Short Stories of the Horror/Bizarre

The Vastness of Reality

Tag: First Aetet

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 

Themselves

Word Count: 2,794

I was overwhelmingly ecstatic to be one of the few fortunate archaeology students privileged enough to be chosen from a multitude of extremely highly qualified candidates. We were to take part in a classified expedition to a wildly remote location. I simply could not believe it when the dean of anthropology from a prestigious institution of higher learning contacted me gave me the good news.

This was a once in a thousand lifetimes opportunity. Signs of another advanced civilization prior to ours surfaced after workers found engraved stone tablet buried for who knows how long under the solidified rubble of an ancient mudslide. No evidence of any previous civilization as old as this, at least in modern times, was ever discovered until now.

Linguists from around the world were already on the scene making an attempt to decipher the odd lettering of the massive stone tablets. We hoped they would translate them of course, but personally I cared little about that aspect of the find. My unbridled excitement focused solely on the possibility of uncovering never before found fossilized remains of the inhabitants of this newly discovered civilization.

After an agonizingly long ground trip, I saw the winged vehicle in a small clearing that would take us to our ultimate destination. Our small aerial transport jolted abruptly, up and down as we passed through some rather turbulent winds. Sudden gales rocking the vehicle made me think more than once we would dive nose first into the dense jungle floor.

It was necessary to take this rough flight in order to progress over the mountains to our destination in the deep, remote valley. The long arduous trip from home to the sharply mountainous region of the southern continent was very uncomfortable. My body ached from the long flight as the craft shuddered through the side winds beating against the flying vehicle.

I had to admit, despite the numbingly rough ride, I did find the view of the majestic snow-capped mountains and vibrant green forests so incredibly alive with color. Seeing the vastly chromatic, lush green of the trees below and the white snow at the peak of the mountains all in one glance was indeed quite a sight to behold. Eventually, a small speck of a clearing became visible ahead. As we drew closer to the landing site, it was all I could do to quell my increasing excitement.

The clearing was small. It was a narrow fit, but the pilots managed a safe landing on the recently constructed pad below. As we began unstrapping ourselves from our safety harnesses and grabbing our equipment, the pilot told us sternly not to exit until the engine came to a full stop. I felt like I waited an eternity before the sliding door finally opened.

There were many supplies to unload. We first removed our most delicate equipment and set it carefully out of the way. Then we began unloading the basic essential supplies. The water here was found to be undrinkable, so there were many heavy jugs to unload. I am smart but not strong, and I strained my way through the unloading process until everything was on the ground.

Our transportation then rose back into the air with a flutter, stirring leaves and dirt from the jungle floor. It reached the top of the giant trees and disappeared over the canopy of leaves. A bit of panic, or perhaps anxiety hit me as I watched our only way out of this remote jungle fly away; I knew it was not coming back for seven days. The transport would return when it was time to bring more supplies, so the amount we had was going to have to last us until then.

We were virtually alone. There were the other team members, but the extremely remote valley location made contact with the outside world all but impossible. If for any reason, we had to contact the forward base, someone had to scale the steep mountain to send and receive transmissions. The funders of the expedition did not bring in an engineering team to install an antenna at the mountain’s peak yet. I did not think it would get to me, but I hated the idea of being cut off from civilization with no way out except for small aerial vehicles.

Putting those thoughts away for a while, I helped the others carry the equipment to a cleared pathway to meet with the linguistics team and geology team. With their camps already set up, the other teams helped carry the supplies to the base. The food and water was for them as well, and it was only fair they carry some of the load.

Although the linguistics team had yet to decipher the tablets, the geology team made some rather interesting findings. After using various methods of measuring radiation levels in the rock strata and the decay of radioactive isotopes, the group determined the rough age of the tablets. By their calculations, the tablets were more than two million years old.

Surely they made some egregious mistakes in their estimations. Our own species is estimated to be around one hundred thousand years old at most. I could not believe there was any possible way any intelligent species evolved so many eons before us.

My experience and education taught me only numerous, gigantic beasts roamed the planet before us. It was estimated to be about this time when an explosion in the number of species on the planet occurred. These enigmatic beasts were not technologically developed and died out hundreds of millions of years ago.

Most of the creatures were extinct. In fact, virtually all of the species were extinct with the exception of a few aquatic creatures. A miniscule number of species remained unchanged, but evolution literally took everything else to a different state.

Once we got all of our equipment and supplies to the camp, my team set up our own temporary shelters. The sun was already set behind the thick canopy of the trees overhead. It was dark enough already. I knew when the sun set behind the mountain peak, I would learn a new meaning to the word “dark.”

We had to set up the camp under the few lights we could spare. Power supplies for the lamps were as limited as the food, so we could not light the camp brightly enough to really see what we were doing. Setting up our feeble shelters turned out to be quite a difficult task.

I wanted to get to our dig site now, but it was not safe to be out in this untamed jungle in the pitch black night. Predators on the ground, in the trees and even in the air made night travel very dangerous indeed. When we finally arrived at the dig site the next morning, it was not at all what I expected.

I assumed the ground covering vegetation was removed, but it was as dense and green as ever. Dense underbrush and thick vines obscured any dirt from sight, and I realized how difficult this was truly going to be. It was our task to first clear the surface before excavating any deeper.

My team received our next load of supplies and the surface was still not completely cleared of the dense, heavy vegetation. It was vital we took as much care of what we did. Rushing and getting ahead of ourselves could in some way damage important archeological evidence. We toiled over the tedious work even beyond the arrival of our supply delivery at the end of my second week.

I knew without question, when I accepted this golden opportunity, I absolutely could not pass it up. An entire year in this miserably hot-steamy place was going to feel like an eternity. In my furvor to be given the chance to take part in such a rare expedition, I did not allocate much thought on the difference in environment from which I was accustomed. It was more than worth it, but the weather was still quite miserable. It was rainy more than it was not, but I was going to see something only two other teams in recorded history ever had the opportunity to see.

From this point, we began to sweep away the dirt after sectioning the area into a grid. I literally removed very thin layers each day, no more than my finger in thickness from any gridded section in a day using only a light haired brush.

Twenty-nine days passed before one of my team mates uncovered the fossilized remains of something incredible. Much more ground had to be excavated before we could determine what it was, but they definitely found the endo-skeletal remains of something.

It was four days after this when the gentle sweeping of the dirt uncovered enough of the fossilized remains to determine what type of creature to which these bones once belonged.

It was large, very large. The newly discovered beast was every bit as massive as the largest of the mammals living in modern day. Although badly decayed, we found evidence of some sort of harness on its body, there since the creature died. Patterns of iron-oxide in the soil indicated the harness was held in place with a series of rings and buckles.

We theorized this was a beast of burden or a riding animal, and became very hopeful to find the master who harnessed the creature. That would be the most amazing discovery to date. What made this truly unusual were the carnivorous teeth filling the beast’s mouth. What kind of being could tame a massive beast such as this?

The geologists surveying the area used various methods and set the date of the strata in which we found the beast approximately eight hundred thousand years old. This placed the time of the creature’s death after the time the ancient mudslide covering the stone tablets.

The linguistics team made a lot of headway as well. Although they had yet to translate the tablets, they began to understand the sequencing system of the chiseled language. Now they had that figured out, it was somewhat easier for them to make the translations.

Days passed, many supply shipments arrived, but no one discovered anything new. For leisure, we did not have much. Members of the three teams entertained themselves with daytime walks through the forest. They had to cut the thick vegetation in order to make walking paths.

One night those out for a walk were about to turn around and make their way back to camp. That was when several of them spotted two vine covered cyclopean stones. It was an immediately noticeable aspect they saw that the massive stones were too well shaped to be natural.

With few supplies and the dangers lurking in the forest in the night, they had to return to camp without any further examination of the newly discovered blocks. We started at dawn getting our supplies to the new location. Going back and forth each day would take too much time, so a secondary camp was set up near the new discovery.

The explorers emphasized the massiveness of the blocks, but I did not think they would be this big. The obelisks were every bit of ten times my height. They were the largest of the tablets found yet. These, covered from top to bottom with the strange ancient glyphs, might be the cypher the linguistics team needed to break the strange code, those writings of this long lost civilization. If the team translated the tablets into our language, it may be very possible they may indicate the locations of other important sites.

At the secondary location, when darkness came, every little noise made me jumpy. In the midst of the large encampment, I felt safe. Now, with nothing more than a few tents and a small campfire in the center, I felt much more vulnerable to the creatures in the jungle. The first two nights, I got very little sleep. By the third night I began to grow accustomed to this even more remote location, my nerves were not quite so shaken, and I finally managed to get a good night’s slumber.

One of the stones was finally cleared and the linguistics team got to work on the translation. My small group chose a spot and prepared for a long and tedious excavation process. With our team divided, we gently dug into the sediment in search of more evidence of the ancient civilization. Five supply shipments later and discouragement began to affect us all. My particular sections of the excavation became deeper than I was tall.

On my knees, a pad underneath me to distribute my weight, I swept away dirt and dust by one stroke of the brush at a time. For what was supposed to be the biggest moment in my life, I had to say the tedious work almost drove me insane with boredom.

I was close to sneaking into a supply transport to get out of here by this time, but then I finally uncovered the bones of something big. It looked very big. It was much bigger than the first fossilized find. Now all of the tedium washed away. I made the discovery of a creature much-much larger than the beast of burden. Nothing remotely like this could be found in recorded history.

I wished I could dig it out with a shovel, but it was far too large. I had to be patient as we slowly removed the several million year old sediment from around the massive skeleton. It was probably going to take me more than the rest of my scheduled time here to completely uncover it. I knew I would need to ask to sign up for another year. I was the first to discover something so amazing, and I was not going to hand my find over to someone else.

It took nearly thirty days only to reveal what appeared to be a hand. A chain of bones held at what we believed to be the upper cavity of the creature was exposed thirty days after that. The chain of bones had at their upper end a set of strangely curved bones. It was possible for me to stand fully erect inside of the torso cavity.

As the excavation continued, we theorized the creature must be bipedal. It was astounding to think something as enigmatically tall could possess enough strength to defy gravity in order to remain standing. It did not add up. The strength to weight ratio for something this large to maintain an erect posture was not previously believed possible.

The phalanges at the end of the top limbs appeared to have been dexterous enough to manipulate tools. The ends of the lower appendages were different, being too short and oddly shaped to effectively use tools.

On the next supply drop, a six member camera crew exited the vehicle and unloaded all of their equipment. Due to the size and amount of the equipment, there was little room for the food, water and basic medications we needed. One member of the geology team rather lost it when he confronted the pilots about this. Our water was running low and our food supplies were nearly depleted.

As angry words spewed from his mouth, one of the pilots stopped him and told him another shipment would arrive in a few days with yet another crew. This crew faced the monumental task of figuring out how to move the pieces of the giant skeleton safely to a museum. There, great care would make sure the bones remained intact for generations to come.

I did not like the idea of someone handling my discovery. I could not stand the thought of them disassembling the body to move it one bone at a time. This body rested here for millions of years and it felt wrong to move it. It had to be moved now as my excavation exposed it to the elements though. Careful and very specific labeling was done to assure the curators reassembled it correctly.

My find was nearly completely uncovered by the time the linguistics team finally deciphered the language found on the many engraved stone blocks. With great enthusiasm, the team ran into the camp yelling they finally made their translation.

“We broke the code,” one of them said while trying to catch his breath.

“We know what they called themselves,” another continued.

They both nearly collapsed as they tried to breathe. The members of the linguistics team tended to be sedentary and out of shape.

“Humans, they called themselves humans,” the first managed to say.

Humans huh? That seemed like an odd name for creatures to call themselves.

COPYRIGHT © 2019

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.

Cedar Sarcophagus

Word Count: 2,460

My family was one of the first of the ultra-wealthy aristocrats to reach the new world. They arrived in North America before the early colonies seceded from the British Empire. Prior to this, my ancestors lived in a castle nestled deep in the mountains of the old country. The majestic fortress, built sometime in the 1100’s, acted as the home of untold generations of my family. 

When my great-great grandparents moved to the new world, they would not allow the family’s proud stone manor to stay behind. Block by block the castle was disassembled, moved by sea to America and reassembled at the place of my ancestor’s choosing. 

The arduous task took nearly a decade to complete. Labor was scarce and my ancestors felt slaves to be more trouble than they were worth. They died easily and were occasionally quite disobedient. Slaves tended to be more expensive than the work they performed. 

The only way to turn a profit with slaves was breeding them, and earlier generations of my family wished to see as little of the Negros as they could. Their fear was the dark-skinned slaves would eventually breed out of control and revolt against their rightful owners. 

By the time I was born into the family line, the mass influx of immigrants from all over the world began to fill the land, and their meager buildings took over the landscape. 

The family castle once rested in the mountains back in the homeland. It was again reassembled in the mountains that would one day be called “The Smoky Mountains.” They chose a location difficult to access, which was the major factor in it taking nine years to put together. It only took a year and a half to disassemble it and move it to the New World. 

Without the kingdom, without the servants or slaves, the building slowly began to decay. Without constant maintenance, entropy slowly took over what was once a grand palace. What were once strong, proud battlements lay on the ground, with only a few still remaining in their proper position atop the broad stone walls. The blocks lay on the ground covered in lichens of mainly two sorts, one rust in color and the other an almost luminescent yellow. Neither were native to the region, only growing on the stone from the mother land. The blocks now lay scattered and cracked by grasses fallen into the tiny crevices formed when the blocks first struck the ground. 

The hall that once ran along the interior side of the east wall collapsed eight years after I was born. Every time I saw the toppled stones I wept. This was once my mother’s favorite part of the castle. The sunlight shined brightly through the morning windows revealing a variety of artworks my family acquired at one time or another. Ever since her passing, I looked at this place as a monument in honor of my sweet and caring mother. 

Without warning, the entire northern wall buckled in the center and within moments it collapsed. Father so happened to be in that vicinity when the fatigued wall of stone fell crushing him instantly. I never got to know him, so the only images I have of him come from the many portraits lining the walls of the still maintained portion of the decaying structure. 

Both of my aunts passed before bearing children, and my uncle’s wife was barren and thus brought no heirs into the family line. This left me and only me as the sole inheritor of the crumbling castle and its fifty-one square miles of land. 

 My family’s land once spread for hundreds of square miles, but at times to keep up the building, land was sold to pay the debt. Still, fifty-one square miles of land was a lot of land. 

Even as a child, I explored the crumbling ruins I would one day inherit. The lichen covered stone southern wall crumbled and fell before my birth. Only a portion of the wall collapsed, leaving the rest strangely bowed inward. The stones of the far end somehow clung in place, but it too would soon fall. It was only a short matter of time before we lost the southern wall, leaving the western wall of the outer castle standing alone. It should be only a few years before it fell from lack of support. The buttresses decayed from the weather and crumbled from the foliage growing out of the stone. 

 I was in my first year of my second decade when the last wall finally lost its war with time and gravity. As with the other walls, I expected the western wall to fall inward. As I strolled outside along taking my evening walk, the west wall fell outward. I walked along the wall only moments ago, and were I one minute later the collapse would be my demise and my grave. 

 Several years later – I changed the path of my strolls after the western wall collapse – I took my scheduled daily walk. As I looked around, I thought of how selling of possessions always paid for the upkeep, and those were nearly exhausted. I did not know how I would keep the building standing at all anymore as I was the sole owner of the fortress.   My uncle passed only a few years ago, so I was the last of the family line. 

Never being much of a socialite, I met very few women in my life. Despite my handsome, well-attended appearance, I did not receive the attraction I expected to receive. It seems I did not have much of a charismatic personality, which really helped to push away any woman I met. I still hoped one day to marry and sire a child to inherit the land when I died, so I still tried to attend social functions when I could. 

As I wondered around the grounds, I spotted what was possibly a constructed entrance into what appeared to be a natural grotto almost completely obscured by decades of overgrowth. Even though heavy vines and other vegetation obscured the opening, it seems like something I would have infallibly found by now. I thought I was familiar with every inch of the remaining grounds, but year after year I passed by this area without ever noticing it. 

I approached the man-made entrance as quickly as the thick foliage would let me. Something seemed quite eerie about the place, but I could not put my finger on it. It quickly became apparent the portal was not natural. 

Soon it became clear to me. The ancient granite comprising my home is the same type of stone used to create this portal. I did not know the function of the place, but once I reached the vine and lichen covered stones I realized its purpose. 

I pushed away the wood-vine draped across the face of the entrance and found something shocking. A message in the old language carefully etched deep into the surface of the stone did not tell me much, but I did recognize the homeland spelling of the family name. 

I stepped into the opening and discovered the small cavern was in fact a mausoleum. The instant I stepped through I could smell the dry pungent dust floating in the air like a light fog. The clouded air burned my lungs, so I removed my handkerchief from my pocket and used it to conceal my nose. 

Small air-shafts let in just enough light so I could see. It took my eyes a moment to adjust to the dimness of the tomb. After a minute or so I could see what lined the walls of the room. Shelves of polished marble supported on polished granite stone created  alcoves. The vertical granite slabs separated the marble slabs apart to allow the shelves to each hold a single cedar sarcophagus. 

The room was larger than I expected and crypt after crypt lined the length of the entire walls. I guessed there must be somewhere between thirty-five or forty of the cubbys, and as far as the light allowed me to see they were all full. 

I approached the left wall and found, engraved into the horizontal face of the marble, the names of the one contained within and the name of each of the parents. If I spent enough time in here with a pad and pencil, I could probably track my family tree back quite some way. The idea of it excited me. I now had the opportunity to find out the lineage of aristocrats leading up to my birth. 

I walked along the wall of coffins and briefly took the time to glance over the names engraved into the stone shelves. Initially the names of the lineage showed on the face was in the language of old. I could interpret some of them, but not many. As a child, my mother taught me to translate and read the language. That was long ago, and I retained less and less over the years. 

After passing the first twelve caskets, the language changed to the English I read and understood. I did not recognize the names on the next two stacks of shelves, but after I walked over to the other wall, I finally saw the name of my great-great grandmother and great-great grandfather. 

The sarcophagus held up all these years because of the dryness of the chamber and the fact the coffins were constructed from cedar. Properly selected, cut and treated cedar coffins would hold their integrity for countless ages. In a way, I felt as if this preservation of my family line somehow brought immortality to my ancestors. 

I found my grand-parents, and my aunts and uncle. One stone shelf remained empty, the only one that remained empty. The casket sat outside of it and did not appear to be sealed, so I assumed it was probably still vacant. A sudden wave of terror and panic coursed through my mind and body. 

Something told me to turn and flee. I stood conflicted. Part of me wanted to run, but part of me wanted to stay. I could not say how long I stood there, my mind conflicted and my heart rate increased. It almost seemed as if I was paralyzed. Nothing but my intense trepidation held me in place. 

The sun shifted position after I entered the crypt, so I knew I only had about ten minutes before the mausoleum turned completely dark. Finally my curiosity won over my fear. I knelt down for better leverage and tried to open the lid. It raised an inch or so, but I could not get it open with only one hand. 

Returning my handkerchief to my pocket, I used both hands and forced the lid open. The dusty air once again burned my nose and throat. I tried to take slow deep breaths through my nose to lessen the burning. 

The lid was heavier than I anticipated. Holding my breath was not an option, as I had to take a deep breath before I struggled to raise the coffin’s lid. After a moment or two of straining my arms, legs and back the lid flew open onto its hinges. 

 As the lid sprung open, it stirred the dust from the lid, the floor and the stone cubby next to it.  The mere quantity of the dust stung my eyes in addition to my nose and throat. I withdrew my shirt so it came untucked from my waist and pulled the top to cover my face. Even then, the dust filtered through my shirt and continued to dry and burn my eyes. 

The casket was empty as I expected. It was then I noticed the engraving on the empty shelf. With the dust and the shift in the sun, I could not make out the engraved message on the marble slab. 

Tears ran from my eyes and the relentless dust stung them unmercifully which caused me to squint tightly. The concentrated the tears in my eyes made it even more difficult to see the lettering on the polished stone. I tried to force my eyes open a little more, but my reflexes would not allow that. 

I leaned in a bit further, which put me leaning above the empty casket. Then I could finally make out the words. As with the others, two names were engraved into the stone. This one shelf was the only to have three lines rather than two. Side by side I saw two names, Gerrard and Cassandra, my parent’s names. 

I had to lean in a bit further to read the other two lines. The lettering was smaller in order to accommodate three lines, making it even harder to read. I leaned in a bit further and saw my name under those of my parents. This casket was for me. 

As unnerving as that was, it did not seem to bother me too much. It was not until I read the third line the fear rocked my body. Below my name I saw the words “The last of the noble bloodline.” 

 The shock caused my arms to fall to my side. This released my shirt from my face and once again the dust choked my nose and throat. The sudden tingling in my nose threw me into a sneezing fit. The convulsing and jerking caused me to fall face first into the casket. When I tried to stand I found something blocking my way. The heavy lid fell closed, shutting me inside. 

In absolute panic, I rolled over to my back so I could push the lid open again. It did not budge. I tried to use both my arms and legs to open the coffin. The lid continued to stay tightly shut. I began kicking and screaming in a futile effort to somehow gain a grip on the wooden surface. 

I never noticed the pain as my fingernails tore from my fingers. I thrashed and shouted to God to get me out of this dire situation. I knew in my heart no one was coming. Vegetation hid the entrance well enough to keep it concealed all these years. I was sure I would never attract someone’s attention in time. I was to meet my end very soon. 

Sparks of light filled my eyes as I now struggled to breathe. My thrashing and screaming served to do nothing but rapidly deplete my oxygen. 

Grasping my throat as if that was somehow helpful, I thought to myself. I never married and thus never sired any children. I am the last of the bloodline and this casket was made for me. Trapped alive, I realized my ancestors somehow knew and prepared for me to be sealed away forever in this cedar sarcophagus. 

In His Place

Word Count: 6,611

I was only thirteen years old when the hallucinations began. A few weeks after my birthday, I began to perceive objects not visible to others around me. That is why I find myself where I am now.

In the very beginning, I did not realize the unusual things I saw were real. The first situation in which I recall seeing something intangible, some friends and I were hanging out in the forest behind our small secluded neighborhood. A buddy of mine snatched some pot from his father’s stash, and we darted off into the woods to hide while we got stoned. Back here in the country, there were not many places besides the forest were teens could hide and hang out.

The four of us lay with our backs against a large smooth boulder in a small clearing. We spent many of our days speculating on what our futures would be like. Brandon dreamed of being an agricultural engineer, as did Francis. This was nothing unusual as this was primarily an agricultural community. Scotty dreamed of being in politics; he thought he could help change the way the world thinks. Me, I always thought I would be a doctor. I wanted to help sick people.

I thought I must have gotten a major head rush, because I swore I saw a couple of men standing to the right of where I sat. What instantly clued me in to the fact what I saw was not corporeal was both men wore clothing common to the days shortly after the American Revolution. To compound upon this surrealist nature of the scene, the men conversed in a dialect of the English language not spoken in more than 400 years. I remember reading in school words like these, but this is the first time I ever heard them spoken fluently.

Immediately I pointed the unusual sight out to my friends, but all they did was laugh and mock me. The three other young men with me thought I was just incredibly stoned, or I was pulling their leg. Either they lied to me, or I saw things that were not there. I don’t think my friends had any reason to lie. We’ve been pals for a long time. Surely they would say if they beheld the same site as I. That left only one option; I must be going crazy.

Drug propaganda at the time tried to make the public believe any mind altering substance brought about with it serious mental and neurological ramifications. I did not believe it initially, but as the number of visions increased I started blaming them on the marijuana. At first, when I gave up smoking the psychedelic plant, the visions did seem to stop, but not for long though, for slightly more than a month later, the strange sightings resumed.

An old road – a road cleared several hundred years ago – twisted through the endless forest behind my small neighborhood. Our town consisted of nothing more than six residential blocks of homes. Even the nearest convenience store was thirty minutes from here.

Grass and weeds now choked the long abandoned thoroughfare. Young green saplings rose from the grass in spotted clusters with the occasional climbable tree mixed in among them. To the untrained eye, it may not be evident at all that this pathway ever saw the traffic of an innumerable amount of horse-drawn carriages, wagons, and stages. No one used this road for travel or trade for hundreds of years. To be fully honest, I did not understand why the trees did not completely conceal the road. Still, anyone from around here knew without a doubt it was indeed an old travel route.

A few weeks later I had about the most terrible day. I failed a test, I was sent to the office because of disruptive behavior, and the resident ruffians threatened to beat me at the end of the day when the school bell rang.

Fighting was not a skill I possessed in any large quantities. Thinking and attentiveness were more descriptive of me. My exceptional intellect and my small size made me the target of not only the resident bullies, but also by most every other student in school.

Because of my advanced book smarts and my uncanny perception, the school placed me in two classes higher than the other children my age. I was glad to be taking courses that somewhat challenge me intellectually, but it always made me the smallest student in class. It aggravated many of the other students that I had such an easy time with my schoolwork; some of them studied constantly in order to receive marks one or two letter grades below mine. I knew they resented the ease with which I approached my assignments, but I didn’t really understand why. It is not as if my good grades made theirs worse.

I slipped out one of the side doors as soon as the school bell rang. My antagonists expected me to get on the bus where they would torture me until the transport reached my stop. I knew the trails through the hardwood forest very well, so I decided to flee into the woods and walk home rather than let that football player and his pals amuse themselves at my expense.

I meandered along the winding trail until I reached the old road. By following this pathway, I would reach the back of my family’s yard within thirty minutes. This long stretch of the old path was unfortunately filled with thick briars, so I was forced to walk through the cover of the trees for a good hundred yards or so. When the mass of thorn bushes finally came to an end, I got back on the road and bounded off for home.

Grasshoppers, crickets, and innumerable flying insects created a blur of motion as I pushed my weight through the four-foot high grasses. My disturbance of the foliage roused gnats, flies, and worst of all mosquitoes. My body was accustomed to the needlelike bites of those bloodsucking insects, but it was still annoying when they swarmed and fluttered around my face.

With the skill of a veteran hunter, I trod along the old pockmarked road at a fair pace. Not really focusing my attention, I enjoyed the sounds of the birds, frogs, and insects. When the noises nature sang to me ceased abruptly, I knew something was terribly wrong.

The abrupt cessation of nature’s singing was not due to the presence of other children. Their presence may cause a ruckus among the forest denizens, but if anything it would rouse even more noise. Not even the gnats and bloodsucking mosquitoes buzzed about the late afternoon air. I grew so accustomed to hearing the sounds of nature after my parents moved me out here in the country, and when their songs ceased, I instantly knew something was amiss.

I turned in circles trying to catch some glimpse of whatever was responsible for the sudden change in the behavior of the insects and reptiles causing them to cease their songs. I did not see anything; I didn’t see anything other than what I should expect to see in this forest. Still, I knew something aberrant was happening. Exactly what that was I did not know.

I stood motionless for several long minutes afraid to move. I didn’t want to alert the unnatural thing that may be hidden. It might spot me if it did not do so already. I carefully scanned the area with my eyes, too trepid to move anything else. I finally mustered the courage to move my head, and once again scan for anything atypical of this region of woodlands.

I turned back towards my house and ran. Even as familiar as I was with this old thoroughfare, I still could not miss all of the potholes and ruts dug by wagons centuries ago. I tripped on one of the old ruts, and then I heard something strangely anomalous.

Not too far off in the distance, I was sure I could hear horses coming, but that was not possible. No one I knew who owned horses ever rode them along this road, not at the speed at which they seemed to be coming. It would be really easy for a horse to break its leg galloping here. Regardless, I knew the clatter of horses, and this was it.

The sounds drew nearer, and the crack of a whip pierced the air. By now there was very little doubt the horses were towing a wagon, but no wagon could possibly navigate the old tree spotted road at this current rate of approach. I tried to jump above the tall grass so I could see the source of the noise, but unfortunately I was not able.

I should have run. I should have dived off the road. I should have done something more than I did. I stood petrified in front of the venerable dual carriage-way unflinching and unmoved. The absence of the croaking and chirping of the forest creatures, hearing the sounds of a horse-drawn wagon, and the congested foliage told me something not normal was heading right for me.

It seemed to leap out of nowhere. A stagecoach followed four draft horses, and they were moving in a hurried pace. The driver wore the clothes of a 16th century pauper while a nicer dress man sat atop the carriage tightly gripping a blunderbuss.

By the time I saw them, I ran out of time to jump out of the way. The driver of the wagon did not seem to notice me. He could not avoid hitting me without turning over the coach anyway. Throwing up my hands in a futile effort to protect my face, I prepared for my imminent demise.

None of the foliage choking the road wavered; none of it gave way as the wagon barreled down the path. Instead of trampling me, the horses passed harmlessly through me. The wagon did not run me down. It continued to advance along its way, and left me without ever seeming to have any idea I was present.

I turned to look at a horse-drawn wagon as it sped away from me. Not only did the conveyance manage to pass through the tall grass and weeds, I watched it pass unhindered through an 18 foot tall oak tree.

I did not know what to think, believe, or trust about the things I witnessed. Pushing through my panic and fear, I tried to remember everything I saw. I thought if I could recall more of the ghostly apparitions, I might understand more clearly their meaning.

By no means was I any sort of historian, but I was still sure the clothes worn by the driver and the man riding shotgun belonged to a time long forgotten. The weapon the man sitting on top of the stained wooden carriage carried was a very early version of the shotgun. The blunderbuss was never a widely used weapon because of their tendency to explode in the face of the user. That was a weapon much more associated the 14th to 17th centuries. I remembered the style of weapon as shown in the illustrations in my history books.

The wagon was of early colonial design as well. Thinking of these spectral images, I believed what I saw to be ghosts. Even though I sustained no physical injuries, my mind went into sensory overload. My limited brain could not logically explain what happened. Although the apparitions ran right over me, I did not think they meant any harm. Regardless, the whole ordeal terrified me, and I ran as fast as my trembling legs could carry me. In less than five minutes, I found myself jumping the fence into our backyard.

Mother and father still were not home, which was a relief to me. That gave me time to wash off my face and calm myself. My parents would never understand me if I told them what I saw. They thought me peculiar enough without telling them stories about ghost carriages. I felt it best not to inform them about anything concerning my recent hallucinations.

During supper, I lingered around the dining table not saying much of anything. It took me much longer than usual to finish my plate. My parents could see something was bothering me, and I could feel their worry over my well-being. It was obvious they were concerned about me.

After dinner I cleaned up the dirty dishes from the dining room, and headed on up to my bedroom and went straight to bed. The dreams I experienced during this nights rest put me in a setting very early in America’s history. When I awoke, the memories of my dream quickly faded. I grabbed a pencil and notepad and instantly recorded everything I could remember. By the time I touched lead to paper, nearly all memory of last night’s dream was gone.

It was now the weekend and I politely ask mother if she would be so kind as to take me to the community library. I hoped I might find some answers to help explain my visions.
Mom already planned to head into the tiny municipality we called the city – and we lived quite some distance from town – so she said she would drop me off at the library before running her errands.

I went straight to the back of the book repository because the bulk of the town’s recorded history was stored there. With fervor and speed, I flipped through the pages of the book until I found some information about this area around the year 1521. The book was old and unique, so I could only study it very carefully under the closely watching eyes of the librarian.

I went through several books – most of them contained dry historical facts of the time – but I finally found the information I sought. I did not know what I was looking for when I began, but I knew what it was when I found it.

My neighborhood, the town, and much of the rest of the area were settled by what were repeatedly referred to as witches. In truth, they were not witches. They did not worship Satan because they did not believe in the devil. The people of this new settlement paid homage to on archaic pantheon of gods.

A common misconception was settlers first came to the New World so that they would have freedom of religion. The problem was these Christian sects wanted freedom only for their own creed, not for everyone else in the budding country. The Christian denominations in the New World did not stand for any sort of religion that did not acknowledge the Christian savior as their own.

The original settlers of this community faced hatred and persecution from any nearby Christian settlements. After repelling several attacks, the settlers turned to nature to protect themselves. Suddenly outsiders found the perimeters of the nature worshippers’ territory surrounded by a thick wall of thorny blackberry bushes.

Within days, wide bands of poison ivy wove through the briars, climbed the trees and created sheets of the caustic plant stretching from one tree to the next. Trespassers attempting to lynch the founders of the community began to mysteriously disappear in the forest never to be heard from again. Eventually, outsiders learned to leave the pagan settlers alone.

Many generations passed and the citizens of the reclusive community resumed trade with the surrounding settlements. It seemed others forgot the stories of the pagan society as the decades passed. The communities growing in the region now remembered such things as nothing more than legend and myth.

Despite the reclusive peoples’ assimilation into “normal” society, no amount of acceptance would get the nature worshippers to stop worshiping their false gods and join the Christian fad that seemed so popular at the time.

Over the next several hundred years, many of the decendants of my town’s forefathers gave in to the pressure and placed their loyalty in the trio of gods all of my ancestors believed to be false. Despite those who renounced their true belief in their gods, the old religion continued to thrive and grow.

When the witch hunts of Salem began, the worshipers of the ancient gods moved their religion to the underground. They held meetings in secret. They hid their sacred relics in a variety of sealed chambers, and many faithful worshipers held their rituals in secret behind closed doors.

The elderly yet beautiful librarian approached me from behind. As I glanced at my watch, I knew she was about to make me leave. Sure enough, the kindly woman told me the building was closing. I wished I could bring some of the ages-old books home with me. Unfortunately, due to their condition and uniqueness, the tomes were not allowed out of the archives room.

Because of school five days a week and the distance to town, it would be several weeks before I could again return to the library. Until then, most of my free time was spent out in the woods looking for something not truly there. A whole week passed without any more strange visions. Then the sleepwalking began.

My parents began finding me sleepwalking and sitting on the floor engrossed in a book or magazine. Never once did they find me reading textbooks or any other similar educational materials. Most of the time they found me reading unusual materials such as owner’s manuals for their cars, the warranty packets for our kitchen appliances, and even the phone books. When mom and dad could rouse me awake, I never remembered any of this strange behavior.

Nearly three long weeks past as I awaited my next visit to the library. I held anticipation for my return as many children would look forward to Christmas. I took a stroll in the woods after school one day to clear my head and calm down my fear of being a target for bullies.

I tried to find the trails I walked countless times, but I did not come across a single one of them. I knew the pathways winding through this forest like I knew my own name. The trails twisted and crossed through one another in hundreds of places, so I should not have to walk far to find one of them. I walked this forest virtually every day and I could not find any of my usual landmarks. None of the trees were where they were supposed to be, and the heavy undergrowth appeared to completely obscure all of my familiar trails.

Until this point, none of my hallucinations possessed any tangible forms. I thought the same might be said about the hidden trails, but I was wrong. As I felt about for spectral foliage, I discovered everything felt very real. I could not find any walking trails at all. The only trails in the area were those created by the forest animals.

Something else was not right, the trees. The woods in which I spent countless hours were all hardwood trees. A majority of the trees now surrounding me were massive cedars. I never saw such gigantic cedar trees in my life. A thought suddenly occurred to me. Just outside of my neighborhood sat a small village comprised of recovered historic homes. The logs from which the buildings were constructed were cedar.

Even though none of the forest appeared as it should, I knew my direction by the position of the sun. Afraid I might become hopelessly lost, I turned and followed the blazing white orb towards home. As I walked, I examine the passing underbrush and saw many plants I was not used to seeing. I spotted a beautiful flower – it appeared to be a perennial – and reached down to pick it.

My heart lept into my throat, and I could not breathe. I trembled in panic as I looked down at my hands. Jumping back from the flower as if trying to jump away from my hands, I nearly tripped and fell on my back. Up to now, it was other things that appeared out of sorts. When I saw now horrified me. The flesh on my hands and arms was wrinkled and covered in liver spots. Fungus stained my fingernails a sickly yellow. I stood and stared at the hands of a very old man.

Experiencing intense reluctance, I finally raised my aged hands, probing the flesh on my face with my bony fingers. This skin I felt with my callused fingers was that of a man my grandfather’s age. I fought to take in a breath. It seemed like my chest constricted and squeezed the organs beneath. It all became too much for me to take and I fainted.

When I awoke, the sun was close to setting. My immediate reaction was to check my hand. To my relief, I saw the hands I should see. My short stubby fingers showed healthy and clean fingernails. The skin was tight and elastic. I looked at my arms and saw no liver spots. Feeling my face, I felt the skin of a 14-year-old boy.

Early in the morning of the following Saturday, I decided to go and check out the historic village a few miles down the highway. I emptied all of the school supplies from my backpack and loaded it with things I would need for my hike. Among other things, I packed a few bottles of cola; some toaster pastries and potato chips; and a magnetic compass. I did not want to have to rely on landmarks and the sun for directions. I told my mother I was going out in the woods to explore and was on my way.

Walking through the forest rather than walking along the highway, it took me nearly two hours to reach my destination. When I arrived, I once again found myself in a place out of time. The village was exactly where it was supposed to be. One major indicator I once again suffered from my hallucinations was, rather than being a place for tourists and school field trips, residents moved about the area. One modestly dressed woman ran laundry throughout hand-crank drier, one woman drew water from a well while a young boy carried firewood from a pile and into a house. I watched for hours as the 16th century Americans went about their manual chores.

I examined my body as the multiple families tended to their daily duties. Once again I found myself occupying the frail body of an elderly man. This time, I paid attention to the garments I wore as well. My britches were made of itchy wool and I wore no shirt at all. Instead, a tunic folded over my upper body, which hung down to my thighs. The belt holding it together was crafted from leather and the buckle was either silver or platinum. I never saw anything remotely resembling the design of the valuable ornament. It was so very out of place when compared to the rest of my garments.

I nearly jumped out of my skin and my heart fluttered when someone addressed me from behind.

“Master Picard, is everything all right?”

I spun around to see a poorly dressed man who, judging by the close resemblance of his face, was the father of the boy toting the fire wood.

The only thought in my mind was, how in the hell did this guy know my last name. The anxiety and panic overtook me, and I fainted as before.

When I awoke, the sun long ago set behind the horizon. No clouds appeared in the sky, so I had an excellent view of the stars. Growing up in the wide country, I learned to navigate by the constellations years ago. Just in case, I withdrew the metallic compass I brought with me. Something was not right.

I immediately realized the needle did not point north; it pointed at the historic village. Thinking it might be stuck in position, I tapped the top to try and jar the needle loose. It came loose all right, but it still did not point north. Now it pointed directly at me. No matter which way I turned, the needle swiveled in the water filled compass to point directly at me.

Already too disturbed to deal with a broken compass, I stowed it in my backpack and followed the stars homeward. Within an hour, I found my familiar walking trails. Now on a well-known route, I tried to jog as much as I could. I knew my parents were already upset with me. We always eat dinner at 5:30 PM every day, and it was much later than that.

I did not know what I was going to tell them. If I told them I got lost in the forest, they would immediately recognize it as a lie. No one knew the woods surrounding our diminutive neighborhood like me.

I quickly began to formulate a story about a bobcat. Those wild creatures were known to inhabit the area. Several dogs and house cats over the years fell victim to these feral animals. Taking advantage of my knowledge, I quickly selected a location for the alleged incident. I knew of a very good place for me to climb an outcropping of massive stone, which would have afforded me safety. As I made the remaining forty-five minutes of my journey, I worked out the specific details.

For no reason could I tell anyone the truth. They would think I was crazy. I was beginning to think that very thing about myself. When the encounters I experienced were no longer incorporeal phantasms, I thought for sure I was losing my mind.

Why was I now having visions of me as a very old man? Why did the forest change to be as it was centuries ago? What was the meaning of that ornamental belt buckle?

Mother and father exacted a punishment of grounding me for a few days for my missing supper. I accepted the consequences without a question. I did not really think they bought the whole bobcat story, but telling them the truth would have been much worse. I would be headed to the county hospital to be locked away on the fifth floor.

I stayed restricted to my room until time for school following Monday. During the bus ride, I looked out the window to see a caravan of five horse-drawn wagons. I looked over the other children on the bus, and it was obvious none of them saw the wagon train I saw as reality. The weeds along the road blurred past as the yellow school bus headed to the school. The wagons were well behind us in no time. I watched them – making their way through an open meadow until the bus turned and entered part of the forest.

If hallucinations are only the figment of one’s imagination, I could never have imagined such intricate detail. I knew very little about early America, the history of the region, much less the type of clothing people wore. Regardless, the things I saw displayed more detail than was in my head.

Two weeks before my 14th birthday, the unwanted images ceased their assault against all my senses. I expected them to return any minute, but three years passed without incident. I was both relieved and anxious at the same time. I felt relieved I did not see any more disturbing images, but I was overanxious from anticipating the images return.

At the beginning of my sophomore year, my sleepwalking spells returned. First my parents found me reading Mom’s magazines and novels set in modern times, not those set in a fictional past. On more than one occasion, they found me going through the pantry and reading everything from cereal boxes to the cleaners under the sink. After I read everything in the house, I waited out on the porch every morning for the newspaper to arrive.

Following the end of the school year, the audio and visual hallucinations returned. Again, the things I saw came from early American history. This time, these phantoms increased tremendously in frequency. Sometimes I found myself witnessing the same scenes over and over. It became obvious to me quickly the things I saw occurred at the same time of day every time. From different places, I saw the images from multiple angles. If these things were truly only in my mind, then my mind was capable of creating a very real and vivid world.

I began to study the things I saw. Before long I was very familiar with some of the people I viewed, as well as their homes, wagons, and virtually all of their belongings. Such intricate detail, things that look this real and this consistent, it was hard for me to believe it was simply the product of a delusional mind.

When I was old enough to drive, I decided to return to that library to see if I could to learn about the early settlement that grew to become the community I know today. Ever since the visions became more frequent and more real, I avoided returning to that library for fear of what I might find. Now, I felt it may be the only hope I had to avoid going completely insane.

Cold sweat seeped from my pores as I entered the archive room. Chills ran down my back as I looked at the shelves containing those centurys-old books. I saw them once before when I first studied their contents, but now they possessed a familiar quality going far beyond my previous work with them.

It took a bit of conscious effort before I could muster the courage to walk my way over to them. I felt a consciousness present, calling me through the centuries old tomes. I felt a darkness to this unseen presence that made me want to flee, yet something inside me made me stay. A voice inside my head told me these were something very important I must see, something inside one of the 400 year old books.

Stepping only a few inches at a time, I reluctantly made my way to the aged leather-bound books. Their antiqued weathered appearance made all of the books nearly identical to one another. One book seemed to me to stand out from all the rest. When I came here to research several years ago, I looked through the books at random. Now, I knew exactly the book I needed.

I recalled seeing no tomes during any of my hallucinations, but I was always too afraid to get close to any of the wagons or log cabin homes I witnessed in my all too real visions. I examined my recurring visions from different angles, but I always made sure to keep my distance from them. Ever since that man identified me by name during my spying on the small hamlet, I was afraid to approach any of the spectral images too closely. I was too scared I would again be noticed. I supposed any of those wagons or cabins may have housed one or more of the books through which I now read. As a matter of fact, I was sure of it.

My apprehension caused the short walk to the far bookshelf to feel as if it lasted for an eternity. I knew, I had no idea how, but I knew the exact book that would make this make sense as soon as I read the pages in that tome. I could sense I was about to get the answers to all the questions echoing in my thoughts.

I finally reached the shelf, opened the glass cabinets, and retrieved that beckoning manuscript. I treated it with such care; I had to treat it very carefully. I stepped over and placed it gently upon the table. I did not pay long attention to the cover of the book, but then I saw embedded in the thick cover of the aged tome the platinum belt buckle I saw around my waist as I spied on the small village. I recognized some of the scratches and scuffs on the item embedded in the tome as the same item I wore when I saw myself as a man my grandfather’s age.

Visions suddenly surrounded me from all sides. Phantom trees appeared, their trunks rose out from the floor of the building and climbed through the ceiling. My heart murmured when a herd of deer bound through the walls. Sheets of vines and brush replaced the tables and bookshelves. Within seconds, the forest became real and the library faded to illusion.

I became aware of the sound of dogs barking in the distance. The chirping of forest critters sang an eerie song, and I felt a gentle breeze blowing against my liver spotted skin. The pleasing evergreen sent of cedar hung heavily in the damp air. The foliage looked every bit as real as any other I have seen, and I could feel the soft cushion of a bed of needles under my feet.

Glancing down at my hands, I found myself holding two artifacts. In my left hand I gripped tightly onto a crystal sphere. It was not a clear crystal ball like the fortunetellers use. The crystal appeared to be made up of opaque lines and produced a cat’s-eye like effect. I believe it was selenite.

What I held in my right hand was much more repugnant. It seemed to be a wand or totem of some sort. The yellowish shaft appeared to be crafted from a human forearm bone. Rawhide twine sewn through holes bored through the knuckle fastened tightly bound feathers and three strings of beads. Unrecognizable symbols appeared to be burnt into the length of the bone, and the grip was wrapped in a skin I could only hope belong to a pig.

The distant dogs barked in frenzy. I figured they must be on the trail of some game animal. They sounded like hunting dogs who finally stumbled on the scent of their prey. When the noise drew closer, I realized the prey was me.

Panicked, I spun myself trying to find a trail or some other escape. Seeing no easy route, I decided I would try to push this frail body through the thick virgin undergrowth. A shock hit me when the thorny foliage moved out of my way. I ran as fast as the old body could take me, and the underbrush never stood in my way. I looked back to see it closed behind me as quickly as it opened.

Using the sun as my guide, I fled to the East as the dogs approach from the West. I did not travel far at all before my muscles and lungs burned. With my own young body, I could run for 30 minutes at a time. In this frail form, I tired after only a few short minutes.

The dogs narrowed the gap between them and me with incredible haste. Even with the cooperation of the thorns, I simply could not travel very fast. I felt them closing in on me when I reached a curtain of poison ivy. The caustic vines covered nearly an acre of forest. To my despair, the skin irritating ivy did not yield its way to me. I thought all hope was lost, and then something amazing happened. The overgrowth of vines opened under no control of my own to reveal a long tunnel.

Not wanting to second-guess the stroke of luck, I walked into the tunnel. Within a couple of minutes I reached the other side. I found myself standing at the edge of a small 16th-century settlement. It was the same town I recognized as the historical attraction only a few miles from my home. The ravages of time had not affected these buildings, and the people living in them were quite real.

They looked upon me startled but not surprised. It appeared they knew me and apparently expected me. I collapsed from exhaustion and several young men came rushing to my aid. Helping me to my feet, they escorted me to a rocking chair positioned in front of the nearest dwelling. All through this, I managed to keep a tight grip on the articles in my hands.

I drew the attention of everyone in this secluded hamlet. One young woman ran to me with a burlap cloth wet with cold water. Using it to dab at my cheeks, she looked at me as if she were suspicious of something.

A young girl came to me with the bowl of bitter tea served in a kiln-baked clay bowl. Everyone seemed concerned with me, and I got the distinct impression they were more worried with making me coherent than with my overall well-being.

When the herbal tea soothed my parched throat enough to allow me to speak, I inquired as to my whereabouts.

“Master Picard, dost thou feel well?” one man asked. It was the same man who asked me that question once before.

“What’s going on here?” I asked with a weak voice.” Who are you people?”

“Did not Master Picard have a safe journey?”

“What do you mean?” I asked out of general confusion.

With that, the villagers turned and walked away from me. The children went about playing and chores. All the men of the village moved across the courtyard to talk. On more than one occasion, I caught them peering at me. I was not being paranoid; I know they were talking about me.

Suddenly I heard the dogs closing in on me again. I turned my head to the barrier of poison ivy as it withdrew from my sight. One of the younger men in the hamlet ran out into the fresh clearing and began to shout to the hunters. The muffled ears of this decrepit body could not make out the contents of the man’s calls. Even though I could not make out the words, I recognized the tone as one of anger.

A group of approximately fifteen men emerged from the forest tightly gripping the leather leashes of their hunting dogs. The villager pointed to me and led the angry mob across the open courtyard to where I sat.

“There is the witch,” the man shouted. “Even now he clings to his scepter made from a human bone, wrapped in the skin of a virgin.”

I could not find it believable this thing in my hand was what they said it was.

The newcomers drug me out into the courtyard by my long unkempt hair. The resident villagers pelted me with flasks of lamp oil while the hunters threw fistfuls of dry pine needles, nearly covering me in the evergreen leaves. The pain from the shattering pots was incredible and the chemicals splashed over my body and blinded my eyes. I never felt or saw the other men piling dry leaves over my body.

A burning lantern smashed against my now broken jaw igniting the flammables with which I was covered. Agony like I never thought possible slowly coursed over my body as the flames spread. My flesh blistered and sizzled as the oil and pine sap burst into an enveloping flame.

It turned out my visions were not hallucinations at all. I saw things from this time because someone was pulling me here. The warlock born to this aged body now inhabited mine. The evil soul of one of my pagan ancestors sent me back here to this time to die in his place.

Copyright © 2019

The Orchard

Word Count: 2,664

I became a source of disquiet unease for my parents at a very young age. It troubled Mother and Father that I appeared incapable of interacting with other children. I did not act like a ‘normal’ child and this greatly disturbed the people who brought me into this mundane world.

I was the first and only child. My parents did not bring me any siblings for fear they would turn out like me. Mother and Father did not understand me; they did not know how to communicate with me and this made them afraid of me.

It was not I was not able to interact with other children; I simply shared no common interests with them what-so-ever. I could not enjoy the company of children my age because they saw me as an oddity. As a general rule, I paid them no mind. I preferred the company of my other friends instead, for they understood me in a way no one else could.

My parents tested me for autism when I was a toddler. Of course the results came back negative. Enduring a multitude of tests over a period of several years, I proved to be normal in every sense of the word. None of the doctors Mother and Father carted me off to found anything wrong with me.

Simply because I had an uncanny ability to discern and detect patterns in the mundane ignorant people missed, the parents of my birth thought surely I was somehow mentally disabled. They almost seemed disappointed to find out I was not mentally challenged. It was as if they hoped something to be wrong with me.

As the years progressed and other children my age went off to Kindergarten, my parents decided to keep me home. They were undisputedly sure I would not be able to assimilate into the close social environment school provided. Truth be told, I didn’t want to waste my days learning at the slow pace of the dull dimwits who would be my classmates anyway.

Before my mother began to home school me, I spent most of my time out in the pecan orchards. The trees there were hundreds of years old, the land being passed down through several generations of my family. That was where my true friends made their home.

They were so joyful and performed beautiful dances accompanied by the sweetest of music just before each sundown. Most of the time, I simply watched them, clapping my hands with the beat of the music.  The dances sometimes being very intricate, they were too difficult for me to perform. I was satisfied plenty simply being in their presence.

During their holidays, my beautiful friends insisted I join in on the gaiety of the festivities. Every night was a celebration for them, so their holidays were over-the-top. I felt very awkward attempting the dances of my friends. I knew I was in the way and looked so out of place, but they did not mind in the least. They only wanted for me to share in the joy and happiness filling their lives.

My excursions into the orchards many times did not go uninterrupted as my birth parents sometimes snuck into the woods prying on my happenings. Were they to catch me clapping and dancing, they would think me insane for sure. Luckily my friends noticed my parents long before my parents noticed me. I never went unaware of their approach. When they found me I was typically reading a thick book for the duration of their eavesdropping. After my parents departed the orchard, I rejoined the festivities.

Several years passed and my education accelerated. At only age seven, I surpassed the materials typically given to seniors in high school. The concept escaped me that other children were not equally as smart. I could not understand how others demonstrated such difficulty in learning. Mother home schooled me because my parents feared what the people of our small community would say about their freak son. The town developed enough gossip of its own concerning me and my lack of friends, much less if others observed me on a daily basis.

I returned home following one joyful sunset celebration to catch some exceedingly disconcerting news. A large corporation was buying up all of the land around here. It planned to develop all of the beautiful orchards and farmlands into apartments and shopping malls. Dad said, when the representative corporation returned, if he got a good enough offer, he was selling the orchard. First he planned to cut down all of the pecan trees to sell for lumber. The developers did not want the wood, only the land. Pecan lumber caught a substantial amount of money, and he planned on making a hefty profit from this.

A panic filled my gullet with the receipt of the devastating news. What was going to happen to my friends? Cutting down the trees meant the death of them all. In a state of shock I began yelling “You can’t kill them! You can’t kill them!”

All reason left my mind and I began to fight them physically, but my struggle was a futile one. Dad was much bigger than me: I was still only twelve. I soon ceased my struggle and dropped hard on the tile floor beneath my feet. Balled up in the fetal position I continued to whimper the same words over and over, “You can’t kill them.”

The local doctor worked out of his home very close to our own, and he did not mind making house calls. Almost immediately after his arrival, the doctor gave me a strong sedative. In only a few seconds everything became an absolutely blissful peace. The next day I awoke in my room. My dream friends did not visit me that night; the manmade medications prevented them from doing so.

When I awoke the next day the clock was already close to striking noon. Quickly I changed into my outdoor clothes and ran out of the house. I saw my father working the pecan harvester, gathering the nuts off of the ground, and I mustered a slight gleam of hope. He worked since early morning, judging by the amount of completed work. That meant he had not yet been to town. At least for now, I did not fret over the sale of the land. I knew he did not speak to the corporate man yet, and he would not until the next morning.

After dinner that night, I cleaned and put away the dishes. I waited until everyone fell asleep and made my way deep in the heart of the manicured forest where my friends always awaited my arrival. I thought along the way about how to break the news to them.  I did not know how to tell them we would never again covert in the light of the full moon. We would never again celebrate one of their sacred holidays.  I did not know how to tell them their world was about to be destroyed, their lives were about to come to an end.

Immediately the others knew something terrible was on my mind. It ripped my hart to find out I would never see my dryad friends ever again. On this night there was no celebration. No dancing and singing joyously filled the cool night air. Tonight we mourned, for we knew soon all of my friends would be dead and I would be alone.

The elders and I sat for a serious discussion, something we never did before. The topic, of course was how to save the lines of these century old trees and those who resided within them. We talked until the sun began to set.

During supper that night I stayed quiet and took in every last word my parents said. Dad told Mom the men were coming to cut down the trees on Thursday. That only gave me three days to figure out how to save the lives of thousands of innocent beings.

After my parents went to bed and had enough time to drift off into a deep slumber, I snuck out of the house. I had to climb down from the third story, which I did before with great difficulty. I walked toe to heel from my bed and over to one of the windows. This was always the easiest to escape. I looked out to see a heavy mass of vines grown up the southern wall of my home in only a matter of a few hours. My friends were helping me escape the confines of my bedroom.

The elders and I discussed again our possible options to save their lives, but it always came back to one specific solution. However horrible it was, it was something that had to be done. Once we reached an accord I went back to sneak back into my third story window. The vines grew to the thickness as a small woman’s wrist, which made it incredibly easy to climb back into the window.

The next morning I looked back out my open window and noticed the ivy retreated from the walls and back into the flower bed. I went down the stairs for breakfast and made it a point to act a bit odd. I would take a long pause before answering any questions my parents might ask me. I would make myself zone out on something just to bring to their mind something was wrong with me. I shoveled the food into my mouth rather than displaying at least a rudimentary etiquette.

Father went outside after breakfast and Mother commenced to cleaning up the dishes. I sat at the table ten minutes or so after I finished, just to arouse much more suspicion to the situation. Finally I rose from the kitchen table and shuffled my feet against the hard wood floor in the hall, standing in front of the door a good minute or two before I exited the house.

I found my father was already at work. He began to use the belt vibrator to shake the loose pecans from the trees, but he was nowhere close to my usual hangout. As I sadly strolled to that one single clearing, the dryads began to exit their trees. While they walked along side me, they spoke to me and I spoke to them. I hoped my parents would see this and come up to do one of their regular spying visits.

It must not have taken long for Dad to see me apparently talking to myself. I could hear the belt vibrator stop some ways behind me. I could not resist the temptation not to turn around to look and found my father quickly making his way to the side door of the house. Just as planned, I slowly made my way to the clearing where all of the celebrations took place. My strange actions worked, and my parents thought they snuck up on me in my favorite place of that massive orchard.

The others began to sing and dance as they would on any other day while I clapped my hands and swayed my head with the beat of the music. Things progressed as normal and we all tried to ignore the presence of my prying parents. They could not see the dryads as their minds were too dull to perceive anything beyond their five limited senses.

Mom and Dad watched my actions and thought I was dancing and singing in the warm sunlight all by myself. This finally confirmed what they always believed about me. They thought I was insane and probably planned to institutionalize me. We anticipated all of this though, even counting on it as a crucial part of our plan.

They watched me engaged in my strange spectacle for over an hour before I heard them calling my name. I continued to ignore them and persisted in my joyful activities. My friends and I all hoped they would make their way up to me. When I failed to heed their calls, I knew they would come and drag me home physically. The eldest of the dryads, along with a few others, lay in wait.

When my parents were within their reach, the roots of the trees rose out of the ground like tendrils. Clumps of dirt fell as the roots coiled like pythons, holding my dim witted parents tight. The roots did not strangle them like the snake would. Instead the roots held them firmly in place.

They screamed out to me, begged me to help them. I paid them no mind. The only good thing they accomplished was blessing the world with my presence. I continued with the dryads in their nightly celebration.

The roots of the elder shook my parents violently sending dirt flying everywhere. What happened next should have terrified me; it should have horrified me to my very soul. Instead, I found solace in the actions of the elder.

The smaller roots burrowed their way into my parents’ flesh, digging into them as they screamed in pain. The elder drained them of all fluids in their bodies. The screaming weakened, and eventually it stopped. When he was finished their corpses were dry and stiff. They looked like mummies without the rags.

The elder opened a hollow in his massive trunk, depositing their bodies inside. Withdrawing the roots from their bodies, he pulled them back into the earth. Two large bunches of mistletoe sprouted from his branches. There my parents’ souls would remain. So long as the elder lived, they would live as well.

At the end of the celebration, four of the dryads walked into the circle of the others. They carried a large box by means of two long poles. The dryads set the ornamented box to the ground and turned it on its side. Precious metals, coins, and jewels poured onto the ground. The dryads dug all of out this ground; items lost over many centuries. Some of the coins were minted from a metal I never saw before.

I picked up one of the odd coins to examine it closely. It almost appeared to be glass filled with microscopic flakes of gold and platinum. Most of the coins I sold to collectors through a prestigious auction house. The strange coins sold for millions of dollars each, but the coins of common metals brought in a lot of money as well. I worked with the auction house to sell the jewels, jewelry and other antique items as well.

I hired an attorney to act as my proxy and to handle the recordkeeping. Through him, I purchased all of the land around mine, dozens of square miles. We created a tax fund, a banking account holding twelve million dollars. The interest alone would pay the taxes on the land for an indefinite period of time. There was no way I was going to let some corperation to come in and ‘modernize’ the area…

I protected my friends and insured their continued existence. I took their seeds, the pecans they dropped to the ground, and planted them all over the land I purchased. The seeds would sprout the next year, giving life to the dryads’ progeny. When they saw me doing this, the maples and the oaks asked me to spread their seed as well.

During this time and for several years to follow I planted trees, tended the forest and enriched the soil. This allowed the dryads to grow healthy and strong. To show their gratitude, the dryads promised to grant me one wish. There was no question of what I wanted. I did not have to struggle to find my greatest desire. My request was a simple one.

The next spring, growing near the elder, was a small vibrant sapling. One day I would grow into a big strong tree. For untold years to come I would celebrate nightly, living with my friends of the orchard.

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