Short Stories of the Horror and Bizarre

Tag: Fourteenth Triad

Ghost Story

Word Count: 9,523

It was my first summer after completing my freshman year in college, and I was really looking forward to the long break. I performed very well in high school, but I found some of the courses I had to take in college to be a bit more challenging. Being a straight A student in my lower levels of education, I was not going to let my grades slip now when I was attending a university. When most of my friends were going out on the weekends, I spent my time in my dorm room studying. 

Several of my college friends along with my best friend since childhood planned a camping trip for the second week of summer break. After some debate over where we would spend our time in the wilderness, we finally decided on an extremely bendy area of the Roanoke River about twenty-five miles south of the Blue Ridge Mountains. This part of the river created a large body of water known as the Smith Mountain Lake.

My old buddy Calvin owned a van, which was the only vehicle any of us owned that would accommodate us all. Altogether there were seven of us embarking on this trip to this place none of us ever visited before. Calvin and I rode up front, our girlfriends rode in the center seat along with our friend Monica. Then there was Monica’s boyfriend and Donavan, a jock who for some reason liked to hang around with the oddballs such as myself,  seated in the back. 

The lush summer-green trees and vegetation lining the road provided us with a beautiful ride as we drove along the winding road. The scent of wildflowers was strong in the air, which seemed so fresh and clean after spending a little short of a year in a big city. I grew up in the country, so living in a concrete jungle very much put me out of my element. Being back in the openness of nature felt much more like home to me. 

We laughed and joked as the green brush on the side of the road rushed past us, but before we reached our destination several of us needed to use the facilities. If it was only the guys there would not be much of a problem, but until we got to our campsite, the girls refused to squat in the bushes to pee. 

We had not passed any sort of business for almost an hour, so we hoped that meant we were going to find something soon. To our relief, we located an old country gas station no more than ten minutes after the girls began to complain constantly. The building was painted white, but it did not look like anyone ever once bothered to wash it. 

The steps leading up to the porch upon which rested an ice machine, a cricket box and an aquarium of sorts containing hundreds of minnows, were dry exposed wood. The steps were probably painted at one time, but now they were worn smooth. The sun baked the wooden planks to a light grey tone. 

Calvin, Donavan and I went in first to ask if they had a restroom available. Unfortunately for the ladies, the only place they had for someone to relieve themselves was an outhouse behind the store. Donavan and I went to break the bad news to the girls while Calvin, the only one of us over the age of twenty, purchased several cases of beer to drink when we got to our camp. 

None of the girls wanted to use the outhouse, but they really did not have much choice if they did not want to have to pee in the bushes. Calvin escorted the ladies to the back of the building while I started grabbing bags of ice for the beer and to replace the melted ice in our food coolers. We even had one cooler we brought with us for nothing other than to store additional ice. 

By the time Calvin and I finished loading the ice chests with beer and ice, Donavan and the girls were returning from their first experience using an outhouse. Once we got loaded back into the van, the girls did nothing but complain about how disgusting the experience was. It was going to be interesting to see how these city girls handled a week out in the forest. 

I was so glad when we finally hit the dirt road that was to take us to the area in which we planned to set up camp. Smith Mountain Lake was dotted with countless small islands and the mainland covered with creeks and waterways connected by a multitude of bridges. Several of them looked less like bridges and more like a colony of termites holding hands. Donavan, who was the one who knew about this remote camping spot, assured us the bridges were plenty strong enough to hold the weight of the van. 

Putting his trust in our new friend, Calvin slowly began to creep the van over the first of the rickety looking bridges. Just as Donavan said, the bridges seemed solid enough to safely bear our weight as we crossed. I lost track of how many bridges we crossed all together. There were six or seven larger bridges, but some of them were almost indistinguisable from the sandy road.

The last bridge took us out to a small island about a hundred feet or so from shore. As we expected, there was no one else out here in this remote location. We had the whole island to ourselves. Before we decided where we were going to set up our tents, we decided to have a walk around the island first. It was not large, and it only took us a little more than an hour to walk the distance of its entire coast. 

We found three previously used camping areas, but the grass grew high in the clearings and tree branches lay on the ground. The second camping area we found appeared to need the least amount of preparation before we could begin erecting our tents. The girls got busy collecting and stacking the branches to be used as firewood as the three guys walked back to the van to begin carrying everything back to where we would be sleeping. 

It took four trips for us to get all the coolers and the rest of the things we would need for the night, and I was ready to hit the sleeping bag early. I did not want to seem like I could not handle myself, so I stayed up for the next few hours after setting up our tents to have a few beers. 

Everyone but Calvin and me could not help but marvel at the near infinite number of stars in the sky as most of them spent their entire lives in a city. Calvin and I were country boys, so although we did find the view of the sky to be quite spectacular, we did not marvel at its wonder as did the others. As everyone grew intoxicated, the conversations turned to discussing the possibility of aliens from one of those hundreds of trillions of stars making contact with us. 

We allowed the fire to burn down a bit before we all climbed into our tents for the night. My girlfriend and I had identical sleeping bags, so we were able to zip them together into one large sleeping bag so we could cuddle during the night. Both of us wanted to do a little more than cuddling, but at this point we were too drunk and too exhausted for sex. Instead, we fell asleep snuggled together in each other’s arms. 

I woke up sometime during the night with an urgent need to empty my bladder. Climbing out of the sleeping bag as carefully as I could, I quietly unzipped the flaps of the tent. After putting on my shoes, I crawled outside and found our fire was nothing but a smoldering pile of coals. Not wanting to waste any time, I walked about fifty feet away from our camp and relieved myself against a tree. 

As I was finishing up and putting myself back into my shorts, I could hear the sound of a cowbell off in the distance. I was not sure how far away it was, but I was sure it was not on the island. It seemed to be coming from some way beyond the coastline. It was difficult to tell because of the echo on the water, but I was positive it was not coming from the interior of the island. 

I probably stood there for a minute or two listening to the bell slowly ringing before it finally came to an end. I guess I must have stood there for another minute or two listening for the sound resume before returning to my tent. I managed to crawl back inside the sleeping bag without waking my girlfriend and was back to sleep almost immediately. 

When I woke up the next morning, it was much colder out than I would expect for a summer morning, but I supposed it could be a result of the breeze coming off the water. Donavan was already awake, and Monica and her boyfriend returned from the forest shortly after I climbed out of my tent. Seeing the two of them returning made me notice the pressure in my bladder, so I went back to the same tree against which I relieved myself last night. 

I got back just in time to escort my girlfriend back into the woods so she could go to the bathroom as well. Even though the sun was out, and we were the only ones on the island, she was afraid to go past the tree line alone. That was okay. I was her boyfriend, and it was my place to keep her safe. 

Someone got some limbs and sticks piled up on the still smoldering coals and had a small fire burning by the time we returned. Calvin’s girlfriend took care of putting some butter and jelly on some loaf bread for us as Donavan cooked a cast iron skillet full of scrambled eggs for our breakfast. Even though it was nothing more than scrambled eggs, something about cooking food over a wood fire made it taste so much better. 

After breakfast my girlfriend and I cleaned the pan and the few other dishes we dirtied while the paper plates and paper towels we simply tossed into the fire. Once we had our campsite tidied up and the non-burnable trash collected in a garbage bag, Calvin, our girlfriends and I went to a small cove to do some fishing while the others found a nice spot to swim and lounge around the shore. 

It was a very relaxing day for everyone. We managed to catch quite a few fish, so we fired up the propane burner we brought for heating up the fryer oil. That night, instead of having hotdogs roasted over the fire as we originally planned we ate the fresh, fried fish instead. 

After dinner, Donavan handed beers out to everyone while Monica pulled a couple of joints out of her purse. We jokingly gave her a hard time, calling her things like a ‘bogart’ and such for holding out on us. She shrugged her shoulders and told us she did not have enough to smoke the whole time we were here, so she decided to save it for the evenings. 

Calvin, shaking his head and smiling said, “I guess there was not much point in me rationing what I had then now was there.” 

Everyone had a bit of a chuckle over that as Monica lit one of the joints and passed it off to her left. As we passed the first joint around the circle, Donavan asked if we wanted to hear a ghost story. We replied with several ‘ooo’s,’ ‘oh no, it’s going to get us’ and such before we stopped joking and allowed our large friend to tell his story. 

It began like any other ghost story. It was a hundred years ago today, on this very island. A man was accused of abducting and killing several children, but after an extremely short trial, the court found him not guilty. The furious parents of the town drug the man from his house and beat him to the brink of death before wrapping him in the curtains from the windows of his home. Several of the men carried his body, thinking the man was already dead, to a fishing boat. 

The men rowed the boat out beyond the islands along the shore of the lake. After wrapping the accused man tightly with a thick hemp rope they had in the boat, the men tossed their still breathing victim into the water. As the man sank into the depths of the lake, the long rope continued to reel out of the boat until the end, which was tied to a large cowbell. The bell made a loud clang that echoed all across the lake and was heard miles away. 

For about fifteen minutes I sat there and listened with interest as Donavan told his story. I took in the tale with amusement until he mentioned the sound of the cowbell echoing across the water. Instantly I jumped out of shock, scaring everyone around the campfire out of their seats. 

Everyone thought I lurched upward to startle them, and Donavan was more than a little irritated that I interrupted his story. My heart was racing as I could hear the sound of that bell echoing off the water last night as if I heard it only seconds ago. When the shock wore off, everyone started laughing but me. 

Pointing to Donavan I said, “You only said that about a cowbell because you heard that one last night didn’t you?” 

Donavan looked at me in confusion. Shrugging his shoulders and holding up the palms of his hand, Donavan replied, “I don’t know what you’re talking about man.” 

“You heard that cowbell last night didn’t you?” I insisted as much as I inquired. 

“Dude, I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Donavan said with a bit of seriousness. 

Donavan then asked me to explain what I was talking about, so I did. I told them about having to get up during the night to urinate. I tried to be careful not to wake my girlfriend up as I climbed out of the tent. After I finished taking care of my business, I heard that cowbell echoing over the water. 

Everyone but Donavan began to laugh at me for being so scared over a ghost story. I was adamant about what I heard, but my companions continued to make fun of me. I finally had enough of their razzing and got up from the fire and walked away. I know what I heard, and I was not just going to sit there as they made fun of me. 

My girlfriend got up to come after me, but I could hear my old friend Calvin say, “I got it,” 

A few seconds later I heard his footsteps running up behind me. “Hold up man,” he called out to me. 

I ceased my stomping and waited for him to catch up to me. 

“Come on man,” he said in a calm friendly tone. “They were just playing with you.” 

Explaining to Calvin that I would not care if they were laughing at me because I was joking, but I was not joking. I was dead serious about hearing that cowbell resounding over the lake last night. After a few minutes of talking it over with my old friend, the two of us made our way back to the campsite.  

When we got back, my girlfriend stood and gave me a kiss on the cheek. I was not expecting them to, but the others apologized for giving me such a hard time about being scared by the ghost story. I wanted to explain to them again, I was not scared by the ghost story. I was freaked out about hearing that bell clanging in the middle of the night last night, but I was afraid reviving that topic would only cause the joking to resume. Not wanting any more aggravation from the others, I dropped it and let the conversation move on to something else. 

We stayed up later in the night than on the previous day, and it was shortly after one o’clock in the morning when we all began to adjourn to our tents. Monica, her boyfriend and Donavan sat outside a bit longer than the rest. They tried to keep the noise down, or they intended to keep the noise down, but they were all three quite intoxicated at this point. 

I was about to get up and ask them to keep it down when the sound of that loud cowbell echoed over the water several times then came to a stop. This time we all heard it, but everyone thought it was the three of them still up trying to scare us all. That was everyone but me. The bell sounded just like it did last night. There were several loud clangs that rang out across the water and then silence. 

My heart pounded in my chest as I yanked open the sleeping bag and burst from the tent. I think I scared my girlfriend more than the bell scared me. Donavan, Monica and her boyfriend were standing in silence, staring out over the water. I wanted to accuse one of them of making the noise because I so desperately wanted it to be something I could quickly blame on someone and go back to bed. 

They just stood there, staring out over the water. Calvin asked them what it was and if they saw anything. He had to ask them a second time before Donavan turned and gave Calvin a look that sent a chill down everyone’s’ spines. It appeared as if he just gazed into the mouth of hell. 

“We-we saw a boat coming,” he said, but this was followed by a long pause. 

Eventually, Monica’s Boyfriend continued, “It was right there. We saw it come in twenty feet, then the bell clanged. The boat, it tore apart and vanished.” 

We all wanted to laugh, we all wanted to pretend this was a joke, but the seriousness in the air kept everyone silent. The stillness betrayed the rush of cold air that seemed to wash over the island. We watched the flames from the fire flicker and the coals glow as if a wind blew over us, but none of us could feel the air move. 

“I want to go; I’m ready to leave,” my girlfriend said through her fear. 

I wanted to agree with her, but there was no way we were going to find our way along that road and all those bridges in the dark. We would probably end up driving the van into a creek, stream or other waterway we could not see without the sun. As much as we all hated to, we were going to have to spend the night where we were and leave in the morning. 

We let the ladies lay down in the van, and the four guys sat outside watching. I told the others to try to get some sleep, but I did not think I was going to get any sleep of my own. We only had around four to five hours before the morning sun would begin to illuminate the horizon, but it felt like we sat there for a week. Donavan drifted off to sleep for a short time, but less than an hour before dawn, we heard a loud crashing sound reverberating off the water and across the island. 

It sounded like a house being torn asunder in a sudden and extremely violent action. The clamor of shattering timbers was clear as we thought something was coming across the island for us. The girls started screaming, but Calvin managed to get them quiet. All four of the guys picked up whatever they could to use as either an offensive or defensive weapon, which primarily consisted of rocks and heavy branches. 

We stood in the silence that followed until the sky began to brighten as the moring sun crested above the horizon. There was nothing damaged that we could see, but we were so sure it sounded like something gigantic tearing through the forest. The instant the sun itself broke above the horizon line, we all loaded the van, climbed inside, and began driving along the obscure road we took to get here. Everyone was looking for downed timbers in the road, beside the road, or anywhere from which that awful noise came. 

It was not until we reached the far side of the island that we found what made that explosion of timbers we heard. The bridge that spanned the one hundred feet wide canal separating us from our route to the mainland was torn to splinters. I could not imagine what could have destroyed such a solid bridge as this and leave it as nothing more than small chunks of wood and a carpet of splinters covering the ground and the surface of the water. I could not believe my eyes. There was no way we were going to get across in the van now, but no one wanted to approach the water on foot. 

We sat there helpless to do anything about the current situation. Our only choice was going to be to cross the water by swimming from one side to the other. It was not that much of a swim, but everyone was terrified of what might be in the water waiting for us. I did not know if I believed Donavan’s ghost story, but there was something far beyond the normal taking place here, something that was scaring the hell out of us all. 

Donavan, Monica’s boyfriend, and I eventually climbed out of the van to take a closer look and assess our situation. I held out hope there would be sufficient debris to provide us with enough of a crossing to get out of here with the van. Calvin waited in the vehicle with the motor running as the three of us tried to find a way across. 

It did not take long to see there was no way we were going to get the van to the other side of the gap, but we thought we might be able to walk across it enough to avoid having to swim in through the still, splinter covered water. Slowly, we continued to approach the water while trying to keep an eye out for whatever tore this bridge apart like it was made of paper. Although we were trying to stay together, Monica’s boyfriend appeared to be the least terrified as he pushed forward faster than Donavan and I felt comfortable. 

Monica’s boyfriend took a close look in the stagnant water and told us it looked like several of the beams that once spanned this gap appeared intact enough to support our weight as we crossed. I turned around to walk back and tell the others what we found. I only took two, maybe three steps when I heard the sound of a cowbell clanking behind me. 

I could see a look of absolute terror on Calvin’s face as he sat in the van watching in our direction. Monica began screaming as I quickly whipped back around to see what was happening. A three-inch diameter hemp rope rose out of the water like a giant serpent. Instead of a fanged mouth at the end of the dripping rope, there was a large cowbell rising eight feet into the air. Before anyone could do anything, the lower end of the waterlogged hemp rope wrapped itself around our friend’s ankles and quickly snaked up his legs. 

I could hear his bones shattering as the rope sinched tighter around his legs and continued up his body. The poor young man screamed in excruciating agony as the twisted hemp constricted his body. The unholy thing continued up his form until it crushed his ribcage and put an end to his screams. Donavan and I, without really thinking, ran to try to help our friend, but we only made it a few steps before the rope instantly withdrew into the water. The living cable yanked our friend to the ground and pulled him into the water before we even realized what was happening. 

In less than ten seconds it was all over. The living rope crushed our friend and drew him into the divide of water between this island and the next. Monica, screaming hysterically, threw the van door open and came running in our direction. I grabbed her as she reached me, but she fought against me so ferociously, I had to yell for Donavan to come help me. 

Monica screamed and fought because she still thought there was a chance her boyfriend could be saved. She was not out here to listen to the sound of the young man’s bones crushing under the pressure of the constricting hemp cord winding up his body. When I heard his ribs shatter and his screaming ceased, I knew he was dead. It all happened so fast, and everyone was in some degree of a state of shock. 

Donavan and I carried Monica, as she fought us the whole way, back to the van. The other two girls helped us get her inside, and as soon as we were all in, Calvin began to drive back down the sandy road toward the other side of the island. As soon as he could, Calvin turned the van around, threw it in drive and headed toward the center of the island at an unsafe speed. Several times he almost ran us off the road and into the trees, but soon we reached a large clearing in the center of the island. 

Monica continued to scream at us for leaving her boyfriend behind. 

“Monica,” Donavan yelled, “he’s dead. Do you hear me? He’s dead. There is nothing anyone can do for him now.” 

Monica stopped screaming as she came to the realization what Donavan told her was true. Staring at him blankly, Monica threw her arms around him and began sobbing uncontrollably. 

In frustration, Calvin beat the heels of his fists against the dashboard and yelled, “Where in the fuck did you hear that story? What the hell do you know that we don’t know?” 

Donavan, as he continued to console Monica, shook his head and shrugged his shoulders. 

“I don’t know man. I heard it a couple of times when we came to the lake when I was a kid.” 

A long silence followed, then Calvin asked in a loud whisper, “How does it end?” 

Donavan did not give him an answer, and after waiting a few moments, Calvin yelled “How does it end?!” 

“What do you want me to say?” Donavan replied. “It’s a fucking ghost story. Everybody dies.” 

The silence inside the van resumed except for Monica’s sobbing. No one knew what to think. We would never have believed this happened if we did not witness it with our own eyes. 

Who could really believe something like this if it did not happen to them personally? 

“Was there anything in the story about what the ghost wanted?” I asked. “Maybe if we give it what it wants, it will let us go.” 

“No, not really,” Donavan replied. “The story just said that the ghost comes back every so often looking for the men that killed him, taking its revenge on anyone it found.” 

We were at an absolute loss as to what we should do next. The ghost story always says the thing came out of the water, so we hoped staying as far away from the water as possible might afford us some measure of protection. There were enough supplies to last us for more than a week if we rationed it carefully, but after that we were going to slowly starve to death. 

Suddenly we became aware the van was very slowly sinking into the ground, but it was sinking faster with each passing second. When Calvin pulled off the road and into the clearing, he drove us into a patch of quicksand. He leapt out of the door on the driver’s side and ran around to the other side, but he stayed ten or so feet away from the van since he did not know where the quicksand began. 

First Donavan jumped out, then I began to help the ladies jump as far from the van as they could. Sand was beginning to seep into the open doors of the vehicle by the time I finally tried to leap for cover. The position of the van put me at an awkward angle to try to jump any kind of distance, but I did the best I could. 

As soon as I hit the ground, Donavan and Calvin grabbed me and pulled me to safety. Standing there helpless, we watched the van along with all our food and drinks sink into the ground until only a small portion of the roof was visible. We did not even have our fishing equipment any longer, not that anyone would get close enough to the water to fish. Our supplies and equipment were all gone. The only things we had left were what was attached to our belts or in our pockets. 

My girlfriend suggested we move back onto the road. There we at least knew the ground was solid and would not swallow us as it did Calvin’s van. Realizing she was probably right, we trotted back onto the road as quickly as we could. We only ran a short distance, but we were all winded when we reached our destination. This hopeless situation took a toll on us physically as well as mentally. 

With our things all gone, we were not going to last more than a few days if no sort of rescue came. We debated and argued over what we should do next. I know no one wanted to be anywhere near the water, but if we got close enough to the shore, we might be able to flag down a ski boat or some fishermen. Calvin’s girlfriend pointed out the fact we may be putting anyone who came to rescue in danger, but the rest of us were willing to take that risk. 

It was approaching midday, and none of the guys had any sleep since the night before. We decided we needed to take turns sleeping, only one or two of us at a time, before we did anything else. Exhausted as we were, we knew we had to rest before we did anything else. I hated to waste the time, but I knew the others were correct. 

I did not think I would be able to sleep, but in my languid state I fell into a slumber rather quickly. My girlfriend woke me after I slept for five hours. Calvin and his girlfriend laid down and went to sleep about an hour before I awoke. Once I was up and lucid, Donavan laid down near the other two and went to sleep. 

It was decided as I slept that we would wait until morning before walking to the far side of the island to try to signal for help. We had to get some sleep, there was no getting past that. If we were to start walking along the road once everyone was awake, we would not reach the shore until dark. The light obviously offered us no more safety than the night, but at least in the daytime we could see. 

After everyone had a chance to get a little sleep, we took turns again sleeping during the night. We all listened and waited to hear the clanging of that tarnished copper cowbell, but the night came and went without us hearing anything more than the sounds of the nocturnal animals filling the still air. 

The next morning it was decided Donavan and I would walk back down the road to our campsite in an attempt to signal for help. I embraced my girlfriend and told her we would be back as quickly as we could. She was doing her best to fight away the tears, but I could see the fear and sadness in her eyes. I did not want to leave her, but if there was any hope of getting off this island, we had to try. 

The overgrown road was much longer than I remembered it being, and the sandy surface made walking even more strenuous than it already was. It took us nearly an hour before we were able to see out over the water. To our dismay, we saw no boats on the water. It was still only seven in the morning, so we held out hope someone would be out on the lake soon. 

I still had my cigarette lighter in my pocket and my survival knife on my belt. Donavan and I decided to start a fire, and once we got it going we could throw green limbs and leaves on it to make it smoke. Our hope was someone would see the plume of smoke and come to see what it was. 

When we rounded the bend and saw our vacated campsite, Donavan and I both became excited when we saw we accidentally left the cooler containing the beer and other drinks behind. We might not have any food, but at least we were not going to die of thirst. First, we wanted to get the fire started. After that we would retrieve the cooler and carry it back to the road. 

It was not difficult to find enough dry wood to get a large fire started. We needed the fire to be larger before we began to feed the green foliage into it, so we continued to seek out and pile dry wood onto the blaze. With my back turned to the water, I saw a long slender shadow growing on the ground. Instantly I turned to see that haunted bell rising straight into the air at the end of that waterlogged hemp rope. 

I yelled to Donavan to run as I began sprinting to the forest line as quickly as possible. Donavan paused for a moment to gaze at the evil thing before he started to run. Before he could move, the bell began to fall from the sky at an angle bringing it far onto the shore. Bursting through the brush at the edge of the forest, I tried to find a place to take cover. 

I heard the bell clang loudly as it struck Donavan between the shoulders. The strength of the drenched rope and the weight of the bell sent him plummeting hard to the ground. Like a coward, I hid behind a large tree as I heard my friend screaming for me to help him. I knew by now the thing was already constricting him and would drag him into the water soon. This was probably the most selfish thing I ever did in my life, but I was thankful I could not hear his bones shattering under the constriction of that rope like I did with the other fellow. 

When I could hear his screams no longer, I began to run. I did not stop running until I got back to my girlfriend and the others. Immediately they began asking me where Donavan was. As soon as I could catch my breath enough to speak, I informed them the ghostly bell got him. 

Dropping to my knees I fell to my hands and began heaving. My body wanted to vomit, but there was nothing in my stomach for it to expel. It was another five minutes before I calmed myself down enough to explain to the others what happened. I omitted the part when I hid while Donavan was crying for my help. I did not want to tell them I hid like a coward as that serpentine rope drug him into the water. There was nothing I could do, and the others understood that. Regardless, I did not want to give them the full details of Donavan’s demise. 

Crawling over to the edge of the road, I sat down and propped my back against a tree. Everyone saw how Monica’s boyfriend died, and they did not continue to probe me for any details. I could not give them many anyway since I was hiding while that devilish rope and bell drug my friend into the depths of the lake. I kept telling myself there was nothing I could do, but I could not get rid of the guilt of cowering away while Donavan begged for my help. 

Eventually I told them about the cooler we left behind containing everything we brought to drink. Donavan told us the ghost only came out when the moon was in a certain phase, so perhaps it would go away after tonight’s full moon passed. If we could only survive until the thing’s time was up, the rest of us might just make it out of here. If that phase ended up being more than a day, we were going to have to risk dying horribly before being drug to a watery grave to get that cooler. 

We were too young to die. There was so much life still left for us to live, so many things to experience, but now we were probably going to die on this small island in a lake I never heard of before this trip. It was not fair. I would not wish this gruesome fate on anyone, but we never got a chance to really live our lives. We were never going to know what it was like to have families of our own. I probably grieved the loss of the life I would never have more than I feared the death I might face in the grips of that demonic bell. 

I wished I let Donavan finish telling his story the night before last, as none of the rest of us knew how it ended. We knew everyone died, but we did not know if there was any possibility of waiting this out or not. Without realizing it, I threw my hands over my ears as I could hear Donavan in my head screaming, calling out for my help as I cowered behind a tree. 

My girlfriend dropped to her knees in front of me and asked me what was wrong. I told her the truth; I told her I could not get the sound of Donavan crying out for his life out of my head. Even though I told her the truth about that, I still did not tell them about how I hid while I let our friend die. I knew there was nothing I could do to save him, but I still feel like I should have tried. 

My girlfriend moved over to sit beside me, put her arms around me and rested her head on my shoulders. Feeling her touch gave me a renewed desire to live. At the most I figured we had two weeks we might have to wait here in the center of the island until the moon was invisible in the night sky. When the new moon came, and this phase of the lunar cycle came to an end, I hoped this nightmare would come to an end as well. 

The only way we were going to be able to wait out that time was if we retrieved the cooler from our abandoned campsite. I suddenly remembered the fire Donavan and I started, and it occurred to me that someone might still see it. I told everyone I had to go back and watch for any possible chance of rescue. I did not want to go alone, and no one else wanted to divide our numbers any further, so we all decided we would walk back down the road until we could see the lake. I was sure we could get close enough to watch for any boats without having to approach too near the water. 

Everyone was tired with hunger, but I did not know what we could eat from the land. I did not know how to forage. I knew how to fish, but getting close enough to the water to do so was out of the question for now. We were probably twenty minutes from our destination when Calvin’s girlfriend grew excited, turned, and ran about twenty feet off the road. 

Calvin was already going after her, but as soon as she stopped, she scanned around the low growing foliage. 

“Huckleberries,” she said in excitement. “There’s a whole big patch of huckleberries over here.” 

Monica, my girlfriend and I approached behind Calvin and found a fifty square foot area filled with knee high plants bearing the pea sized fruits. As much as we wanted to eat everything there, we knew we had to ration what was available until we had another source of food, so we all restricted ourselves to one handful of the delicious berries. 

At least now we did not think we were going to starve to death, but the berries would not provide our bodies with enough water to sustain us for long at all. Although we now had a source of food that could last us for a week, we still had to take the risk of falling victim to the demonic cowbell to retrieve the cooler with all our drinks. 

Once we could finally see the lake through the trees, Calvin and I told the ladies to stay where we were. Calvin and I were going to go further ahead until we had a better view of the water, but they did not want to be left behind. After arguing with them for a few minutes, we finally gave in and told the girls they could come with us. 

As we topped a small hill in the road, we could see a large ski boat speeding away from the island. Someone came to investigate the fire, and no one was there to meet them. I should have been there to meet them. I was supposed to be watching for any hope of rescue, but I ran after what happened to Donavan. 

Calvin began shouting and running toward the shore in a vain attempt to recapture the attention of the people in the boat. I grabbed him by the back of the shirt and nearly pulled him to the ground when I saw something resting on the edge of the island. That cowbell was lying on the beach motionless, waiting for us like a patient predator. I thought Calvin was going to punch me for what I did until he saw where I was pointing. 

Even if I was here to meet that boat, I did not think that bell was ever going to let us board. It used the boat as bait to try and draw us out into the open where it could crush us to death as it already did two of our friends. The damn thing allowed the people in that boat to come and go, but it was not going to let us leave. We were trapped until this thing went dormant again, which we hoped would be in no more than two weeks. 

Withdrawing a couple of hundred feet from where we currently stood, we tried and failed to think of an idea that could safely get us to the cooler and back. That horrid bell allowed that boat to come to the island and leave safely, and now it was holding our drinks hostage, using them as bait. I wished we knew how much rope lay hidden underneath the water. I knew where it was when it struck Donavan to the ground, so it had a length of at least twenty-five feet. 

We waited until an hour before the sun set, checking on the status of that hellish copper bell every so often. It never moved, but we never got within several hundred feet of it. I did not know if it was unable to sense us from where we were, if it was unable to reach that far, or both. Not wanting to be near that thing in the dark, we walked back to the patch of huckleberries where we took turns throughout the night sleeping on the sandy road. 

The next morning, we stopped off for a breakfast of small handful of huckleberries before heading back to our abandoned camping spot to see if that bell was still waiting for us. To our dismay, we found it resting only a few feet away from where we found it yesterday. The unholy thing was still waiting for us. We knew, as soon as we stepped out to grab our cooler, that living bell was going to take at least one of us. 

Turning around, we made our way back to the center of the island. If there were huckleberries here, perhaps we might find some other fruits, nuts or anything we could eat. At this point we still did not know what to do about water, but we hoped the bell might retreat back into the lake if we made it wait for us long enough. Until then perhaps we could find some fruit with a high-water content to stave off serious dehydration. 

I found some maypops at the edge of a small clearing, but there were not very many of them. I counted a total of eleven, but we did not pick any of them yet. That may have to be food for several days, so for now we left them alone. Things were starting to lean in our favor as we continued to search for food to keep us alive for the next few weeks. 

Our excitement grew exponentially when we found three wild plum trees growing in a cluster together. They were full of ripe fruit, and we ate six or seven of them each. The juicy fruit felt wonderful on my dry, parched throat, and it felt very good to get more than just a handful of berries in my belly. We continued to explore the small island for any other sources of food, but the number of plums in each tree was enough to keep us alive until the new moon arrived. 

We were getting close to the western tip of the island, and we could see water through the trees from one side to the other. Before we even got close to the shore on this end, we turned around to go back and search in the other direction. Unfortunately, the only other thing we found was a persimmon tree, but the fruit was a long way from being ripe. Anyone who ever ate a green persimmon was aware of how thirsty the extremely tart fruit could make a person. 

We did not see the small inlet on the eastern side of the island coming up from the south. It was no more than a foot wide where it ended about six feet behind where we stood. No one was expecting to encounter water from the lake this far away from the shore, so no one was really watching for it. 

By the time we even heard the clanking of the old copper bell, the rope already hooked itself around the neck of Calvin’s girlfriend. My longtime friend tried to grab his girlfriend, but as soon as he got close enough to put his arms around her, the bell and rope lifted the girl high in the air. She fought against the hemp binding her throat, but all she could do was produce a sickening, gurgling sound 

The rope dangled the girl just out of Calvin’s reach, taunting him with the life of his love. I stood there petrified as my girlfriend and Monica screamed in terror. The girl’s face was beginning to turn purple from the lack of oxygen, and her struggle against the rope sped the process. 

Calvin dropped almost to a squatting position, then leapt as high into the air as he could. He managed to grab a hold of his girlfriend’s feet, but that malicious thing jerked her out of his grasp leaving him holding nothing but her shoes. We all watched helplessly as a ripple moved up the rope, up to the girl, and whipped her body violently far above us. Her neck snapped with an audible crack, and she was dead. 

In a desire to take revenge for what he saw happen to his girlfriend, Calvin drew the knife from his belt and charged toward the thing. I knew there was no stopping him, and I also knew there was no helping him. 

I put my arms around Monica and my girlfriend and told them to run. Both of them in a state of shock continued to stand there screaming. When they did not listen to me, I yelled at them as loudly as I could for them to run. Finally, the two snapped out of the fits they were in and began to run. I could hear Calvin screaming in agony as I ran off and left yet another friend behind. I knew there was nothing I could possibly do to help him, but guilt still permeated through my soul. 

Calvin’s screams continued as we put more distance between the bell and ourselves. This time, the tarnished copper terror continued to twist and torture Calvin rather than giving him a quick death like the others. I knew that ghost was only trying to draw us back to it; it used anything it could to bait us into its trap. 

Calvin continued to scream in pain and cry out for help for more than an hour. I could see in Monica’s eyes that she was about to lose her grip on reality. I wrapped my girlfriend tightly in my arms and hummed in a futile attempt to drown out the agonized screams of my oldest friend. Up until now the ghostly bell dispatched our friends quickly, but it tortured Calvin as long as it could until his injuries finally killed him. 

When the screaming stopped, I looked up and Monica was nowhere to be seen. At some point as we listened to Calvin pleading for the thing to go ahead and kill him, Monica ran off. Neither of us were watching her as we had our faces buried in each other’s shoulders. We called out for her over and over but received no response. 

My girlfriend thought we should go after Monica, but I told her to listen to what she was saying. We had no idea which direction she went, and even if we did there was probably nothing we could do for her. My girlfriend said she did not care. She was not going to abandon our friend. There was no way we could help the others, but we could still help Monica. 

I believed Monica lost it, that the ordeal of the last few days drove her over the cliff into insanity. Suddenly, we could hear Monica screaming. It did not sound as if she were crying out in pain. It was more like she was trying to release some of her fear, frustration and anxiety. My girlfriend told me we had to go help her, but I was terrified. She gave me a look of sheer disgust before turning and running in the direction of our last surviving friend. She was probably twenty feet ahead of me before I finally mustered enough nerve to make my feet move and follow her. 

Monica did not run too far from where we were before she had to stop and rest against a tree. We called out to her as we approached, but she was not responding. Monica was no longer screaming hysterically, but she was not speaking to us either. She ran off the road a bit, so my girlfriend and I finished walking the rest of the way to her as we tried to catch our breath. 

I called out to her again as we got closer thinking perhaps in her state of temporary insanity, she did not hear us yelling out to her before. This time, I think she tried to reply, but all she did was make a disgusting guttural noise. She probably strained her vocal cords with all that screaming, and now she was not able to respond. We were no more than ten feet away from the tree against which Monica rested when she slid down the trunk and slumped to the ground. 

Immediately on the other side of her was that ghastly bell and the end of the thick, wet hemp rope. It rose into the air and poised to strike like a serpent. Out of the corner of my eye I could see blood running down Monica’s arm and dripping onto the sandy soil. I did not think we were close enough to the water for the haunted bell to reach us, but apparently it could come farther inland than it did on the previous occasions. 

I could see the rope slithering through the underbrush and fallen leaves like a python. It moved so quickly, there was no running away from it before it got us. There was only one thing I could do to prevent this thing from hell from killing me. God help me, as the thing moved in to strike like a viper, I grabbed my girlfriend and used her as a human shield. 

I heard her ribs crack as the copper bell struck her with such force it almost knocked us both to the ground. I felt my girlfriend’s body go limp as the rope began to snake around her body. I turned and ran. I ran as fast as my legs would move me until I reached the dead center of the island. I was still close to the huckleberry patch, and with me being the sole survivor, it should be enough to keep me alive until the new moon. 

When I finally came to a stop, I began to sob uncontrollably. Up to now I was only guilty of not helping people who had next to zero chance of being saved, but now I was a murderer. I took the girl I dated for the last year by the shoulders and held her in between me and what should have been my death. I did not even have the gall to spin her around so she did not see it coming. I could not bear to see the look on her face when she came to the realization of what I did, how I so gutlessly sacrificed her life to save my own. 

At least now I was safe. I was sure I could make it until the new moon came, and I was certain the thing would withdraw back into the lake and stay there until the proper phase of the moon returned. With my eyes so filled with tears, I did not see the ground around me begin to heave and slither slightly. I did not know anything was coming until two small arms burst through the surface of the soil and buried their fingers into my flesh. 

I screamed in pain as another set of decayed arms burst from the ground and grabbed my other leg tightly. I tried to pull them off me, but the small arms were too strong. A third set of child-like arms burst through the soil and grabbed me by the ankles. 

I struggled and fought with everything I had in me. I did not want to die, oh God how much I did not want to die. Suddenly I felt myself sinking. The ghoulish arms began to drag me into the ground as they dug deeper and deeper into my flesh. I screamed for help, but there was no one left to hear me. I begged and pleaded for someone, anyone to save me, but the arms continued to drag me deeper and deeper into the earth. 

The arms did not simply retreat into the ground as they pulled me deeper and deeper. They continued to reach up to dig their bony fingers into my flesh again and again as I felt the pressure of the dirt squeezing my bleeding legs. I continued to scream in agony and desperation as my mind struggled to comprehend what was happening. We knew about the murdered man, but we did not hear the part about him being innocent or of the three missing children being buried on this island. I displayed my cowardice then, and for that we never heard the rest of the ghost story. 

Copyright © 2024

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They Found My Horse

Word Count: 5,202

Traveling through the forested hills west of the Great Smoky Mountains, I was headed to the newly ratified state of Oklahoma. An aunt I never knew I had passed away and it appeared I was her only heir. I was not even aware of her passing until seven months after she departed this world. She left me a house with a rather large swath of land which I planned to make into a farm once I arrived. 

The air grew cold as the year came to its end, but I was happy just being out of the mountains before the snow began to fall. I was uncertain for several weeks of whether or not I would make it to lower ground before the mountains began to fill with snow. My horse and I were not equipped to handle such weather, and getting stuck up there through the winter would probably have been a death sentence for us both. 

My original hope was to reach Decatur and ride out the rest of the winter there, but the weather was not that kind to me. I was still deep in the foothills when the snow began to fall. Two inches or so fell in the first few days, so I thought I was not going to have too much to worry about. The next day the clouds began to drop large, clustered flakes that greatly impeded my vision and accumulated on the cold ground quickly. In one hour, I saw more snow than in the previous several days. 

By the time midday arrived, I was beginning to worry. I knew I was still several weeks from my destination, and I did not think we were going to be able to survive out here for that long. If I did not find shelter for me and my horse soon, we would be goners for sure. 

Several hours passed and I managed to locate a crevasse between two gigantic stones that would at least shield me and my horse from the wind. I would have to try to gather some wood and get a fire started if we were going to make it through the night and into the morning. After tying my mount to a half-buried stone, removing the saddle and covering it with what blankets I could, I scoured the area for any burnable wood I could find. 

At least on this front I was fortunate. Craggy trees filled the region and locating dry dead logs did not turn out to be as difficult as I anticipated. In no more than an hour I had enough wood stacked up to easily last me through the night. 

Although this crevasse was open all the way to the top, only a minimal amount of snowfall made it into the crack to fall on top of me. I was sure I would not have to worry about the snow putting my fire out as I prepared myself a meager meal or while I slept. Losing my heat at either of those times could present serious problems for me. 

Following what could scarcely be called dinner, I piled enough wood on the fire to keep it going easily through the night. The narrow canyon walls helped keep the wind from dissipating the heat too quickly, and the natural shelter stayed warm enough to keep us alive through the night. Propping my back against the hard stone, I covered myself with my bedroll as best I could before allowing myself to drift off to sleep. 

I was not happy to see it was still snowing when I awoke, but at least it was not snowing like it was yesterday. Although still falling fairly heavily, the drifting snowflakes were much smaller than those blinding my vision yesterday. As I prepared my breakfast, I considered waiting in my stone sanctuary for another night, but I was afraid if I did the snow might pick back up again. Ultimately, I decided to press forward and hoped I would find another hospitable place to again bed down for the night. 

Finding somewhere for my horse to graze turned out to be more difficult than I initially hoped. I knew finding foliage on which my mount could feed would be a challenge, but I was beginning to find it very difficult. More than two feet of snow fell from the sky yesterday and last night, and the entire landscape was blanked in white. Search as I might, I could not find anything more than a small snack for my horse. 

The sun was not even at its peak in the sky when I felt the legs of my riding animal began to falter. I climbed off my old friend and tried helping him walk, but it was a futile effort. I was unable to find anything to feed my already hungry horse, and after the ordeal of over the last couple of days, it simply could take no more. He slumped to the ground, and trying to reassure him, I attempted to coax him back to his feet. 

I could see it in his eyes; he was not going to make it any further. Drawing my rifle from its holster on the back of my saddle, I put the barrel to my old friend’s temple. With tears streaming from my eyes and freezing on my cheeks, I pulled the trigger and put my nearly two decades-long companion out of his misery. 

Taking as much as I could with me, and with a broken heart, I left my old friend behind as I continued to try to find refuge from this terrible weather. When I initially set out on this journey, I worried I might get trapped in the snow in the mountains, but I never expected to hit such a brutal, early-winter storm like this. I tried to learn about the terrain I would pass through on my journey to my land in Oklahoma, and everything I learned told me this area received very little snowfall. Either the information I received was incorrect, or I chose a bad year to make this crossing. 

Pushing through the snow took its toll on me rather quickly. Normally I had the stamina to walk from dawn to dusk, but trudging through this deep, heavy snow took much more energy to even move at a slow pace. I had no choice but to push myself onward. Stopping now would mean certain death. 

I removed a strip of dried meat from on of my sacks and chewed on that as I walked. I was not able to soak the meat and cook out the salt used to preserve it, and it made me incredibly thirsty. The water in my canteen froze long ago, and I did not have the time to build a fire to melt any snow to drink. Consuming the meat as I went gave me the energy to push on through the still falling snow, that was at least until shortly before dark. 

I thought I could make out several buildings off in the distance, but it was difficult to say for certain in the blowing snow. Using every ounce of energy I had left, I stomped my way through the deep snow dreaming of the warmth and comfort those buildings had to offer. The snow began to fall heavily enough to obscure my sight of what I hoped was a small settlement. Only minutes after losing my view of the structures up ahead, my legs finally gave out on me. 

I strained desperately trying to bring myself back to my feet, but the effort was in vain. A warm sensation passed over me as I lay there waiting to freeze to death when I thought I saw a light approaching me. I was sure it was an angel here to take me to that land with streets paved in gold as I lost my hold of consciousness, and everything went black. 

When I next became aware, I could hear several voices talking quietly. My head throbbed like someone struck my crown with a stone, and it was very difficult to open my eyes. I let out a grunt, and I heard the footsteps of two people quickly making their way to my side. Almost instantly I saw the silhouettes of a man and a woman standing over me before the excruciating pain in my head made me pass out once again. 

The next time I awoke, it must have been daylight outside because the illumination was much brighter than the last time I awoke. I found myself lying on a straw filled mattress and covered with several blankets and a goose down comforter. This time I heard no other voices in the room. I called out feebly several times, but I did not think anyone heard me. 

I was about to call out again when a small red-haired girl, probably no more than five years in age, came to the door. She stood there for a moment with her rag doll in hand staring at me with what seemed like a mix of fear and curiosity. As soon as I opened my mouth to ask the child for help, she ran yelling into another room of the building. Her loud voice caused my head to pound worse than it already was, but at least she caught the attention of someone who could come in and lend me some assistance. 

Only moments after the young child ran screaming, a man and a woman entered the room. I assumed they were the same people I saw last time I awoke, but my eyes were so blurred and the lighting in the room was low, so I could not say that for certain. Honestly, I did not care who the people were so long as they could help me with some food and water. 

“I see yer awake,” the man said in a thick Irish accent. “We were worrin about ya. You been sleepin since we found you day before yesterday.” 

The woman, who stepped away for a moment returned with a kettle of hot tea and a large ceramic cup. I could see the little girl once again standing in the doorway clutching her ragdoll in both arms. In this extremely remote location, I doubt the girl got to see strangers much. 

As the woman poured me a cup of the hot brew she said in an even heavier Irish accent, “It’s a good thing the boys come back from trappin when they did.” She handed me the cup and continued, “You would’a been a gonner for sure.” 

Taking several careful sips of the tea, I found it to be very soothing on my sore throat. I gave myself a few moments before once again wetting my throat with the hot tea. I began to try to speak, but the young woman interrupted me. 

“Just keep drinkin yer tea and give your throat a minute. Ya been sleepin for more’n a day,” she told me. “You need to be gettin some water in ya.” 

As she said those last few words, the young Irish woman refilled my large cup with the kettle she still held in her hand. 

“Me and the lads found you when we were comin back from checking our traps,” the man told me. “God must’a been lookin down on you. It was a miracle anyone spotted you through the snow.” 

It was a miracle indeed. Once I put my mount and longtime companion down, I was rather resigned to the fact my death would come shortly afterward. I thought I was seeing things when I spotted the buildings through that blowing snow, but I was not even able to make it that far. Luckily, this group of men found me when they did as it probably would not have taken me long at all to die from the cold once my body collapsed under me. 

“Thank-thank you so much for your hospitality,” I said through a scratchy but recovering throat. 

“There’s no need for thanks, but you are welcome nonetheless,” the man told me. 

“Where?..” I began to ask, but as if anticipating my next question, the man already started his answer before I could get past the first word of the question. 

“Ya found yerself in the humble little town of Flannery Pass,” he told me. “By the way, me name be Eoin Muldoon. This is me wife Kayleigh. The little one that be peekin her nose in here is our daughter Shauna” 

I introduced myself to the generous couple then inquired, “Am I near Decatur?” 

“You poor son. Your way off the mark,” he told me in a kind and concerned tone. “If you want to get to Decatur, yer going to have to wait until the snow is done for the season. It’s at least a three-week ride on horseback in the summertime. You’ll never make it on foot here in the dead’a winter 

“You can stay with us until you are good on your feet, then there is a boarding house down the road where you can stay after that,” the man told me. “I done talked to the lady runnin’ the boarding house, and she said you can stay’n catch your bill up when you pick up some work.” 

I did not know what work, other than trapping, I could find in this town, but this man sounded confident I could find employment enough to at least cover my room. I was not a trapper. I was not really much of a hunter at all, but I was a quick learner. 

It only took me three days before I was back on my feet and moving again. Up until my rescue, I managed to keep myself fed, but water was a bit more of an issue as I had no way of melting any snow. I found no rivers or creeks from which I could drink. The last water I consumed was when my old companion and I were hiding in the large stone crevasse. The nice lady rehydrated me with tea and soup in addition to the delicious meals she provided me. 

Luckily, I was dressed in thick layers of furs and hides, and I was found almost immediately after I collapsed. I was not out there exposed long enough to lose any of my fingers or toes to frostbite. Although I was reaching a dangerously low temperature, this nice young couple kept me warm with the heavy covers.  

By the morning of my fourth day with this family, I was ready to move into the boarding house. The room was quite small, but I did not need it for much more than the bed it contained. There were several desks throughout the building if the boarders felt like writing a letter, journal or anything else. The boarding house was much nicer than I expected after some of the places I stayed over the years. 

I was ready to go out with the trappers that day, but Eoin insisted I take this day to get settled in my new accommodations. He assured me I could join them tomorrow as they planned on moving their traps to a new location, and they could use all the bodies they could get. I had money, but I needed to keep that for my trip from Decatur to my property in Oklahoma. 

The sun shined the whole day, but it was not hot enough to cause any noticeable snowmelt as far as I could tell. Regardless, it was nice to feel the sun on my face after being trapped in the snow for nearly a week straight. I took some time to explore the small town before the sun began to set and the cold of the night began to creep in. It was a nice little hamlet set in the steep foothills near the mountain’s end. It did not take me long to discover I was the only non-Irish born person here, but I found everyone to be very polite and helpful. Although I never met any Irishmen before, I heard a lot of stories about them. Those stories all turned out to be false as I did not find these people barbaric at all. It was quite the opposite. 

As I headed back to the boarding house for the night I noticed a faint light in the distant hills. I continued to watch the light in the distance as I walked down the snow-covered street and found it to be moving back and forth. Once I reached my destination, I stood by the building and watched the light after the sun dropped below the horizon. It appeared to be someone carrying a lantern, but all I saw it do was move from side to side like someone was keeping a watch over something. 

I assumed it must just be someone living deep in the hills, and perhaps they were looking for something. Whatever the source of the light was, I was sure it was simply someone looking around the ground for something. I was not going to stand out in the increasing cold pondering what it might be. I needed to get to bed because Eoin would be sending for me an hour before dawn. 

I thought we were only going to move traps they already had placed, but we were bringing more with us. Each man had a backpack to carry, two traps and whatever personal equipment they may have. We walked for almost an hour before we reached the running water, from there we walked upstream where the other men began to place the traps. Not knowing what I was doing, I helped the others in any way I could. It took us an hour to get all the traps set, then we headed back downstream where they already had traps placed. 

We worked shortly past midday before we headed back to town. This was the routine I followed day after day for the next several weeks. I grew much better at becoming a trapper and no longer needed the guidance of others to perform the job correctly. 

The people of the town were some of the most hospitable people I ever met. It did not take me long at all to land on a first name basis with everyone living in the township of Flannery Pass. They even invited me to join them for Mass, even though I was a Protestant and not a Catholic. 

Night after night I saw that strange light moving in the hills. It was always in the same place and all it ever did was move back and forth. My curiosity grew each time I saw that lantern or whatever it was. I could not understand why someone would live that deep in the hills nor why they would pace back and forth every night shining a light as they did. 

Finally, one evening as I sat and drank with the other men at the pub, I brought up the odd light in the hills and asked if anyone could tell me what it was. You would think I just gave birth to a hen because the room grew so silent all I could hear was the crackling of the fireplace. 

“Yer flirtin’ with Devil askin’ things like that,” the eldest man in the town said after many awkward seconds. 

I heard Irishmen could be very superstitious, but me asking that question seemed to put the fear of God in them all. With every set of eyes in the room on me, I found myself at a loss for words. I never felt so awkward in my life. They made me so uncomfortable with their stares, I was contemplating paying my bill and leaving the pub. Thankfully Eoin began singing a drinking song, and eventually the others joined in. 

What could be up there in the hills that would scare the townsfolk of Flannery Pass so intensely? 

 One would have thought I just announced myself to be a witch by the way everyone looked at me. Unsure of how what I asked upset everyone so, I wished I could shrink away into nothing. I was so thankful to Eoin for drawing everyone’s attention away from me. 

My curiosity over the light in the hills only grew as the nights passed. Eoin saw me standing out late one night observing the light, and he decided to approach me. I think it scared him for me to be staring at this light, but I could not help myself. I could not help but wonder who that could be carrying that light nor their reason for doing it. 

When Eoin reached me, he patted me on the shoulder to distract my attention from that illumination off in the distance. 

“Ya need to be leavin’ that alone,” he told me in a serious and concerned tone. “If you keep obessin’ over that light, you’ll be overcome by the will o’ the wisp.” 

Turning my head toward the Irishman, I inquired as to what a will o’ the wisp was. He told me there were stories of them from back home his mother used to tell him when he was a child. The supernatural creature used lights to draw people into the bogs where they would never be seen again. No one knew what the wisp looked like because no one who ever ventured after one was ever seen again. 

I nodded my head, gave him a friendly pat on the shoulder and told him I would see him before dawn when we went back out to reset the traps. Struggling to fight the urge to turn and look at the light as I walked back to the boarding house, I began to wonder if there was something ghostly about this nightly luminescence. I did not believe it to be some ghost from the Emerald Isle, but whatever it was, it seemed to have a strong draw on my attention. 

There were not too many places in Flannery Pass from which the strange orb could be seen, but walking from the pub to the boarding house was one of them. I found it excruciatingly difficult to not turn my eyes towards those distant hills, but I only frequented the pub one or two days a week. I was trying to save what money I did earn from the furs to purchase a new horse, saddle and the various other things I needed to continue on my journey. 

After spending nearly two months in Flannery Pass, the weather finally began to turn to spring and I was ready to be on my way. As payment for my share of the furs, the good people of the town provided me with a mount and everything I needed to ride and tend to it. It was not my old friend, but I supposed we would eventually grow fond of one another. The horse seemed sturdy and healthy, and the man who presented me with the animal informed me it was three years old and still a little stubborn at times. It was a good horse nonetheless. 

Almost everyone in Flannery Pass came out the morning I was to depart. They all wanted to say goodbye to me and see me off on my way. If I was not headed to a large estate in Oklahoma, I would have seriously considered becoming a permanant resident of this town. I never met such nice, generous and giving people in my life, and I would probably never see a town like this for as long as I lived. 

My gaze turned to the hill upon which I saw that nightly light, and my curiosity finally got the better of me. During my stay in Flannery Pass, I studied the layout of the terrain well. Shortly after I made it out of view of the townsfolk, I altered my course and began to head deeper into the hills. I absolutely had to know what that beacon slowly moving from one side to the other was. 

The superstitious people of Flannery Pass thought the light to be some sort of Irish ghost, but I shrugged off such notions. Although a small part of me thought whatever walked nightly with that lantern might be something supernatural, I was almost absolutely sure it was someone keeping watch over something at night. 

After winding through the hills for about thirty minutes, I discovered an ancient stone road that seemed to lead to my destination. I could not get over the excellent construction of the road, which appeared to be made of blocks of granite. A majority of the road appeared to be obscured by vegetation and stones that rolled down from the hills over the ages. Enough of the road remained visibly exposed to allow me to stay on its course. 

I traveled for almost an hour, and I was quite sure I was growing near to my destination. I decided to dismount my horse and lead it by the reigns instead. Quickly, I learned to avoid the patches of moss I saw growing here and there on the road. It was not anchored like the other vegetation, and more than once I nearly slipped and fell to the hard ground. 

Ten minutes into my walk, my new horse began to appear acting nervous. At first, it only seemed a little uneasy, but after five more minutes of walking it began to pull against me. I did not know what had the horse so upset, but I decided to tie it to a tree and make the rest of the walk alone. As I attempted to lash the horse to a tree, it began to panic. Desperately trying to calm the animal down, I failed, and it pulled away from me. I stood there helpless as I watched my newly acquired mount running away. I could only hope it stopped before making it too far. 

Wandering along the ancient road for almost another hour I finally rounded a large hill and caught sight of a massive wall built along side of that tall rise from which I continued to see that patrolling light every night since entering Flannery Pass. There were still a few more hills for me to navigate before I reached my destination, and I was unable to get a good look at the base of the wall. I wondered if I would have to climb the hill to reach the top or not, and I was happy to see a stone staircase leading up to the top as I rounded the final hill. 

The staircase was windy and steep. The ancient stones were covered in moss, and I found it to be very difficult to climb. It was next to impossible to walk over the slick green moss on the steps, and I found myself having to clear a spot on each step before I was able to progress. This took an incredible amount of time, and I really began to regret my decision to discover the source of that eerie light. 

By the time I reached the top of the ancient stone wall, it was getting near to being dusk. I had a clear view of much of the town of Flannery Pass from here, although I was too far away to see any people. It was really quite a beautiful view from here. I could see the majestic snowcapped mountains in the distance and the dark evergreen trees that covered much of the region. 

Horror filled me from head to toe once I looked down at the base of the stone wall. Heaped at the bottom of the wall was a ghastly pile of bones rising at least twenty feet up the side. The human skeletons stacked on top of the mound of bones were bleached white and appeared rather fresh as skeletons go. Some of those toward the bottom I could see were in the process of turning to dust and being overtaken by masses of thorns. 

I instantly regretted my decision to ignore the warnings of the people of Flannery Pass. I assumed their fears were nothing but old superstitions, but now I was beginning to believe their stories. The sun was beginning to dip below the hills, and I knew that light usually came out shortly after dusk. Now all I wanted to do was get away from here. Cursing myself and my curiosity, I turned around to leave and saw the most horrid, disgusting thing I ever witnessed in my life. 

Already standing on the wall beginning its patrol was the thing that walked this wall every night for eons, guarding a civilization that no longer existed. This thing, this abomination standing before me wore no clothing, so I was able to see every disgusting feature of its unholy body. Different parts of its body were in various stages of decay, but that was not the most horrifying part. Its hands, its arms, every part of its body was taken from a different corpse of the unfortunate souls that were foolish enough to venture to this forbidden place. 

Right there before me, the flesh golem grabbed its hair with its free hand and ripped its head free from its body. The sound was sickening, but the stench was even worse. Were I not in a state of shock at the moment, I probably would have vomited. The cursed being tossed its rotten head over the side of the wall and withdrew a sword dangling from its side. 

I wanted to run, I wanted to get away from this thing as fast as I could, but for some reason all I could do was stand there and watch it stepping toward me. Now I believed Eoin’s story about the Will o’ the Wisp, because this thing seemed to override my will and would not allow me to flee. It stepped forward and raised its sword up high. With one quick swipe, it sliced through my neck like it was butter. Never dropping its lantern, the unholy thing pushed my body over the side of the wall to join the thousands of corpses who proceeded me as my head fell to its feet. 

Putting away its blade, the abomination picked my head up from where it fell on top of the wall. Placing my severed head on its shoulders, the ghastly thing took in the beautiful scenery with its new set of eyes, my eyes. Until it rotted away, and this ungodly creature replaced it, my eyes, my face would watch over this region as it guarded this wall from an enemy that died out millennia ago. 

Oh, why did I not heed the warnings of the people of Flannery Pass. What I blew off as simple superstition, I should have seen as wisdom and experience. They did everything they could to help me survive through the coldest of the winter for me to ignore them and walk straight to my own death. I guess the people of that small town would know of my fate once they found my horse. 

Copyright © 2024

 

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Glass Coffin

Word Count: 6,495

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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