Short Stories of the Horror and Bizarre

Tag: Horror/Bizarre

Lake in the Mountains

Word Count: 5,772

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

It was only a dream, but was it really? 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

I was not sure if I could not hear them because of the city’s walls, or if I could not hear anyone because they were all dead, as in my dream. I wondered when I could go back in, if I could ever go back into the city of Argon. After leaving everyone behind, I did not know if I had any right to reenter the city. 

As I stood there in a state of shock, I watched as a small flock of birds flew over the pristine granite city walls. They made it perhaps fifty feet past the wall when they suddenly began to fall right out of the sky. It was like the air of Argon became poisonous. Not even birds flying over the city could survive. 

In its wrath, the Spirit of the Lake made the very air of Argon toxic to life. I knew at this point I would not be able to reenter the city any time soon, if I was ever able to reenter. The reality of the situation still had not caught up with me as it all seemed so impossible. Argon, the city that remained a shining beacon in the mountains for centuries, was wiped out in less than twenty minutes. 

I do not know why the Spirit of the Lake spared my life. Perhaps it was because I questioned the acts and motives of the city’s rulership. Perhaps it was because I refused to allow my unit to be a part of the slaughter of those poor people past Drawnbrass. Whatever its reason was for warning me, the Spirit of the Lake left me as the sole survivor of the once majestic city of Argon. With all of its riches now guarded by air that even kills birds soaring above the city, no one would ever again look upon that majestic city surrounding that crystal lake in the mountains. 

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When the Birds Fled

Word Count: 5,954

The sun scarcely peeked over the horizon when I heard the blasting off in the distance begin for the day. Several years ago, work on the railroad began in this region. More recently the demolition crews began to create a pathway through the mountains which would allow the trains to travel further east. I awoke to the sound of dynamite exploding every day for more than two months now. It was beginning to seem like they were never going to finish that daunting task. 

We had to relocate our cattle to the land of another rancher because the stress of the constant noise was causing some of them to fall ill. Our laying hens were producing a fraction of their normal yield, but we were not able to travel every day to collect the morning eggs. My family was going to have to make do with what food they did provide us. 

On this particular morning it did not take me long to tend to my daily duties. I got what livestock we still had at home fed and then pulled weeds in the garden with a couple of hours left until mid-day. I pulled a few carrots and other vegetables per my mother’s instructions and brought them in with me when I went in for dinner. My mother and sister took them to prepare the vegetables for the supper meal as my father and I ate. As soon as we finished up, it was back out working in the garden again. 

Normally during the summertime, we would nap after the midday meal, but no one could get any sleep with those deafening detonations going constantly. Instead, I helped my father hitch the horses and get the wagon loaded with hay to bring out to the cattle. Once he set off to the neighboring ranch, I started getting a recently cleared section of the garden ready for another planting. 

It was shortly after noon when the loud explosions from the demolitions happening only a few miles away stopped. I kept waiting for the unnerving blasts to resume, but they never did. I was glad to have at least a short break from the constant noise of the dynamite tearing apart the mountains. I did not know why they stopped, but I hoped it was not because of a fatal accident. Three people already died in the two months since the workers began. 

My father returned home several hours later, and he was as surprised and relieved as I was the noise of the blasting ceased, even if only for a few hours. Normally the explosions stopped a bit before sunset, so we hoped the crews were done for the day. I was helping my father unhitch the horses when they began to grow jittery and unsettled. As my father and I tried to calm the horses so we could get them disconnected from the wagon, the chickens began acting up as well. These horses were very well trained, but we could not get them to settle down at all. 

Finally, my father told me to help him get one unhitched and then we would take care of the other. As soon as the animal was free of the wagon, it ran off like a bat out of hell. This only caused the second horse to act up even more. We finally got him loose, but not before it damaged the wagon wheel. It was not until after the horses ran off and things got quiet when my father and I both noticed a deep moaning which seemed to come from the very earth itself. 

Why did the blasting stop all of the sudden? What did they do? 

Mother ran outside to see what was going on. She said the dishes were dancing on the shelves from the vibrations. We were just as baffled as she was, and we could provide her with no answers. Almost as if on cue, the sky became dark as countless birds burst forth from above the forest. All different species flocked together as they fled the distant mountains. The sounds of their collective cries were almost deafening. 

My father ushered my mother inside and came back out a few minutes later with a rifle for each of us and both of our six shooters. I did not know what he thought these were going to do against millions of birds, but I was glad to be armed anyway. We watched the spectacle unfold for more than half an hour, and when the birds were gone the groaning in the earth seemed to be stopped as well. 

We were both in something of a state of shock as we watched the black stream of birds fade off into the distance. Neither of us knew what to say, so we just stood there in silence for a bit. Eventually I was able to muster up the words to ask my father what was going on. He had no more of an idea of what was happening than I did. After another half an hour or so, he told me to go inside and keep an eye on my mother and sister while he tried to go and round up the horses. 

I could not see the horses anywhere around, so I hoped they did not run off too far. It was not an ideal situation for my father to go off by himself at the time, but someone needed to stay with the womenfolk just in case. My father was a tough man and was perfectly capable of taking care of himself. I did as he said and went back into the house with my mother and sister. 

I closed and barred all of the windows except for one, in front of which I slid a chair where I could sit and keep an eye for anything outside. My little sister was terrified, and my mother was doing her best to keep her calm. I am sure my demeanor was not helping them at all, but I had to keep my focus while I stood guard. 

It was almost dark when my father finally returned home with the horses. Luckily, they did not run off too far, and he found them drinking from a stream about a mile into the forest. By the time he came home, my sister already cried herself to sleep, and mother finished up cooking supper. With my father back, mother woke my sister and the four of us sat down to eat. 

Once the blessing was said, everyone was quiet through most of the meal, including my sister. As we ate our supper, I waited for my father to tell me about getting the horses, about anything to help me understand what was happening. Finally, I asked him if he saw anything out of the ordinary, but he said no. Hoping for a little more than an abrupt, one-word answer to my question, I wanted to probe him for more information. I knew my father though, and that would only serve to irritate him. 

Father began to talk once he finished his meal. He explained how he tracked down our horses and found them drinking from one of our best fishing streams. He did not see anything out of the ordinary. As a matter of fact, he did not see anything at all. Not only were the birds gone, there were no other animals to be seen with the exception of our horses. He was not sure if they were hiding, if they fled or if it was some of both. Father did not have a good feeling about the whole ordeal, and neither did mother nor I. 

The only one who slept well was my sister. Exhausted from all her crying earlier, she slept through the night. The rest of us could not stop wondering what was going on, what happened in the nearby mountains. 

Father woke me about an hour after sunrise. That was the first morning in months I did not wake to the sound of dynamite blasting away at the stone in the mountains. If it were not so disturbing, I would have found it a relief. I really had to wonder what happened up there. I could not imagine what would make them stop their demolitions after continuing day after day for months. 

Could they have caused a landslide or possibly an earthquake, and that was the moaning that seemed to be coming from the ground? 

Out of all the possible scenarios I could conjure to my imagination, those seemed to be the most plausable. I shared my thoughts with my parents, and they both agreed those seemed to be logical possibilities. They were not able to offer up any better explanations than those. Still feeling uneasy about the situation, we had chores that had to be done. 

After getting the chickens fed, I went back over to the wagon where my father was attempting to repair the damage caused by the horses the previous day. We were fortunate that the only damage they caused was to one of the wheels. There were two extras inside the shed, so I went to retrieve one of them. 

As I was in the shed moving things out of the way of the spare wagon wheels, one of our neighbors, Mr. Schmidt came riding up on his horse. I could not hear what he and my father were discussing, but I assumed it had something to do with the cattle we were keeping on his land. The instant the man rode away, my father began yelling frantically for me to hurry. Forgetting about everything else, I pulled one of the wheels free and let everything on top of it fall where it may. 

Why my father was yelling for me like this, I did not know. Never in my life did I ever see him in a state of panic such as he was in now. As I was running back to the wagon carrying the cumbersome wagon wheel, my father ran inside the house and was shouting something at my mother. Going back to the wagon, he told me to hurry as he waved his arms through the air. 

I was running as fast as I could, but that was not fast enough. Having waited only a few seconds for me to arrive, my father finally ran to me to help me carry the large wheel to the wagon at a more rapid speed. We immediately started changing the wheel, my father being blunt in his instructions as he told me what to do to help. My mother and sister suddenly came out of the house carrying jarred vegetables and preserves. Loading these into the back of the wagon, the two ran back inside to grab more supplies. 

Trying to ask my father what was happening did me no good at the time, as every time I spoke my father gave me more instructions. No sooner did we get the wheel replaced, than my father told me to go get the other spare wheel while he took care of getting the horses. Whatever was going on, I hoped the horses did not go crazy like they did yesterday. All this effort in a frantic rush would be worthless if our animals acted up again. 

My mother and sister were still loading the wagon with whatever supplies they could. Father was already at the wagon with both horses by the time I returned with my charge. I got the weel mounted on the back of the wagon as my father finished up with the horses. We helped my mother and sister finish loading the wagon and we left everything else we had in the world behind. 

Once we were going, Father finally began to explain why he just had us load the wagon with all the essentials and leave our poultry and livestock behind. The neighbor told my father the blasting crew from the railroad unearth something ancient, something evil that was imprisoned in the stone. I had a hard time believing it, but Schmidt said a lot of our neighbors were evacuating the region. This unknown horror consumed everything in its path. Mr. Schmidt sent his family ahead and was going around the area warning the neighbors. 

My father did not say what it was the demolition crews set loose because he did not know. Schmidt did not get into too much detail, but apparently, he was very convincing for my father to have us pack up and leave like that. He was a good person and allowed our cattle and few sheep to graze his land so they could be further away from the constant explosions. There was no reason for us not to trust him. 

Several hours before dark, we saw two more wagons ahead of us in the distance. The road was very difficult to see because it was overgrown with grass and other foliage, and in some places one had to know where the road was to find it. I recognized the families in the wagons. The lead wagon was that of a family who lived closer to the mountains than us. The second wagon was that of Schmidt’s family. Mr. Schmidt caught up to us as the sun began to set behind the trees. 

Unfortunately, he was not able to convince any of the other families in the area to flee their homes. They thought he was being hysterical and overreacting. Everyone in the region who knew Mr. Schmidt knew he was a good and honest, God-fearing man. He was not the kind to spread a panic just because of a simple overreaction. I had no real evidence to draw this conclusion, but I could not help but believe those families that did not heed their neighbor’s warning would be dead soon. 

When darkness came, the earth again started to moan as if the very land itself was in tormented agony. Somehow it seemed closer than it did yesterday, but that could be my terrified imagination deceiving me. I could not hear any insects in the grass or in the forest located only fifty feet away on either side. Everything seemed absolutely quiet except for those cries of pain coming from the ground all around us. We pulled two of the wagons abreast then had the women and children get in between. The men sat either in the wagons or on the ground outside of them. 

Everyone including the women, but excluding any children under nine years, were armed. Women out here had to learn to shoot every bit as good as a man with the wild animals, bandits and occasional vagabond. I had my rifle in my hand and my six-shooter on my hip. I carried as much ammunition as my belt would hold. 

The moaning in the ground stopped after two hours, so the men began taking turns sleeping, while the others helped keep each other awake and on their guard. The women did the same. Only the smaller children were permitted the luxury of sleeping through the night. 

I was still terrified when my turn to get a few hours of sleep came, but I was so exhausted both physically and mentally that I had no trouble drifting into a slumber. 

The sun was minutes from peeking over the horizon when my father woke me. There were already some eggs and coffee made. I had nothing to eat since breakfast the day before, and the food smelled absolutely inviting. It was of course an extreme relief to know nothing happened, not to us, during the night. 

We could all feel it. No one was talking about it, but we could literally feel the unholy aura of something that was supposed to remain buried. As soon as everyone ate and the horses were tended to, we were again on the move, taking the most direct path away from the mountains as possible. 

I hated when we had to pass directly through the forest instead of alongside it. At least when the road passed through a field, we could see almost to the range of our firearms. In the forest, something could be hiding behind every tree, underneath every rock. If something attacked our small caravan, we might not ever have time to react. 

We finally exited the timberlands and were about to rest our horses when the moaning once again emanated from the earth. Several of the smaller children began to cry as we continued forward. We were simply going to have to work our horses a little longer. Everyone here was experienced with farm animals, and we knew when they were almost to their limit. 

The crying of the earth did not last as long this time, but it sounded even louder than before. Whatever came out of those mountains appeared to be catching up to us. When the moaning stopped this time, we took the time to water the horses and let them graze. I pointed out to my father my observation, and he pointed it out to the others. While we gave the horses some much needed rest, all three families began going through their wagons and discarding as much as they could. If we could lighten the loads, the horses could travel longer and at a slightly faster pace. 

Leaving behind some of the cast iron pots and pans would greatly help reduce the load, but none of the women would agree to be the one to leave hers behind. The same went for several things for both the men and the women. No one wanted to agree to be the ones to part with what few things they had remaining in this world. I was afraid that, if we did not pick up the pace, all this fleeing would be in vain. Hopefully the adults could come to an agreement on who leaves what before it was too late. 

Around an hour before sundown, we met up with two more wagons, two more families fleeing from a south-western facing direction. The members of one family claimed they saw the ancient entity with their own eyes. According to their account, a giant black mass flowed down from the mountain consuming everything organic in its path. 

Everyone still wanted to make some distance before dark, so the other two wagons joined ours and we traveled for another hour. Once we stopped, we got the five wagons in a circle and started a small campfire in the center. Men were keeping guard from each wagon the entire night, sleeping in shifts as we had before. The O’Riley family, the family that saw the dark abomination, told us it would not do us any good to use guns if that thing caught up with us, but we all stayed armed nonetheless. 

Mr. O’Riley waited until the young children were asleep before he got into the specific details of what he saw. He watched as the flowing darkness burst through the forest line and into the field housing his flock. The unburied horror was engulfed in massive whisps of black smoke that seemed to appear and disappear constantly. The sheep began to melt as the thing approached them, with very little being left of them when it arrived. It was not only the sheep either. O’Riley said even the trees and bushes melted as the thing approached. 

I did not want to hear anymore, so I went to join someone in one of the wagons keeping a watch for the rest of us. There were fifteen fighting aged men now, so we would be able to take shorter shifts and sleep a little longer. I joined another young man my age, and for the first hour neither of us spoke. He was one of the O’Riley kids, and one of the few people here to witness what came down from the mountains. 

The O’Riley boy did not want to talk about what he saw, and honestly, I did not want to know. If we got away, I would never have to know those details. If we did not get away, I guess it really did not matter. Instead, when we finally started talking, we discussed where we thought we might go if we could not go back home. I mentioned going west where the government was handing out homesteads to whomever wanted it. There was not enough open land left to settle in the east, and none of our families had anything of value with which to start life over. 

That thought made us take a pause to think about everything we lost. We lost our livestock, we lost our land, we lost our homes and we lost most of our belongings. I wondered if those neighbors who did not believe Mr. Schmidt’s warning were still alive, or if they melted away like the O’Riley’s sheep. The thought made me want to vomit. I tried to think of something else, but my mind kept going back to those who stayed behind. I never asked the O’Riley boy about their neighbors, and he never brought them up. 

Thank goodness I knew better than to hold my rifle with my finger on the trigger, because my father came up behind us and told me to lay down and get some sleep. I jumped and almost fell to the ground. Once we climbed out of the wagon, my father climbed in. 

I thought it would take me some time to get to sleep, but I again fell asleep very quickly. The exhaustion and anxiety wore on me more than I thought, but in this case that was a good thing. I did not want to lay there for hours wondering if something was going to get me during the night, so drifting into unconsciousness quickly was a blessing. 

I awoke minutes before the sun broke the horizon when the ground began to groan and vibrate underneath me. Everyone was up with their firearms in hand faster than a jackrabbit with its tail on fire. We all circled around the inside of the wagons protecting ourselves from every direction. Minutes passed and the sun began to illuminate the new morning. No one saw anything out of the ordinary, but we kept on our guard for ten minutes after the moaning stopped. The womenfolk got breakfast ready as the men took care of getting the horses hitched back up to the wagons and the gear packed again. 

We ate quickly and loaded back up into our wagons. Some of the children would not eat, as children sometimes do, so the parents finished feeding them as we were on the move. The moaning in the earth that morning was louder than it ever was, and everyone wanted to put as much distance between us and the mountains as we could. 

When the wagon train stopped to allow the horses to eat, drink and get a bit of rest, we started going through the wagons and settling on who was going to leave what behind. The women did not want to leave their cast iron cookware behind, but there was no point in having all five wagons weighted down with them. Despite all the arguing the first time this proposal was made, the adults were able to come to an agreement rather quickly. 

As we continued about our way, we left a whole wagon’s load of things behind. That should allow our horses to move a bit faster and for a slightly longer period of time. As far as we knew, only five families managed to escape the horror released up in the mountains. 

How many people were going to die in the name of progress? 

I wondered if that thing, that mass of black the O’Riley’s saw descending from the mountains was following us. There was so much in the way of livestock for it to eat, it seemed rather foolish to think it was following us specifically. I tried to tell myself that, but every time we heard the moaning in the ground, it was louder than it was the time before. Every instinct in me told me whatever this thing was, it was pursuing us. 

Did it see the O’Riley family and was following them? Could it be they led the thing to the rest of us? 

Trying not to let such paranoid thoughts build up in my head, I turned to the back of the wagon to see if there was anything I could do to help my mother. That was when I saw it off in the distance. Initially I thought my frightened mind was simply playing tricks on me, but after a few moments it became clear I did indeed see a dark mass headed in our direction. 

I screamed out to everyone what I saw, and once they turned and looked at it for themselves, the drivers spurred the horses as fast as they could get them to run. The thing was just as the O’Riley father described. It appeared to be a mass of fluid darkness with giant whisps of smoke forming and quickly dissipating. To me it seemed like the ebony horror was trying to create tentacles, but they continued to dissolve as fast as it could make them. 

Everything, every tree, every shrub, anything that was alive or once alive melted away as the thing from a time long before man approached it. By the time the main body of the thing reached a location, absolutely everything organic was gone. It was almost like this thing was digesting its food even before it reached it. 

Everyone began throwing whatever they could out of the sides of their wagons hoping to gain a little more speed. The dark terror was still a long way behind us, but it was moving very fast for something of its immense bulk. After unloading virtually everything but our food, we began to put some extra distance between us and the black mass. That thing from the netherworld was moving almost as fast as we were, and we were driving our horses as hard as we could. 

I was sure our horses would reach the point of exhaustion before we could put a safe distance between us and that thing whose name was lost to time. The rail-road demolition crews never considered what they might be unearthing with their constant dynamiting of the mountains. There was no doubt the reason they stopped blasting is because this thing ate them first. Now the few surviving families from the region were fleeing for dear life. 

Suddenly something quite unexpected happened. The large mass slowed and eventually stopped its progress. Giant ripples rolled across its entire form as it slowly began to sink into the ground. As it slowly faded from view, the earth all around us began to moan. It was almost as if the earth was groaning with pain as this thing sank down into it. When the last of the mass disappeared, the moaning ceased. 

Now we knew this deep sound meant it was going dormant for a time. Everyone assumed this entire time the moaning meant the thing was on the move, when it turned out that was when it was, for the lack of a better phrase, going to sleep. Perhaps it could only stay active for a certain time, or perhaps it reached its feeding limit. Whatever its reason for sinking into the ground was a mystery to us, but everyone felt a large measure of relief when the thing vanished. 

It would be counterproductive to continue pushing our horses at this speed. We would literally drive them to death if we did not stop. The men were trying to remain calm, or at least put on the façade of being calm, but the younger children were in hysterics. As the women tended to the little ones, the men tried to decide what to do. We let the horses rest and graze as we debated our options. 

Eventually it was decided it would be best if we left two of the wagons behind. The Schmidts already had three horses for their wagon. If we took four off two of the wagons and put them on the remaining two, we could greatly increase our speed. Keeping the oats, grits, and meat and vegetables that were dried to preserve them, we ate everything we could of the jarred food and left the rest behind. Only keeping enough water for drinking, we had to hope we could find some fresh water with which to cook when it came time. 

Praying the reduced number of wagons and continually decreasing weight of the wagons we kept would give us the boost we needed, we were on the move once the horses were sufficiently rested. All of us could not help but wonder, since the moaning occurred when the monstrosity sank into the earth, would we have any warning if it became active and came for us. 

Only keeping the horses at a slow run, the idea was not to drive them too strenuously so we could make the greatest distance possible for the day. If we disabled the horses, that would be the end of us all for sure. There was no possible way we could travel fast enough on foot to stay ahead of that thing, that entity that killed everything it approached. 

Fully aware of the direness of our situation, no one spoke for some time. I thought everyone was in a mild state of shock. I knew that to be the case for me. My mind was almost a complete blank. I could not think of anything but the image of the flowing mass of black death. The sight of it was vividly burned in my mind, and I could now understand why the O’Riley family did not like to talk about it. 

When we stopped again to allow the horses some rest, we stopped by a nice clear stream. I looked around at everyone, and all of us except the small children were holding one or more guns. For a moment I thought I was literally going to chuckle. I could not imagine what we thought we were going to do with that flowing horror with these tiny weapons. 

A sickening dizziness washed over me when I realized there was another very good reason to keep our guns very close. It was an idea I did not want to consider, but if I was ever going to consider it, this was the time. Having witnessed the way living things melt away like ice in the hot sun in the path of the approaching wall of death, it would be wrong of us not to spare the women and children that gruesome fate. 

It felt like I should cry over the thought of having to carry out such an action, but I was far beyond the point of terror. It was almost as if I felt nothing at all. I looked at my little sister standing next to my mother and tried to resign myself to the fact that I may very well have to carry out this act. My father was standing close to them with his rifle in hand. 

As I stared at them, my father turned and caught my gaze. He patted the butt of his gun then turned his head to my mother and sister. I put my hand on my six shooter and nodded my head, indicating to him I understood what he was telling me. I could not believe my father and I were having such a cold, silent conversation as this. 

Less than two minutes later the men started to gather together rather than getting the horses hooked up to the wagons. I reached the group in time to hear them agree, we were not going to get away from whatever this giant horror from inside the heart of the mountain was. We had to do the merciful thing and spare the women and children the fate that would be coming upon us very soon. 

The conversation came to an end, and each man went to his respective family. I looked at my beautiful little sister, and it saddened me deeply that she would not grow up to have children of her own someday. I could tell she was scared, even though she was not saying anything. Mother told my sister to stay calm, that everything was going to be just fine. Grabbing a blanket, my mother draped it around my sister so she would not see what was about to happen. 

With tears streaming down her face, Mother mouthed the words “I love you both” then turned her head to the ground. I raised the barrel of my rifle, and my father did the same. Someone pulled the trigger and fired off a shot, igniting a volley of gunfire all around the camp. In three seconds it was all over with. 

All the men stood in absolute silence except for one man who was cursing God at the top of his lungs for making him do what he just did. My mother and sister lie there on the ground as my mother still had her arms wrapped tightly around my sister. Nothing seemed real anymore, this all seemed like some horrible nightmare from which I would soon wake. 

Suddenly I felt a searing stinging sensation on my right arm. I glanced down to see what it was. It appeared to be some sort of insect or arachnid. It only had four legs, and its shiny black body reminded me of the look of shattered obsidian. It bit a salt grain sized piece of my flesh loose and flew away. Almost immediately I felt another pain in my ear, and in seconds I had dozens of these things biting me. 

The other men in the camp were being eaten as well, with most of them screaming and trying to swat the carnivorous bugs off their bodies. I dropped my gun in a futile attempt to rid myself of the flying pests. We never saw whisps of smoke coming from the creeping mass; we saw swarms of biting bugs engulfing the black horror. 

That was why it looked like everything melted as the eldritch monstrosity approached. These tiny bugs consumed everything bite by bite and returned it to the main body. The ebony horror was made up of an unfathomable number of these small mineral-like insects. 

More and more of the biting creatures arrived, and my whole body felt like it was on fire. Piece by piece they pulled me apart. My father raised his gun to end the pain for me, but the gun fell from his hands as the diminutive monsters rapidly consumed his fingers. Although the pain did not last any more than a few minutes, it felt like an eternity. As these things carried my body away in small bites to feed the main mass, I tried to think and take comfort knowing my mother and sister were spared this horrible death. 

My family, as did others, assumed the blasting in the mountains stopped because there was some sort of major accident. It was disconcerting when the explosions we became so accustomed to hearing suddenly ceased, but we still did not have any reason to believe we needed to evacuate. We did not pay attention to nature, and now we had to pay the price. There was a good chance we could have escaped the flowing hoard if we had left when the birds fled. 

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Shadow in the Corner

Word Count: 4,879

I was the proprietor of a very prosperous antique shop just a short ways outside of Nashville, Tennessee. The store itself was almost an antique. I purchased the establishment twenty years ago from someone who owned it for fifty years before me. He inherited the store when his elderly uncle passed away who maintained the business for decades before that. I managed to get most of the antiques I sell for next to nothing, which made my store a very profitable one indeed. 

There were so many people out there who had absolutely no idea of the value of some of the things they owned. Many country folk had furniture and household items that seemed old and worn to them, but their antiques could bring me loads of money from the right customers. Uneducated people were my best prey. I could buy many things for pennies on the dollar when people were unaware of what they really had. The trick was to never allude to the true value of an item. If I did this, people would expect to receive that much money from me for it. I had to turn a profit, so I was deceptive and made them believe their things were only slightly sellable. 

Periodically I turned the management of my store over to one of my more trusted employees while I went off on one of my antiquing tours. I recently received word from a couple of pickers with whom I was familiar that they found some artifacts neither of them could identify. They called me so that I could go and have a look at them myself. 

When I entered the destination into my GPS device, it looked like I had a ten-hour drive ahead of me. That was if I drove nonstop until I got there. If I left at 5:00 am, I should make it to the location by 3:00 pm. I knew to expect serious heat and humidity, so I brought along a cooler filled with plenty of bottled water. Sunscreen and mosquito repellent were essentials in that region. In addition, I brought a duffel bag filled with a week’s clothing, toiletries, and a first aid kit. I also loaded several worn pieces of luggage filled with the sort of clothing one might find typical country rednecks wearing. 

I had several sets of forged ID’s. These and the proper attire allowed me to fit in and appear to be more like the people from whom I purchased my antiques. Playing different roles seriously affected my profit margins for the better. When people felt a connection, it was easier to work out a discount, and the bigger the discount was, the more money that ended up in my pocket. Over the years I learned to imitate various accents from around the country, and this allowed me to talk the part as well as look the part as I cheated the locals out of their valuables. 

My drive took me near Tunica, Mississippi and its multitude of casinos. What a waste, I thought. These people go and throw away their hard-earned money in these gambling dens. It was like they could care less if they had any disposable income or not. That was not for me, not in any way shape or form. I worked hard for my money and, I would rather go to Hell than to throw it away at a casino. 

My ex-wife used to spend my money like there was a well in our back yard full of an infinite amount of cash. Before she left, we fought almost constantly over our finances. We fought so much over finances that it finally ended our marriage. I thank God I had her sign a prenuptial agreement before taking our vows. Otherwise, she would have left with half my money or more. She tried suing me several times, but all she did was waste our time and her money. 

I finally got my SUV loaded before the sun rose over the horizon. By the time dawn broke, I was already on the road for thirty minutes. Shortly after I crossed the Mississippi state line, I began to see Spanish moss in the trees. As I drove further, the hanging plants draped over the tree branches more and more thoroughly. The stuff was everywhere, and it increased the darkness produced by the shade of the trees by threefold. 

Spanish moss always gave me the jitters. It filled me with the sensation of driving through a dark and haunting forest. The masses of the light green, stringy plant looked to me like giant cobwebs. I always expected a hoard of monstrous arachnids to swarm out from every direction and engulf my car. No matter how many times I drove through this region of the country, I never got over the eerie creepiness I felt when traveling through there. 

I found the roads of Mississippi to be rather hilly, and in some places the highways were in serious need of repair. Were I not in my SUV, I would have bounced up and down on my seat like a petite woman on a roller coaster. Caught up in my thoughts, I lost track of time. Before I realized it, I crossed the border into Louisiana. It was like suddenly journeying to another world. The hills and pine trees of Mississippi gave way to endlessly flat land with only a scarce tree here and there. I was unable to see very far into the distance because the intensity of the humidity produced a visible haze. 

I passed fields of corn, cotton, and even watermelons. I never knew that watermelons grew on vines, but I supposed that made sense. They were obviously too heavy to grow in trees. Quite frequently, I passed dirt roads leading off into the fields. Several of the dirt roads were actually marked as state highways. I saw highways in bad shape, but never made of dirt. There was not even any gravel on some of the roads, just the iron-rich red clay. 

For some reason my GPS device suddenly stopped showing me where I was. The little blue dot indicating my location was still in the center of the screen, but the map showed no roads anywhere near my current location. For a moment I thought of turning around, but I was sure to find a service station or something where I could obtain directions to my destination. 

A sense of relief washed over me when I saw a small billboard that read, “Grandma’s Antiques and Broken Cookies.” To be honest, my curiosity of the broken cookies roused my anticipation and wonderment more than the idea of browsing the antiques. I never saw a billboard advertising broken cookies before. I passed several signs advertising the place, each time displaying the number of miles remaining to the destination. I wondered more and more what the signs meant by broken cookies. 

I reached the establishment to find it was a beautifully restored plantation house. The building was in immaculate condition, so I figured it was probably restored fairly recently. The grounds were covered with a vibrant green grass, and several moss filled trees dotted the landscape. Rose bushes lined the front and side of the building and displayed beautiful blossoms of yellow and red. The parking area was a large gravel plot located just off the main drive of the house. 

The large, wooden front door was wide open, so I walked in without knocking. The downstairs vestibule was converted to a reception area. A couch and several chairs formed a conversation area to my right and a television viewing area to my left. Engrossed in a romance novel, a late-middle aged woman sat behind a desk. I did not want to startle the woman, so I tried to make a little noise as I approached. 

“Well hey there darlin’,” the lady greeted me kindly. 

For her age, she was quite an attractive woman. I thought her amazingly beautiful blue eyes gave her an angel-like quality. 

“Howdy, my name’s Margret,” she said kindly as she placed her book behind the counter. “How can I help you?” 

I explained to her where I was trying to go. She informed me I was far off the path. 

“See, the problem with those satellite gadgets is they don’t know all the back roads,” she explained. “Ata you leave here, your gonna’ go nineteen miles to da junction ‘a dis road and the highway. Hit L0014, at’ll be on your right. Turn ata way and you’ll be there in a hop, skip, and a jump.” 

Before I turned to leave, I had to inquire as to the nature of the broken cookies. 

“They’re just that,” she replied. “We make one big cookie in a sheet and break it into manageable pieces. They’ve become something of a novelty in these parts.” 

I do have to say I was a bit disappointed when I found out they were literally broken cookies. I cannot say what I was expecting them to be; the name was rather straight-forward. It stood out as odd on their billboards, which I supposed was the whole point. I could not help but wonder how many people stopped here simply because of the unusual advertisement. 

After purchasing a generously filled bag of broken cookies, I thanked the kind lady for her assistance and turned toward the exit. 

“You might wanna’ consider waitin’ till sun-up,” the woman said, almost sounding as if she were warning. “Most people around here are going to be hitting the bed soon.” 

Part of me thought she was only saying that to get me to rent a room for the night. Another part of me took her very seriously. I did not think she was trying to scam me, as she seemed like a very sincere woman. 

“Whilst you’re stayin’ here, you’re more than welcome to browse round our antiques,” she added to seal the deal. 

I decided to accept her advice and procured a room for the night. I drove almost for twelve hours, and I could really use a shower and a comfortable bed. I did not see any problem waiting until morning to reach my destination. I anticipated the room would be rather expensive, but it was no more expensive than a halfway decent motel in the city. 

“How’s about we give you room twenty-two. There ain’t anything on that side to make noise and it’s got a heavenly view,” the woman said. “My boy’ll bring your bags to yer room for ya. When you’re freshed up, maybe ya can come down’n browse the store.” 

I thanked the woman for her generosity, took the key, and made my way to the second floor. It amazed me when I saw the room. I expected it to be nice, but it was truly incredible. It was the kind of room I would expect from a four-star hotel and not at half-star hotel prices. 

Not even five minutes later, the bellboy arrived with my bags. He bore a striking resemblance to the woman downstairs. It was obvious he was her son, nephew, or possibly grandchild. 

I gave the nice boy a ten-dollar tip and inquired as to where I might find a hot meal. 

“Oh, well, we ain’t got no menu. But Grandma can fix up just ‘bout innithin,” he said with a strong southern drawl. “Ya jus’ gonna’ hata order soon though. She don’t like stayin’ up no later than nine.” 

Such Southern hospitality. People up north were never this polite and accommodating. In a B & B, the boarder ate when the food was ready, not the other way around. It sounded like the woman downstairs would prepare me a fresh meal on the spot. 

“Well my boy, you probably know your grandmother’s cooking better than anyone,” I said. “What would you suggest?” 

Without hesitation the lad gleefully said, “I’d pick the lamb wit beans’n rice. A bowl of Momma’s gumbo’d go great wit dat. Aint’z hot’z dem Cajuns make it, but it sho is good.” 

I asked the boy to bring me the meal he recommended and tipped him four more dollars for his kindness and hospitality. 

“Yon’t it now?” 

Trying to act kind, I told the boy that I did not want to rush them. I would take the meal whenever it was ready. He said he would bring it up to me in thirty minutes or so. I could not believe it. For these prices, I was even getting room service. With the right marketing strategies, this place could be a Mecca for travelers in the South. These people seemed perfectly content with what they had. There were only four other cars and a rental truck in the guest parking lot. I did not see how they could possibly make enough money to keep this business up and running. 

Dinner was fantastic. The soup that was called gumbo in the North was nothing like thick stew this woman made. It had to be one of the most exquisite things I ever ate in my life. Like the boy said, the gumbo was hot but not sufferingly so. The beans and rice with the stewed lamb could go for top dollar in any elegant restaurant. 

After I finished the delectable meal, I decided to head back downstairs and browse through the antique collection. The study and toreador of the house were converted into the antique shop. The first object to catch my attention was an obscure artwork that I only ever saw in a book, a very old book. The tome describing the item was so old it was written in a very early English. 

The item consisted of a mass of thin metal bars comprised of a variety of metals. The bars twisted, split, intertwined and again converged with one another. It was a depiction of an ancient god that possessed no corporeal form. Therefore, it was sculpted as things twisting, combining, diverging and reemerging. I tried to stow my excitement as I picked up the object to examine more closely. From what I saw, this was the real deal. This thing was thousands of years old, and these people had it on display with a collection of other, mundane objects. 

This was the find of a lifetime. The family only had it marked for two hundred dollars. There was no doubt that I could resell it for thousands of times that amount. As I searched around some more, I found that almost everything in the shop was underpriced. Some of the things were ridiculously underpriced, so much so that I was confident I could make a great profit from them. 

I found a jasper obelisk standing a little more than a foot tall. The edges were lined with pure silver and dotted with a color sequence of tiny gems. The metal capping the top was very strange. It looked like gold at first, but upon closer inspection I realized it was something altogether different. It almost looked like quartz filled with tiny flakes of gold and platinum. 

Inscribed on all four sides of the obelisk were small, strange hieroglyphs. I knew by their obscurity that the obelisk was four thousand years old at minimum. The type of jasper from which the obelisk was carved was completely mined out even before the birth of Christ. 

I suddenly jumped when I thought I saw something moving behind the stands of rare items, but when I turned my head to look, I saw nothing. I wanted to try to get a look behind the display cases to see whatever it was. Unfortunately, I could not get to it without overturning some of the tables. I was sure it was probably just a play on the shadows, an optical illusion of sorts. Nothing could move back there without at least bumping the tables. 

The last thing I found made me want to erupt with excitement. It was a carving grossly mislabeled as a Chinese bird figurine. The object resembled a glider, the type of glider so popular in the 1980’s, but the aerodynamic design would even be an improvement on today’s predator drones. This thing was incredibly ancient, yet whoever created it had to have a deep understanding of aerodynamics. 

I could see that it was painted over many times, but I was sure of what I was looking at. Another object such as this one was found sealed in a sacred chamber in Egypt. Another was found in a recently discovered pyramid in India. Now I stumbled on a third. 

I continued to casually browse. I did not want to let on to my excitement over these finds. I examined the artwork of twisted metal bars and acted like I thought two hundred dollars was too much to pay. In reality, I knew that I could get millions for it. Finally, I brought the three items, along with some other worthless pieces, and started to the reception desk. 

Through my peripheral vision, I thought I saw a man moving behind the tables in the far corner of the room. Again, when I turned to look, I did not see anything. There was no possible way someone could be back there. The tables were pushed up against the wall. No one or nothing could fit behind there. I watched for a few minutes but saw nothing but the stationary shadows alongside the display cabinets. 

A very polite gentleman, who turned out to be the nice lady’s husband, told me he would pack the items securely and have them ready for me in the morning. As I walked up the stairs to go to my room, I passed another man dressed in business clothes someone would wear forty or fifty years ago. I greeted him with a hello, but he did not respond. 

The older man sitting at the desk said in a quizzical tone, “Hello.” 

I did not know why he thought I was talking to him, but I was tired and was looking forward to climbing onto that large comfortable mattress. I went on to the second floor, got to my room, and hit the bed hard. Bizarre dreams disturbed my night. I did not sleep well at all. I could not remember what my dreams were about, but there seemed to be an ever-present darkness stalking my slumber. I woke up feeling extremely paranoid and nervous. 

My purchases were safely packed in corrugated boxes stuffed with tissue paper waiting for me to pick them up. I asked the man if he would mind helping me carry the more than a dozen boxes to my SUV. He called his son and the two of them lifted up some boxes. The father walked out of the exit first, but then that rude man from last night walked in the door. I almost fell trying to avoid running into the man. 

“Watch where you’re going,” I said to him rather snidely. 

“I’m sorry,” the boy behind me replied. 

I turned to look back, but I saw no one except for the young boy. The man that so rudely pushed his way past me was nowhere to be seen. I thought maybe he went into one of the antique shops as soon as he entered the building. Still, it did not make sense for the lad to respond to me if he saw the man in question. 

The two loaded the packages like professionals, taking great care not to break anything. I gave them each a twenty for their help. What I recognized as appreciation was in fact their eagerness to depart with the three extremely valuable items. I always prided myself as being a good judge of character, but these people had me fooled. 

After the boy brought my bags down to my vehicle; I packed up, thanked the family, and set off on my way. I adjusted the rear-view mirror so that I could take one last look at the kind family. I saw the father, the mother, and the son all standing there. Just to the right of them was that strange dark man with the old hat. I rubbed my eyes and looked again, and the man was gone. 

I am not one to believe in ghost stories, but this guy was really making my skin crawl. I saw him three times, but no one else apparently saw him. Even in this bright daylight, the man appeared to be shrouded in shadow. 

I got back onto the main road and started my journey back home. I did not even continue to go on picking antiques. This find would bring me more money than anything I have found to date. These items were going to make me extremely rich. 

I reached up to adjust the mirror properly and found myself filled with indescribable terror. The shadowy man was sitting in my back seat. I slammed my foot on the brake pedal as hard as I could. Thank God for anti-lock brakes, or I would have probably gone into a skid on this old, worn highway. 

As soon as my vehicle came to a halt, I grabbed my knife from the center panel. With one fluid motion, I flicked the knife open and spun around to put the blade to the man’s throat. When I turned around, no one was there. 

Now I was a logical person. I saw the man last night and twice this morning. Those sightings I could probably rationalize away, but there was no way I could explain what just happened. The only possible explanation I could conceive of was my difficulty sleeping last night and the nature of my dreams were making me see things. 

I was so happy when I finally reached home late that evening. My driveway was such a welcome sight after driving those southern roads. I thought I saw that man once more during my drive. He was sitting at a bench in front of an old gas station. I knew there was no way he could have gotten that far ahead of me, but I was so sure it was him. 

Most of my load I left inside the SUV for the night. The only things I brought in were the three priceless items and one of my old suitcases. I planned to lock the rest of the things in the garage in the morning. For now, the alarm on my vehicle would warn me if anyone tried to steal anything. 

I found no rest that night. I felt something drawing me to the packaged objects I left sitting by the doorway. Eventually I could no longer resist this nagging urge. Moving as quietly as I could, I made my way out of the master bedroom and down the wide staircase. I froze when I thought I heard something below. I swore I heard someone walking around on the squeaky floorboards in the dining room. 

Of the antiques I personally collected, swords were one of my favorites. Beside me on the wall hung a centuries old katana, what most people call a samurai sword, and I cautiously removed it from its stand. Sliding it from its padded scabbard, I went sword leading, making my way down the stairs. I was very mindful in taking care to avoid the squeaky boards. Before I reached the last step, the sound in the dining room stopped. 

At first it seemed nothing was out of place. I could hear nothing, not even someone’s stifled breathing. I turned on the lights and my body almost melted in horror. The three boxes still stood by the door, but all of them were opened. All three of the artifacts were arranged on the dining room table. 

The objects were placed in a triangular shape with the face of each pointing to the center. All the obscuring paint on the mislabeled bird was gone to reveal the jasper figurine underneath. Now I could see that the surface of the glider was covered in those ancient hieroglyphs. I also noticed something I somehow missed before. The warped bars of metal comprising the piece depicting the formless god were engraved with long thin rows of the strange hieroglyphs. Without previously looking at them very closely, I thought the thin lines were no more than added decorations. 

After checking the door to see if it was secured and a thorough search of the first floor, I turned the lights off in all but the living room and the stairwell. I had an intense sensation that someone was staring at me from behind. I turned to look into the dining room and saw something move in the darkness. 

Brandishing my antique sword, I slowly made my way back into the dining room. Approaching the doorway, I reached over and turned on the lights. When the lights came on, they were much dimmer than usual. I thought it might be an electrical problem, and then I noticed a ghastly shadow blocking their glow. 

In the far right corner I saw that dark man. That shadow specter that followed me was now standing in my house. I held the sword up like a baseball bat and demanded he tell me who he was. 

“I am the one who dwells in-between,” he said with a slight northern accent. 

The cryptic response in his raspy voice meant absolutely nothing to me. I stepped forward and brought my sword up as if to swing it and insisted the man tell me who he was. 

“Who I used to be matters not. I am he who dwells in-between,” the shadow man repeated. 

I warned him not to move and shifted the shiny blade so that I could hold it in one hand. My cell phone was in my bedroom, so I reached over and picked up the receiver for the landline. Instead of hearing a dial tone, the phone produced nothing but static. Buried in the static, I could hear a chorus of voices speaking in a garbled tongue. Absolute terror finally took me. My bones tingled and my skin stung. Bursts of light filled my eyes and my soul cowered down to the very deepest of my being. 

When I hung up the phone, I must have taken my eyes off the ghostly man. I looked up, he was right in my face. I swung the sword and hacked a hole in his hip. He did not move at all. I took the sword in both hands, made a two-step backward and ran the blade tip first through his chest. 

Right before my eyes, this man who haunted me began to age rapidly, decaying in only seconds. Before his face was too far gone, the rasping voice said, “Thank you. Now it is yours.” 

The man’s body instantly crumpled into a pile of white dust on the floor. His aura still stood there, and he gazed at me with his heavenly blue eyes. The shadow man nodded his head as if to show me his appreciation and vanished in a wisp of vapor. 

After he was gone, and after I came to my senses, I realized I dropped my valuable sword on the kitchen floor. I knelt down to retrieve it, never taking my eyes off of that awful pile of dust. I must have missed the grip of the sword and I reached again. I could not feel the hilt of the ancient weapon in my hand; I could not even feel the floor. I looked down to see my hand pass through hilt and floor alike. 

Ethereal images of things not there before began to appear. Everything real around me became transparent and murky. The only thing that stood out, the only thing that looked real to me were the shadows. It was into these shadows that I felt myself drawn. I was somehow trapped in a space between spaces, a place that was part of no world but touched upon many. 

Standing in the ghostly image of my house was an obelisk twenty feet high and eight feet wide at the base. A massive door of gold, silver, and that strange metal I saw in the antique shop stood tall on one side of the structure. Also on this obelisk were the same hieroglyphs I saw on the items I purchased yesterday. 

This time I could decipher the writings. Without even knowing what language this was, I was as easily able to read it as I was English. As panic built up inside me, I wanted to turn and run, but where was I going to run. My world was now nothing more than an ethereal specter. 

From this time forth, it was my duty to make sure the door to this massive structure stayed closed. The hieroglyphs gave no indication of what was imprisoned inside the mineral obelisk, but I could not let it out. If the being, force or entity trapped within was ever released, it could bring about the destruction of every world with which this ethereal purgatory connected. In order to enable me to do this, I had to take the place of the former guardian and become that terrifying shadow in the corner.

Copyright © 2018

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When Darkness Fell

Word Count: 5,051

It was a cool, spring Louisiana night and the early season cotton was well on its way to blooming. On this particular day, in April of 1991, my large family came together for an old-fashioned crawfish boil. Many of my uncles raised rice, and during early spring they pulled hundreds of pounds of crawfish from the rice paddies a day. Every member of my family was there. All of my aunts, uncles and cousins showed up to the family event. 

As the crimson sun set, painting the distant clouds a beautiful orange on their underside, the mosquitos came out to feed. My cousin Ricky Ray and I decided to go for a drive. Lifting our cooler full of beer, the two of us walked to Ricky’s pick-up truck. I was checking my pocket for cigarettes when we heard my youngest brother, Justin Paul, calling out our names. I didn’t particularly want him coming with us, but Ricky Ray waved his hand for J.P. to catch up. Making J.P. sit in the middle, we climbed into the truck and headed along the dirt road. 

We headed East. There was a good swimming hole twenty or so miles from here at a bend in the bayou. My oldest brother – who was now away to college – tied a thick hemp rope to a tree overhanging the water. It was a popular spot and there was a good chance we would run into some of our friends there. We saw three trucks already present when we arrived. One belonged to my buddy, Mark Staton. The second truck we did not recognize but the third truck belonged to the Whitten boys. 

My family and the Whittens have carried on a cold-feud for several generations. No one could say for sure what caused the tension between our families. Only two fights between the families occurred over the last decade, but there was the ever-present tension among the clans. We didn’t really want to go swimming with the Whittens, but we were not going to let them keep us from our fun. I hoped they would leave when we showed up. 

I pulled off my socks and shoes immediately after exiting the truck, as did Ricky Ray. The ground was sandy and I always ended up with my shoes filled. The only sounds we heard were the crickets and the wind blowing through the tall grass. In that near silence, J.P’s flip-flops sounded like someone smacking water with an oar. 

“Why don’t you take them damn things off,” Ricky Ray griped at J.P. “People can hear us coming from a mile away.” 

Normally J.P. would have come back with a snappy comment, but because there were Whittens out here he did what Ricky Ray said. Even though there were only a couple of physical altercations between the families in years, we always expected one at any time. If the Whittens did decide to cause trouble tonight, there was no point in announcing our arrival. 

The old oak tree overhanging the water was visible in the near distance. The trunk of the venerable tree was more than four feet thick. It was a sapling long before the bayou ever cut its way through the flat landscape. Mark Sutton and his two younger brothers were playing on the swing when we broke the tall grass and into view. Two other fellows, a couple of strangers I’d never seen before, were standing near a fire.  

I knew the two weren’t from around here because they repetitively swatted at the relentless mosquitos. Everyone around here was used to the Louisiana blood hawks, very rarely even noticing them. The older folks in these parts said that mosquitos get used to the same old meal every night, so it’s like a buffet when new blood comes to visit. 

I learned that the new guys moved into Jep’s old farmhouse just a few miles South of here. Jep passed on some six or seven years ago and had nobody to which to leave his land. Old Jep was a devoted Christian man who likely never neglected a Sunday of church in his life. He put it in his last will and testament that the property was to be sold and the proceeds go to the church. I suppose Reverend Loftus was finally able to unload the unused land. 

I saw no trace of the Whittens and didn’t really care to inquire as to their whereabouts. Instead, we said hey to our old friends and introduced ourselves to our new ones. Come to find out, the new boys moved here from Austin, Texas. They were used to the dry heat of that city and were finding the humidity here to be unequivocally miserable. Setting aside their complaints about the mosquitos and humidity, these boys seemed alright. 

One of them asked me about the Whitten boys; he asked if we were friends. I shrugged my head, lightly shook my head and said, “Naw.” 

“Good,” the younger of the two elaborated. “They seem like a bunch of assholes.” 

“Then we got somethin’ in common,” Rick Ray chuckled as he offered them each a beer. 

These new fellows, Ken and Terry Greyson, brought some dark beer I was not familiar with. Terry offered us each a bottle. It was profoundly terrible, tasting almost burnt. I wanted to be polite, so I complemented the taste and finished it as quickly as I could. If I’m going to sip on a beer, it’s going to be one I like. 

It was Terry who first noticed the darkness. A spot in the sky was completly devoid of stars, and I was not sure if it was always that way or not. We all watched it and it appeared to be drifting slowly. I did not know if the motion was a result of the earth moving, the stars moving or the darkness itself moving. 

Our attention turned from the stars to the nearby forest. Someone just exited the forest and we could see the beam of a flashlight. Before long, Billy Whitten and two of his cousins emerged from the tall grass. Insults were exchanged then the Whitten boys hopped in their truck and left. 

As soon as their taillights faded from view, J.P. sprung with excitement and said “They were fuckin’ stoned man.” 

“You sure?” Ricky Ray asked with a new rising hope. 

“Shit yea. Didn’t you see how bloodshot their eyes were,” he said with enthusiasm. “That little Whitten was carrying a paper sack.” 

“We gotta go raid their crops man,” the youngest Sutton insisted. 

I was relieved to see that the Greyson boys had the same positive reaction to this news as we did. 

Someone had to stay with the trucks, so J.P., Terry and the youngest Sutton padded of into the grass. It was easy for them to follow the path beaten by the Whittens as the tall stalks broke easily and left no doubt someone recently passed through. The remaining five of us turned our attention back to that mysterious black spot in the sky. We weren’t sure if it moved, but it was doubtlessly larger than before. Chills ran through me as I noticed the edges of the darkness moving with a shifting fluidic motion. 

Half an hour later it was obvious to us that, whatever it was, it was falling toward the earth and it was falling slowly. A meteorite was immediately ruled out. Falling stars produce bright flames, not fluid darkness. We thought it might be a hot air balloon but that would produce an illuminating fire as well. 

The darkness altered course and now appeared to be descending at an angle. It was apparent that it was decelerating, like a man with a parachute. I attempted to convince myself that was the explanation, but I knew it was a lie. A parachute would block out the stars and produce no illumination of its own, but that theory went out the window as the darkness grew larger and larger. It was falling into the forest, falling toward my baby brother and the others. Clenching my eyes shut, I prayed it was no more than a figment of my imagination. My skin stung with chill bumps as it drew closer, emitting the sound of a thousand tortured screams. 

As if some force suddenly bore its grip upon us, all we did was remain petrified as the thing descended into the forest. In such a state of horror, I did not notice the bottle that fell from my hand. Cold beer soaked my feet, but I did not notice that either. As the bottle gurgled out its contents, all I could think of was that obscurity that fell to the earth.  

A muffled boom was faintly audible when the darkness landed. We tried to rationalize it as a man with a parachute, but the intense feeling of terror that chilled us to the bone told us otherwise. My heart welled up into my throat and I couldn’t breathe. My baby brother was out there somewhere in the forest with that terror from the sky. 

“What the fuck was that?” Mark asked in a whimpering tone. 

No one had an answer for him. 

Turning to Ricky Ray, I could see that he was petrified with the same horror we all felt. Brown beer splashed out of the bottle Ken had in his hand. He grasped the bottle so tightly in his hands, his fingers turned white. I was surprised the glass did not shatter under the pressure of his grip. 

Mark slid out of the truck and struck the ground with a soft thud. Balled up in the fetal position, tears streamed down his contorted face but he made no sounds of crying. Ken tried to help him up, but Ken wasn’t in much better shape than his brother. 

“T-tell me that was something normal,” Ken said in a wavering voice. “Tell me that’s like swamp gas or some shit like that.” 

None of us spoke a word. We were all mortified; none of us had any rational answers for why we were drowning in a quagmire of fear. I can’t say how long we stood there, too terrified to function. When a person is dredged in such terror, time has a way of ceasing to exist. 

Eventually I mustered the courage from deep within me and took a look at my watch. J.P. and the others left more than an hour ago. They should have been back from raiding the Whitten’s plants by now. Looking back to Ricky Ray, I could tell by the countenance of his face that he was thinking the same thing as me. Despite the horror that gripped my throat, I began to call out for my little brother and the others 

Ricky grabbed me by the arm and pressed his index finger against his lips. “Shh, listen,” he whispered. 

Initially I did not hear a thing. There were no insects, no frogs nor any of the myriad of nocturnal noisemakers. The creatures of the night were silent. The only thing I could hear was the light rustling of the leaves and tall grass as the wind pushed its way through the meadow. After a few moments I knew what Ricky Ray was telling me. I became aware of a strange wailing coming from the direction of the forest. The ghastly cries came from the same direction in which the darkness fell, from the same direction my baby brother went. 

It sounded like a choir of people crying out in agony. I felt a chill in my very bones. I knew, deep down inside, the sounds emanated from something not of this earth. 

Mark then insisted that, as a group, we go into the forest to look for our missing kin-folk. God knows that I did not want to go. Everything within me told me to flee, to get as far away from this tainted place as quickly as I could. I could not abandon my little brother though. I had to go find him. 

Mark grabbed the two shotguns from the rack on the back window of his pickup. Handing one of the weapons to Terry, Mark asked him if he knew how to use it. 

“I’m from Texas,” Terry replied. “Of course I know how to use it.” 

Mark grabbed a box of ammunition from under the seat of his vehicle. Fumbling the shells with their shaky hands, the two managed to load six shells into each weapon. A while back we modified them so they would hold more ammunition. It was illegal, but right now I was so glad that we modified the guns. I would take a cannon right now if I could get one. 

I took the hunting rifle from the rack of my truck and handed Ricky Ray the .22 caliber pistol I kept in the glove box. We all made sure our weapons were fully loaded then filled our pockets with the rest of the ammo. Unfortunately, there were not enough firearms for everyone, so Mark’s brother was left carrying nothing but a hunting knife.  

Mark and I were the biggest of the group, so we had the honor of taking the lead. We put Terry in the back and kept Ricky Ray and Mark’s brother in the center. Despite our desperate urge to flee, we managed to draw courage from one another. With our weapons in hand, we headed off toward the forest. 

The woodland was gloomier than it should be, even if it was a moonless night. The smell of the fallen pine needles filled the air, but an underlying odor stung my nostrils. The fallen needles and leaves formed a soft cushion over the sandy ground, which helped to muffle our steps. It felt like a beautiful night, but something intangible filled the five of us with intense trepidation. 

The screams seemed to fade into the night until we could hear nothing but our own footfalls. My mind struggled to form a rational explanation for the screams and for the lack of any other noises. We froze, petrified like statues when the unnerving wailing resumed. The screams did not sound to be coming closer; rather, the atrocious wailing appeared to be moving further away. When the cries of torturous agony subsided, there was nothing but silence. There were no birds, no crickets chirping; there was nothing but deafening reticence. 

So far, we could see nothing, but we knew we were close to where that demonic blackness fell from the sky. In the absolute silence, we were all too terrified to call out for our missing kin. Something hellish enough to quiet the calls of the nocturnal animals densely populating the forest lurked about in the night, and it made me sick to think we might draw its attention. I steadied my hand as I mustered up the guts to flip the plastic switch of my flashlight. I was not ready for what we found. 

Everything was dead. All of the heavy vegetation that once filled this area was gone. The once vibrant section of forest was now no more than a perimeter of death. As I shone my light about the area, it was obvious that we found the epicenter of the landing. In the center of the large opening there was nothing. Where we stood, the vegetation was dead, but it still remained. The closer to the center the plants were, the further along they were in their state of rapid decay. Even the skeletons of small animals that littered the area appeared bleached from years in the sun. It was as if something lurched time forward here, aging anything that lived a thousand years. 

On the far side of the impact side, I caught sight of something small glimmering under the light of my LED torch. Motioning with my free hand, I pointed out to the others what looked to be a polished metallic-shine. I apprehensively held my tongue, still too terrified to make a sound. My throat was dry and lips felt swollen. All I could manage was to aim my flashlight at the sparkling gleam and point with a shaky finger. Leading away from us in that same direction was what appeared to be a pipeline clearing. The long stretch of clearing shot out before us. Like an ominous invitation into the bowels of the most horrific, blasphemous abomination ever to be put on this earth, the wide pathway began on the other side of the circular epicenter of decay. 

I did not know if we stood there for seconds or hours. None of that seemed to have any meaning. It was as if the laws of time and space were changing around us. Eventually Ricky Ray bumped my shoulder with his muscular forearm nearly causing me to jump straight out of my own skin. My thoughts were coursing through my head so fast I thought my brain was going to hemorrhage. Snapping my head back, I saw that my cousin was motioning for me to stay at the edge of what was still forest. He indicated that he wanted us to go around, avoiding the center of the ring of decay, to follow the straight pathway on the opposite side. 

As we drew closer the reflections from our flashlights revealed a surface that could have been a long sheet of tinfoil. The gleam was smooth and stretched on as far as our torches could illuminate. When we reached it, we realized it was something entirely different. It was not the shine of metal. Instead, it appeared that something covered the pathway with a thick, viscous liquid resembling overused motor oil. Without a word spoken, the five of us began to follow along the ooze covered pathway. We took great care to stay far away from the trail of death, but in the blackness of the night it became difficult to see. There was no choice but to stay within six or seven feet of the nightmarish route. 

The stuff bore the nauseating stench of rotten fish, and it appeared that anything that black discharge touched instantly commenced to decomposing. Even at the edge of the contamination, the plants withered swiftly. So much so, it was visibly perceptible. We trudged onward, doing our best to continue to remain as far away from the trail of putrefied, fetid remains of what was very recently forest. I dared not even consider what the ooze would do if it were to make contact with one of us. 

Thorns tore at our clothes and skin like a thousand talons. Ken quietly murmured several complaints about the shrubbery tearing his arms, but none of us replied. His whispered voice seemed to echo in the silence of this abysmal night. Ken was the first to notice; the only foliage the ghastly substance appeared to spare were the thorns. As everything else decayed right before our eyes, the briars remained unchanged. I asked myself why the putrid goo only spared the thorns. It made no sense.

What nightmarish thing created this path of decomposition? 

A glimpsed of relief filled me when I spied with my flashlight someone up ahead leaning against a tree. Ricky Ray softly called out several times, but whoever it was did not answer. Mark vociferously shoved his way through the merciless undergrowth, reaching the silent person before the rest of us. My long-time friend rounded the large pine and froze, his face contorted in absolute panic. 

“Who is it?” Ricky Ray asked. 

Mark was paralyzed in sheer terror and made absolutely no response. I motioned for the others to stay in place and drudged my way through the ripping thorns so that I could see what was going on. I could swear that most of the damnable briars only recently appeared. The pain was unbearable and I could feel the blood trickling down my arms, legs, and torso. A dense thicket prevented me from walking directly to the tree, so I poked whoever it was with the tip of my shotgun. With that little push, the body propped against the tree fell to the sandy ground. It was the youngest Sutton boy, or at least what was left of him. 

No visible wounds were apparent on the body. There were no cuts, no tears from the briars, no damage what-so-ever. I prayed that I was caught in the midst of a cruel nightmare. I could not understand how God could let something like this happen to a person. What I saw was more gruesome, more repugnant than anything I could create in my own imagination. The head on the Sutton boy’s body was gone. His head was not cut off; there was no blood and no stump where his neck should be. It was like there was never a head on the body in the first place. There was nothing but undamaged flesh stretched from shoulder to shoulder. 

The body of the youngest Sutton boy laid there on the ground, its chest heaving up and down as with panicked breaths. Mark fell over the body and cried. I grabbed the boy’s right wrist and found that the headless body still had a pulse. I never heard of any such blasphemous thing in my life, and neither had any of the others. I was past the point of fear, or terror and of shock. Everything around me became a haze as I glared down at the atrocious thing that lay before us. It seemed impossible, but Mark’s headless youngest brother was still alive. 

Mark must have seen something. Waves of terror coursed through me as I heard my friend fire off two shots. In the dead silence of this unbearable night, the blasts from his shotgun caused my straining ears to ring. Fire was clearly visible in the unnatural darkness that surrounded us. He screamed in uncontrollable anger as he sprinted across the clearing. As soon as that poor boy touched the viscous blackness it climbed up his body and engulfed him in less than a second. Terry fell to the ground retching and Ricky Ray averted his eyes. Right before me I watched as Mark’s flesh melted off the bones like hot wax. He tried to call out, to beg for help, but only scarlet blood mixed with thick ooze emanated from his mouth. 

The scene continued on for an eternity; although, it only took thirty seconds for the boy’s body to melt. There was no doubt that he felt every bit of it. I staggered and fell as the skeletal remains of my friend clattered to the ground like a pile of dry sticks. The atrocious death of that poor kid ran through my mind over and over, playing like a skipping CD. The darkness that fell from the sky consumed the soft tissues of that boy’s body and made him suffer through it all. It must be the end. God set the devil loose on us. 

Ken must have seen something because he fired off two shots then ran along the side of the trail with astounding speed. I could not see what it was, but my new friend spotted something. I did not know what to do. I just watched the ooze consume Mark Sutton, and the other Sutton lay before me with no head atop the body. Ricky Ray, unable to stay at this appalling site, set off after Ken. I resolved to the fact there was nothing I could do here and followed the others. Ignoring the searing pain, I followed Mark for around a hundred yards or so and the demonic trail ended. Whatever created it, it took a sharp left toward the direction from which it came. Ken already rounded the bend and with incredible speed, disappeared into the night. 

Ricky Ray and I tried to keep up with the Austin boy, but he was moving too fast for us. I could no longer ignore the tears that covered my flesh; trickles of blood dripped from every part of my body. Cautiously, we moved further away from that putrid trail and found that the thorns thinned to virtually nothing. The trail was no longer visible, but we could clearly see the wall of thorns that ripped at our flesh. 

Ten minutes or so later we could hear something thrashing in the briars. A foreboding thickness filled the air as we warily approached the sound. It was Ken, or what was left of him. Like the youngest Sutton brother, Ken had no head. My friend suffered even worse of a fate than the Suttons. Not only was he missing his head, both of his hands were gone along with his right leg. What remained thrashed in the thorns, no blood dripping from tears in his flesh. 

The stillness of the night suddenly rang out with the agonizing cries of hundreds of wailing voices. I knew that hell itself came to claim us when I saw the thing. Having the shape of a giant slug, the surface of the abomination was coated in a dark leathery flesh. It was pocked with the twisted faces of countless people, calling out in agony and begging for death. 

The horror pushed its massive body by means of a series of legs. Like a centipede, this thing of the nether reaches of existence pushed its way along using a series of appendages lining both sides of its horrendous body. The appendages were not legs, not in any normal sense of the word. Some were human arms, only with feet. Some were human legs ending in a random assortment of hands and feet. Scared beyond all rational thought, all we could do was stand there. 

The demon from the sky reached Ricky Ray first. A mass of faces screamed in unison as they stretched and twisted, creating a long pseudopod. Ken’s tortured face was at the tip, which widened large enough to engulf my cousin’s head. Falling to the ground, the head from his body was gone. Another mass of damned faces reached out and consumed both of his legs. 

Suddenly the thing froze, the voices falling to weeps and sobs.  A grouping of faces screamed out in pain as they began to stretch apart. Pushing its way into the thick hide of the nightmarish thing was my cousin’s face. New legs sprouted out from each side of the thing and it again moved forward. I fired all six of my rounds at the monstrosity approaching me, but all it seemed to do was cause the assimilated heads of countless people additional pain. 

I heard this behind me because I turned and ran. My gun and flashlight were gone. I aimlessly ran away from the trail of that ungodly entity. I ran until I was exhausted and my body burned with fatigue, then I ran some more. The sun broke the horizon and I collapsed. My skin stung all over from the talon-like claws of the briars, my muscles ached from being pushed beyond the point of exhaustion. 

The glorious rays of the sun shone down upon me like a blessing from the angels. For over an hour, I laid there basking in the holy warmth. When the pain subsided enough that I could move, I climbed back to my feet. For hours I wandered without any idea of where I was. The sounds of the frogs, crickets and other insects began to sound, and I found the simple songs of the forest to be the most beautiful thing I heard in my life. 

Eventually I again found the wide trail that abysmal thing left in its wake. The ooze was dried and flaking away in the morning breeze. I located the mutilated bodies of everyone but J.P. I even found the stacked remains of that poor Sutton’s skeleton. Some force drove me to gather the bodies of Ricky Ray, Ken, and Mark together. It may have been my own will, but that was something I would never learn.  

I could not allow them to remain in such a condition. Retrieving one of the shotguns from nearby, I loaded its empty chamber with six shells. The first I fired directly into the chest of the Austin boy. The smoke cleared and no wound appeared on the body. The aberration that lay before me thrashed and lurched. All I did was cause it additional pain. My soul went cold as I fired another shot into Ken’s torso, only to repeat the same results. That thing from the darkness that consumed their body parts would not let them die. 

By the time I reached my truck, it was already close to nightfall. Using the pathway the horror from beyond created as it pushed its unholy form through the forest; I drove my truck to where the three bodies were stashed. Along the way I picked up the jerking, kicking body of the youngest Sutton. I removed a shovel from the bed of my pickup and began to dig. Deep into the late hours of the night I forced my wary body to dig a pit in the sandy ground large enough to accommodate the four bodies. After tossing the living remains of Ricky Ray and those other three boys, I threw the sand back over them until I could see no more motion underneath. 

Throwing my shovel to the side, I drove my truck and stopped it directly over the buried remains of those undying bodies. In the bed of my truck was a large plastic gas can that was used primarily for my boat. I removed it and emptied its contents into the sandy ground, making sure to splash plenty in and on my truck. I almost passed out from the dense fumes when I climbed into the cab of my old Ford. My eyes and nostrils stung, but I was already in so much pain I barely noticed. 

Word of this cannot get out, I thought to myself as I placed a cigarette between my lips. No one can know what happened, which included me. As I struck the flint on my lighter and the flames engulfed me, I said to myself, ‘No one can know of the night when darkness fell.’ 

 Copyright © 2018

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Leave Us Alone

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

She was not allowed to finish. 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Blushing, I stammered a “Yes-yes.” 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“What’s wrong baby,” she pled. 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“You-you can see them too?” 

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

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

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

Now I was the one who was scared. 

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

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

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

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

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

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

 Copyright 2019 ©

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Leave Us Alone

Word Count: 8,115

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

She was not allowed to finish. 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Blushing, I stammered a “Yes-yes.” 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“What’s wrong baby,” she pled. 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“You-you can see them too?” 

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

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

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

Now I was the one who was scared. 

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

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

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

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

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

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

 Copyright 2019 ©

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Boarded Up House

Word Count: 2,671

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“Please!” I cried.  

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 Copyright 2019 ©

Views: 10

No Such Thing as Ghosts

Word Count: 1,222

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Night after night I lived in terror. As far back as I can remember, I saw those phantoms walking about. Even when I reached my tenth birthday, I continued to see the phantoms. I hoped father was right, and I would grow out of it, but nothing I could do would make them go away.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Copyright 2019 ©

 

Views: 8

Cedar Sarcophagus

Word Count: 2,461

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Copyright 2019 ©

Views: 4

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