but I could not watch it and where I was going at the same time. I turned and began to walk away, but it obviously heard me. It scuttled along the ground with rapid motions and would be upon me very soon. I tried getting away as fast as I could, but my feet were not made for this terrain. This thing obviously was. It was on me in no time. 

The creature sprung through the air from twenty feet away to crash down right on top of me. I felt its talons dig into my skin as it knocked me to the ground. The pain was absolutely excruciating. I did not know if it had venom in its talons or if it was simply the bacteria and grime under its nails. Whatever it was, it stung immensely, like lye poured into a wound. 

I wrestled with the beast as it tried to pin me solidly against the ground. The creature evolved for this underground world, but it was not built for fighting something like me. It had a very poor range of motion in its neck, and it could barely lower its head toward me, which put me at somewhat of an advantage. I struggled against this thing, then I managed to reach my shin and remove the fishing knife I kept tucked in my boot. 

In our struggle, I almost dropped the knife several times. Finally, I obtained a solid grip on the handle and plunged the blade straight into its chest. When the metal pierced its sickly pale flesh, it let out a piercing scream. It squealed so loudly, the volume caused my ears to throb. With it distracted from the pain, I managed to free myself from its grasp, and I plunged the knife into it over and over. Ichor so dark red it was almost black spilled out of its wounds. It covered my shirt, arms and face. The stench was so intense I almost began to vomit. 

Finally, the thing stopped its screaming and struggling and fell limp on top of me. As I fought to roll the beast off of me, I heard the screams of others in the distance. Others heard its piercing screech and were no doubt coming to its aid. 

It was difficult in this mushroom forest for me to determine the direction from which the other screams came. I could not tell if it was an echo effect or if the things were surrounding me. I put the deceased creature to my back and began to run as fast as the slick ground allowed. In our struggle, I lost my sense of direction and could only pray I was not running back to the ramp descending deeper into the earth. If I was to survive this ordeal, I needed to find a way back to the sunlit world. Going further down would surely mean my demise. 

Here and there I could see a bit of light coming from the ceiling crawling insects. I looked for some sign as to which direction my exit might be, but I could only make out small portions of the ceiling at a time. I could not see the walls of the giant cavern at all. My only hope was to keep in the direction I was headed. 

I heard these things screeching softly and knew they were closing in on me quick. I picked up my pace and made no more effort trying to be quiet. These encroaching creatures followed my scent, so noise really did not matter at this point. Even as adept as these creatures were to this terrain, I could hear their taloned digits scuffling toward me. 

I turned back as I was running in an attempt to see my pursuers. I only turned for a very brief moment, but that was far too long. I should not have looked back, because as soon as I did, I slid on a cone of insect dung and plunged face first into a six-foot-tall pile of guano fallen between some of the giant mushroom caps. What came next was the last thing I would expect. The grotesque abomination ran right past me. It continued another fifty feet or so, and then screeched so loudly, it echoed through the forest. 

Four more of these abominations of what might have once been humans arrived at my location. They screeched back and forth, talking I guess. Fanning out, they sniffed the ground and mushroom stalks in the immediate area. On two occasions, the creatures moved right around me. 

It was the dung. Apparently, these things relied mostly on their sense of smell. As disgusting as it was, sinking into the pile of insect feces saved my life. The smell of the guano was much stronger than my own scent, so I was now invisible to them. 

They continued to scan the area, following the scent of my trail which led me here. I could not really say how long they searched for me as time felt meaningless. Eventually, they gave up and all five ran off in the direction I believed the descending ramp to be. I waited for a long time. I waited to see if I could hear any of them before I moved. 

I tried to clean the lens of my flashlight, but I could not get it to produce enough illumination to be useful. Feces smeared on the lens blinded the glow. There was one option available to me, I could remove the dung smeared filter and shine it in its normal brightness. I was entirely certain these creatures were blind, so I did not worry about the glow of my electric lamp drawing any of their attention. 

Now I could see the slick ground and the large stalks clearly. It was an amazing sight, were I not terrified beyond comprehension. All that mattered now was getting out of here. 

Slowly and quietly I rose to a standing position. I tucked my pants into my boots and filled my jeans with the dung. I filled my pants pockets. I tucked my shirt into my pants and filled that as well. I caked it on the outside of my jeans. The smell was ghastly and the fumes stung my nose and caused my eyes to burn. Struggling not to vomit, I caked as much of the material on my body as would stick. 

Once I felt comfortable my scent was sufficiently masked, I began to walk toe to heel very slowly. Very quietly I moved forward scanning the area with my large flashlight. It was hard to say how long I walked, but my heart raced with excitement when my lamp shined upon a wall of stone. I reached the side of the cavern. 

I moved along the wall watching the lightening bugs above. I was trying to find some indication as to where my ramp to the outside was. I thought it would be easy to locate, but from this angle, it was really difficult to tell. Eventually I reached a rather large patch devoid of the massive mushrooms. 

Scanning the walls, I finally located the ramp by which I entered. It was on the far side of the cavern. I went the wrong direction and was now the furthest from my exit as I could possibly be.  Tears ran from my eyes, not from the horribly pungent odor covering my body, but because of the fact I knew I would never leave this place. 

My lips began to tremble as I fell to my knees. As hard as I was trying to escape this dungeon, all I did was get myself even deeper into the nightmare. It seemed all hope was lost until I looked upward. A light shined into the cavern from above. I thought it no more than an illusion, a figment of my terrified mind desperate for escape, but after a few moments I was sure it was real. 

It was probably one hundred feet or so up a steep incline. Regaining my composure, I rose to my feet and started making my way along the base of the wall. The wall was steep, but it was also very craggy. The rocks provided plenty of hand and footholds. It was well within my ability to climb. I just had to make sure I did not let myself slip on the slick rocks at the bottom. 

I wiped the drying dung from my hands. I could not hold onto my flashlight and climb at the same time, so I undid part of my belt, slipped it through the handle then re-buckled it. I would not be able to direct my light very well at all, but it did allow me to see the stone wall immediately in front of me. 

Carefully and quietly, I began my ascent. The craggy wall was slick at the bottom but became drier and coarser as I moved upward. It was a long climb. I wanted to go as fast as I could, but I had to continue to be as quiet as I could be. I was very careful to make sure each stone was firmly in place before putting any weight on it. I did not want to kick a rock loose or anything else to alert the abominations in the fungi forest as to my current location. 

When I was almost two thirds of the way to my escape, my left foot slipped underneath me. I managed to keep my grip, but I smashed my leg against the stone. My shin scraped against the rock, and from sheer instinct I almost cried out in pain. I was able to restrain myself and did not shout as my instincts told me to do. 

Planting my feet once again on the stone jutting out below me, I continued my climb to the glorious light of the sun shining through the small hole. As I approached the exit, I saw the carapace of some of the lightening bugs here and there. It looked like perhaps the insects died, fell down the wall and wedged into the rocks. 

My heart raced and my ears rang as my blood pressure increased. Anxiety, fear and joy caused my head and knees to shake. I had to be careful. I was too close to my escape, and I was not going to let this opportunity slip away from me. It was a blessing to find this opening after I journeyed so far from my original entrance. 

Determining the size of the opening when I was at the floor of the cavern was difficult, but as I got closer and closer, I could see the opening was plenty large enough for me to crawl out. It was fortunate for me as I worried I may have to jar stones loose to widen the opening. 

An unbelievable sense of relief washed over me when the warm light began to shine on my face. The rays of the sun never looked so beautiful. I grabbed onto the outer edge of the hole and pulled myself out. I nearly let loose when I saw what covered the slope outside. 

Spread across the ground I saw hundreds or possibly thousands of the chitinous shells of lightening bugs. That was not what terrified me so much. When I looked around, I saw the bones of cattle, deer and all sorts of wild animals. That meant either the poor animals somehow wandered into the cavern, which seemed unlikely, or the more logical answer was these monsters hunted outside of their subterranean world. 

A wave of nausea, numbness and horror washed over me when I saw the skulls and bones around me. Among all the animal bones and insect carapace, I saw the skulls of several human beings. I did not know how they ended up being a part of this field of bones. Perhaps these creatures were responsible for the occasional unfortunate missing hiker in the mountains over the years. 

As I started to pull myself the rest of the way out of the darkness, I felt something grab hold of my legs. I screamed in agony as something sharp pierced my flesh. The pain was so intense I could not breathe, and it burned, like lye. 

My heart was still beating as I felt those subterranean terrors rip the flesh from my legs. Here I was so close to escaping back into my world, and the underground humanoids located me. Their sharp talons tore into my abdomen, and I could no longer hold myself out of the hole. 

I did not realize my excitement to reach the surface increased my blood pressure which caused the abrasion on my shin to bleed. I covered myself in guano to hide from them, and they located me over the scent of the blood from a small scrape on my leg. 

The deformed beasts pulled me into the hole as they ripped the organs from my body. Right there, they feasted on my flesh. Helplessly I watched them tearing me apart; then suddenly everything got cold. The darkness of death finally took me. 

I was so close. I reached the warm, welcoming sunlight and thought I was safe. I was dead wrong, literally. I was momentarily back in my world and those abominations drug me back into theirs. Soon, after they were done feasting on my soft flesh, I would return to the surface take my place as part of the bone yard. 

 Copyright © 2023

Rickety Old Ship

Word Count: 6,287

It was impossible for me to say how long I lay there adrift in the warm crystal-clear tropical waters of the Caribbean Sea. My lips cracked and bled, parched from the harsh sun and the salt lightly coating them, and my dried tongue swelled in my mouth like a malign puffer fish making it very difficult to breathe. As my virtually limp body dangled half-way off the piece of ship wreckage, I could feel the wrinkles in my feet as my high leather boots filled with the briny sea water. The splintered wreckage currently preserving my life dug into my water softened skin, and the briny water inflicted an insurmountable amount of pain. 

Surrounded by a light gray fog, my obscured vision extended not more than a couple of hundred feet in any direction. Surrounding me adrift, I saw the remnants of the large ship upon which I was recently a passenger. I saw no other survivors, and with my parched throat and bloated tongue, I found it impossible to call out. 

This was one of God’s magnificent jokes. Thirsting to death, I drifted in a sea of undrinkable, virtually poisonous water. If I were to drink the briny sea water, it would only hasten my pending demise. 

The course of the ship on which I was a passenger traveled along a heavily used merchant trading route, so I could only have faith another passing ship found me before the lapping waves washed me to the next life. Other sea vessels would have a greater chance of finding me if the rest of this thick heavy fog burned away, but that would leave me fully exposed to the unforgiving sunlight. 

This was God’s second greatest joke. He gave us a lifegiving sun we cannot live without, but then the same sun that gave life could burn a man to a blistering death. If I were not such a coward, I would let myself slip into the water to drown to spare myself such a gruesome fate. 

Call it courage or fear. Whatever it was, I intended to hold onto this life for as long as I could. Small waves slapped  gently, brushing my legs and the piece of broken wreckage currently preserving my life. The gentle sound of the smacking water made me even thirstier. I scanned the ocean around me hoping I might find a water keg still intact. I would take a bottle of rum if I could find it. Unfortunately, I found nothing drinkable anywhere near by. 

It seemed impossible for me to recall how long I was adrift, and I knew I would soon die of thirst. The salt soaking into my body through my skin only worked to accelerate the dehydration process reducing my remaining time in half. 

I felt something rubbing against my numbing legs. Streinously I rolled over and propped myself into a semi-seated position to try to get a look at what it was. I spotted something gently bobbing up and down in the water, but could not discern what it might be. Using my booted foot to turn over whatever it was, the pale-green, bloated corpse of another passenger rolled onto its back. I probably would have screamed with fear and disgust if my throat was not painfully dry. I tried to kick it away with my foot, but instead the belly ruptured from the gas buildup releasing the most foul of odors. The corpse appeared to be in the water for days. It could not be from the ship I was on, for it sank only the previous evening. 

The stench did not last long. With the putrid air escaping from its stomach, the body quickly sank into the depths of the sea. I did not see any other bodies floating in the water, but then again I did not notice this one until it brushed against my leg. With all of the wreckage floating about, it was virtually impossible to discern what anything was. I could easily be surrounded by the corpses of other passengers and not even know it. I wondered if I was the only survivor. 

My parched, cracked lips stung from the briny sea air, which dried my eyes until my vision blurred. If rescue did not come very soon, I knew death was a certainty. It became difficult to open my eyes; tear production in them stopped. I found myself envying the dead, the bloated corpses floating atop the water and concealed by the fog. At least they were spared the torturous, agonizing death I had the luxury of experiencing. 

I thought I lost it, that my mind was quickly fading when I heard splashing in the water. I knew my delusional mind; my desperate desire to be rescued created the hallucination of the sounds of oars in the water. The insanity brought on by dehydration tried to soothe my frightened soul. 

As everything faded to black, I heard a faint voice call out, “I have another one over here.” 

I thought it was the voice of an angel, here to take me to heaven. I awoke an unknown time later in the crew cabin of a squeaky wooden ship. I hung in a hammock between two posts swaying side to side, and was dressed in ragged but dry clothes. A pretty dark haired lass sat next to me slowly feeding fresh water into my mouth. I felt the world spinning and was unconscious once again. 

Unaware of it most of the time, the caring girl poured water, drop by drop, into my mouth. She coated my dry cracked lips with lard so they could start healing. I did not know how long it took, but the enchanting young girl slowly nursed me back to health. 

I awoke at one point and straining but weakly asked, “Others, were there others?” 

“Shh,” the young girl whispered softly. “You worry about you right now.” 

“My lips,” I said. “I-I can talk.” 

“Yes,” she said caringly, “but you must save your energy for healing” 

The dark haired young girl held a small bowl to my lips and told me to take a sip. It was an herbal tea, which tasted quite dreadful, but it made my irritated throat feel much better. The brew must have a sedating effect, because I was asleep again within minutes. 

The next time I awoke it was dark. I hung there gently swaying in the hammock and found my nurse was not with me. I did not hear her or anyone else aboard the ship. In the tight crew quarters, I should hear people snoring and breathing in their sleep. I should be able to hear the ship rats squeaking and scurrying in the corners. The only sounds I heard were the splashing of the water against the wooden hull and the creaking of the old planks as the ship rocked gently from side to side. 

I tried to climb out of my hammock, but I still did not possess the strength to lift myself. Relaxing back into my swing bed, I listened to the sounds around me. I heard the pots and pans from the galley clanking and ringing against one another. The wind blew across the opening at the top of the ladder producing a hauntingly deep, pipe-like sound. 

The thing that disturbed me, that filled me with fear, was I heard no other people. I remained conscious for several hours, but never once heard the crier announcing the hourglass. I wanted to drift back into a slumber. I was very tired, but this deep terror prevented me from attaining slumber. I figured it was just before dawn when I finally drifted off to sleep. 

The next time I awoke, I felt like I slept for several days. My nurse was again at my side, and I heard the captain shouting orders to the crew above. Hearing the flapping of the sails in the wind, I thought that strange silent night to be nothing more than a dream, that was if it were not for the incredible pain in my right leg. 

I tried to lean myself up. I wanted to get a look at my leg. My dark haired nurse read my motions and gently pressed me back down into my bed. 

“Your leg is badly broken,” she said compassionately. “The medicinal tea I gave you numbed the pain, but I can’t keep you in such a deep slumber forever.” 

I wished she would sedate me for a few more days, but then I realized I had not eaten since my rescuers brought me aboard. My nurse fed me droplets of water and tea as I slept, but without my being conscious, she could not feed me any solids. 

My head throbbed from hunger, thirst, fear and the combination of the rest of the ordeal. Several men elsewhere in the crew quarters joked and laughed loudly. They must have done something to earn a day off, and they really seemed to be enjoying it. By the sound of it, there were eight or ten of them. Their slurred speech and clanking of bottles told me they were inebriated on rum. 

I wished they would stop with the excessive noise, but I could not blame them. Leisure time on a ship such as this was indeed not a gift given frivolously. I thought of asking them for a swig of their drink, but with my growling stomach, I knew it would do no more than cause me to vomit. Best I wait until I filled my stomach before I wrapped my healing lips around a rum bottle. 

The precious girl returned soon. Seeing the agony the noisy men caused me, she snapped at them to shut up and get out of the crew quarters. The men grumbled and murmured a few swears under their breath but did not disobey her. 

I found it rather strange the sailors did not blatantly insult her or give her any kind of grief. I thought perhaps she was the daughter of the captain or a high paying passenger. Either way, I did not care. I was glad to have those drunken sailors out of the immediate vicinity. Until I got some food in me to help ease the pain in my skull, I preferred those drunken celebrators out of earshot. 

“Don’t mind them,” she said. “They didn’t mean any harm; they don’t get all too much time for such foolishness.” 

A delicious smoky, fishy aroma drifted from the girl’s direction and brought an appetite to my belly. 

“I brought you some soup,” the beautiful girl said politely. “I’m afraid cook didn’t have much to put in it.” 

I leaned my head forward as she lifted a spoon from the bowl to my mouth. The fish soup was not half bad. It was rather salty, but salting was the only way to preserve meats. Only so much brine could be cooked back out of it. 

“Thank you,” I said to the girl. “Thank you for being so kind.” 

Gently shaking her head, my brown-eyed nurse replied, “You don’t have to thank me. I am glad I can help you.” 

I slurped down the spoonful of soup quickly. My care taker told me I must slow down, least I get a stomach ache. I knew she was right, but my hunger would not let me think like that. Because I would not stop slurping down the large spoonfuls of liquid, the young lady fed me smaller servings. 

As I finished the meager meal, my nurse said, “We will have some fresh fruit tomorrow.” 

“H-how’s that?” 

“We’re stopping near a lush tropical island tomorrow,” she explained. “The captain will send a few boats ashore to gather some fresh food and water.” 

I wondered to what island she referred. The ship on which I was originally a passenger headed from the island of Haiti, and we were heading toward the Southern Americas. I was not aware of any islands on that route until we reached the continental rim. We were not headed east. I watched the yellow sun rise, the same sun that almost took my life, on the port side of the ship and set on the starboard side. That meant we must be sailing south, but where I did not know. 

I was about to ask the girl on what island were we stopping. As if anticipating my question, she excused herself and climbed the stairs to the deck of the ship. It almost felt as if she was trying to avoid my interrogations. 

I hung there in that hammock, with my leg set in a splint consisting of two small planks and a mass of rope. My head felt at bit better an hour or so after my meal of pickled herring soup. I attempted to sit, but sparks filled my eyes and my head throbbed like an African drum. I nearly blacked out and fell back into my hanging bed. Obviously, I was not as well as I felt a few minutes ago. 

My heartbeat pounded in my ears and the throbbing in my skull nearly made me lose the small amount of food I did manage to eat. Perhaps I would feel better tomorrow after I got some fresh fruit inside of me. I hoped they would find some segmented fruits. Depending on how much time we spent at sea, it might not be long before scurvy set in. 

I could not say for how long I hung there gently swinging in my hammock. For hours, I listened to orders shouted out, instructions given, and the sound of countless feet thrumming against the deck above. Eventually, I saw the sun shining through the starboard porthole. I knew it would be dark soon. 

My caring nurse came back into the crew quarters. I knew it was her because of her soft footsteps and the aroma of fishy soup. The first meal she fed me today did little to satiate my hunger. I could not wait to eat again. 

As she slowly fed me one spoonful after another, I considered asking her about the strange silence during the previous night. I changed my mind after seeing the stern look on her face. I was used to seeing her with a friendly face, but something about her countenance made me afraid to ask her anything. It was probably no more than a dream anyway, so I decided it was not worth mentioning. 

I was about half of the way finished with my soup when she finally spoke. 

“Are you okay sir?” she asked kindly. “You’ve been awful quiet.” 

“Yes,” I replied. “I just have a lot on my mind.” 

I sipped down a couple of more spoons full of soup and mustered up the nerve to ask her a question on my mind since I first became conscious aboard the ship. 

“Were there any other survivors, or was I the only one?” 

A long uncomfortable pause followed my interrogative. I did not find this to be a good sign. Either she was afraid to tell me or she was trying to quickly concoct a lie. 

“There were others,” she explained. “We brought seven aboard, including you. When the lifeboats found you, you were an inch away from oblivion’s door.” 

She still avoided giving me the answers for which I probed. I heard no one else in the dank crew quarters. If she did help nurse others back to health, I never heard them. As far as I knew, I was the only one in such bad shape. During the day I saw no one else down here. The one night I was awake, I did not hear anyone above deck either. Something strange was happening, but I could not say what. 

I should be able to get around soon enough. After my body recuperated from the whole ordeal, I should be able to find something to use as a crutch. I needed to get over my continued lack of food and water to allow my body to muster up some strength. 

The young nurse gave me another small bowl of the herbal tea after I finished my soup. I fell asleep shortly before dark and did not rise until the next morning. I heard the cranking of pullies and the creaking of rope. The rattling of tack and harnesses squealed as someone lowered several dinghies down onto the slapping water. 

The men must not have been to shore for quite some time. I heard them yelling out “yahoo,” “yippee,” and saying farewell to the other crew members. It almost sounded like they were never coming back. I thought the nurse may have lied, and this was more than a tropical island. If these men were indeed staying behind, there must be a port of some kind here. Unfortunately, I still could not stand, thus I could not look out of the porthole. 

We stayed anchored in place until midday of the following day. I heard the man in the crow’s nest announcing the smaller boats were returning from land. Twenty minutes later, I heard the lowering of the cargo planks. That must be for the fresh water and food the men brought from the island. 

After the supplies were all loaded onto the deck, I heard the splash of hooks at the end of heavy empty rope. Thirty seconds passed and someone shouted angrily. The voice demanded the men in the boats to attach the hooks. I heard grumbling and whining as some of the other crew members lifted the boats back to deck level. 

These were not the same happy voices I heard as the boats left for shore. These men sounded beaten and broken as if they lost all hope. I did not understand this odd reaction. So far, I found the ship quite comforting with the exception of the hauntingly silent nights and the strange return of the sailors who went to the land then returned. 

The men no sooner set foot on the deck before they were put to work scrubbing the deck and such. The captain did not waste any time. If these were indeed new crew members as I thought, he gave them no time to acclimate. 

An hour passed and my nurse returned to my side. She brought with her a fresh banana and a segmented orange fruit. If she handed me the food, I knew I would scarf it down. She probably realized this because she only gave me small pieces of fruit at a time. Over the course of the next forty-five minutes, my nurse spoke to me as she fed me the fruit and water. 

She did not speak of anything of much importance. Truth be told, I think she stuck with the small talk so as to avoid any serious subject matter. Despite her meaningless words, I had many questions of my own. 

“You told me they found other survivors from my ship,” I reminded her. “Where are they?” 

She took in a deep breath and let out a long sigh. I knew she did not want to tell me. The question was, why did she not want to tell me? What was it she was trying to hide? 

“Some of them the captain sent to shore,” she replied. 

I waited for her to continue, but she did not. If I was going to get anything out of her, I would have to be blunt. 

“Why were they sent to the island?” I asked, “The men who returned, were they the same men who went to shore?” 

Again she let out a deep sigh followed by a long awkward pause. 

“Those in the proper condition were left ashore,” she reluctantly replied. “They were dropped off on a veritable paradise.” 

“But will anyone find them?” I asked. “We can’t leave them marooned.” 

“Trust me,” she said. “In an Eden such as that, they will never want to leave.” 

Before I could ask her who the men were that returned in the boats, she excused herself and went back up to the deck. 

Her words meant nothing to me. They made no sense. I traveled these trade routes for years, and I never heard of any such island. How could a tropical island be a paradise? Hardships always existed, and insects spread disease. Shelter is hard to construct. Food can become scarce with the wrong weather. As far as I could discern, we went off and left the unfortunate men stranded. 

Later, the young dark-haired girl returned with a bowl of the tea. She allowed me to drink it rather quickly. As soon as it was gone, she left without saying a word. The pain in my leg faded slowly and I drifted off to sleep . 

Another week passed and infection set in my broken leg. My brown-eyed caretaker tried a variety of ointments and herbal poltus. She slowed the infection, but it began to progress its way up my leg. The young woman brought me the sedating tea three times a day. If she did not, I probably would have died from the pain. 

The next time I awoke, I felt like I slept for weeks. I sat upward in my hammock to look at the condition of my leg. I almost fainted. I almost vomited. When I looked down, my right leg was no longer there. The infection grew too great, and my leg was amputated as I slept. 

The pain was minimal, and I realized I must have been out for quite some time. My leg, severed at the knee, was healing nicely. If I was unconscious long enough for my leg to heal this far, how did I eat during that time? 

My nurse could spoon feed me water and possibly broth, but I would not have healed so quickly on such a meager diet. This only stood to raise more questions. 

I waited until dusk, expecting my nurse to come down at any time. She never came. All day long, I listened to the sounds of the sailors above. 

When nightfall came, everything fell silent. The only sounds were the creaking of the wooden ship. The first time I witnessed this strange event, I thought I must be dreaming. Now I knew better. It was as if all of the sailors vanished as soon as the sun set. This time I was absolutely sure I was not dreaming, and it terrified me beyond measure. I could not conceive of one logical explanation for the abrupt silencing of all those above deck. 

I did not sleep for the entire night. 

Something unholy lingered about this ship. What it was, I did not know. I only knew it was present. When the sun rose again in the morning, all of the sounds of the hardworking men resumed. Their words, their movements above deck resumed exactly where they left off last night. 

Only a few hours after dawn, I felt the ship slow nearly to a stop. The loud clanking of chains came from above as the crew lowered the anchor. I prayed it was my time to get off this ship. I hoped we stopped at a major port with a proper hospital. The anchor hit bottom and the boat softly jerked to a stop. 

It was not until then I realized it was raining outside. No wind seemed to blow against the ship, but I could hear it whistling across the deck. I could feel the air growing colder and knew a storm must be pushing its way in. Perhaps that was why the ship was at anchor. The captain may have anticipated strong weather and decided to ride it out anchored rather than while sailing. 

Then I heard the splash of two rowboats as they hit the water. The captain must be a fool to send his men to shore in rowboats with a strong storm approaching. We could not be that needy for supplies. 

I thought initially it was only days since our last stop, but then I realized it had to be much longer. I spent a lot of time unconscious, enough time for my leg to heal to the point the pain was nearly gone. Perhaps we were in more of a need for supplies than I realized. 

I waited for my nurse to return to my side, and the hours passed by slowly. Eventually I heard someone above announce the return of the rowboats. The deck hand only announced the return of one boat, but I was sure I heard two hit the water to head for land. The boat seemed to be returning awful early. I did not see how they could have gathered sufficient resources in such a short time. The clanking of the chains told me when the rowboat was being lifted back to deck level. 

I heard the men on the small boat moaning and wailing. It reminded me of the cries coming from a battlefield after the fighting concluded. It was the cries of those defeated, left with no hope, and abandoned to die. The tormented sounds nearly made me sick. I could not fathom what could happen in such a short time to make these men cry like this. 

There was a thud and a man screamed out in pain. When the pattern repeated, I realized the men were being drug forcibly from the dinghy to fall hard onto the deck. If these men were ill, they should not be brought back on board. They could bring diseases onto the ship that would rapidly spread in these close quarters. 

I thought about the second boat. I had no doubt I heard two of them splash into the sea, but only one dinghy returned. Could it be they were attacked when reaching shore? That would explain both the missing rowboat and the wails of the men returning. 

At this point, I had no idea where in the Americas we were. The sun continued to rise on the port side of the ship indicating we still headed south. It could be very possible the ship worked its way up and down the coast. Without knowing our location, I did not know what kind of natives these men dealt with. They could be coming back injured, poisoned, diseased, or a combination of two or more. If they were sick, the captain was a fool to ever let them back on board. To protect the other passengers and crew, the captain should have left them behind to die so as to save the others. 

My nurse did not return to my side until several hours following the return of the rowboat. When she did come down to the crew quarters, she did not say much. For some reason, she acted very cold and distant. The child did not show the compassion and caring in her eyes she did thus far. She was nothing but considerate and caring to me until now. 

The lass gave me a bowl of stew and a large red apple. She left as abruptly as she arrived, not saying a word the entire time. I assumed she had patients above who needed attending more than me. If that was the case though, why were none of the injured brought down here with me? I was sure I would have time to ask her later. 

I ate the stew, but I hesitated when I thought of eating the apple. If this was just brought on board, I did not want to eat it. Since the boat was not gone long enough for the men to gather any fruit, I eventually broke down and consumed the juicy red apple. It was not as good as a segmented fruit, but it would help stave off the scurvy. 

I placed the apple core in the bowl and gently dropped it beside my hanging bed. I found my eyes burning and realized I was awake for more than a full day. Pulling the blanket over my cold body, I quickly went to sleep. At least asleep I was spared the ghostly silence of the night. 

We must have sailed very far to the south because the air grew colder with each passing day. For the next week, I only saw my nurse when she brought me my meal for the day. The young dark-haired girl brought me a cup of her herbal tea, which always helped me sleep through the night. 

One day I decided not to drink the tea so that I could remain awake. 

She must have had other patients located somewhere on this ship. I never got a chance to ask her about the crying men, the continuous rain, or the increasingly colder temperature. I wondered if I did something to anger the young woman. Perhaps I said something in my sleep that greatly offended her. 

When darkness fell, the sounds on the deck silenced as usual. I heard the creaking of the ship and the clanging of the metallic pots in the galley, but this time I could also hear the other men wailing like their souls were being torn asunder. Terror like no other overwhelmed me. I wanted to drink the tea so I would sleep and forget about the pain in my leg. On the other hand, I was afraid of what could be happening to me as I slept. 

I awoke in the morning to find the burning in my eyes grew worse. I knew I caught something the men on this last dinghy brought aboard. My left eye stung, but my right eye burned with a searing pain. My right ear ached as if someone punched me hard in the side of the head. The cold only made the irritation intensify. 

I still used the blanket given to me after my rescue. It was very dirty and did very little to shield me from the piercing cold. I looked around trying to locate something more I could use for insulation. The only thing I saw that might contain blankets was a closet at the front of the crew cabin. My nurse never stayed long enough for me to ask her much of anything. If I was going to find more blanketing, I would have to get it myself. 

I rolled out of the hammock and onto the floor. I was instantly reminded of the pain in my amputated leg when I hit the creaky wooden surface.  

Pulling my way toward the closet was easier than what I originally thought. I giggled with joy when I found the closet unlocked and a stack of blankets inside. I wedged myself into the corner and covered myself with all of the wool blankets. As my body warmed, I drifted off to sleep. 

I slept through the night and woke when the ship jolted to a halt. We did not hit anything or water would be flowing in through the hull. That must mean the captain once again dropped anchor. I heard very little commotion above, nowhere as much as when compared to the day I was brought aboard. It seemed to me we did not slow much before the crew dropped the anchor causing the ship to jerk hard. 

My right eye completely swelled shut. Try as I might, I could not open it. I felt it with my hand and felt a scar running from the bridge of my nose to the severed tip of my right ear. The scar was not new. I felt no scabs, only deformed flesh. Terror filled me as I felt the old wound on my face. 

Only yesterday I had the use of both eyes. How could it be that my right eye would now be nothing more than a horribly disfiguring scar? Panic set in and I threw the blankets off my body. Strapped to my missing right leg was a long wooden peg, mahogany by the looks of it. Chills filled me, not from the stabbing cold, but from the truth I was coming to realize. 

Forcing myself to a stand, I walked on the wooden leg with great proficiency. This was not the first time I walked on my peg leg. The prosthetic thumped against the floor as I made my way to the stairs. Standing at the top was my nurse. Her forearm was slashed from elbow to wrist, and a musket wound pierced her chest. Suddenly I remembered why she looked so familiar. 

She was a passenger on a Spanish galleon headed from the Americas bound for Europe. In addition to transporting passengers, the ship carried a vast wealth of gold and jewels. I was the captain of a ship of buccaneers who pirated the transport. 

The girl hid in a closet when my men and I boarded the Spanish galleon. The crew of the vessel fought back courageously, but they were no match for my seasoned men. I led a group below deck to seize and secure the precious treasures. I fired two of my muskets as we took the deck of the ship before dropping them on the deck. My last musket I carried in one hand as I held my saber in the other. 

An elderly man surprised me when he jumped from around a corner with a dagger in hand. He slashed at my musket arm with the sharp blade and, as I jerked back, the musket went off. The man dropped to his knees and cried out. After slashing his throat, I went to the closet to see what he thought so precious he was willing to give up his own meaningless life. I opened the door and there was the dark-haired, brown-eyed girl. Blood pulsed from a hole in her chest. 

When the foolish old man caused me to misfire, the pistol fired into the closet instead of putting a whole in his chest. The old man hid her because he knew what my men and I would do with her. I clearly remembered the look on the girl’s face as she fell forward. I tried to catch her and her forearm slid down the length of my blade. Without a second thought, I threw her lifeless body out of my way. 

I helped set up the powder kegs to destroy the ship as my men carried the gold and surviving women aboard my vessel. I would let my men have their way with the screaming women until we grew weary of them and threw them into the sea. Not that I cared, but the little girl was spared that fate. She did not have to experience being brutally raped over and over by a crew of pirates, who would later toss them into the ocean when their fun with them was over. 

We finished laying the fuses to the kegs and tied them together at the ends. Another fuse ran from there to the top of the deck like a rope. There had to be enough to make sure we got it to light after we moved away. I finished up and then I heard the splash of the boarding plank falling into the water. It was mutiny. 

My first mate smiled and waved to me while someone threw a firepot onto the deck of the Spanish galleon. I watched my ship, the Cerberus, moving away as the strung fuses burned around me. I cursed my first mate to hell only seconds before the transport vessel exploded into a show of flame and splintered fragments. 

The next thing I remembered was floating in the water holding tightly to a piece of the ship’s hull. I floated there in the salty water until this ship came by and rescued me. 

I heard the two dinghies hit the water as the last of the ship’s crew abandoned their vessel. The lass stood on the deck looking into the crew quarters, looking at me. The dark-haired girl smiled a caring smile as a halo of blue light engulfed her body. I felt the warming love radiating around the girl as she stepped backward and disappeared into the light. 

I cried out, pleading for her not to leave me. I begged her not to leave me alone. The beautiful glow retreated from me as I staggered up the stairs to the upper deck. I tried to catch up to the heavenly light; I wanted so desperately to go into the light. 

Suddenly the anchor chain snapped and I fell flat to my face. When I looked up, the beautiful blue light was gone. I was left aboard the vessel alone. The tattered sails caught a wind not there. I grabbed the helm and tried to take control of the ship. The rudder was stuck; I could not get the helm to turn. I struggled with the wheel as the scorched Spanish flag flapped on the mast above me. 

Days passed and I could not find any food or water. I saw no land, but even if I did, I had no rowboat to get me there. By the fifth day, I should have been dead. My stomach cramped with hunger and my dry lips cracked and bled. Days turned to weeks and weeks turned to months. I reached a level of thirst and hunger I never imagined possible. 

I realized I would not die because I was already dead. The others were dropped off in the places they deserved, either a place of paradise, punishment or something in-between. This was my punishment. This was my hell. I was doomed to spend eternity forever sailing south without food or water into increasingly cold weather aboard this rickety old ship. 

Copyright 2018 – Michael Wilson 

Myself

Word Count: 3,177

Infinitely more realities, alternate universes, or perhaps other dimensions some may say, exist than the human brain could possibly imagine. It boggles the mind trying to grasp the idea that there exists an infinite number of infinitely sized universes. Theoretical physicists were only beginning to scratch the surface in their understanding of the nature of reality. 

I wish I knew nothing. I wish I could be as ignorant as the rest of humanity. Others cannot see the things I can see, and I envied their blindness. Countless generations ago my ancestors were blessed with the knowledge of and ability to see these other worlds. They called it a blessing, but I called it a curse. 

When I slept, I did not dream. Instead, surreal visions of places unknown dominated my sleep. I saw hellish worlds, worlds of bliss and worlds very similar to my own. Each morning, as soon as I awoke, I recorded my visions in a ledger. I kept my ledger and a pencil on the night stand because I wanted to make sure I documented the perplexing visions before they faded from memory. 

Until I was thirteen years old, I could not see these other dimensions all the time. When I did, I had absolutely no control over what worlds would appear to me. It took years of practice to master my control over what I did and did not see. 

Some of the beings from these other dimensions overlapped my universe enough that they could slip through. Some of these beings intermingled with the Earth Terrans while others remained hidden. Certain beings wanted to cause harm to humanity, some were benevolent, and others remained completely indifferent. 

I was first able to see these other realities immediately upon reaching the age of six. It was this way with all the males in my biological family tree. Before my ability blossomed, one of my uncles mysteriously vanished; it was assumed he crossed the threshold of an alternate universe. We had a hell of a time convincing the authorities and my uncles’ acquaintances that nothing sorted occurred. Fortunately, his wife passed away prior to his disappearance, so there was no need to concoct a cover for his absence there. 

Such things occurred every so often with the men in my family. Sometimes one of us slipped through the boundaries between realities and became stranded, unable to return. When there was no wife involved, it made the disappearance much easier to cover up. Any sons understood because we all shared the gift. Daughters were another story. When daughters were involved, things became much more difficult to explain. A more elaborate ruse had to be concocted in such cases. 

Some of my bloodline thought it was their responsibility to police immigrants from one universe to another while others believed it was their place to rid our world of them altogether. Many chose to work with the aliens to our universe to the mutual benefit of both. Countless discoveries were made when the wiser men of our family used the knowledge gained from an alternative reality to make this world a better place for the natives. 

My father broke a long-held rule among the males; he chose to explain our fantastic gift to my mother. Initially things did not turn out well at all. Mother believed he was insane. She left and tried to take me away from him. Mother did not want me to hear, or God forbid believe father’s outlandish tales. I do not know how, but father somehow convinced my mom he was telling her the truth. I am glad because I would be lost when my second site began. 

I can remember that first glimpse through reality as if it happened yesterday. It was a beautiful early Autumn day. Father took the dog for a walk and insisted I come with them. We lived in a scattered community; thick forests congested the areas in between small clusters of homes. A trail worn from decades of use began in our backyard and continued on for miles. It was on this route that we always walked the dog. 

Because the tree coverage was so dense, there was very little undergrowth obscuring the ground. Leaves and pine needles created a barrier which hindered weed growth. This allowed a clear view deep into the forest. 

Shortly after we entered the woods, a sudden case of vertigo washed over me for several moments. Eventually, as my head began to clear, I could feel my father’s strong hands holding me erect. I suddenly became aware of our dog barking, and I heard another dog barking back. No not back, they were barking in unison. 

When my mind cleared enough for me to stand on my feet unaided, I turned my gaze toward the source of the excited shouts of the second dog. Initially I did not know what to think. I was looking into a mirror. At least I felt like I was looking into a mirror. Fifty feet to the right of the trail, I saw another man, boy and dog. 

I did not remember any other walking trails until this one splintered into multiple paths another half mile from here, so I wondered what the others were doing out here. Another few moments later I realized these others paralleled all of our moves exactly. Their clothes were of a different fashion from ours, and the dog was of a different breed. Despite the minor differences, the others were exactly like us. 

My whole world crashed in around me. I did not know if they paralleled our moves or if it was us that mimic theirs.  Were the dogs barking at one another or was it the same dog barking in both places. I tried to ask my father what I was seeing, but he told me to be quiet and pay attention. 

“Be patient my son,” he said. “Try to calm your thoughts and watch closely at everything around you.” 

The reflections of ourselves appeared to be having the same conversation. I was looking across the threads of existence to another universe for the first time, and so was the little boy I was watching. Initially I saw nothing except for that one peculiar scene. My father tried soothing me, explaining I was in no danger, but fear of the unknown gripped me tightly regardless of any assurances. What I saw could not be real, yet there it was. Father saw the others as well but showed very little reaction to them. 

Rubbing his hands on my shoulders, he began to hum. Something about the melody was very soothing and washed my fear and anxiety away. Again, he told me to be silent, quiet the thoughts in my mind and pay attention to my surroundings. An hour passed and I still saw nothing besides the other versions of ourselves. 

Apparently the other me must have seen what he was supposed to see already. The nearly identical versions of us stopped imitating our movements and resumed their walk in the forest. Finally, with the aid of my father, I began to see more than what was there. The trees of the forest faded into almost nothing, and I saw a large number of massive stone structures. They reminded me of the pictures I saw in a book about ancient Egypt. I still saw the forest, but it was nothing more than a vague ghostly image. 

Father asked me what I saw as I scanned across the odd civilization. At first, I ignored him. What I saw commanded all of my attention. When he asked me again, I softly told them what was displayed before me. Something about this revelation pleased Father tremendously. 

I told him of the beings in the city. In no way shape or form were they human. They were like giant, towering amoeba. Their leathery thick, green skin was almost totally transparent. Rather than nuclei in the center there were only what could be called brains in their amorphous bodies. 

There was no doubt the creatures were intelligent. They did after all build the city of polished granite and marble. At least I thought it was granite and marble. I was not sure if the same minerals existed in this reality as were in mine. 

They had no sensory organs in any normal sense of the word. Occasionally two of them partially merged in what I thought was an exchange of information. I could’ve gotten caught in awe of this place if father had not roused me to my senses. 

I looked into his eyes and saw the pride. Over the next several hours, he explained the nature of my second sight. He told me bedtime stories about people who could see people from other worlds, but until now I thought it was fiction. This was the conversation when I learned only the men of my family had the second site. He told me this gift never manifested itself until the male was six years old. 

The vast majority of males in my family could only see into the immediately adjacent realities. My father was overcome with joy when I described the scene that played before me. Occasionally men in my bloodline are born with the ability to see much-much deeper into the string of pearls, the threads of all that is. My sight was powerful. I was a member of this very tiny minority. 

He explained what I saw was an alternate universe occupying the same space as hours. I was only six, so it was close to impossible for me to wrap my arms around it at all. It did not make sense to me how something else, somewhere else could be where we already were. It was utterly baffling. 

During the following years, Father taught me how to control my ability. He could not fathom what it was like to see as much as I, so it was difficult for him to teach me to deal with it. Still, he did help me control my gift enough to preserve my sanity. 

Father was one of the family members who believed in working in cooperation with the others. Initially I followed the same path, but that would later change. My father only saw those at the threshold of our universe and the next. I could see much deeper and trusted the others less and less as I watched them go about their daily activities. 

According to my father, I could cross physically into any reality I could see, but I was too terrified of what could happen if I did. I never made use of this ability at Father’s request and because of my own crippling fear. Whether it was actually possible or not, I was too scared of becoming stranded in a universe that was not my own to find out. The air could be different, or the ambient levels of radiation could be much higher. I did not know if I would be able to adapt to new environments, and Father was unable to answer me this when I asked. The two universes he could see were virtually identical to our own. 

In time I learned to project myself mentally. This could -accurately be referred to as an out-of-body experience. I dared not attempt to move across the threshold in my physical body, but when I projected myself through the ether that connects the whole of existence, I was not perceived by those in the other realities. I felt much safer leaving my body at home and doing my exploring as a ghost. 

I attained years of knowledge in a very short time. When I moved across one universe from my own, time slowed in my universe from my perspective. The further I moved from my own universe; the more time stood still back in my own. This allowed me to spend years studying the vastness of reality without wasting any of my own years. 

In most universes I found only infinite chaos with no definable laws of physics. Among the dimensions remaining only a small percentage supported life as we understand it. The ones I did find occupied usually had inhabitants with a level of violence the same as our own. There were some a little more and some a little less violent than humans. 

I took a special interest in the world of the green amoeba-like beings. Theirs was the second universe for me to see besides my own, and it was far away from my own. I could spend years there, and only a few minutes would pass for my body at home. 

These amoebas, who I came to call “the Grand,” were by far the most peaceful species I encountered in any universe I visited to date. I spent hundreds of years in their universe watching and studying them. When one Grand encountered another, they began a several hour-long ritual of saying hello. They were never in a hurry, and I never once saw one of them commit a single act of violence. It was as if violence was a concept unknown to them. The reason this was such a favorite place for me to visit was because of how blissfully peaceful it was. 

The architectural design of the Grand was absolutely awe inspiring. Blocks weighing tens of tons, all cut in oddly irregular shapes fit together snugly like pieces of a puzzle. I was never sure of their motivation for this, but nowhere in their architecture could one find anything with a right angle. With all the time I spent there, the reason for this is something I have yet to discover. 

Their cities were absolutely awe inspiring. No two buildings looked alike, but despite the vast array of designs there was a sense of uniformity about them. Very few of the structures had roofs, which made sense in this world. 

I never once saw it rain. The weather was always extremely consistent. For hundreds of years the weather remained exactly the same. A thin and even layer of cloud covered the sky, thin enough to allow the large blue sun to shine through. 

A system of underground catacombs equal to the size of the city above ground were a part of every metropolis of the Grand. This is where they did the things they considered to be the most private and sacred such as mating, eating and sleeping. 

The mating ritual of the Grand could include a number of individuals at least two or more. In specially designed chambers, the Grand join together to create what was essentially a massive multi-celled organism. This took anywhere from a few weeks to several years depending on the number involved. Genetic material is traded, and soon after separating the Grand will each sprout a bud. After several years of carrying and nurturing the bud, the growth falls from the parent and becomes a new Grand. 

I made the decision to stay out of the catacombs after my first few visits there. I realized it was a place they considered sacred and private to them. Being the gentle creatures they were, I really felt I should respect their traditions and beliefs on the matter. 

Initially I thought the maze of structures were composed of granite or marble. When I had enough time to look at them closely, I could see the stone resembled Jasper more than rough granite or smooth marble. 

I never thought Jasper could be formed in such large sections; that was, if it was truly Jasper. It occurred to me long ago that the geological properties existing in my home reality may not exist here. That always made me wonder how diverse the laws of physics were from one reality to the next. For this reason, I was ever so happy I left my body safely in my bedroom, in my house and in my own universe. 

It was in my 17th year when I saw the first signs of the invasion. The denizens of the amoeba world enjoyed the peaceful life of harmony with all other life native to that reality. I found great solace when I visited that slow-paced civilization, enjoying the casual and serene ways of life. On this world there was no pain, no frustration, there was no negativity of any sort. 

As I observed several of the Grand carving away at a stone to be used in a newly constructed building, the gentle atmosphere of that beautiful tranquil world congealed into massive storm clouds. The Grand did not know what to think as they watched the dark clouds billow forth from nowhere. 

Such a strange sight was never seen on their world, and I found myself to be as shocked as they. Bolts of deep-red electrical discharge blasted from the black clouds, and wherever it struck the ground it left large smoking craters in its wake. Nothing could have prepared me or the Grand for what happened next. As the smoke from the glowing hot craters cleared away, I saw the forces of the attacking army. 

Thousands of soldiers, some of them bipeds, many of them not, gathered from different realities rushed outward killing every animal-like life-form they encountered. A dimensional vortex, an aperture between worlds remained in the center of the smoking craters. Soldiers poured through the gateways in what seemed like endless numbers. 

The vast majority of the army appeared to consist of a hoard of creatures that had the look of a wild man from the waist up, but a body resembling that of a dire wolf from the waist down. These vicious creatures slaughtered without compassion or remorse. Others appeared reluctant to engage in the slaughter, but participated nonetheless. 

Although the Grand greatly over towered the invading army, they had no means of defending themselves. Violence was a concept with which they were completely unfamiliar. Attempting to flee was not even a thought they considered as this was an unknown idea to them. The innocent and peaceful Grand were slaughtered because they did not know what else to do. 

I could not believe what I was seeing. I watched these benevolent beings for centuries of their time. No where else in the strings of reality did I find a species this peaceful. They were being slaughtered and there was nothing I could do to help them. I watched on in sadness and horror as the army slaughtered every last living being they encountered. 

Out of sheer instinct, I brought myself in for a closer look. One man was obviously the leader. Everyone appeared to be taking orders from him. I willed myself over to him and instantly knew that there was no hope for my world. This army would move from one reality to the next led by an extremely powerful psychic. The man who commanded the slaughter of the peace and tranquil Grand was instantly familiar to me. I was looking at a face I saw many times before. I was looking at a mirror image, an alternate version of myself. 

Leave Us Alone

Word Count: 8,115

Most children have imaginary friends when they are young, and I was no different. My parents marveled at my imagination. They thought I was very creative because I could describe my friends in expressly intricate detail. Most of my friends were not people. Some of them were animals, and some were very abstract. 

My parents allowed me to play with my imaginary friends all day. I was their only child, and we lived an hour away from the nearest store. In the 400+ square miles that made up our scattered community, only a couple of dozen families occupied the region. Until I began school, the only time I saw children my own age was when we needed to go to town for groceries or canning supplies. 

Although I never realized it, I grew up in extreme poverty. Most of the food we ate was what mother could grow in the garden. She was out there every day killing bugs and pulling weeds. She could not miss one long day of work without threatening our food supply for the next several weeks. 

Most of the vegetables grown in our garden were the kind that produced a high turnover. Summer squash, tomatoes, and okra dominated the garden during the spring and summer. Before fall drew too near, I helped her plant turnips, radishes, and winter squash. 

Father did odd jobs for other families in the region to earn some money. Jimmy Carter was president of the United States and we watched as one industry after another moved out of the country. In four years, the man managed to turn the economy from one based on production to one based on service. The money this country worked so hard to generate over a hundred years was gone in less than four. 

Many farms in the state were going bankrupt. Father’s family lost the land our name farmed for six generations. Most everyone moved away after grandma and grandpa died. Father was stubborn and refused to leave the land in which he was raised. We lived on the six acres that we were left after the bank foreclosed on her hereditary farm. 

The families who retained their farms threw my father worked when they could. The banks sold the foreclosed lands to large farming conglomerates who made it difficult for the locals to compete. Even more families lost their farms as the corporations made it too expensive to match. The large companies had the buying power to keep up with the latest agricultural technology advances. Most family-owned farms used equipment a decade old. 

Since my parents never had any time available for me, they did not think too much about my friends and I spending the day playing out in the yard. They were glad that I was happy and content. I never whined for more than I already had, and I could keep myself occupied for hours. 

I was polite. I had good manners, and I always treated my elders with respect. Mom and dad thought I was a perfect child. It made me happy to make them proud. 

When I began attending school, my happy life started to change. Initially, I had no trouble making friends in kindergarten. At that age, many children still played with imaginary friends. The more I played with other children, the less I liked to do so. When playing pretend, other children sometimes told me what my imaginary friends were doing in relation to theirs. 

It upset me that the other children seemed to presume to know what my long-time friends did. I knew mom and dad could not see my companions. I figured that out long before I started school. I knew this because my parents never paid attention to them. After I started school, I thought the other children might be able to see them. At first, I thought they could. School was new to us all, and when the children of my class played together, we pretended to be in many wondrous places and to see many spectacular things. 

I quickly began to realize that no one else really saw my lifelong companions. The other children acted like they saw my friends, but their descriptions of what they saw were always wrong. I could not see their imaginary friends either, and that initially seemed normal. What told me otherwise where the inconsistencies. The other childrens’ descriptions of their friends changed too often as did their behavior. This was when I realize their imaginary friends really were imaginary. 

As the school year progressed, the other children slowly forgot about their imaginary friends. Now they had real friends, they no longer needed to pretend. My imaginary friends on the other hand went nowhere. I soon found it difficult to interact with other children in my grade. As they grouped off and started to forming cliques, they shunned me. 

Eventually I became the object of ridicule. My classmates called me a baby because I still played with imaginary friends. What was I supposed to do? I could not make them go away. At times they left of their own accord, but it did not usually take long before more appeared. I tried to ignore them, thinking perhaps they would go away. Not only did they not go away, they tried harder and harder to get my attention. 

The school year was winding down, and my teacher was concerned that I grew increasingly withdrawn from the other children. She called my parents to the school for a parent – teacher conference. They made me sit in the secretary’s office so I would not know what they were discussing. I did not need to be in there; some of my friends were. They constantly went in and out, relaying to me what was being said. 

My teacher thought I had some sort of behavioral disability. Mother asked if I fell behind on my work, but the teacher told her no. Mother asked if I had difficulty learning. Again, the teacher told her no. Dad asked if I was being disruptive or causing problems in class. Again, the answer was no. 

My parents did not understand why my teacher thought there was a problem. She told them that I am still playing with imaginary friends while other children went on to play with each other. She told my mom and dad that she thought my problems stemmed from home. 

I did not need to have my friends tell me what happened next. I heard it through the door just fine on my own. 

“How dare you,” my mother shouted. “You have no idea what my family has been through.” 

“I’m sorry we all can’t have government jobs like you lady,” father added. “Some of us have to work for a living.”

The teacher tried to defend herself, but my parents did not give her time. 

“How many children do you have?” Mother demanded. 

“None,” the lady said, “but I have taken many childhood development courses while….” 

She was not allowed to finish. 

“Then you know diddly squat about how or what it’s like to raise a child,” mother yelled. “When you have a kid, I’ll make sure to come back when he’s in school and tell you everything I think is wrong with him.” 

That was the end of the conversation. My parents stormed out of the conference room. I thought they would yell at me, but they did not. It was quite the opposite. When they stepped out of that office, their faces were red with anger. 

“Come on son,” my mom said gently. “Let’s go home.” 

State law did not require children to attend kindergarten, so my parents kept me out for the last two weeks before summer vacation. That was fine with me. I already saw the flaws in the developing school social structure. I was happy to be away from that place. 

Mom needed my help in the garden anyway. The squash and okra came in like wild due to recent rains. We had to get it all washed, cut, and canned while it was still good. Tomatoes and onions were coming in real nice too. That meant we could get to eat some fresh stewed okra and tomatoes for a while. Add in some fried squash and cornbread and we had some good meals coming. 

One of the family’s father helped on occasion raised hogs. When they were unable to pay dad the amount they promised him on a job, they sent him home with one of their fattest pigs. That was better than money. We could get much more meat out of that hog than we could ever have with the money. The problem was that we did not have an ice box in which to store the meat. 

A few days later he came home with meat packing paper and tape. Early the next morning, we got the scalding tub boiling then Dad put a bullet in the hog’s skull. The hams were cured in brine along with some of the fat. We spent the whole day processing the hog and, in exchange for the loins, another neighbor stored the perishable meat for us in their freezer. 

We used every part of the hog we could. Dad took the head and made headcheese with it. The belly we salted and cold smoked for a week to make some good bacon. We did not smoke hams until they soaked in brine for a couple of weeks. We even boiled up the skin until it was good and soft which we then fried crispy. 

Even the cartilage at the knuckles of the bones was used. Mom rendered that down into gelatin which she later used to make jellies and preserves. The roasted bones added flavor to our black-eyed peas. Mom even pickled the feet to save for the winter months. We did not let one part of that animal go to waste. 

My friends understood I was busy and left me alone. Once the hams were hanging and the canning was finished for now, I went back to spending my days playing on ours and the surrounding land. We made up games and played for hours on end. I did not need toys or television. Nature provided plenty of entertainment for a creative child.

A few years later, when I entered the second grade, I already had the reputation of being “that weird kid.’ I saw the hierarchy form among my classmates. The biggest and dumbest kid stood on top, keeping other kids in line by beating them up. In the third week of the school year, the brute turned his sights on me.

We were the same size in kindergarten and in the first grade. He must have drunk too much of that hormone filled corporate milk, because he nearly doubled in size by the time we made it to the second grade. He backed me against the wall. Pushing me hard, he may my back bounce away from the wall only to slam me back into it again. 

One of my companions could no longer watch the other boy bully me and took action. This particular friend was the last one I thought would act violently. I called him Pinky, at least I think it was a he. Pinky’s  body was as round as a ball and covered in pink hair. Pinky had two fixed eyes, one on each end of its body. Above each of those another eye rose up on a ropey stalk. He did not have a mouth I had ever seen. Pinky moved about using long tendrils that reminded me of long bottle brushes. 

My pink friend wrapped one of his tendrils around the boy’s leg and squeezed. The bully screamed in pain and fell writhing to the ground. When Pinky let go of the kid’s leg, he left a mass of wire like spines embedded in the boy’s skin. My tormentor grabbed his shins as he cried tears of agony. I thought his hand would brush away the spines, but it passed through them like they were not there. 

I yelled at Pinky, scolding him for his actions. The eyes of the other children turned back from the child squirming on the ground to stare at me. They all looked at me with such fear in their eyes that I expected them all to run. Instead, they all stood glaring at me. 

Several teachers came running when they heard the commotion. One teacher lifted the sobbing boy and his arms and carried him to the nurse’s office. A second teacher demanded someone tell her what happened to the boy, and all of the other children pointed to me. I tried to tell her I did not do it, Pinky did. She snarled something about me making up stories. Grabbing my arm painfully tight, she angrily dragged me to the principal’s office. 

I tried telling themI did not do it, Pinky did. My principal told me he was tired of me lying and sat me in the empty conference room. I did not know what was going on. All of my friends ran when Pinky attacked while all the children stood in fear. I had no one around to look in the other room for me. Five minutes passed, and I heard the noise of the local fire truck pulling into the school parking lot. A few minutes later the sheriff, or one of his deputies arrived as well. 

I had to know what was going on, and I finally climbed onto the table beneath a high window. One of the firemen carried the bully to the police car. He climbed in the backseat with the boy, and the deputy threw gravel into the air as he drove away with them. 

They left me in the conference room for thirty minutes before the sheriff arrived with my mother. They stopped outside and talked with the principal and the mean teacher that drug me down here. When I saw them walking toward the building, I jumped down from the table and sat back in the seat. A few minutes later my mother, the principal, and the sheriff all came into the room. I immediately started crying. I was afraid I was going to jail. 

Mother came over and I ran into her arms. The sheriff assured me that I was in no trouble. He crouched down with his hands on his knees and looked into my eyes. 

“Do you know what happened to Brandon?” he asked me. 

I told him how the boy bullied me and pushed me against the wall. I hesitated before I went on any further. Telling them the truth about Pinky was obviously not going to work. No one believed my pink furry friend existed, and continuing to insist it was his fault would only make me look like more of a liar. Instead, I told them that the boy pushed me a few times and then fell down crying. 

“Did you see a spider or any kind of bug on the kids leg?” the sheriff inquired. 

I shook my head feebly and replied, “No sir.” 

The sheriff told me to try and remember. He asked me if I saw a bee, wasp, or even a horse fly buzzing about at the time of the confrontation. 

I told him no, but he asked me again, asking me if I was absolutely certain. I had assured him I did not see any spider or any other kind of bug bite the boy. This was not a lie. Pinky was not a bug. I did not know what he was, but he was not a bug. 

After a few more questions, the sheriff drove mother and me home. Apparently, the buses already took most everyone else home. 

The boy stayed in the hospital about an hour and a half away from here. School was canceled until they could make sure that the building was fumigated and disinfected. The doctors could not figure out what was wrong with the boy. The hospital placed him in quarantine. They even flew in specialists from the CDC. No one knew what made him so sick, and it became a worry that some previously unknown virus was attacking that bully’s body. Until it could be identified, the parents did not want their children congregating in one place. 

Three days after the attack, the boy died. They said something destroyed his internal organs, but none of the doctors could find a cause. His body was sent to some special hospital research facility. No children were allowed to go to school or even to play with the other children because their parents feared for their lives. 

I knew what happened. When my friends began to return, they told me Pinky’s spines introduced a poison into his system. Normally, in his own world, Pinky’s poison only caused temporary paralysis of the attacked tissue. None of them knew it would affect the human and such a gruesome way. 

I knew Pinky did not mean to kill the boy, and I eventually got past my anger with him. My little pink friend acted like a scolded puppy until I forgave him. I made him promise not to hurt anyone else again. He could not answer me, not in any traditional way, but I knew he understood. 

Three weeks after the incident, it was determined it was no poisonous insect or reptile that killed the boy nor did any detectable pathogen. School resumed. Even though nobody saw me do anything to the bully, they all stayed away from me. They stopped picking on me, they stop sitting near me, and they stop playing with me on the playground. They were all afraid of dying if they got near me. In light of the Pinky incident, I cannot say I blamed them. 

Rumors circulated saying that I was cursed. The story grew until it was my whole family that was cursed. That, people said, was why our crops failed to the point that we lost our land. Banks foreclosed on a dozen farms, but that did not matter. We were the only ones to be labeled as being cursed. 

A new family bought some of the seized land at the end of my fourth-grade year. The man that bought the land thought the whole notion of a curse was idiotic. He knew many farms failed and were foreclosed upon, and he did not think my family any different. He felt bad for us so he gave Dad a regular job on his farm. 

The new family had three children. One boy who was two years older than me, would attend the junior high school in the fall. Their youngest boy was only going to the first grade, but their daughter was the same age as me. I played with her on several occasions while my dad was working for hers. We played for hours at a time, and I grew quite fond of her. 

When I began the fifth grade, Tamara and I spent a lot of time together. The other children did not want to play with me because of the whole cursed story. They would not play with Tamara because she was friends with me. 

Her older brother did not like her being my friend. He thought Tamara was going to have enough trouble making friends at a new school. When he heard the stories about me, he decided to confront me. 

The elementary school and junior high school students rode the same buses. One day, when Tamara stayed home sick, her brother told me I better not ever come over to his house again. He said, if I did not stop hanging around with her, he was going to beat me up. He also said, if I told Tamara about this, he would beat me up even more. Her brother was a big kid, and his threats deeply scared me. 

The next day Tamara came to school, she sat beside me on the bus. I could only think of her brother’s threats. I kept my eye on him the whole ride to school. He sat at the front of the bus instead of the back as usual with the older children. He glanced back at us once. As soon as he saw me watching him, Tamara’s brother snapped his gaze back to the front of the bus. It was clear he was suddenly afraid of me. I began to worry that one of my friends did something to him. I would have to talk with them when we had some privacy. 

All the ones I knew said they did not do anything to the brother. Not all of them were known for their honesty, but I believed them. If they did not scare the brother into leaving me alone, who did? That would be a question I would not answer for many years. 

Our first day and junior high school was mostly a day of learning our way around. The second day things already turned sour. Tamara and I stood in front of her locker talking before lunch, and a group of five eighth-grade girls approached us. 

The girls were really mean to Tamara. They made fun of her hair, laughed at her for not wearing makeup, and said bad things about her choice of clothing. I expected her to get upset and cry, but she did not. Instead, she shot back with her own insult. 

“Ooo,” she said. “It took five of you to come up with all of that. What, do you all share one single brain?” 

The five popular girls did not know how to come back. One of them warned her to mind her place than the five sauntered off. The girls made it to the entrance to the cafeteria, and the one in the middle fell flat to her face. It looked like someone grabbed her by the feet, but none of my companions were anywhere near them. She must have tripped over her own feet. 

All of the children in the hallway burst in an uproar of laughter. The stuck-up young girl climbed back to her feet and screamed to the other children to shut up. When they continued to laugh the girl began crying and ran out of the building. 

I looked at Tamara. She had a thin sly smile on her face. I was positive she knew something, but this was not the proper place to bring it up. When the opportunity arose, I would ask her how she did that. We went on to lunch and finished out the day. 

I got off the bus at her stop because I saw Dad’s truck parked at their house. He must have caught a ride to work with Tamara’s dad this morning. That was great. We had three hours before our dads returned. That gave me a chance to talk to her about the strange happening at school today. 

When we exited the bus, Tamara’s older brother got off the bus. Without ever looking at the two of us, he walked straight to their house at a faster than normal pace. I knew I had to talk to the others later. I was sure one of them had done something to the boy. 

Tamara and I walked down the long driveway escorting her younger brother. As we approached the house, she told the little one to run inside to grab a snack. Once we were alone, Tamara reached out and held my hand. She invited me for a walk. 

Blushing, I stammered a “Yes-yes.” 

Continuing to hold my hand, she led me to the woods behind their yard. She found a nice trail through the forest and took me along the path. I was so nervous, I could not think of anything to say. I never held a girl’s hand before. 

The smell of the forest was refreshing. A light breeze pushed through the trees as the insects and birds sang. It was a beautiful day. It was the perfect day for a walk. I wanted to ask her about school, but now that she was holding my hand, I did not want to ruin it. At the time all I could do was try to force myself to say something to her. 

“It sure is a nice day,” I finally managed to say. 

That was all it took. We both opened up and talked about all sorts of things. School today was not one of them. I told her how we lost our farm, how a lot of people lost their farms. I explained how large conglomerates bought most of the land, running them with high-tech machines. She feared her family bought what was once my family’s land, but I assured her they did not. 

Several weeks passed, and the two of us became inseparable. Finally, on the third celebration of our walk through the forest, I asked her to be my girlfriend. I was absolutely elated when she said yes. When I started school, I thought I would spend the next twelve years as a loner. 

The older I got, the more I could see others. I thought my preschool friends were strange. Some of my newer companions were stranger still. Not all of them were nice, but my friends protected me from the unfriendly ones. 

Years passed and many of my oldest friends no longer came around. I made other, stranger friends, but I also saw more of the beings of chaos. It seemed like those darker creatures wanted to get close to me, but so far I always had those who would protect me. I do not know what these demented creatures wanted with me, and I was always afraid to ask my companions. I felt much better not knowing. 

As our relationship progressed, I became ever more fearful that one of these chaotic creatures would harm Tamara. They seemed to come around more often when I spent time with her. The world was broadening around me and I became ever more aware that these creatures I once thought were imaginary were just as real as every person I knew. I do not know why I was the only one who could see them. I did know they surrounded me all the time. 

It did not matter what buildings or objects obstructed my movements, most of the ones I encountered moved through physical objects as if they did not exist. Sometimes they seem to have to navigate through ghostlike structures that acted like no more than a fog to me. Some of them did not appear to notice each other. 

Long ago I learned not to let on as to what I saw. After the incident with Pinky when I was in the first grade, I knew no one would believe me if I told them the truth. I lived with this lie all on my own. 

As my body and mind matured, I realize some of those things I saw were the things people called ghosts. At death, a consciousness was not destroyed, it simply passed the barrier into one of the intangible worlds. Sometimes, they could temporarily push through and move things, or appear in our world. This was the case with Pinky. His anger over my treatment allowed him to reach across and attacked the bully. 

I knew Pinky did not mean to hurt that bully, at least, he did not mean to kill him. In his world his spines are harmless. They cause pain, but in the same way as when one touches a cactus. Something made the boy’s system react violently to the intangible needles. Doctors never did figure out what killed the bully. All they found were very minute traces of an unknown compound attached to one of a million blood cells. This latest discovery was only made last year by a team of scientists working on the case all this time. 

The Halloween of my junior year in high school, Tamara and I decided to spend the night at my house. We took a walk through the woods using nothing but the moonlight. I did not tell her, but I ask a few of my formless friends to light the way for me. I was glad I asked for their company because I saw many of the devious creatures hidden throughout the forest. 

We found a nice clearing and laid on the ground staring at the stars. She talked about all of the alien life that must be up there. I agreed with her speculations not wanting to tell her we were surrounded by aliens all of the time. If I told her I talked with all sorts of creatures on a regular basis, she would break up with me for sure. I loved her too much to chase her away. I could not make her think I was insane. 

We made love for the first time. We were both 17, and we were best friends since second grade. Although we officially dated for four years, I never pressured her for sex. Tonight, it just happened. It felt like the right time. We were both ready. I never felt more in tune with her since we met. 

We shared a blissful hour together. Both of us grinning from ear to ear, we walked back through the forest to my house. The two of us could not help chuckling occasionally. Instead of holding hands, I put my arm around her lower back and her left hand was in my back pocket. I was afraid sex would make things awkward between us, but it only made things better. This was a perfect night. 

After arriving at my house, we sat on the porch swing. Sometimes we kissed flirtingly, but most of the time we spent speculating about our futures. We both did very well in school. An academic scholarship would be the only way I could go on to college. Tamara’s parents could afford to send her, but my family did well to keep the car running and the lights turned on. 

She rested her head on my shoulder and we wrapped our arms around each other. Just then some of the other kids wearing masks jumped out from their hiding spots and began pelting me and Tamara with eggs. Laughing on our humiliation, the others ran to a truck hidden off the road and tried to flee. 

I tried chasing after them. Tamara screamed. She did not cry or curse them. She simply let out a long piercing shriek. Suddenly what looked like the fangs of a giant maw rose from the ground and punctured all four of the truck’s tires. Quickly hissing out air, the heavy rubber tires instantly went flat. The exposed rims created sparks as they tossed gravel into the air. 

The guys in the bed of the truck jumped back out, and I ran at them alone. I did not doubt that all these guys were about to give me a beating of a lifetime. That did not stop me. They would not get away with doing that to the woman I loved. 

The truck’s engine suddenly went dead. When the driver turned the ignition switch, the engine smoked and then burst into flames. 

I stopped in my tracks as the two people in front of the truck jumped out and ran. I do not know how I knew it was coming, but I leapt to the ground only an instant before the gas tank exploded. I watched the four young men behind the truck lifted and thrown 30 feet through the air. It was not like in the movies. They did not stand there as the force of the explosion only move their hair. The concussive force made these guys literally fly over me and land hard on the gravel road. 

Most of my otherworldly friends fled, and the devilish ones moved in. One of them was somewhat spiderlike. A grotesque human face showed in front with two long rows of eyes. A thin whiplike tail protruded from its backend and its body was covered in many scales. The beast chased after the driver. 

It did not take the six-legged creature long to catch the young man. With its long-pointed tail, it stabbed the young man in the back of the neck. The boy collapsed and the creature continued to run until I could see it no longer. 

I felt something move under the ground beneath me, but I did not see anything. I believe the beast whose fanged maw through the truck tires was going for the four boys on the ground. I could not see it, but I did feel the ground heave slightly. Apparently, this monstrosity had a closer connection to this world than many of the others. 

The young man who took the stab in the neck cried out that he could not move. The other three tried to help him to his feet, but the kid hung there like a rag doll. I hoped that the group grotesque spider being only numbed his body and did not permanently paralyze him. I did not want to be responsible for another critical injury or possibly even a death. 

The tire rending beast rose up from the ground. It was the most horrific thing I had seen thus far. Its body was somewhat like that of a scallop. It had a hard outside shell that bulged in the center. It was almost as thick as it was wide, and it stood feet high. Surrounding the seal of the bone like shell was a row of long narrow teeth. At what I assumed was the front of the being, the needlelike fangs were nearly four feet long. As it circled around to the side, the fangs grew increasingly shorter and thinner. I yelled at it to stop calling for some of the others to help me. 

The horrid creature either could not hear me or did not care to listen. The shell opened to reveal the terrible thing inside. Attached to the inside of the shell was the true body of the thing. It was a reddish black, nothing more than a mass of sickening flesh. The mass contained many eyes and other sensory organs. It opened a sphincter typed orifice and shot out a serrated tongue like a toad. The tongue passed through the head of another of the young men. A bluish glow pulled out of the boy’s head when the tongue withdrew, and the kid crumpled to the ground. 

I do not know why, but the shelled beast withdrew back into the ground. All of the chaos creatures withdrew. They stayed within my sight, but they moved away from our assaulters. My friends still did not return. 

At my request, Tamara got in her car and drove to the nearest phone. A half hour passed before the fire truck, the deputy, and the sheriff’s car all came rushing down the gravel road. It was then that I noticed almost all of the malicious beings were gone, and some of my friends began to return. In my anger over what those jerks did to Tamara, I must have subconsciously called those monstrosities. 

Could my desire for vengeance have been strong enough to call upon those horrid things? 

The four uninjured young men were loaded into the back of the two patrol cars. With their masks off, I recognized the thugs. They were seniors in high school who happened to be close friends of Tamara’s oldest brother. This must have started out as a Halloween prank, but things did not go well for our attackers. 

The men from the fire department called for a medical helicopter when they saw the condition of the other two bullies. One of them, the young man who took the spike to the neck, could still speak. Left paralyzed from the neck down, he fared the better of the two. The other young man never moved or spoke again. He did not react to any outside stimuli. I began to think the blue light that fang toothed scallop beast removed from the boy’s head was no less than his very mind. What hell that had to be to have your mind eaten by a phantom monster. 

Medical experts concluded the two injured boys receive severe nerve damage when they were thrown through the air. They landed hard on the gravel after being thrown thirty feet. The concussive force of the exploding truck alone was sufficient to cause serious damage. 

The four seniors who did walk away from the attack were charged by the district attorney. They were held responsible for the injuries their friends sustained during the malicious attack of Tamara and me. Because the two boys were injured while they were, as a group, assaulting us; the four were all charged with attempted manslaughter. 

As part of their plea bargain, the four high school boys named Tamara’s oldest brother as the one who put them up to it. He even paid them for their services. Neither of us knew this until the Sheriff arrived at their house to arrest him. 

Tamara and I walked across an open plain, surrounded as always by creatures both cruel and kind. We enjoyed the light fall breeze when we saw the Sheriff pull onto the long driveway. He drove up to the house and Tamara’s father met him outside. The two seemed to argue for a few minutes and finally went inside. Two or three minutes passed, and the Sheriff walked out the door with Tamara’s brother in handcuffs. 

I think she knew what was going on because she did not seem overly surprised. Her brother despised the fact that Tamara and I dated. I thought about the time he threatened me if I did not stay away from his sister. He never followed through with his threat, and I always wondered why. I realized my fear and anger probably conjured something that put the fear of God into him. 

Tamara’s parents would not tell us why her brother was arrested, but I think she already knew. Word did not take long to circulate through the community, and this confirmed her suspicions. It was a subject about which we would rarely ever speak.

The four boys who pled guilty only receive three-year prison sentences. Tamara’s brother pled not guilty and chose to stand trial. Their parents were torn. On one hand, their son faced a maximum of 20 years in prison. On the other hand, this was all caused because of his cruel treatment of Tamara. In the end, they decided to hire their son a good attorney. 

He never made it to trial. Tamara’s brother hung himself from the bars of his cell three days before the trial began. The guilt of his actions must have been more than he could bear. Quite frankly, I do not understand how a brother could treat his baby sister with such cruel indifference. I cannot honestly say I was not glad he was gone. 

One month after graduation, I asked Tamara to be my wife. I had no ring to give her. I had very little to offer her in general, but she consented to be my bride anyway. Our wedding took place one week before she and I went off to college. We were accepted to the same university. She earned an athletic scholarship while I received an academic scholarship. It cost us a little bit more, but we moved into the married dorm. An apartment in town was out of the question because our scholarships would not cover off-campus housing. 

Neither of us made friends very well. Among the thousands of students attending the university, we more or less kept to ourselves. Some of the other girls on the track team started giving Tamara a hard time. She came home from practice angry almost every day. I met some of these girls at the beginning of the year and instantly sensed they were not good people. If it was not for the fact her scholarship was tied to it, she would have quit the team. 

I did not see any of my normal friends for a while, but I had no trouble making more. Just as always, there were ever present beasts and daemonic creatures. Those creatures born of chaos kept their distance until Tamara’s team troubles began. They started to draw closer. It mortified me that my desire to protect my wife might end up in the deaths of even more people. 

I did not know what I could possibly do to stop them. It seemed they responded to my emotions, and I could not change how I felt. I knew if I did not do something though, those mean girls would end up hurt or even dead. I tried to think good thoughts; I tried to give those young women the benefit of the doubt. All I could do was hope my thoughts were positive enough for the malicious ones to leave Tamara’s teammates alone. 

When my wife returned from her last class, I had our small apartment set up for romance. Scented candles illuminated the room and a trail of flower petals led to the bedroom. Surely, I could not be negative in my head while making passionate love with Tamara. Soft jazz music played in the background as our bodies intertwined. There was no way I could think of hurting someone while spending such an intimate time with the woman I loved so dearly. 

Afterwards, we held on to each other until Tamara fell gently to sleep. I went to the front room and blew out all of the candles which still burned. Most of them already burn themselves out. I picked most of the flower petals up off the floor; the rest of them I would vacuum in the morning. When I finished straightening up, I climbed back into bed, snuggled up to Tamara, and drifted off to sleep. 

When we rose for class in the morning, we took a shower together and got dressed to go. We did not even make it to our first class when we heard the rumor. One of the fraternities on campus threw a large party last night. One of the young women apparently became too intoxicated and fell off the second floor balcony. Her neck snapped on impact and she died instantly. I prayed to myself it was not one of the girls pestering Tamara. 

By the time I finished with my second class, I knew the dead girl was a member of the woman’s track team. No one I spoke with knew the girl’s name, but I had no doubt it was one of my wife’s tormentors. I tried. I did my best not even to think about those stuck-up young women, but it did not work. Again, because of my anger another person was dead. 

I did not mean for these things to happen. Those who only I can see responded to my emotional state. Never would I be able to constantly maintain a positive attitude. People were going to anger me. Suddenly it occurred to me. Tamara and I never fought, and I never wished her any sort of ill will. That day would eventually come however, and the thought of her dying because of me was more than I could bear. 

I decided I would tell her the truth tonight. She would surely think I had gone insane. How could I possibly get her to believe me that I had been able to see the inhabitants of nearby realities. Hell, I would think someone was crazy if they try to tell me such a story. I had no other choice than to tell her the truth and hope she did not walk out the door for good. 

When she got home, Tamara instantly knew something was wrong. The long look on my face gave me away. My wife walked in with a smile, but now she looked like she was about to cry. She ran to my side and wrapped her arms around my neck. 

“What’s wrong baby,” she pled. 

I could not say anything. I did not know how to begin. How could I tell my wife I could see ghosts, and they were killing those who are a focus of my negative thoughts. Finally, I pushed her back enough to look deep into her eyes. 

“Like most children, I had imaginary friends. When most kids my age grew out of that phase, I couldn’t,” I began to explain. 

I thought I might see fear or confusion or hurt in her eyes when I began, but she did not seem to react. 

“As I grew older, these imaginary friends did not go away,” I continued. “That boy, the bully who died from an unknown infection, one of my friends did that.” 

I still did not get a reaction from her. I wished Tamara would give me a hint one way or another, but I could not read the expression on her face. We have been together for more than twelve years, and I could not tell what she was thinking. 

“As I grew older, I could see more and more of them. These were no imaginary friends. Call them ghosts, aliens, or denizens of other realities. These things are real.” 

Tamara continued to listen. I was afraid by now she would have thought me insane and fled our dorm room. Instead, she seemed to be looking at me with sympathy and compassion. I thought she actually believe the strange words coming out of my mouth. 

“As I came to see more of their world, I began to see horrible things. I only saw friendly beings when I was a child, but now others have appeared. These new denizens of another world felt nothing but hate and chaos in their hearts,” I told her still expecting her to freak out and run. 

“When I get mad, some of these entities react to my negative emotions,” I continued. 

I did not know how to finish with my explanation. When I told her of the harm caused by these extra dimensional beings. How could she believe that all of those deaths were caused by creatures only I could see? 

I finally finished with my explanation, and Tamara still sat there with me holding my hands in hers. The gaze in her eyes seemed more relieved than confused or scared. It was like she somehow understood everything I said. I told her the most outrageous story in the world, and she stayed right there by my side. 

Tears dripping form her eyes, Tamara looked at me with intense love. 

“I always feared you might find out about my gift,” she said. 

“You-you can see them too?” 

“Yes, but my childhood friends were not nice. There’s a reason you have seen an increase in the number of devilish beings,” Tamara explain.” They have been following me.” 

I was absolutely stunned. Now I really did not know what to say. I was not responsible for those attacks with the exception of the Pinky incident. Tamara was. 

“Did you tell them the hurt those people?” I asked nervously. 

Now I was the one who was scared. 

“No,” she replied sadly. “I never asked them to do anything. I don’t know why I attract these things, but they do what they want to do.” 

I believed her. Those beings of the abyss followed her just like the others tended to congregate around me. It was nothing we chose and there was nothing we could do about it. 

I never felt less alone than I did now. All these years I have carried the burden of the second sight. It turned out the girl I had a crush on in elementary school, became enamored with in junior high school, and married shortly after graduating high school possess the same ability. Perhaps that was what drew us together in the first place. 

I think Tamara expected me to leave at this point, but I would never let go of her. I loved her just as much now as I did the day we married. 

I leaned over and whispered into her ear, “As long as our love stands, they will never hurt me.” 

Yes,” she replied. “When it comes to people we know, or even people we don’t know, our negative emotions will cause these hideous things to act. No matter what we do, they will never leave us alone.” 

 Copyright 2019 ©

Simple Shapes

Word Count: 4,072

It was quite amazing how often things remained invisible to one’s eyes until given a reason to notice them. 

After concluding some business in downtown Murfreesboro Tennessee, I browsed some of the shops lining Main Street. One particular establishment was a purveyor of fancy and precious stone objects in addition to incense and spiritual text. Never the superstitious sort, I paid no attention to the tarot cards and the tomes on spiritual healing. Instead, my attention focused on the polished stone artifacts concealed in illuminated glass cases. The items were simple but magnificent. 

Spheres, pyramids and obelisks appeared to be the dominant shapes, but there were other things as well. One particular object, a 3-foot-tall obelisk formed from a single piece of clear quartz, seemed to pull my attention to it. Nearly five inches on each side of the base, the artifact displayed absolutely no flaws. I had the perfect display case in the corner my office, and I just knew I had to have it. 

I inquired of the young lady running the shop as to the price of the item. The price she quoted nearly made me faint. I suppose I should expect such a perfect crystal object would be incredibly expensive, but the number still shocked me. Budgeting for the next few months would be tight, but I did have them means to purchase the spectacular quartz creation. 

As the shopkeeper protectively packed my new decoration, two more items caught my attention. Both of them cut in the shape of pyramids. While I waited for the box containing the obelisk, I browsed over the rest of the encased objects. Of them all, these two-to-three-inch sided pyramids struck me as remarkable. The prices were displayed along with these items, and these were well within my financial reach. 

One possessed an amazing visual effect. The object appeared clear, slightly milky, but clear. As I looked at it from different angles, it produced a laser hologram type of effect. The second was multicolored and emitted a beautiful glow when exposed to a florescent light. 

Within only minutes of leaving the shop, I began to notice the shapes everywhere. Large concrete obelisks towered over the entrance to the University. At the head of the grass median set a granite pyramid surrounded by perennials. 

As I approached home, I passed by a large cemetery. More tombstones than not either incorporated the pyramid or the obelisk into its form. Over the next few weeks, it seemed like there was nowhere I could look without seeing one of the two shapes. The big question that consumed my thoughts was why. 

Why were these two shapes so dominant in the construction of the area? 

I saw them in TV sitcom neighborhoods. I saw them decorating the living room sets of drama programs. I even saw them in cartoons my children enjoy. 

Why? What made these particular forms so popular? 

As a documentary film director, I had to find an answer to this question. My research began with Egypt, but I quickly discovered a staggering quantity of ancient cultures which utilize the pyramid and the obelisk in nearly every aspect of their architecture. 

My curiosity deepened as I learned more, and the more I learn the more I had to know. The need to construct such objects either big or small seemed to be as built into the human mind as the need to find a “true” religion. These seemed to be woven into the fabric of the human mind. Something in our nature compelled us to replicate the structures over and over, from one civilization to the next. 

I found it next to impossible to think the monumental pyramids were constructed to house the mummified remains of a pharaoh or even the royal bloodline. One of the undeniable flaws in this logic was simple. No one ever found bodies, burial chambers or catacombs inside the structures. Such mausoleums were found in smaller rectangular buildings buried in the surrounding sands, but never any inside the pyramids themselves. 

Different prehistoric nations throughout the world utilized figures from their mythology to create constellation maps of the stars. The three stars on Orion’s belt were viewed as symbols of various mythological deities and pyramidal representation of these stars could be found all over the world. This could not be a mere coincidence. 

An alien conspiracy documentary colleague I once dismissed as fanciful and superstitious became someone with whom I worked ever more often. My wife worried for the credibility of my career if I were to continue with my associate, with Dr. Nebbins, but I paid her no mind. I imagine she cared more of what her superficial friends thought than my prestige. 

Some mainstream archaeologists thought perhaps the pyramids were the ancient’s way of keeping track of annual weather cycles, but Nebbins held not even a fleeting doubt these were only secondary functions. What he believed to be their primary purpose seem to defy all rational logic. Nebbins believe the pyramid and obelisks structures of the past were to connect us with the gods. 

These gods, he theorized, were no less than one or more extraterrestrial species. He was certain the secret to reaching the stellar beings was somehow encoded on the pyramids throughout the world. Nebbins believed these were clues left behind for us to discover. 

This last part of his theory made no sense to me. Why would aliens come to earth, engineer the construction of tens of thousands of pyramids known worldwide, and then leave them falling into ruins. If anything, the buildings lived out their usefulness, and whatever created them left Earth for a new destination. 

Then I learned something shocking. An engineer and defense contractor built seven steel and fiberglass pyramids much steeper than most of those from ancient times. The inside of the structure contained very little, really nothing more than the underside of the outside walls. He believed shape alone created an energy field of unknown origin. 

Plants left to grow in these modern pyramids showed a 30% increase in their normal production. Antibiotic microbes allowed to remain in the center of these pyramids for a single lunar cycle showed hundreds or even thousands of times the potency of those kept in traditional conditions. People frequenting the fiberglass structured showed a marked decrease in heart disease and some types of cancer. 

In 2010 two Russian jet fighters on training routines reported encountering a strange electromagnetic anomaly as they passed over one of the structures. Initial reports were that the jets were attacked by some form of new energy weapon. This I chalked up to being nothing but publicity propaganda intended to draw more tourists to the locations. I read the first-hand studies that showed unequivocally how some organisms did show measurable results, but electromagnetic field 10 miles high above the structures seemed a bit too much to believe. 

I learned of a man in Bolivia, an outcast and the scientific community, who theorized a series of four-sided hills in his native country were pyramids. He believed, due to their sheer size, they had too have been covered intentionally. Loose rock and sediment could never work its way to that height. If this archaeological pariah was indeed correct, the largest of the Bolivian pyramids exceeded the largest pyramid in Egypt by more than twice the height and six times the mass. Not only that, samples from road like structures sent to six independent labs yielded the same astonishing results. The concrete was without a doubt artificial, it was at least 10,000 years old, and the quality at this age was still three times that of anything produced in this century. 

My wife, a churchgoing woman, began to see my obsession with the pyramids as an obsession with the occult. She thought Dr. Nebbins to be nothing more than a dreamer and a laughingstock in the world of documentary film. As I spent more time in this archaeological research, she became increasingly cold and distant. 

Devastation overwhelmed my one-track mind when I returned home late to find my wife and the children gone. At first, I assumed she took the children to a neighbor or friend, then I noticed many other things missing. I ran into the hall and a frantic rush of fear. In my mind, my family was kidnapped. 

I thought perhaps my research was coming too close to someone, or something which wanted to stay secret, but the beige envelope propped up on the gaudy table froze me in my tracks. It was the dreaded dear John letter. 

My wife of 15 years took my three children and moved to her mother’s in California. She thought I lost my grip on reality, her reality, and worried for her eternal soul and the souls of our children. 

I called her multiple times over the next three days. She never answered her mobile phone and no one ever picked up at her mother’s. I again began to fear something tragic befell them until the sheriff deputy arrived at my door. Once verifying my identity, he served me with a restraining order preventing me from calling or visiting my wife and mother-in-law. 

I sank into a deep depression. Alcohol, something for which I never cared, became my best friend. Not leaving my house for over three months, I survived on fattening delivery foods as I had no desire to cook. I had no desire to cook, and I did not have any food to cook even if I did. 

I ignored my phones. Eventually my home phone and my mobile phone could hold no more messages, yet I continue to ignore them. A producer of mine wanted me to direct a film on the fact are fiction of man-made global climate change. This assignment would reinstate my credibility and fix my mounting financial difficulties, but I never answered or returned any of his calls. 

By three months my insurance lapped, my utilities were all disconnected, and the same deputy sheriff arrived on my doorstep with a foreclosure notice. I lost my wife, I lost my children, and now I lost my home. My crazy obsession with two simple geometric shapes ruined my life, but I still could not stop fascinating over them. 

I packed my ever-growing collection of stone objects and moved it into a small, one bedroom apartment. I took very little furniture as the confines of my new home allowed for close to nothing. Foremost I made sure to allow room for my stained mahogany display case, then I never worried about space for anything else. What I could not take I commissioned a lecherous company built on preying on the unfortunate to sell my remaining possessions. 

I saw very little money from the liquidation. Eight months after my wife took my children and left my life for good, I got my first stroke of good luck. Someone knocked hard on my door and jarred me for my drunken sleep. Rolling off of the fabric couch, I knocked several mostly empty bottles of beer to the floor. As the amber bottles slurped the remainder of their stale contents onto my stained carpet, I staggered sluggishly to the door. 

At the door stood a well-dressed man. The tailored suit and Italian shoes were like those that once adorned my body. Now I stood in a flannel shirt and my off-white briefs. I recognize the man. He worked for the bank. Without any thought I began to berate the man with every curse and swear that my hung-over mind could articulate. 

When I finally let up on the poor man, he informed me my home sold for more than the remainder of my mortgage. All I had to do was go to the bank and sign for the excess of $100,000 that awaited me. 

At the time I was much too inebriated to drive to the bank, and I passed out shortly after the man left. When I finally came to, a sunbeam glaring into the east window struck me blind. The hangover left from the previous night already gave my cranium the sensation of exploding. The yellow orange rays of the morning sun made me think my skull would implode at the same time. 

On the end table of my couch sat a bottle of beautiful brown whiskey. There must’ve been two or more shots left in the uncapped container. Like a helpless sea turtle on the wet sands of the beach, I awkwardly pushed and shoved my way out of the accursed sunlight. This only mildly relieved the headache echoing inside the bones of my skull. Fighting back the intent nausea that begged me to empty my stomach contents on the floor, I pulled myself up to my knees. 

I stretched my arm until I heard the rush of blood in my ears. Catching it with only my middle and index finger, I nearly pulled the bottle of glorious brew onto the floor. My reflexes triumphed over the shakes and I managed to catch the bottle right before I lost my magical elixir. 

Moving through instinct rather than thought, I lifted the smooth glass opening to my lips and let the bitter fluid pour straight down my throat. The vaporous fumes permeated my sinuses bringing me a few steps closer to consciousness. Once the hair of the dog did its thing, I staggered to the cluttered bathroom to take a shower. 

None of the towels were clean, so I found the least musty smelling one and dried my body with it. I knew I still stank of alcohol, the very smell seeped from the pores of my skin. I overcompensated with use of an excessive amount of antiperspirant. I hoped the two would fight an even enough of a battle to render me presentable. 

Coincidently, the only clothes in my house not in desperate need of washing were my dress clothes. I mostly only wore suits to church, and there was not much need for them of late. My expensive loafers still remained in the box from the last time I sent them to be professionally polished. That was two weeks before my wife took the kids and left. 

I arrived at the bank at precisely 10:32 AM. A year ago, I would’ve called that late morning. In the drunken haze I was in the last few months of my life I consider this to be extremely early. In my regularly inebriated state, I slept as late as my intoxicated brain allowed me. 

The formalities frustrated me to the brink of releasing the reins on my anger. The man at the bank insisted on several forms of identification, and ask me multiple questions about my recent home address. There for a short time I thought he would ask me for a drop of my blood. 

This bank took my house and sold it at auction for a fraction of its value. After deducting any charges and fees they wanted, I got what little remained. $100,000 was a lot of money, but it paled in comparison to the value of my home. I wanted this jerk to give me my money so I could get up and leave. 

A pocket full of cash made me feel alive again. When I returned to my apartment and saw the deplorable conditions in which I was living, I realized I hit rock bottom. Easily fifty beer cans, seven or eight liquor bottles, and a dozen pizza boxes made up the landfill that my life became. 

I cleaned my apartment, cut my shaggy hair, and cut off the Grizzly Adams beard whose primary function was to store potato chip crumbs. Once I had the look and confidence of a respectable man, I sought out my old friend Dr. Nebbins. To my dismay, I found he passed away during my drunken isolation. 

He must have known I would eventually resume my research because he left several file boxes for me to examine. Much of the information stored in the plastic boxes he told me about, we worked on it together, or it was rather common archaeological, knowledge. The old scientist did leave me a few breadcrumbs to follow. 

Tucked in a stiff folder bound with rubber bands, I found a loose collection of materials. Among them I found maps, a collection of his final notes kept together with a paper clasp and a large envelope. I set the envelope off to the side until I had time to go through Nebbins notes. 

Shortly after my breakdown and I fell off the professional map, Nebbins came by a physicist with some radical theories about the pyramids even I thought to be ridiculous. I came to believe the pyramids all over the world to be markers for extraterrestrial visitors. Perhaps they were used to assist with the navigation of aerial vehicles. Perhaps their configuration around the world mark Earth for identification, a sort of nametag if you will. What Nebbins came to believe in his final days made my idea seem practical. 

This physicist, a man from Hamburg Germany, theorized the pyramids were in reality energy generators. Made from cut stone with no movable parts to create power, this idea was absolutely absurd. The only documented report of unusual energy associated with the pyramids was the report made by the Russian air force pilots concerning the fiberglass structure built only decades ago, but no confirmation was ever made. 

Nebbins made it very clear in his journal this was the truth behind the mystery of the pyramids. Nebbins could be rather eccentric in his line of thinking, but he always seemed to be a rational man. He believed many ideas to possess some validity, but in his final entries Nebbins stated he found the true purpose of the ancient structures. 

Abandoning all other ideas, Nebbins focused his remaining wealth on unlocking this ancient secret. This physicist convinced Nebbins some simple trick would cause the buildings to once again produce energy from the very ground upon which they stood. Perhaps his age made him easy prey for the unnamed German, for the scientist goaded Nebbins on with the promise of eternity. To his dying breath, Nebbins felt this to be the absolute truth to the mystery of the pyramids. 

Guilt washed over me, and I broke out in a cold sweat. Had I not been so wrapped up in my own well of depression, I may have prevented Nebbins from selling everything he had to fund expeditions all over the world. My old friend thought he was paying to send teams to key places in the world. He thought the trick to turning the power plants on was to do so in a specific sequence coordinated through hundreds of individual structures. He thought this physicist was using the money to achieve this goal, but I suspected the German saw an old man desperate to learn the knowledge he made his life’s work to find. I think he preyed on Nebbins in those final days to suck the man dry of his worldly possessions before my colleague left this life. 

When I reached the last scribed page in the journal, I found it addressed to me directly. It seemed Nebbins was sure I would get the few things he still had left and used his last entry to give me a message. I wondered if my friend had gone insane, for the word scribed on the page made no sense. 

“Mark my friend, before I leave, there is something I must tell you. We did not know what the ground looked like until we took to the air. We did not see the earth until we were able to escape its atmosphere. The only way to truly understand the universe is to step outside of it and look back in. 

“Humankind is absolutely deluded into thinking our narrowly focused senses could even begin to perceive the truths of all that is. Arrogant with our technology and knowledge, we knew no more of reality than the hermit crab in the tide-pool understands the orbit of the planets. 

“The Big Bang that created this universe was no more than a brief spark of light. Black holes in this universe continually create more, but this universe resides in the black hole of in another universe. In turn, that universe is no more than a disembodied particle in this universe. 

“We call the circular existences impossibilities, paradoxes because our infinitely narrow way of thinking. In truth, they are really embarrassingly simple. One simply has to be ready to accept everything they know to be wrong. All of our science is flawed because we limit it with our intelligence. 

“We think we are smarter now because we develop ever increasingly complex technologies. The truth is, people 10,000 years ago understood this universe much more than we as they understood our universe was only a very small part of the infinite whole. 

“Alien visitors were not from different parts of this galaxy or any other galaxy. They were from Earth, just not this one. The laws of their universe followed different laws of physics, if anything can really be called a law. As I said, you must accept everything you know to be wrong. 

“The simple geometry of the pyramid generates a nearly endless supply of energy. This energy feeds another version of reality inside the web of all that is and is not. Except the simplicity and it will begin to make sense.” 

That was the end of the journal. Obviously Nebbins was suffering from dementia before his death. He spoke in circular sentences and logical nonsense. A universe was made by the universe it created? That was a bit too much. 

Exhausted, I started to my bedroom. In the hall stood the case holding that obelisk I bought several years back. Before I turned off the light, I thought I saw a crack in the beautiful quartz construct. Possibly no more than a trick of light, I decided to check on the obelisk that cost me a small fortune. 

The artifact looked shattered, but remained in one piece. Angry, I opened the case to look at my worthless decoration. Gazing into it’s form, I witnessed the impossible. Light refracted in layers similar to cracks, but the layers of faint rainbows were in a state of flux. 

What is, is not and what is not is. The words and my friend came back to my mind. I have to except everything I know is wrong. Worlds, stranger than anything I ever imagine appeared in the quarts structure of the obelisk. Although it stood there in the case in front of me, I look from the inside out. The simplicity of the object was extraordinary, extraordinary but more complex in its mathematics than ever considered in this day and age. 

I knew all matter consisted of pure energy, but only now could I see it. See is a misused term. What I perceived extended beyond my five senses. Energies invisible to my eyes played in beautiful colors and indescribable entities surrounded and even passed right through me. 

The slow degradation of my energy became perceivable. I knew, when I died, the energy would take on a new form without the burden of my consciousness. The cohesion that made me me would one day end then I would cease to be. 

My soul extended to encompass the galaxy, but it existed inside the galaxy. The universe did not exist but there it was right in front of me. Reality became a sponge of holes, strands, and intersections. As confusing as it should be, the simple shapes explained the complexity of the multi-verse. 

If my mind and my energy went separate ways, my life truly meant nothing at all. I know why kings, pharaohs and emperors thought they would become gods. They utilized the pyramid to compress their limited energy to create a singularity of infinite heat and density. The final amount of their lives gave birth to a new universe. In a way, they did become gods. 

As my last will, I released myself in the maelstrom of the shifting chaos that formed the logic of the absolute truth. In billions of years, marked in the laws of its new universe, the first life forms would arise. My life ended and a new reality began due to the influence of simple shapes. 

 Copyright 2019 ©

Boarded Up House

Word Count: 2,671

I awoke lying on the damp ground and surrounded by hardwood trees. Smooth gray clouds covered the dim sky, and a slightly chilling drizzle made its way to me from between the leafy treetops. It was difficult to think. My mind was nothing but a haze.  

I am not sure what happened. The last thing I can recall was driving my lovely wife and two children through a high-end residential area. We were headed to the home of a long-time work friend. He was having a huge barbeque party and invited my family and me to join in on the food and festivities.  

I drove us into the large gated community, greeting the familiar guard as we entered. We were almost to my friend’s house, and then I recall seeing a blinding light. Sometime later I woke up lying in the woods with a pounding headache.  

Immediately my palms began to tremble with anxiety and my knees shook with terror. I could feel my legs buckling beneath me. My heart pounded rapidly in my chest, and I began to hyperventilate as I went into a full panic. My first thought was we were in a car accident. The accident must have thrown me free, and I landed here.  

When I saw a street light glowing in the night several hundred feet through the obscuring trees, I knew that could not be the case. It is not possible that a car accident could throw me this far through the woods. I would have hit a tree and stopped long before I could make here.  

The second thought to cross my mind was I must have hit my head and wondered away in a daze. Strenuously I raised myself to my feet and began to sprint toward the light. Either I was not injured, or I was too worried about my family to notice the pain.  

My head on the other hand beat like and African drum. My eyes blurred from the excruciating pain and I could hear the roaring rush of blood in my ears. Despite the hindrance, I struggled to run out of these woods as quickly as I could. 

I guess I reached my threshold because only twenty or thirty feet from the street light, my knees buckled under me. I plunged face first onto the ground again falling into unconsciousness. When I next awoke, the sun was out. By the looks of it, it was still early morning.  

Not far away at all I saw cars passing by. Forcing myself back to my feet, I staggered through the remainder of the forest. When I made it to the clearing and onto a sidewalk, I had no idea where I was. Frantically I looked around for something familiar.  

As I attempted to discern my location; I also looked for any signs of an accident. I saw no wreckage, no tire marks or any broken glass. If I was indeed in an accident, I must have wandered far away. Perhaps the road on which the accident occurred was on the other side of the forest.  

I staggered along the light-gray concrete sidewalk for ten minutes or so and finally I spotted my friend’s car. It was parked in the driveway of the ranch-style house next to his blue-gray Tudor, but I knew without a doubt the car was his. I thought perhaps his neighbors allowed him to park in their driveway so those attending the party last night could park on his property.  

I did not know why he parked there, and I did not care. As fast as I could force my weary body to move, I headed directly for his house. Two times I tripped and fell on his lawn before I made it to his front porch.  

In my frantic state, I beat hard on the door while simultaneously ringing the doorbell over and over. I allowed a few seconds to pass and resumed pounding on the door as I screamed for help. I heard someone call out from the house next door.  

“They’re out of town for a few days,” the man from the neighboring house yelled. “Is there something I can help you with?”  

Propping my exhausted body against the door frame, I turned to look at the man addressing me. It was my friend. He was wearing a bath robe and it appeared he was out getting his morning paper when he heard the commotion and observed me beating on the hardwood door.  

I was sure this was his house. I thought perhaps in my panicked state, I got the houses wrong. I never visited his home before, but I knew this area. It seemed like the directions he gave me on Friday sent me to this house, but obviously I was wrong. I did not care. I was relieved to at least know where I was.  

As I did my best to run toward my colleague, I yelled out, “Something happened. I think I was in and accident and I don’t know where Susan and the girls are.”  

He beaconed me with a repeated wave of his hand. When I reached him, he took me by the shoulders to help steady my trembling body. Looking at me with an unfamiliar gaze, he tried to calm me.  

“Slow down sir,” he said. “Tell me what happened.”  

I quickly explained to him the last thing I remembered was going to his house for the cookout, then the next thing I knew I woke up in a large patch of woods. He looked at me with a face filled with confusion. Right then his young wife came to the door and asked if everything was okay.  

“You’d better call the police,” he told her in a tone somehow sounding both calm and distressed.  

My friend helped me to the porch swing and instructed me to sit down. As I caught my breath, I explained to him Susan, the girls and I got ready and were headed for his house for the barbeque. I explained to him that we were driving, and were almost here, when I think we had an accident. I told him I did not know where my wife and daughters were, and I was terrified something happened to them.  

He looked at me like he was even more confused. I started to wonder if we did make it to the party and something happened on the way home. Perhaps that is what he found so confusing. I did not know what happened. All I cared about at the moment was where my family was and if they were alright.  

“I am sure the police will be able to help you sir,” my friend and longtime co-worker said.  

That was several times he used the word sir to address me. I did not know why. It was not like I was his boss or anything. I did not have the time to speculate on why he spoke to me in such a way, so I flatly asked him why he kept calling me sir.  

With a quizzical look on his face, he shook his head gently and said, “Well, I don’t know your name, and you did not introduce yourself.”  

I stood to face my good friend and angrily poked him several times hard in the chest. He backed away but did not look like he planned to strike back. He seemed to be trying hard to remain calm, but I could see fear growing in his eyes.  

“That is not funny,” I snapped at him as I jabbed his ribs with my finger. “Please, for the love of God, if you know where Susan and my girls are, tell me. This is no time to joke.”  

Now seemingly incredibly perplexed, the man in front of me tried to explain he had no party last night. He did not know me and he insisted he did not know my wife or our girls.  

“Come on,” I pleaded, growing close to shedding tears. “We’ve worked together at the same firm for ten years.”  

Again, softly shaking his head, the man with whom I was so familiar said to me, “Sir, I don’t work at any firm. I am an engineer at the railroad.”  

By this time I had enough. I was terrified. I did not need my friend pranking me. Shaking him by the shoulders, I demanded he stop this foolishness and tell me what happened. He tried to pull away from my grip, but his back was already against the wall.  

I began to shout and almost immediately heard someone call out from the street.  

“Sir, I need you to let go of that other gentleman and take a few steps back,” a uniformed police officer said.  

Some sense of relief washed over me when I saw the two officers and their patrol car. If anyone could help me figure out what happened and where my family was, it would be them. In my brief moment of zeal, I ran, or rather scrambled toward the officers.  

“Sir, you need to stop where you are right now,” the officer nearest me ordered in a stern tone. Both officers placed their hands on their sidearm. In my current frame of mind, I did not think of how the police would consider me charging toward them a threat.  

I froze in my tracks. Tears welled up in my eyes.  

“Please help me, you have to help me,” I begged. “I can’t remember last night, and now I have no idea what happened to my family.”  

“Please!” I cried.  

The officers approached me and asked me to explain the situation.  

As I tried to piece things together so I could explain it to the police, the second officer asked me if I had any identification. Not even thinking, I pulled my wallet out of my back pocket and removed my driver’s license. Without interrupting my explanation to the first officer, I handed the second my ID.  

Once I told him everything, he instructed me to stay where I was and approached the scared and confused couple standing on the front porch of the smaller house. I could see by my friend’s demeanor as he told the policeman he did not know me. I almost ran over there to ask him why he was doing this to me, but I knew that would not be a smart thing to do.  

My friend and his wife went back into their house, and the officer headed over to me again. Before he reached me, the other law-enforcement officer beckoned him over with a nod of his head. The two stood closely. Their backs turned away from me just enough that I could not attempt to read their lips. It was probably only one or two minutes, but it felt like they talked for hours before finally coming back over to me.  

“Can you verify your name for me sir?” the first officer inquired.  

I answered the question, and then he had me verify my address and finally my driver’s license number. As I answered each question I grew more and more frustrated. We were wasting time that we could spend trying to find my family. I had enough and in an angered tone I asked them why they were not helping me.  

“It appears sir that this driver’s license is fake,” the second officer said. “Our system does not have your name, the DL number is not valid, and no one registered with the department of motor vehicles lives at that address.”  

My head spun as I listened to his words. I nearly passed out.  I could not remember last night. Could I have sustained a head injury bad enough to make me this delusional?  

I began to sob as my knees buckled underneath me. One of the officers grabbed a hold of me before I crumpled to the ground. Helping me remain erect, the two officers assisted me to the patrol car.  

“Let’s get you over here so you can sit down. Then we can try to figure out what is going on,” one of them said as they led me to be back seat of the patrol car.  

“Now, tell me again what happened,” the first officer instructed.  

“I already explained it,” I said quite loudly with an obvious tone of anger to my voice.  

“Sir please,” the second officer said. “You need to calm down.”  

“Look, I told you my wife, daughters and I were going to a barbeque,” I reiterated. I went through the details of what I could remember once again.  

“And you were going to this man’s house for the barbeque,” the second officer continued. “The problem sir is they said they had no barbeque yesterday and neither of them knows who you are.”  

“Okay,” I said. “I thought that was his house,” I explained as I pointed at the larger domicile. “Once I realized he lived in that smaller house, I wondered why he did not have this gathering at the pa-park over….”  

I did not finish my sentence. When I pointed to the park, I instead found myself looking at the forest I recently staggered out of. There was no park. I knew without a doubt a park once existed there. On more than one occasion Susan, the girls and I went there for a picnic, to fly kites and so forth.  

Was I going insane or was I insane already? How could so many of the details I remembered so well be so wrong. For a moment I thought I was dreaming, but I ruled that out quickly. This was too vivid.  

“Ok sir,” the first officer said. “We are going to bring you to the address on your license.”  

“If it is a fake, it is a very-very good one,” I heard the second officer whisper to the first.  

They did not handcuff me, but they did close me in the back seat of the car. I suppose they had to, but this enclosure almost sent me into a whole new level of panic. I tried not to think about being confined and focused my attention out the window.  

As we reached my neighborhood, it shocked me when I noticed the conditions of some of the lawns. They had brown spots, a major sign of grubs. The trees along the road on which I lived were mostly gone. The remaining trees appeared to be quite sickly.  

I recognized the houses, but they looked like no one performed any upkeep on them for years. Car parts and furniture littered some of the yards. Lawns were allowed to grow deep in some areas. I did not understand. The homeowners’ association would never allow these conditions to exist.  

Finally we reached my address. My head swirled and I became very disoriented. I did not panic this time. I believe I was in too much of a state of shock and felt little else.  

This could not be possible. My friend did not know me. My driver’s license number did not exist. The park my family and I frequented was gone as if it were never built. The finely manicured neighborhood in which I lived for twenty years was quite dilapidated and run down.  

Perhaps I could believe some of that, but what I saw at the moment made me question my existence. Looking at the beautiful home in which Susan and I raised our children I saw it was in serious disrepair. A small portion of the roof looked like it collapsed some time ago. I was looking at my home, my once beautiful home. Instead of seeing the house I remembered, I looked at an old, dilapidated building.  

In the front seat, one officer said, “Why are we wasting our time sitting here.”  

“I don’t know,” the other replied as he glanced at the empty back seat.  

“Well drive somewhere. I don’t know why we are sitting here in front of this boarded up house.”  

 Copyright 2019 ©

Full Circle

Word Count: 5,407

It was early in the fall of 1989 as the first hint of the green of the trees transforming into their autumn colors became apparent, I set out on the long, arduous trek between South Carolina and Texas. My ex-wife and I shared joint custody of our only son, but I rarely got the chance to see him. The distance made any sort of regular visits impossible. The plan was for me to drive to Texas, and then my son and I were to fly back to South Carolina. At the end of our two-month visit, I would fly him back, pick up my truck, and drive back home to the east coast. 

By trade I worked as a creative writer. Among the works I had published were mystery novels, fantasy novels, and horror short stories. In such a profession, I enjoyed the freedom to decide when I worked and when I did not. I sent off my last manuscript a few days before my trip, and my next one was not due for several months. 

I cleared more time on my schedule than the length of my visit with my son. I wanted to take a scenic drive through the secluded roads of the forested country. I planned to take a drive through the Appalachian Mountains until I reached Alabama. From there I intended to cross West through the Southern states. During all of my past visits with my boy, I took the interstate highways the entire way to San Antonio. I thought this time a pleasant drive through the mountains would do me some good. 

The sun rose fresh and bright as I set off on my way. Because the orange light blazed so intensely, I turned my rearview mirror toward the ceiling to deflect the blinding glare from my face. Once the dazzlingly bright sun rose above the rear windshield window, I returned the mirror to its proper place allowing me to glance safely back to the traffic behind me. 

The morning air was rather chilly, probably no more than 50 degrees, but I preferred to leave the heater off as I drove. The air outside would warm up soon enough and the crisp, cold morning invigorated me. I wore a thick flannel hunting shirt, which I could remove in a few hours when the heat of the day arrived. 

Breakfast came in the form of two crumbling biscuit and greasy sausage sandwiches and paper cup full of bitter coffee from a fast-food joint. I did not stop to eat; I ate as I drove. My hope was to find a good place to stop to bed down before nighttime fell. Before long, I found the mountain road for which I was watching that I needed to take to get to the scenic highway. For a state highway, the road was exceedingly narrow, and there was virtually no shoulder on either side. One lane ran against the nearly vertical mountain face while the side of the rode on which I drove bordered an 80 degree angle drop through a forest of pine trees. 

By my calculations, if I followed along this highway, I should reach the Southern tip of the Appalachians in Northern Alabama in a matter of four to five days. I really looked forward to this drive for some time, but thanks to the windy roads, I stopped to relieve my bladder quite frequently. The large cup of coffee I picked up the last time I stopped to refill the gas tank probably did not help, but it did keep me focused and awake. 

The meandering drive provided an outstandingly splendid scenic view. I spent the first two nights of my trip camping out in my tent. Being an avid outdoorsman, I always kept camping gear in the toolbox of my truck. In spending a fair amount of my time secluded with nature; I found a lot of inspiration for my stories in the wilderness and the imagined mysteries it contained. I imagined how much my boy would enjoy this. He liked the outdoors almost as much as I did. Perhaps we would do some camping during his visit. 

On the third night I drove late into the evening. I wanted to try to make good time, so I drove until I began to doze. Setting up my tent quickly, I climbed swiftly in and went to sleep. I drove longer than I should have. It was not safe to be driving these windy mountain roads while I was so sleepy. Only minutes after crawling into my sleeping bag, I was sound asleep. 

I woke up an hour before the sun would rise above the horizon. Something woke me up. It sounded like loud whispering, but it was nothing but garble. I figured it must be some sort of insect or bird. Just to be safe, I climbed out of my tent and took a look around. The whispering continued, but it became very faint. I knew it was some kind of animal but did not know what, so I went to my truck and took my pistol out of the glove box. Climbing back into my tent, I set my pistol next to my pillow and drifted back into my dreams. 

When I finally rose for the day, it was about three hours past dawn. I packed up quickly and got back on the road. I could not get the sound of that whispering out of my head. I rationalized it as a nocturnal animal, but something deep inside me told me different. I wanted to get as far from this area as quickly as I could. 

I took pleasure in the secluded drive. Many years passed since the last time I spent time in the mountains. I forgot how magnificent everything looked from this altitude. I drove a while after the sun went away for the night. I decided I would find an inn and stay there until morning. I needed a place to shower and shave. Two nights in the wilderness left me quite dirty. 

I let myself get in too much of a hurry. If I was driving the speed limit, I may have avoided the tragic events that were about to unfold before me. A man in torn and filthy clothes staggered out from nowhere and limped right out in front of my truck. I was not paying clear attention; I did not have time to react. I had nowhere to turn or move out of the man’s way. If I swerved I would either hit one side of the nearly vertical mountain face to my left or go careening over the other side of the mountain. With my right foot, I pressed down on the breaks with every bit of strength I could conjure. Unfortunately, that was not enough to prevent the events I was about to set into motion.  My breaks locked and the oversized truck began to skid straight ahead. For a fraction of a second I saw into the man’s eyes, and I saw my own impending demise in there. Somehow in his eyes I seemed to feel my own death. I clipped the fellow hard with the right front fender of my large pick-up truck. 

My heart stopped as dazzling sparks of light overtook my vision. I jerked the parking brake and hastily ran back to help the man I  hit, if he could be helped. Vertigo nearly overtook me when I realized I just pushed the man off the side of the cliff. My head spun an I nearly lost my balance and plummeted down after him. I wanted to vomit. I looked around for an hour, calling out for the man. I got no reply. I realized my only option was to run. The man was dead, and there was no point in me spending years in prison for it. 

Jumping back in my truck, I got out of there like a bolt of lightning. I could not believe what I just did. I killed a man, and now I was running. There was nothing I could do though. He stepped right out in front of me. It was either him or me, and I had a son in San Antonio waiting for his father to go get him. 

No one would ever find the body there. That man would decompose and be eaten by wild animals long before anyone found him. That was my hope. As long as he was not a local, I should be in the clear. Who would even think to look for the body of a drifter? 

I passed a few scenic parkways, but I did not want to stop until I was back to an interstate highway and far from here. Almost two hours passed, but I still did not find a major highway. I passed several scenic parkways, but it was not until now I felt a bit safer. I finally pulled over so I could assess the damage to my truck. What little blood there was on my truck spattered along the side. I easily washed that away with a few bottles of water. The denting was minimal. I expected more structural damage than this. Apparently, I did not hit the man very hard. He was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. 

I continued driving, looking for a way to get out of the mountains and to a major highway. After hours of driving, I wondered if any such exit existed. Eventually I found a small mountain hotel and pulled over for the night. I was exhausted from the stress and anxiety, and I reached the point of struggling not to fall asleep. I simply could not continue any further.  

A nice gentleman, probably in his mid-fifty’s, checked me in and gave me the room key. After a quick shower and a change of clothes, I adjourned to a small bar right next to the motel. I hoped a drink or a few would help soothe my frazzled nerves. 

It was a rugged little tavern with a cozy atmosphere. The lighting was fairly dim and soft which helped put me at ease a bit. I was rather surprised when I saw the hotel manager was the bartender as well. I shared a few kind words with the man, trying to hide the guilt and paranoia plaguing my thoughts. I was on my second drink when a few other people entered the bar. Two scruffy men with long hair and beards walked in with a rather attractive woman. She had a natural beauty all the make-up in the world could not improve. I caught myself staring at her. I turned back around to the bartender and hoped I did not offend the men. 

After my fourth shot of bourbon, I decided to head back to my room to attempt to ge some sleep. I walked in, closed the door, and shed all of my clothes. Right then I heard three gunshots ring out in the night. Grabbing the sheet off of the bed, I covered my lower self and ran outside. 

The two men and the beautiful woman ran out of the bar and jumped into an old navy-blue sedan. In their hurry, the tires spun and pelted the front wall of the bar with chunks of gravel. I threw my pants back on and ran to the bar. I yelled the whole way hoping some other patrons could help me. I ran through the front door of the small pub to find the bartender lying over the bar dead. Blood covered the countertop and dripped on one of the bar stools with an audible tap. The cash register was pulled from the counter and smashed on the ground. All of the money was apparently gone. The three even searched the dead man’s pocket for valuables. 

No one else was checked into the hotel. The bartender was the only employee there. I needed to make a quick decision. I already tried to cover up one murder, now I was considering ignoring a second. If the authorities arrived, they may notice the damage to my front fender and put two-and-two together. I could not take that chance. I quickly gathered my clothes, jumped in my truck, and got the hell out of there. 

I cursed myself because I did not pay attention to which direction the sedan went as they hastily exited the scene. I obviously wanted to go the opposite direction, but I did not know which direction that was. I took a chance and continued on my way South. All I wanted was a peaceful, serene drive. Instead, this trip was turning into my worst nightmare. God knows who I hit. I was a murderer who fled the scene of another murder. 

Panic pressured me to drive as hastily as I could. I had to calm myself and keep the speedometer at a safe level. My heart tried to pound its way out of my chest, and there was not much I could tell myself to help me calm down. Anxiety and fear filled every nerve from head to toe. I desperately wanted to get out of these mountains and out of this state. 

I tried not to think of what would happen if I got caught. I would surely spend the rest of my life in an Alabama backwoods prison. I could not let my boy grow up without his father. It was an accident. The man staggered right out in front of me, and I did not have time to react. I even stopped to check on him, to try to help him. There was nothing I could do. If the impact with my car did not kill him, the fall definitely did. 

Absorbed in my thoughts, I barely noticed the dark blue sedan parked at one of the scenic views. My heart leapt into my throat when I recognized the car as the one I saw fleeing the hotel. When I passed, I could not see if there was anyone inside or not. I prayed they abandoned their vehicle for another or set off on foot into the mountain forest. 

I drove several more miles and thought I was in the clear. Only a few minutes later I saw headlights quickly winding along the road behind me. I hoped it was only another late night traveler, but my gut told me otherwise. I knew it was the murdering thieves from the bar. 

I increased my pace, but I was unfamiliar with the windy road. I knew if I drove too fast, I could easily run off the side of the mountain. Despite my haste, I saw the headlights of that dark blue getaway car closing in on me. Within five minutes, the heavy steel vehicle was upon me. 

The sedan approached closer and closer until it was only a few feet distant from my rear bumper. I already set into a panic even before the horn began to blow. Over and over the driver of the sedan honked the horn instilling within me dread and fear for my own life. I was probably the only person who could identify the murders, and they wanted to kill me before I could do so. 

They did not know I was a murderer as well. I had no more of a desire to encounter the authorities than did they. I desperately wanted to get away. I could not report them for fear of being found out as well. I wished I could make them understand this, but I was sure they wanted me dead. They did not care about my own troubles. With me dead, there were no other witnesses to their violent crime. 

The road began to straighten. I pressed harder on the gas pedal increasing my speed as much as I could. I was terrified of running off the narrow mountain road, but I feared the trio following me even more. With us now on a straight way, the car behind me began to ram my rear bumper. I did not know if they were trying to stop me, kill me, or simply run me off the side of the road. 

Up ahead of me, I saw a fork in the road. I had no idea which way to go and no time to think about it. Reacting without thinking, I continued straight. This led me onto the left fork in the road. To my relief, my pursuers did not react quickly enough and ended up on the right fork. 

My heart filled with despair when the paved road ended and a gravel road took its place. Obviously I was no longer on the main road. The rough road bumped and bounced my truck. I could hear the rocks hitting the side panels. The paint job on my new truck was destroyed, but that was the least of my worries. 

I let the irregular road lead me deeper into the mountains. I was afraid of getting lost, but I was more afraid my pursuers would return. I drove for thirty minutes through the jagged mountain path before I finally stopped. I had no idea where I was. I did not know if this road would dead end deep in the wooded mountains or return me to a paved drive. 

Turning off the truck, I climbed down to the floorboard and removed the fuses for my break lights and tail lights. If the trio did follow me, I would not give them tail lights to use as a beacon. The headlights had to stay on; the night was too dark for me to navigate without them. The further I proceeded, the more I was sure that I was heading toward a dead end. The road grew progressively narrower and the overhanging foliage grew ever denser. 

I breathed a sigh of relief as I came to an intersecting road. This road was gravel as well, but it looked more worn and heavily used. The sense of reassurance faded quickly as I realized I had no idea which way to turn. The windy gravel road made so many twists and turns. I did not know what direction I was going. I stopped to try to regain my bearings. 

Turning off the headlights, I turned off the truck and grabbed the flashlight from under the seat. I took my pistol out of the glove box along with a small box of bullets. My head spun with fear, confusion, and anxiety. I prayed that the three murder-thieves did not know this area. I hoped beyond all hope they were from out of town and not locals. As far as I knew, they could be just about anywhere. 

I knew some of the constellations like Orion and Scorpio. If I could find these, I might just figure out where to go. The walls of the mountain, not to mention the heavily congested trees, made it almost impossible to determine North from South. My fear of becoming lost in this rocky wilderness intensified. I nearly jumped out of my own skin when a voice greeted me from behind. 

“You lost?” the voice asked politely. 

I snapped around to find myself face to face with a large man. His facial features, hair and eyes did not betray the origin of his heritage. He easily stood eight inches taller than me. The peculiar man was getting on in years, but he still looked healthy and strong. He dressed in jeans and a denim jacket. Feathers and beads were woven into his slightly graying hair. A large, aged deerskin bag hung from his shoulder; the large satchel hung down to his hip. 

“Y-yes I am as a matter of fact,” I replied when I finally stopped gawking at the man. “I turned off on this road by accident. Now I can’t figure out what to do.” 

“You cannot go back,” he said. It was as if he knew more than he possibly could. “There are too many paths behind you. It is too easy to get lost that way.” 

I sensed a creepy aura about the man. He did not look at me; he looked through me. My soul cowered in guilt and shame. 

“Which way should I go?” I asked the tall stranger. 

“Which way calls to you?” he replied cryptically. 

I did not have the patients for this one with nature crap. I wanted to get back to a main road, preferably one heading in the opposite direction of that sedan. I knew I would get no help if I became belligerent. Taking a few deep breaths, I tried to calm myself. 

Several minutes passed without either of us saying anything. There was an eerie stillness to the air. No breeze blew across my sweaty face or tickled my short hair. I saw no clouds in the sky. It was like the air suddenly decided to take a break. 

When I began to speak, the man silenced me by pressing one strong finger to my lips. He cupped his other hand around his ear. A few more awkward minutes passed, and then I noticed something very unnatural. To my left, I heard the crickets, frogs, and nocturnal birds creating a hypnotic song. To my right, I heard nothing. In front of me, the growth became increasingly thicker. There was no way going forward was an option. 

I did not know what to say, and I stepped backward toward my car. The aging man smiled, and I could not help but think he somehow manipulated the animals of the night. He made me very uncomfortable, and I began to climb back into the truck. The man spoke to me again. 

“Every action a man takes affects every action he takes in the future,” he said. It was almost like he was delivering some sort of prophecy. 

I desperately wanted to leave, to put as much distance between the sedan and me as quickly as possible. Still, something made me stand there. I felt like the man had more to say to me. 

“If a man does not determine his destiny, it will be determined for him,” he said in a monotone voice. “Is a man truly lost if he does not wish to be found?” 

“All things come full circle,” he finished. With that statement, the man turned to walk away. 

“What do I do?” I asked as if the man was a fortune teller. 

“Yin and Yang my friend. What comes around goes around,” he called loudly as he continued to walk into the dense forest. “However you sow, thus shall you reap.” 

A few steps after he disappeared from view he yelled out one last thing. “Go; follow the path you have chosen. 

The man never appeared or acted aggressive. I did not think I had to fear any danger from him. Even so, there was something about his mere presence that terrified me until my bones grew cold. It was as if a cloud of doom hung around the man. 

I found myself full of doubt. Did the nocturnal sounds beacon me or warn me away? Initially I was sure I should go to the left, but now I wondered if the silence meant safety. I wished I never encountered that man. I felt one way meant safety while the other meant death. 

I was parked there for a while. If that sedan did backtrack, they could be on me soon. I decided to go with my first instinct. Turning on my parking lights, I turned to the left. So long as I drove slowly enough, the dim light of the parking lights were sufficient. Turning on my headlights was the last thing I wanted to do. 

I crept along that backwoods road for miles. Several times I saw other trails, possibly other roads. I ignored all of these and continued to follow the road I chose. I was in a deep valley when my truck ran out of gas. The engine sputtered, clanked and finally stalled. I took my flashlight and pistol, along with my first aid and roadside kits, and then set off on foot. 

With the full moon hidden behind the mountains, it was intensely dark in the deep valley. It was a long way to the top of the road. I could barely see the road beneath my feet, and I stumbled on rocks, roots or other foliage and nearly fell several times. Regardless, I walked without the use of my flashlight. I was too afraid of drawing the wrong attention. 

By the time I reached the top of the road, my legs burned with cramps. The steep walk took my breath and caused a sharp pain in my side. The climb exhausted me. I wished I took better care of myself. I did not think I could make it much further on foot. I had to find some means of transportation. 

At the top of the road, I again had the benefit of the bright light of the moon. The mountain leveled here, and I could see a fair distance in front of me. The road was virtually devoid of growth, but no tracks were visible to indicate regular use. 

My whole body was on fire. Fatigue overtook me and I had to rest. I finally resigned to the fact I could go no further and wandered off the road. I walked about two hundred feet through the heavy undergrowth and found a small clearing. I collapsed. I could not stay awake. Absolute fatigue forced me into a deep sleep. 

When I awoke, I did not have any sense of passed time. It was still dark, but the moon’s orbit removed it from the night sky. 

Through the woods, leading away from the road, I saw what looked like the light of a window. I walked in that direction, but because of the absent moon, I had no choice but to use my flashlight. The undergrowth separating me from the house was quite dense. I was very hungry and wished I had something to eat. My body was weak because I had not eaten in almost two days. 

I thought it an unfortunate turn of luck when the underbrush became thick with thorns. The sharp talons tore at my skin and clothing, but I was not going to let that stop me from reaching that house. I suddenly realized the thorns tearing at me were wild blackberries. The thorny plants were a mixed blessing. 

I stopped and picked every berry I could find. They were tart, but satiated my hunger and soothed my parched throat. I did not continue on until I ate several handfuls of the dark berries. Feeling somewhat better, I continued to push my way through the brush and to the house. I briefly forgot about the torturous pain wracking my body. 

I spotted a white pick-up truck parked beside the house. I did not see any other vehicles, especially not a dark blue sedan. I hoped the owner of the house might give me a ride, or better yet give me some gasoline for my own truck. I finally emerged from the unforgiving shrubbery and came out about fifty yards from the house. A light on the opposite side produced a halo like effect making me comfortably feel I finally found safety. 

Approaching the house, I alerted a chained dog which instantly began barking. The shock filled my eyes with sparks, and I nearly fell to my back. A light over the back porch of the house turned on and a man stepped out. Confusion overtook me when I saw the man’s face. It was, without a doubt, the bartender and hotel manager. That was impossible; I saw the man lying dead only hours earlier. 

“Oh thank God,” I cried. “You-you’ve got to help me. They’re going to kill us both.” 

A shot blasted in the silence of the night. Initially I thought the trio in the sedan caught me, but then I realized the bartender stood in the door aiming a rifle at me. 

“Get out of here you damn thief,” he yelled only seconds before another shot cracked the night air. 

The bullet hit the ground only a few feet in front of me. Dirt and fragments pelted my body adding to my agony. 

“You don’t understand,” I tried to reason with the bartender. 

“Understand this,” he said as he let a third shot fly. 

The shock set my ear to ringing with a piercing shriek. The bullet passed only inches from my head. This was no warning shot. The bartender tried to shoot me but missed. He was not going to give me a chance to explain, so I ran. 

I could not go back the way I came. A floodlight now illuminated the area, and I could not pass through the thorn bushes with any speed. My best option was to run to the side of the house. As he fumbled to reload his firearm, I shot my revolver twice as I frantically dove into the white truck. I saw keys hanging in the ignition and thought I finally caught a break. 

I cranked the engine and floored the gas. Several more shots rang out behind me. I heard one hit the truck and another shattered the side view mirror. 

I frantically tore down the road as fast as the truck would go. I heard the gravel pelting the underside and inner fenders of the truck like an angry hail. Soon the gravel road gave way to pavement, and I felt like I was home free. In my zeal, I did not realize I was driving in the dead center of the road. I did not see the oncoming car soon enough. I tried to move to the side, but I clipped it hard on the driver’s side. 

I hit the brakes, which set me into a spin. The force threw me out of the truck to slam down onto the hard pavement. I welcomed the new pain when I watched the truck spin off the road and roll down the slope of the steep mountain. 

I looked back to the other car and saw it teetering on the edge. The front of the car pointed directly at me, and the headlights blinded me. I stepped toward the vehicle and felt a crippling pain in my belly. Looking down, I saw the bartender did not miss. The shot I heard hit the truck passed through and got me as well. I was losing blood fast. If I did not get help now, I was going to die. 

I forced myself forward. I had to help the people in that car, and hopefully they could help me. I dropped my first aid kit, flashlight, and roadside kit when I ran from the bartender. I was almost on the vehicle before I could see it without the headlights glaring me in the face, and I recognized it instantly. I stood there swaying from the loss of blood. I looked at the dark blue sedan with its three passengers. 

They tried to get out, but any small movement they made slid the car ever-so-slightly over the edge. They pleaded with me to help, to do something to weigh down the car so they could escape. My body was growing numb. I lost a lot of blood and I knew I was about to die. 

“Sure,” I said as I placed my foot on the grill of the car. “Have you ever heard of yin-yang?” I asked. I never got an answer, because I used what energy I had to give that sedan the little help in needed to go over the side. All I could hear were their death screams as the sedan rolled down the mountain. 

Reveling in my revenge, I did not see the shiny black pick-up truck round the sharp curve. I glanced up and, only for a brief moment, I saw myself behind the wheel of my undamaged truck. 

The last thing I heard was screeching tires as the breaks of the vehicle suddenly locked. I felt something, but I became so disoriented, I could not say what happened. I felt the rush of cold air for a moment before I came to a stop when I became impaled on a tree trunk. I saw a face up above me looking down the hill. Eventually the headlights drove out of view. 

“Don’t worry,” I said as darkness overtook me. “Everything comes full circle.”

 Copyright 2021 ©

Photo by Pexels from Freerange Stock

No Such Thing as Ghosts

Word Count: 1,223

I can remember hating this house for as far back as my memory reaches. Although well-crafted, the structure creaked and moaned throughout the night. The pipes banged and rattled, intensifying the creepiness of the venerable home. The truly worst part of this house were the nocturnal shadows I saw moving around my bedroom as I tried to sleep. 

The specters danced along the walls, which to me looked like a host of ghosts cavorting around my room as I tried to make myself sleep. My parents always told me my childish fears were unfounded, that there was no such thing as ghosts. Despite my insistence I saw faces on some of the shadows when they drew close enough to my bed, my parents never believed me. They told me I was letting my imagination get away from me. They told me it was all in my head. 

My father grew up in this house, and told me he used to have the same fears. Eventually, he said, I would grow out of it. He tried to convince me it was a phase through which I was going to pass. All of the convincing he tried to do was for naught, as I knew what I saw. What I saw was what I saw. No amount of talking would convince me to believe otherwise. 

As much as I wanted to believe there was no such thing as ghosts, I knew what played out before me night after night. Figures danced and moved about my room. They passed in and out of my bedroom walls as if no barrier existed. Some seemed to interact with others while there were those who appeared oblivious to any of the others. Did they ignore the others, or could they not even see the others. If they could not see them and I could, then why? It made no sense. I did not understand. 

The specters terrified me night after night. The ebony figures typically did not approach too near, but on occasion they walked right up to my bed. When one drew that close, I could make out details of their clothing and facial features. There was simply no way this could only be a figment of my imagination. I was not that creative. 

When my father told me he had the same fears as a child, he never got into details. Judging by the look he got on his face when I told him what I saw, I knew the things he saw were the same. My thought was he tried so long and wanted so desperately to believe they were not real, he stopped seeing. I suppose after time he managed to somehow block them out. He somehow learned not to see them anymore. 

I tried. I wanted to disbelieve the ghosts filling my room. I wanted to believe it was nothing more than my imagination gone wild, but I knew what I saw. The figures moving about my room, and likely the rest of the house, were too vivid to be all in my head. So if it was not my imagination, it means I was experiencing hallucinations. If they were indeed hallucinations, there must be something seriously wrong with me mentally. 

Night after night I lived in terror. As far back as I can remember, I saw those phantoms walking about. 

Even when I reached my tenth birthday, I continued to see the phantoms. I hoped father was right, and I would grow out of it, but nothing I could do would make them go away. 

I lived so many years in terror, but shortly after I turned ten, I realized none of them every made any attempt at harming me. They had plenty of chances but did nothing, so I finally accepted that the ghosts presented me with no danger. 

Several months later, I decided it was time for me to see if I could communicate with them. Some looked directly at me on occasion, but as far as I knew they never tried any attempt to speak with or communicate with me. They never seemed to be malicious in any way. It was more like people interacting in a social setting. 

It was not until this revelation I finally lost my fear of the phantasms. I could not believe I allowed myself to live in fear every night for so long. I wondered if they were the spirits of those who died in my house. I did not know who built the house, but I did know the core of it was built in the late 1800’s. My great-great grandfather purchased the house and land. As the generations passed, the house was expanded. 

A few months before my eleventh birthday, I decided I was finally going to try to communicate with them. With my penetrating fright now gone, I gathered together enough courage to face the phantasms that terrified me for so many years. Never before this did I climb out of bed before sunrise. 

Sitting up, I shifted my legs to hang over the side of the bed. Allowing my pajamas to ride along the fabric of my sheets, I slid down to the floor and into my bedroom slippers. The instant I stood, several of the ghosts, most of them in fact, turned their heads to look at me. 

For some reason I did not understand, the phantoms became more and more visible. They began to lose their transparency, and I could see their features much more clearly now. I saw eyes. I saw mouths. I even made out the crow’s feet around the eyes of a nearby woman. My bed and bedroom seemed to be growing a bit hazy. I made two fists and rubbed them against my eyes to see if I could make them focus a little more. 

Suddenly, I heard my bedroom door slam open. Startled, I dropped my hands to see what happened. Mom and Dad both frantically burst through the door. Running to my bedside, they went right past me and lurched to their knees. I did not understand why they passed me by until I turned to see what was so important to them. 

There, on the floor I saw myself. My body lay there on the floor as blood ran from one of my ears. My neck was twisted into a grotesquely unnatural position. A small red fire engine, my favorite toy, lay underneath my body and my toy police car lay upside down at my feet. I forgot to put my toys away before climbing into bed. 

Where my slippers should be, I left my cars lined up in a row spread about six inches apart. I was playing cops and robbers with my toys when my mother hollered up the stairs to tell me I had better be in bed. Leaving the various miniature vehicles lined along my bed, I jumped under the covers and pulled them over my head. 

I stood there watching my parents hold my dead body in their arms as they cried out. Some of the others in the room approached me to help me to the other side. Before my parents and bedroom became the shadows, I looked down to Mom and Dad and said, “Now tell me there is no such thing as ghosts.” 

 Copyright 2019 ©

Down That Road

Word Count: 5,186

Over my long years with the firm, I accumulated such a vast amount of vacation time I was going to lose two and a half weeks if I did not take it now. Things were not well at the office, the current economy taking its toll on everyone, so I insisted I stay on until a better date. When my supervisor told me to use it or lose it, I decided to take my pick-up truck to do some driving across the country.

The next morning, I loaded my cooler, made sure I had what I needed in my tool box, and packed up a suitcase full of clothes and toiletries. I really had no idea where I would go, but since I lived so close to the east coast, I decided to drive west.

In a few hours I passed through Atlanta and got on interstate highway 20. That was more or less a straight shot through Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana. I never before traveled through any of the states in the Deep South, and I was rather excited to see it.

I made some stops to enjoy the unfamiliar scenery and take in the local culture. There were vast amounts of pine trees from the west side of Alabama, which created a rather dense forest, and almost all of the way through Mississippi.

Crossing over the Great River from Mississippi, I entered the vast, monotonous landscape of the steamy state of Louisiana. A long highway stretched in front of me; a straight lengthy path expanding off far into the horizon. Miles upon miles of vibrant green crops surround both sides of the highway for as far as the eye could see.

I assumed the endless rows of crops must be cotton. I had no idea what a cotton plant looked like; I only ever saw it in ball or swab form. The large steel grated rail cars covered in white puffs are what clued me in. I knew of no other type of crop that produced such a thing.

It felt like I was driving forever without seeing any sign of another car on the road. I knew I should have stuck with the interstate highway, but I thought the smaller state highways could provide me with some nice scenery. I was sorely wrong about that.

Two hours after crossing the border, the rows of cotton plants ended and gave way to massive flats packed with countless small ponds. Each pond could not be more than one or two hundred square feet in area. They were filled with some sort of grass and packed edge to edge going on for as far as I could see.

It was only ten o’clock in the morning, but the heat pounded down upon my black truck without mercy. The air conditioner was cranked up as far as it would go. Normally the thing had me freezing my ass off at that setting, but in this heavy Louisiana heat with the sun beating down on my black truck, it was just enough to keep the cab at a bearable temperature.

A large obscuring haze formed from the steadily increasing humidity. The heat rose up from the concrete roadway in obviously visible waves, pulling the moisture along the highway back up into the air. Because of those thousand upon thousands of grassy ponds, the air became so thick with humidity there appeared to be a fog from a distance.

That ungodly long tar-patched stretched in front of me, relatively free from the haze, taunting me with hopes I would find something more than farmland. Turning around became a consideration, but I thought I could see a gas station off one of the small side roads. As the building drew closer, I was relieved it was not some sort of mirage generated by the tortuous heat.

It took me much longer to get there than I thought. Without even realizing it, I was driving over ninety miles per hour; the ponds alongside me flew by with a blur. Twenty minutes elapsed before I reached the turnoff to the road on which the station sat.

It looked like it was once a large truck stop, but now it was in serious ill repair. Cracked, crumbled blacktop and densely choked weeds replaced what was once a smoothly paved surface. The old parking lot looked like an overused minefield. To call it a parking lot would be generous. It was really more of a bunch of dirt-filled potholes surrounded by the occasional patch of blacktop.

I climbed out of the truck as a large cloud of dry red dirt my truck stirred up rolled over me. I made the mistake of breathing in while the cloud still engulfed me. The fine dust choked my lungs and stung my throat. The red-orange cloud quickly blew past me, but I coughed and my nose ran for a minute or so afterward.

Withdrawing my wallet, I stepped around the truck to the pump. To my dismay, the pumps did not have a credit card slot. I was not even sure the pumps worked. These were of the sort installed in the 1970’s. The grimy white paint curled and chipped off the rusty metal gas dispensers.

The building did not look much better than the parking lot. It appeared to be an old diner turned into a garage. Paint covered the windows from the inside and one was covered from the outside with sheets of plywood. A stack of car hoods taller than me stood amongst a litter of other parts scattered around. I knew this is very cliché, but I actually heard banjo music coming from the one open door.

Were it not for the fact my truck was almost completely out of gas, I would climb back in the cab and leave this unnerving place. A young man, of what age I could not tell, stepped out from the door and onto a small porch-like area at the entrance.

Something in his demeanor and his stereotype Louisiana redneck appearance made me extremely uncomfortable. He was dirty, dressed only in jeans, an old rock and roll t-shirt, and a faded John Deer hat.

“Sumpin I cun do fer ya mista,” the boy said with an incredibly thick accent. I assumed he must be eighteen or nineteen judging by his voice. Because of his sunbaked skin and his wiry black scruff on his face he appeared to be much older.

“Ay, mista,” he called out louder than before. He sounded either agitated or rude. It was difficult to determine the underlying tone of his voice with it camouflaged under that heavy accent.

I realized I was standing there like a fool, gawking at the unfamiliar scene. I thought places like this only existed in movies. I apologized to the young man, who wore no socks or shoes. His feet were covered in dry dirt. His T-shirt was sleeveless and his jeans were worn with holes. I did not think I could come up with a better stereotype than this. I took my credit card out of my wallet and informed the grungy country boy I needed some gasoline.

“If yu cun pu at thar plastic back’n yer wallet’n pull ‘at sum cash, I sell ya some,” he replied with a snarky sarcasm.

I fumbled with my wallet, nearly dropping it to the ground. A vague sense of relief passed through me when I saw I had sixty dollars in it. I so rarely use paper money anymore, I was not really sure if I had any on my possession.

“Yea, uh, yea,” I stammered. The boy rolled his head and used the momentum to roll his back off of the wall, and then walked inside. Reluctantly, I followed.

Inside a radio played bluegrass music, which explained the banjo music I heard. I gave the filthy young man the cash from my wallet and told him to put it on premium.

“Mista’, we got two kina gas. We got gas ‘n we aint got gas. Whichun’ you wawnt?” I had to admit, I was somewhat taken aback by the young man’s boldness. Possibly normal in this region, his demeanor made me feel extremely uncomfortable. His matted blond hair showed in patches from underneath his worn ball-cap. A chunk of tobacco bulged behind his left cheek and he continuously rolled a wooden toothpick from one corner of his lips to the other. His eyes looked sunken and dark. The dark brown of his eyes seemed to convey a sense of infinite depth. I could not explain it, but he scared the hell out of me.

I inquired as to the nature of the endless acres of small ponds.

“Dem’z rice paddies,” he said.

“Rice pattys?” I asked rather stupidly. I never heard of a rice patty.

“Ya know, fer grown rice in,” he said with a patronizing sarcasm.

I thanked him in words but not in tone. Walking back out to the pump, I put my sixty dollars of gas in the tank and began to leave. I wanted out of there as fast as I could. It may only be culture shock, but there was something about this whole place that gave me the shudders. Despite the incredible heat, chill bumps ran down my arms.

As I pumped the gas, I stayed facing my truck. Even so, I could feel the boy’s sharp stare boring into the back of my head. When I turned around to put away the nozzle, I found him leaning against the same wall as before with his back and one foot propped against the mostly exposed wood. It felt like he was looking at me like he was sizing up a game animal.

“Hey, you uh, you know how I can get back to the interstate?” I asked the dirt coated boy with discernible apprehension.

A long pause and an eerie, uncomfortable silence followed. It was as if the boy acted like he was trying to decide if he was going to help me or not. It did not take me long before I grew weary of the blatantly rude wait. I was about to ask him again when he finally spoke.

“Get back on at dared’n go right,” he began. I saw a dark brown stain on the matchstick in his mouth caused by the mass of tobacco squirreled in his cheek. “Ater jes tirty miles yer gonna turn right on da dirt road marked ‘leven sitty fow. At’ll take ya to highway twenne.”

Again I thanked the unnerving young man. Just before I climbed back into the cab of my truck the boy called out more.

“You gonna pass a white-top a’fore ya git to da dirt highway. You aint gonna wanna go dat way,” he instructed me. “It’ll take ya to I-20 z’well, but ‘member, you aint gonna wanna go down dat road.”

I nodded my head and shut the door. I was so eager to get off of that long state highway, but now I found it a welcoming sight. The long lonely stretch was a welcomed relief from that unnerving young man. I drove a little over seven miles and saw a sign for I-20. The boy told me not to go this way, but I believed he was only giving me a hard time. I saw no reason in driving another twenty something miles to get to a dirt road that may not exist when this one would take me where I was going.

It was an oddly paved road. It had a blacktop base, but it was covered with white marble rocks embedded in the black tar. I did think it awfully strange the rocks managed to stay so chalky white. It seemed like they would be dark and scuffed with tar and rubber. I dismissed the boy’s instructions and turned to the right. I did not see why I should drive to a dirt road when I could take a paved one. That boy probably saw me as a target for enjoyment and thought it was funny trying to get me lost.

Immediately after my turn onto the snow-white street, I saw a sign saying I-20 was only thirty miles away. That kid wanted me to drive twenty miles to get to a dirt road, a dirt road that might not even exist. Right after the reflective green direction sign was another much older sign. Two tall stone obelisks covered in moss and lichens held between them an aged wooden sign. The paint was peeling away, and I could barely make out the words “Moon Lake.”

Not too far ahead I saw a mass of trees comprising the edge of a dense forest. When I entered the shade of the trees, it was a great relief from the direct sun of the farmlands. My air conditioner instantly began cooling the cab of my truck.

It was not like any kind of forest with which I was accustomed. The floor of the cypress forest was no more than a shallow lake of water, and cypress knees of various sizes surrounded each tree. Fallen logs lay scattered about making convenient gathering spots for congregations of hundreds of turtles. Some appeared stacked to six and seven high atop each other.

Spanish moss choked the tops of the trees to the point very little light made its way to the road. Every now and then I saw a spot of land pass me on one side or the other, but for the most part there was nothing but water and vegetation.

The rapidly passing trees scattered with patches of Spanish moss produced a mild mesmerizing effect. I was momentarily captivated by this unfamiliar scenery, and when I pulled my gaze back to the road, I found myself quickly approaching a large alligator lying stretched across my path. The reptile stretched from one shoulder of the road to the other. It was twenty feet in length if it was a foot. In a panic, I hit the brakes with all of my strength. The wheels of my heavy-duty truck locked and I went into a sideways slide. I jerked my steering wheel the other way in a desperate attempt to straighten my progression, which only served to send me into an uncontrolable spin. I drove right over the narrow shoulder of the levee road and into the dark, murky water.

I cannot say how long I was out, but when I came to, the sun was gone. A roar of noise – crickets, frogs, birds and other nocturnal creatures – flooded my ears. Suddenly I became aware of sharp, stabbing pains coursing through my head.

My truck rested at a forty-five-degree angle, and the grill wrapped half way around a cypress tree. I tried to rub my eyes, but an intense burst of pain from a broken nose filled my eyes with sparks. It took me several minutes before I could again open my eyes. I realized my left eye was almost swollen shut and I could feel blood dripping out of my nose. I suppose I was fortunate the crash did not kill me.

Opening the driver’s side door, I tried to climb out of the truck and back to that ghostly road. I almost passed out from the pain. My right leg was broken in at least one place.

Judging by the pain in my chest, I must have cracked several ribs. I screamed in pain as loud as my injuries let me scream, which was not much at all. At first I thought I heard my voice echoing off of the water, but then I realized someone was calling out.

“Ey, inney un in dare,” the voice shouted.

All I could manage was one loud ‘yes.’ A few seconds later I could hear the splashing of oars in the water. The man calling to me was in a boat. I would prefer he came from the road, but I would take any help I could get.

“Old on air,” the voice echoed through the swamp. “Gonna be dare innamunnut.”

The truck budged just a little as the aluminum boat bumped against it with an audible metallic scraping sending shivers coursing through my spine. It was fortunate this man happened to be around when I needed him. My hopes were dashed a bit when the aged, deeply tanned man looked in through my shattered windshield. I could not tell the man’s race. He must have a sorted mix of ancestry, as he carried an unusual mix of facial features.

There was something in his eyes that frightened me. It would be better to say there was something not in his eyes frightening me. His hazel-brown eyes gave me the impression of a voodoo zombie. The kerosene lamp in his hand cast a shadow over his face, making him look like he wore a Halloween costume.

“Haw ya goin’n git yawself aw turnt up round dis heya tree?” the old man asked me with a tone of concern. Judging by the look on his face, I did not think he really cared anything about me at all. His mouth said one thing, but his facial and body expressions said something else.

Moths and other insects of all sizes swarmed around his old kerosene lamp, many of the creatures falling into the shattered windows of my truck. I felt the pests crawling on my face and arms, some gnawing and biting my fresh wounds. I built up the strength and asked the old man to move the lantern away from me. I was in enough pain without insects feasting on me.

The old swamp man hung the lantern on something; I assumed it was a tree branch. The direct light was out of my eyes, but the insects continued to fall into and fluttered about the cab. The lantern now cast a shadow, giving the man a strange ominous look. He removed his torn hat, revealing a head of greasy gray-black hair, and hung it on my side view mirror. I shuddered over the thought of him touching me, but what other option did I have?

“Es git ya atta dare,” he said, his voice betraying his wrinkly old body. He sounded like a healthy young man in his prime.

I went numb when he put his cold hands under my arms. Sparks filled my vision as darkness overtook me and I again lost consciousness. When I came to I was resting on the bottom of the aluminum boat. Underneath me I could feel the cushioning of what I hoped were life jackets.

The lantern hung from a pole at the front of his boat. Each time the man paddled the boat, the lantern swung side to side. The shadows of the trees moved with each sway, creating the illusion of creatures dancing in the forested darkness.

I rose my head up as much as I could in an attempt to try and get a good look at my rescuer. He was standing in the back of the boat. Rather than using an oar to slowly propel the boat, he was using a long wooden staff to push along the bottom of the swamp water. The cypress trees crowded the water, making it effectively impossible to work with a set of paddles.

“Don ya be worrin naw,” the old man said as he stood over me. “We gonna git ya all took care’v.”

I could feel a stinging sensation all over my body. It felt like someone sticking me with pins. I tried to wipe away the bugs piercing into my flesh, feasting on my blood, but every time I did they only moved somewhere else.

“Dem skeeters eatin ya up?” he said with a cackle. “Day shaw do like at sidde blood. Ole Justin been living out here so long, skeeters done stopped feastin on me no moe. Day lookin foe’a fresh meal.”

Mosquitos? I’ve never felt such painful bites from mosquitos before. These things must have been huge. With the light of the lantern shining in my eyes, I could not see the individual insects biting me. Swarms of insects circled around the lantern, most of them probably being mosquitos. I almost lost my bowels when something large swooped down at me, took a sharp turn, and darted in another direction.

“Careful dare,” the old man, who introduced himself as Justin, warned me.”Dem bat aint wont you nun. Day her fur dem bugs. Don worry yer body nun. Naw. Dem bats hep keepin da skeeters down. Show is plenty nuff for dem ta eat, no?”

I turned my head to the side so I was able to look over the water. A light fog settled over the surface, and it seemed to emit a faint green glow from within. ‘Swamp gas,’ I thought. I heard of swamp gas creating its own light, but I thought that was only a tale. I did not think it was something that happened outside of movies and television.

Three lanterns broke through the fog up ahead. As we drew closer, it became much easier to make out a small shack. It was built among the trees about four feet above the water. Underneath the crude structure were several dozen oil drums keeping the home a constant height above the water.

Two lanterns hung from the corners of the shanty, and the other one dangled from a tree. As we got closer, I could see an old woman. She was fishing off her deck using a bamboo cane pole. Bugs gathered around the lantern on the tree, many of them falling into the water. I could hear the fish feasting on the insects. With her bamboo cane pole, the aged lady yanked one fish out of the water after another. With amazing proficiency, the woman removed the fish from the hook, dropped it into a bucket, and re-baited her line. She paid us no attention. She never made any attempt at a greeting, not even to my rescuer.

We passed alongside the crude but sturdy structure, and I saw two other individuals standing on that porch floor above the water. One of them was a man and the other a woman, so I assumed they must be a couple. Their own boat bumping gently against the pier jutting out from the house, the man and woman appeared to take a great interest in us. The woman was probably an attractive person, but her hair was unkempt and her clothes worn and dirty.

After we passed this shanty, several more of the swamp homes came into view. I looked around the boat as much as I could and saw what appeared to be a whole town built among the trees. The fog retreated from the groups of dwellings. I could still see the haze, emitting its strange green glow, outside this perimeter, but it stayed away from the buildings.

I became aware the soft splashing of Justin’s pole sounded strange. Initially, I thought it must be an echo of his staff in the water. My stomach churned with fear when I realized there were a multitude of other boats, pushing their way through the tightly compacted trees.

It appeared these trees, cypress knees and fallen logs made some form of a natural maze. Anyone not familiar with the area could get lost here for weeks.

“Why are they following us?” I managed to ask, despite the pain in my face and my dry, parched throat.

“Day’s cumin t Pawpaw’s wid es,” the sunken eyed man said very casually. I tried to ask why, but my dry throat and swelling tongue would not allow it.

“Yun, Ole Justin aint even reconed ya’d be tirsty,” he said in a compassionate tone. Again, his face showed more contempt than compassion.

Justin laid his pole along the length of the boat. Kneeling down, he retrieved something resembling a thermos.

Handing the receptacle to me, he said, “Yeya, dis water’d be yo need naw.” I took the strange thermos from him and examined it for a minute or so. The metal was strange, appearing more like glass filled with flakes of gold and platinum, and covered in inscriptions that reminded me of hieroglyphs.

“Na aint be worring,” he explained to me. “Day be un’a dem coal filters ta make da wata fresh.”

Reluctantly I took a sip from the container. I expected the water to be very warm, but it was actually quite cold. I guess something like this came in very handy in the putrid swamp.

I expected the swamp to reek of the smell of death, but the aroma in the air was actually quite pleasant. The cypress reminded me of the scent of cedar, just a little. It was then I noticed there were not only more poles propelling boats through the water, it appeared each of them brandished a lantern of their own.

All of the individual lights hanging from poles, swaying with the movement of the boats gave the appearance of horrible creatures jumping from tree to tree. The green mist grew thicker and brighter, but seemed to leave a clear path for the boats.

“Where?” I asked through the pain causing my head to throb.

“We takin’ ya ta Pawpaw’s. He gonna git ya awl fixed up.” He said, never taking his eyes off our course.

“The others?” I choked.

“Day jes gat big noses. Mose’a dem ain’t never seent no city feller a’fore.”

That gave me very little solace. Apparently, I was a spectacle to these swamp folk. The fear I felt earlier now escelated into terror. We passed yet more of the swamp homes, and I began to feel as I would never leave, not on my own. Shortly after, I could hear even more boats adding to this sojourn.

I felt Justin pull the front of the boat onto land. I could not wait to get to land earlier, but now I wished we could go back into the water. Several dozen boats, the boats following us, also pulled themselves to shore. Two younger men approached Justin’s boat.

“C’mon, ets give Ole Justin sum ‘elp,” one of them said to him.

I thought they might be Justin’s children or grand-children. The two were both young and healthy and shared the same sort of odd facial traits as Justin. I thought I would pass out from the pain when the two men lifted me from the boat. The other people from the procession of aluminum boats carried lanterns and torches. The ones I could see also showed the strange, mixed racial faces, but none of them really looked like the others. I did not know how to explain it. The motley group of swamp-folk filled me with a chilling dismay.

The procession led in between two large, gently-sloping mounds. When the two men carried me past those mounds, I could see more of the mounds surrounding us. It looked like there were thirteen of them in total. Lanterns burned on hangers and torches burned on poles. Despite the multitude of small light sources, it looked like there was too much light. The green fog surrounding this area glowed brighter than ever.

The two men gently carried me to the center of the area. They carefully laid me on top of a stack of reed mats. I was surprised over how comfortable the crude mats were. The men stepped back when a rattle sounded. I lifted my head enough to see who was approaching.

I expected the approaching man to appear something like a Native American medicine man. For the most part he dressed normally, normally that is for one of these locals. The hair on his head grew in patches only, and the matted tufts were three feet in length. His face looked ancient. He easily looked a hundred years old.

Several aspects of his attire stood out in comparison to his filthy clothes and dirty skin. In his left hand he held a rattle, fashioned from a gourd. In the other hand he carried a lantern made from a human skull. The light shining through the empty eyes, mouth and nose hole gave me the impression of looking into hell. Woven snake skins covered the length of the rod atop which the skull rested.

Around his neck and at the bottom of a hemp string hung a strange amulet. It appeared to be forged from the same metal as the water dispenser Old Justin gave me. When he reached me, the shaman shook that horrid rattle and waved the ghastly candle holder over me. All the while, the man chanted in a language I did not recognize.

He jammed the shaft holding the skull into the ground, never ceasing his chanting. The others that followed Justin and I to this unholy place all began to chant in unison.

“Justin dun tol ya, Pawpaw gonna git ya took care of,” the man said in an ancient, scratchy voice.

I felt people grabbing me by the wrists and ankles, pulling my limbs tight. The pain was excruciating. My broken leg burned with intense agony and my broken ribs made it nearly impossible for me to breathe. I wished the pain would allow me to go unconscious, but as intense as it was, I was perfectly aware.

Yellowish smoke poured out of the mouth of the mounted skull, producing the putrid, stinging odor of burning sulfur. Something cold clasped around my ankles and wrists. It took me a moment to realize I was shackled to the ground.

Absolute panic and horror flowed through my body as the strange, pagan ceremony continued. More and more people crowded into the circle of mounds, chanting in sync with all the others.

The voodoo priest raised his hands and the chanting ended.

“Ole Justin bring us a freshen,” the patchy bald-headed man called out to the massive crowd. Justin, the man who rescued me from dying in my truck, stepped forward and joined Pawpaw.

“Da ona’s yo’s.” Pawpaw said as Justin knelt down beside me and smiled.

“Why did you save me?” I plead through my burning throat.

“Taint no need in wastin dat life dare’n dat truck. You gonna see dat Ole Justin not so ole anymo.”

With those words, my rescuer plunged his hand into my chest. He broke no bone nor tore any skin. His hand simply passed inside of me. I screamed in unholy agony as I felt Justin literally grab onto my soul. The feeling was indescribable. It transcended any earthly fear or pain.

Justin grew younger and took on facial features to resemble some of mine as he grabbed the very life inside me to give immortality to his own.

The man tugged at my soul and I saw the darkness coming. Before me lay no afterlife, I did not die, I was consumed. The heaven I was promised did not greet me, only the emptiness of oblivion.

Why didn’t I listen to that boy? I never should have gone down that road.

Copyright 2019 ©

A Great Motivator

Word Count: 4,616

For untold generations, caring and worrisome parents attempted to control the behavior of their small children by employing the use of frightening folktales and macabre nursery rhymes.

Fear of the green-skinned, wart-covered wicked hag living in the dark and unknown regions of the forest the parents employed to prevent children from curiously straying too far from the home. Terror of the twisted and fearsome man-eating troll making residence under the concealment of a bridge thwarted any fleeting thought children may consider when playing too near the water. Fear of the cannibalistic old hermit with the aged leathery skin living in seclusion prevented children from approaching the homes of strangers. Fear is a great motivator.

When it came to employing the intense trepidation created by the unknown, my parents acted in a manner no different from anyone else in this untamed region of the country. Mother and Father applied the terrifying legends to deeply instill the dread necessary to frighten my brother and me from venturing into the peril posed by the steep craggy mountains. Broken and sheer cliffs, sharp jagged rocks, and unpredictable landslides presented very real hazards to smaller children, or anyone else ready to tempt fate for that matter. Under this pretense, my folks justified the frightening lies they regaled to us on a nightly basis.

The images crated by one disturbing tale in particular remained clearly burned into the canvas of my imagination. Deep in the stony mountains, in a sacred and unknown valley, existed the virtually inaccessible entrance to a timeless mine. Indian legend talked about it only in hushed whispers. It was said a people predating the Redskins burrowed a shaft hundreds of yards into the bowels of the mountain. I did not know how long the natives lived here before my grandparents arrived in hopes of a better life, but I assumed it must be at least a dozen generations.

One story said the miners dug too deep in search of minerals, and inadvertently awoke an unholy abomination not of this world. Another version of the tale said the strange people freed the beast intentionally. God imprisoned the inhuman demon during the creation of the world, where it would remain until the Day of Judgment. A being of the netherworld, the timeless devil possessed no tolerance to the beautiful and warming rays of the life giving sun.

On moonless nights, when the sky was at its darkest, the revolting atrocity ventured from the safety of the mine. Stalking the twisted trees of the steep mountains, the unholy thing searched for the heaven bound souls of good people to feed its damned existence.

When my grandparents arrived in the area with the first settlers, the Indians warned them and told them the legends of the inhuman spirit. Among others, my grandparents ended their pilgrimage at the foothills of the majestic mountains, but others dreamed of a promised land, and continued their fateful journey. Ignoring the myths of the savages, several families proceeded into the snow-capped peaks. No one ever heard from them again.

The heavy wind-blown snow blanketed the mountains and filled the valleys before the September month yet came to an end. The men of the foothills resolved to locate the missing settlers, but inclement weather did not allow this to commence until the thaw next spring began.

Fourteen skilled hunters collected their gear and embarked on a mission to find the missing settlers. They approached many redskins as potential guides, but none of the natives dared venture into these forbidden lands. Arrogant in their skills, the fourteen men set out, many of them with dogs, to discover the fate of the missing settlers.

Eight long weeks passed without one sign of the hunters. A man farming the area at the far edge of the forest, while working his crops, caught sight of something squirming in the undergrowth. The thing he saw haunted him for the remainder of his days.

A single hunter returned from the search party. Bones in both of his legs were broken, and his skin was covered in bruises and lesions. This is not what caused the farmer such repugnance. Something gouged out the hunter’s eyes, and it appeared to have been the hunter.

“They wanted me to hear, they wanted me to hear,” the blinded hunter whimpered repeatedly. No other words ever passed from the man’s quivering lips again. He died screaming those words three days later.

Passed down through the spoken word, the terrifying folktales evolved a tiny bit each time someone recited them. The stories my father told me were not quite the same stories my grandfather told him. Oral revisions grew to incorporate the existence of goblins and demon-spawn making the high mountains their home. Many nights, images of these hellish creatures, images conjured by the creativity of my own imagination, dominated my thoughts when I went to bed.

During my toddler years, I imagined these creatures lurking in every dark crevice of the forested mountains. I cried and pleaded for my life when my parents forced me beyond the clearing around our house. I knew some unholy terror stalked me, ready to consume my flesh and soul at any moment. Simple trips to the homes of other families felt like the last I would ever take.

As the years passed, my fear of such encounters continually decreased. The longer nothing happened, the more I became sure nothing hid out there waiting to rend my flesh apart. Over time my fears subsided until I eventually thought only of the stories as mere fairy-tales. My belief of the boogeyman vanished completely by the time I reached my 12th birthday.

My mother bore many children, but not all of them lived to see their first year. By the time of my 12th year, she gave me three surviving brothers and four surviving sisters. I listened on with a certain amusement as my parents told them the same stories they once used to terrify me. I never considered the macabre stories to be lies, because they were told for our own good. Small children simply held too much  curiosity within them, so I went along with Mother and Father by pretending to believe the tall tales. Through lending my credibility to the horrific tales, I helped my parents reinforce the fear in they cultivated into the young ones.

As my earlier years crept away and curiosity overran any lingering fear, I pressed my way progressively deeper into the rocky forest that once terrorized me so. Caring for seven young children, tending the farm and livestock, and preparing meals consumed most every bit of my parents’ attention. Other than seeing to me completing my chores, my parents did not have any spare time to afford me. My progressively longer excursions went unnoticed.

The land which my grandfather claimed when he moved into the area was one of the family lands deepest in the rolling foothills. Beyond the edge of our now deeded land, the terrain changed drastically. The smooth hills became replaced by steep slopes covered by sharp rocks and loose dirt. Adults wanted to use this fear to prevent young men like me from exploring these dangerous places.

My own personal explorations took me meandering through the foothills surrounding the loose community, but despite my disbelief in tall tales, I still never dared to climb up into the unknown mountains. I called myself brave for adventuring as much as I did. Still, I could not find the will to work my way upward into the craggy slopes. That was at least until early in the summer of my 13th year.

Eventually reason conquered fear, and I resolved to have a look in the steep and foreboding mountains to find what secrets it held. All throughout the previous winter, I used rationalization to resolve my lingering fears until they no longer stood in my way. None of the children from the nearby homes ever saw the monsters keeping guard over the rocky range, and with a little practice, I fully convinced myself I never would.

I waited one morning until after my father left to tend to the farms at the lower hills with the other men, and mother and my siblings went to the spring fed creek to wash our clothes and haul a few loads of water for the house. Once there was no one around to see me, I slipped back into the house for a few provisions. From the pantry I liberated a hunk of stale bread and a skin full of water. On my way back out the front door, something in my parents’ small bedroom caught my eye.

The light from the kitchen candles gleamed off of the collection of guns against the far wall. Thinking more of wild animals than supernatural monsters, I decided to load one of my father’s muskets and tucked it in the scratchy hemp rope that was my belt.

Satisfied I had everything I needed, I set off to the north to explore the legendary mountains. I made great time for the first two hours, but the slopes grew steeper and I slowed down to exercise more caution. If I slipped and broke a leg, I do not know I should expect anyone would come looking for me. No one knew I was here, and I think the adults were just as afraid of the stories they told as the children they tried to scare.

Eventually the large stone outcroppings gave way a slope covered in boulders and exposed dirt. All my exploratory excursions up to now honed my skills to travel through different and difficult terrain. Even so, I took care in these parts. The bluff was all too ready to give way beneath me, and I did not want to end up entombed under tons of earth. Grass, leaves, and the occasional shrub were all that held the surface of the slope in place.

Giant stones rose from the mountains on either side of the obstacle. All I needed to do was make it across and I should be fine. I laid flat against the surface and slowly begin to inch sideways. If I reduced the pressure I put on any one spot, I should make it across without causing a landslide.

I nearly panicked and almost let loose of my handholds when a stone under my left foot pushed free, echoing as it careened down the steep slope. If I was not the explorer I was, I may have let go and followed the loose stone to the bottom of the deep valley floor. I could see how treacherous this place would be to those not adapt at traveling such terrain. If the story about the missing hunters were true, perhaps they laid covered at the bottom of this mountain.

With the sun at my back, I could not determine the approximate time of day. I tried to make the judgment by the shadows cast by the small rocks and grass, but all I could do was create a very rough estimate. I never learned to tell time in such a way. Father only taught me to determine the time of day by examining the sun’s position. I wish I knew how to use a sundial. That skill would probably come in very handy at this point.

I was unable to see the slope curved as it worked across the mountain side until the initial edge of the bluff slowly pulled out of view. I greatly misjudged the distance from one side to the other. I knew I would not reach the other side and back before the hour grew too late. I hung in place and pondered over the possibilities for a few minutes. Finally I decided I had better turn back and head for the warmth and security of home.

First only with a small shift, and then a deafening rumble, the ground around me began to break apart. My heart lurched and I nearly screamed when the soil beneath my feet gave way. I held tightly to a mass of roots as I listened to the dislodge dirt deafeningly roar its way down the steep hill and into the valley below.

The noise of the crashing rocks and rolling dirt echoed between the valley walls for several minutes, but to me it felt more like hours. The landslide produced such a roaring resonance against the steep mountainsides, I worried my parents would hear it as far down as the foothills.

The deep rumbling boom produced as the dirt and rock careened into the bottom of the dark valley was one of the least of my worries. When the soil dislodged and swept nearly any signs of vegetation with it, I lost any sort of footholds that may have existed. Tree roots protruded from the ground here and there. That was my only hope of avoiding rolling down the hill and breaking every bone in my body. I thought I could make it across using the handholds available, but unfortunately there were no such convenient means of going back the way I came. The collapse left me with only one choice. I had to go forward and try to find another route to take me back home.

Several times I almost lost my grip and slipped. My hands were strong from years of heavy chores, and I managed to keep a tight grip on the earth covered roots. The tree roots bore deep into the rocky mountainside. The incredible force of the ever expanding system of roots broke the solid rock into loose sections, and stones fell loose as I pulled myself from one to the other. Once, the stone dislodged and the root on which I desperately clung pulled four feet out of the ground. I held on, but the short drop jolted hard on my shoulder.

I did not flinch when death came up to stare in my face. My swift reactions saved my life more than once. By the time I reached the safety of the other side, my arms were exhausted and I was quite sure I seriously injured my shoulder. Callouses protected my hands, but scratches covered the skin of my arms. I did not know how I would explain this to my mother and father.

My primary concern was to find a way back around the majestic snow-capped mountains and return to the warm safety of home. Climbing up the mountain was out of the question. The slope was too steep, and I had not sufficient clothing to protect me from the cold, tearing winds. As I tried to conceive of a route leading back the way I came, I worked on excuses in the back of my thoughts.

I considered the possibility of climbing up or down a short distance to seek a way back across. I ruled these options out quickly as the smooth run extended as far as I can see in any direction. As large as this mountain was, it could take me several days to walk around. I could go hungry if I took that path home. I did have the musket in case I had to hunt something to eat.

Mama and Daddy would realize something was wrong when I did not show up for supper tonight. Even so, no one would be able to look for me in this area until morning. This part of the mountain was much too dangerous to navigate at night. I surely did not want anyone else getting hurt because I went where I was told not to go. Unless I figured a way to cross back to the other side of the landslide, I knew I would at least be here until dinnertime tomorrow.

As the sun began to set for the night, the blowing winds calmed but the air quickly grew cold. I must have climbed higher than I thought I did because it would not be so chilly at home. Since it was such a nice morning when I left, I did not bother to bring with me a coat. I did not expect to become trapped, and therefore thought I would have no need of it.

I did have the forethought to bring a box of matches with me, so I began to look for a good place to build a fire. The steep slope did not offer me a wide variety of choices. I needed a flat surface upon which to build a campfire. The last thing I needed to do while trapped on this dangerous spot was to set the brush and trees ablaze.

Vigorously rubbing my hands over the surface of my arms to produce some warmth, I made my way deeper into the mountains. With the landslide long ago out of sight, I finally found a level stone slab sufficiently large enough to hold me and a fire. I kicked and stomped on the spot to make sure I would not end up riding it down the hill, and then I set up a small ring of stones.

It took very little time at all to gather some stones, wood and kindling, and I had a fire pit filled in no time. After piling enough surplus wood to last me through the night, I withdrew the box of matches for my britches. My hope waned when I saw only five matches inside. I grabbed the box in a hurry this morning, and I never bothered to see how many matchsticks it contained.

I had to make each of these matches count, so I stuffed the stack of wood with a couple fistfuls of dry leaves. Holding the box up to the pile, I struck the first match, but a sudden rush of air extinguished the small flame before it ever had a chance to catch. The brisk breeze vanished just as fast as it appeared.

I use some of the dry dead leaves to cup the match and, holding the wooden sticks still, slid the box along the tip. Again a breath of wind blew over me, but this time the small flame caught the crunchy leaves on fire. I fanned it until it developed a small mass of hot coals, and then allowed it to spread. I expected a third wind to blow out the growing fire, but none ever came. I was relieved to finally have a campfire burning.

My front side stayed nice and warm, but the cold air covered my back with chills. The fluidic dancing flames mesmerize me and I stared at them blankly. The sounds of the nocturnal insects, birds, and reptiles filled the air with the resonance of nature. Added to the flickering fire, I nearly drifted off to sleep. Suddenly, I noticed something was amiss.

Something large cried out into the night air. It sounded close, and nearly made me jump out of my shoes. I thought it was a coyote, but if it was, it did not sound normal. There was almost a human-like quality to it.

I grabbed a log out of the hot fire, turned, and waved it through the air behind me. I looked for the prowler. At the same time, I hoped the glowing log would scare the beast away. I saw nothing, but I heard something moving through the brush and across the loose landscape. To my relief it was moving away from me. Thank God whatever that was, it was afraid of fire.

An adrenaline surge caused by the cry of that creature had both my heart and head racing. Because of my fearlessness of the unknown, I found myself stuck in a terrifying situation. In a way I was thankful for the shock. I would not fall asleep any time soon. I planned on the wood I gathered lasting the night. Now I added extra to it so as to increase the size of the fire. Now, what I had left would not last until morning. Several times I told myself to get up to find more. My body did not want to react to my thoughts. I know it made no sense, but I think my body was more afraid than my mind.

Finally I decided I could put it off no longer. Rising to my feet, I peered around for some convenient fuel for the campfire. As soon as I stood, the warmth of the fire faded and my face grew ice cold. I still felt its radiance, and I did not want to walk away from the yellow and orange blaze.

I did not stray far from the protective glow. The ground was too steep to navigate in the dark. I picked up all the wood I could find. Large logs, small twigs, I did not care how big it was. If it was dead wood, it was going into my fire. I would burn anything flammable to keep the blaze glowing bright until morning.

Right as I once again felt the warmth of my fire, the semi-human cry echoed through the valley again. It was rather far away, but I had the feeling it was calling for more of its kind. The image of being shredded apart by the teeth of a pack of hungry coyotes filled my mind.

The longer I thought about it, the clearer the image of a torturous death became. I should have listened to my parents. I never should have come here. I thought I was brave. I was not brave; I was stupid. The vigor of youth still gave me a sense of immortality. Now I would give anything to be in the safety of my home sitting around the fireplace with my siblings as my mother read the Bible to us.

Another twisted cry from below me was answered by another on the mountainside above me. I hurriedly built up the ring of stone to deepen my fire pit. After getting it about eight inches higher, I fed sticks and loose handfuls of leaves to the campfire. Loading on the larger wood, I turned the campfire into a bonfire. I prayed and prayed the mini-inferno would keep the predators at bay.

I thought perhaps I was dealing with a breed of coyote I was not familiar with, and that was why they seem to sound so strange. Still, the animals’ bays eerily resembled the sound of a crying baby. I thought of the stories grandpa told me before he died. At night he reminisced about his boyhood in the Irish Isles. The cries of those creatures brought to mind the tales my grandpa told about the banshee. The tortured soul of an evil woman, the banshee cries out in the night. Anyone clearly hearing her moans died right there on the spot. I knew it was not a punished ghost, but those stories brought frightening images to mind.

I was sure these were simply a different species, but something in the pit of my stomach told me I was dealing with something otherworldly. I never heard tales of beasts in these mountains. I never really heard much at all. The natives only told us to stay away. Any settler that tried to homestead here in the mountains disappeared. They were never heard from again.

Why did I come up here?

More cries pierced the stillness of the night. Those horrific childlike cries now came from many directions. If I heard properly, a total of five creatures shared in the conversation. The horrible baying made me want to cry, and I whispered a prayer softly begging God to protect me from the goblins inhabiting the steep mountainside.

My body trembled with unbridled terror when I heard another creature screaming out into the night, but this one only yards away from me. I backed up as close to the fire as possible, so close the heat burned my back. I did not want to see the thing capable of such terrible howling. I wished it would go back to wherever it came.

I did not get my wish. I did not know what to call the thing I saw. The bulk of the form appeared to be a six-foot tall column of black ink. Thin membranes, resembling something like the wings of a bat, on either side of the top vibrated to produce the childlike screams. I suspected it might use them to hear as well.

The horrid thing had no eyes, ears, at least as I knew them. It had nothing remotely similar to a head. It had no facial features whatsoever.

A band of thick white fibers encircled the being about midway up its trunk. The six inch thick ring of long fibers produced a changing, pulsating glow. It felt like the eyes of a demon staring into my soul. Not even the fear instilling stories told to keep children from straying into the wilderness spoke of such horrendously inhuman things.

Another of the ghastly creatures abruptly emerge from my left. The light emanated by its fibrous band fluctuated with every visible color. Like the first, this unholy creature moved itself by dragging its body using a dozen or so tentacles. The long thin tendrils were easily 8 feet in length but smooth and no thicker than a man’s thumb. A single bone-like talon at the end of the slithering tentacles gripped the ground then retracted pulling the creature forward in the process.

When a third appeared at my right, the membranes at their, for lack of a better word head, began to vibrate. The vibrations were so strong, the membranes only appeared to be an egg shaped blur.

A piercing chorus of the sound of tortured infants stung my ears and vibrated my chest. This went on for a minute or two then stopped for a few seconds. When they resumed their terrifying cries, I cupped my hand over either side of my head in a futile attempt to shield my ears from the unholy sound.

The ebony column to my left began to approach. The illuminated colors at the end of the thick fibers twinkled like a meadow filled with lightning bugs. The colors flashed and changed rapidly producing a mesmerizing effect, and I felt this spectacle trying to reach into my mind. It tugged at my thoughts and tried to force its way in.

My fear of these things outweighed my fear of death 100 fold. This thing from some other world struggled to pull the very thoughts from my mind while shouting at me with its own. I sobbed at the thought of what this thing would do.

Would it rip me apart? Would it consume my body? Would it consume my soul?

I was not going to give it the chance. Without any further thought, I drew father’s musket from my waist and fired at my face from point blank range. The force pushed my body down the steep craggy slope. The creature tried to catch me with the points of its bony talons, but I was quickly out of its reach.

My bones snapped and cracked and I crushed my skull as I tumbled down the craggy slope. I was dead before I fell from my resting stone. I reached the bottom, my body a torn, ragged mess.

The hellish things screamed with its membranes, talking to its companions. They greeted me with offers of friendship and could not understand why I chose to jump to my death. How could I do such a thing? They simply did not understand. I was afraid of what I did not know. Like I said before, fear is a great motivator.

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