Read 2 Minutes to Midnight Online
Authors: Steve Lang
Tags: #sci fi short stories, #sci fi fantasy, #sci fi action adventure, #sci fi anthology, #sci fi adult, #sci fi and apocalyptic, #sci fi about aliens
might
be able to make it
to the next village before dark, but it's several hours walk and I
don't want to be stuck out there at night. Let's see what they
know." Jefe said.
Jefe and Alex were welcomed warmly into the village, given food and
traded tales around the fire that night.
"Did you see a woman come through here recently? Alex is looking
for her, she's his wife." Jefe said.
There was some discussion between the men in their native tongue,
but Alex did not speak conversational Spanish, so he had to rely on
the bits and pieces he did understand.
"Some of the men saw a white woman with blond hair passing this way
a week or so ago with Carlos, a known guide from the city." One man
said.
"Yes, and Carlos came back through a few days later and she was not
with him. He told us she fell, and vanished." Said the chief, in
English.
"I can't go back without her." Alex said.
"We will pray for you on your journey. I hope you find your wife,
Alex." The chief smiled.
"Here, drink this. It's chicha." Said a man to Alex's right. A man
from the village handed Alex a bottle full of a pale, straw colored
liquid.
"What's in it?"
"It's fermented corn beer. It won't really get you drunk, but it'll
take the edge off." The man grinned. Not wanting to offend his new
friends, Alex drank from the ancient looking bottle. He took one
swig and then another as the man clapped him on the shoulder.
"We'll get started again in the morning. Until then, you might want
to turn that radio off," said Jefe.
As if it had heard Jefe, the little transistor radio faded to
silence as Alex and Jefe stared wide-eyed.
"You better be careful with that thing. Some of these tribes still
believe in witchcraft, and your radio might make them nervous,"
said Jefe.
"I just hope we find Angela before that happens. I know she's not
far," said Alex.
A hut was loaned to them for the night and both men passed out
before their heads hit the pillow. Alex dreamed of Angela lying
still and peaceful in bed with a bandage wrapped around her head.
She had been hit by something or someone. A young girl sat by her
bed keeping watch as Alex drifted closer to his sleeping wife, and
Alex saw a smile cross her face.
Alex and Jefe were sweating and hiking through the jungle again by
first light and by noon they had located the Nocivo Trail where she
had been reported lost. The temperature and humidity were miserable
for Alex, but the incessant bugs buzzing around his face were even
worse. He could not wait to get home, or at least someplace with an
air conditioner and ice-cold beer. They hiked up and found the spot
where Angela fell. A woman's hiking boot was sitting next to a
steep drop. The two of them could smell smoke through the dense
tree cover. Somebody was cooking fish nearby. They looked over the
edge and Angela's radio suddenly began to blare That's the Way I
Like It by KC and the Sunshine Band. Alex laughed.
The two backtracked to the place where she had fallen and began
walking east while Angela's signal became stronger and the music
got louder. A twenty minute walk later Alex and Jefe walked into
another village where there was an immediate stir from the
villagers. A frail, older woman shambled over to the two outsiders
waving her hands frantically. She was saying something in Spanish
to Jefe, and waving them toward her.
"She says there is a white woman in her home with a bad head
injury. They've been caring for her while she sleeps. She wants to
know if the woman is yours," said Jefe.
Alex felt his heart race, and quickened his pace as he followed the
old woman to her home. She smiled warmly, through a mouth with few
remaining teeth, at Alex and pointed to a room on the right. It was
Angela. He entered the room, quiet as a church mouse, so as not to
disturb her. Angela lay soft and still in her bed as Alex
approached, and for the first time in a week her eyes opened. For a
moment there was silence.
"Hi," she whispered.
"You would not believe how long it takes to get out here." Alex
said.
"Glad you got my message."
Alex knelt down beside Angela, took her hand in his, and kissed her
fingers.
"I was dreaming about you," she said .
"Your guide said you had vanished, but he turned your backpack in
to the police. I just can't figure out how they only sent your
little radio back and not the entire pack. You ready to spend the
rest of your stay in Bolivia getting room service?" Alex
asked.
"Yes, I am, and maybe a brain scan. I'd also like something to kill
this pounding headache." Angela smiled.
"Your radio is going with us everywhere from now on, and I'm never
letting you out of my sight again." Alex said.
The three thanked the villagers for their kindness, and once a
suitable stretcher could be constructed, Jefe and Alex carried
Angela back through the jungle to his truck. Alex and Angela
traveled the globe together as partners from then on and for the
rest of their lives. Although they carried the transistor radio
with them on every trip, it never functioned again, with batteries,
or without.
the ducks
Two men and a weekend trip
to party in the woods. What could go wrong?
Dan Stratford, and Jake West had
decided that they needed to get away from suburbia for the weekend,
so the two planned an escape to Jake's property in the swampland of
South Carolina. Spring was giving way to summer, and the swarming
bugs would not be too bad yet, so this was a perfect time to
disappear into the woods. Friday afternoon Jake loaded the car with
his game console and two cases of beer that would easily last them
a few days. After hitting the grocery store for supplies and
munchie food for the weekend, he had fully stocked them for some
excellent chill time far away from society. Jake pulled up to Dan's
house around five p.m., and the two began their journey
south.
"You're wife do much bitchin' about the trip? Jake asked.
"Nah. To be honest, I think Melinda's happy for the break. Told me
to have fun, but leave the hookers alone," replied Dan.
"Where we gonna' get some hookers who want to trek out to the
swamp?” Jake laughed.
“You never know, with the right amount of cash almost anyone can
get adventurous.”
"Ha ha, yeah. This weekend is all about stonin' and chillin'
anyway. I need to get the hell out of town and that cabin rocks,
brother!" Dan said.
"Agreed!" They bumped fists. "The sooner we get there the quicker
this party gets started."
It was a two hour drive and the sun had begun to set, which would
make finding the almost hidden dirt road to Jake's cabin that much
more difficult to spot. They stopped at a The Little Red Barn
roadside convenience store to get some last minute provisions. The
pimple-faced clerk working the counter wore a Lamb of God shirt,
sported a peach fuzz Van Dyke beard, and was reading a Guardians of
The Galaxy comic book. He looked up from his studies long enough to
acknowledge Jake and Dan.
"Welcome to The Barn, fella’s."
“Good evening, my man!” Jake grinned. The two began a mad grab for
every unhealthy snack they could find in the store.
"We need potato chips, beef jerky, and here’s some donuts for
breakfast, or...whenever." Jake said. His arms were getting
full.
"You can lay that stuff up here if you want to guys." The clerk
said. He went back to reading.
"Make sure you get some Philly cigars, or Swisher Sweets, we gotta’
roll some blunts, dude!" Dan blurted.
"Why don’t you just make that public information, dumb ass!" Jake
whispered. The attendant looked up for a moment, shook his head,
smiled, and looked back at the comic.
After racking up sizable bill they checked out, and were back on
their quest for the ultimate buzz. About two miles down the road
Dan they began looking for the almost hidden turn. Jutting
diagonally out of the weeds was a dilapidated mailbox constructed
from a couple of four by four posts bolted together in a cross, and
an old coffee can painted black, nailed to them.
"That's it!" Jake cried.
If either of them had blinked they would have missed the turn. Dan
suddenly hit the brakes and skidded to a stop.
"Jesus, dude! Are you trying to kill us?" Jake barked.
"Sorry man, the damned thing just popped up." He turned right, and
that's when the boys entered the twilight zone.
The car bumped and jolted down the mile long road to Jake's cabin
as creatures of the night whistled, chirped, and buzzed along
unseen.
"I love coming out here, Jake, but it's spooky as hell driving down
this road at night. We are in BFE." Dan said.
He shivered involuntarily as he stared out into the
blackness.
"Yeah, I know what you mean. My family's had this land for over a
hundred years and even though I know every inch of it, I still feel
like I'm on an alien planet at night out here," said Jake.
Ahead of them they could see the log cabin appear as Dan's
headlights illuminated the old family haunt. The cabin, which was
more like a shack, had been constructed with wood siding and
shingles, and although Jake’s dad had put new wood siding on, that
had been twenty years ago when Jake was a kid. His father passed on
five years ago, and although Jake was now the owner, his neglect of
the property was apparent. Large weeds had overtaken the front
porch, long cracks split through old wooden siding, and the wood
shingles were falling off the roof in places.
"Here we are. Let's get the stuff inside and pop a few warm ones."
Jake smiled.
"Ugh, I hate warm beer," said Dan
"Look in the glove compartment, killer. What I brought is going to
make one warm beer irrelevant. Besides, once we get em' in the
fridge you won't have to worry about warm beer for the rest of the
weekend," said Jake.
Dan opened the glove box and was immediately greeted by the pungent
aroma of incredibly potent marijuana.
"Oh man, what is this? Ha hah! You sneaky mutha..." Dan
grinned.
"Say goodbye to reality, my friend. The guy I got this from said
this strain of bud is so strong that he hallucinated the first time
he smoked it, and this dude is a habitual stoner," said Jake.
"Awesome! OK, well, let the games begin." Dan was grinning like the
town fool.
The two got settled in, cracked a couple beers, and proceeded to
get stoned beyond the normal limits of reason. The cabin had an
outhouse and no running water, but thanks to solar panels and a
closet full of batteries wired in series they did have working
electricity.
"You mind coming with me to inspect the outhouse, man?" Jake
asked.
"Dark gotcha' scared?" Dan replied.
"No, but you never know what you're going to find in there and I
need you to hold the light while I hold the baseball bat," said
Jake.
Dan was sitting on the ratty cabin couch allowing it to absorb him
when Jake made his request.
"Look man, ain't shit out there gonna' get you. Just go, and get
back so we can hook up the game system." Dan chugged a beer, and
waved a hand at Jake.
"I'm not going out there in the dark to an uninspected outhouse by
myself, bro. I'm high as balls. There's more than just frogs out in
the woods at night. We got wild pigs out here, too. Som' bitches
are mean, and I gotta' go poop."
"Alright, alright! I'm coming, but I did not need to know that last
little bit." Dan felt the gravity of his buzz suck him back down,
but he fought it and stood. "Let's go see the boogey man
together."
"Ha ha...very funny" Jake shook his head.
Crickets chirped noisily as the two left the relative safety of
Jake's one bedroom cabin and walked ten feet to the outdoor toilet.
The door hung open an inch or two creaking on its hinges as they
approached.
"You hear that, man?" Dan asked.
"Yeah, something moved in there."
Dan held a battery powered lantern that swayed as he walked,
casting shadows on the outhouse. It seemed to breathe in and out,
making the ordeal that much more unnerving.
"Dude, you ready with the bat?" Dan asked. He held the lantern out
like a shield.
"Let's do it. This weed is making me paranoid." Dan kicked the door
open and nearly fell over backward as an angry raccoon dashed out
of the opening, chittering at them at it disappeared into the
darkness. Jake had no time to react and stood like a statue holding
the bat over his head.
"Did you just see that?!" Dan yelled.
"I told you man, this place requires the buddy system!" Jake
replied.
"Holy crap, that was crazy! You think maybe we interrupted him
takin' a dump?" Dan laughed.
"I dunno, but he sure looked pissed."
For the rest of the night the boys played video games, drank
lukewarm beer, and paid homage to the reefer gods. Jake crashed on
the bed and Dan took the uncomfortable green seventies style couch,
neither option was a home away from home, but it was a place to
sleep. The next morning, Dan was up first, and his back felt like a
car had been parked on it all night.
"Damned couch." He walked outside holding his sore back.
While he relieved his full bladder into the weeds, Dan spotted
noticed something odd in the middle of the small lake. Its bank was
fifty feet from the cabin and had been a family fishing spot since
the cabin was built.
"Probably just driftwood or something." Dan said to himself. His
eyes were still adjusting to the new day after loading his brain
with chemicals the night before, and he went back inside.
"You're up early. Sleep well?" Jake laughed.
"Yeah, just great. That couch sucks, even stoned."
"Fire up Call of Duty and let's get rollin'." Jake said.
"Good idea, bring me a beer. I'm thirsty as hell."
Jake threw Dan a cold one and walked out to empty his bladder,
leaving the door open behind him.
"Watch out man! Don't step in piss..." Dan was powering up the
console, chuckling a little.
"Yo dude, you see those ducks out there on the lake?" Jake hollered
over his shoulder.
"Pretty damn cool," he mumbled.
He rubbed the sleep out of his eyes and walked down the bank where
he could clearly see that there were three ducks sitting motionless
on the water.
"They're just sitting there. You ever see ducks on this lake
before?" Dan asked.
"Never, but then again, I haven't been up here in a few years.
Maybe a family of them moved in or something." Jake replied.
"They just sit there, must be sleeping?"
"OK, well whatever. Let's eat. I brought the hot plate and we have
eggs and bacon for breakfast." Jake said.
Dan produced a pre-rolled joint from a little cigarette box in his
pocket and the two proceeded to get baked. After stuffing
themselves on eggs, bacon, and now very cold beer, Dan wandered
down to the bank to see if the ducks were still there.
"Dude, I think they've come closer to shore!" He shouted.
"Ignore the ducks, dude! Call of Duty awaits, and we ain't got no
interwebz out here so, you're all I got to shoot at. Get in
here!"
Dan reluctantly walked back inside giving a final, suspicious,
cursory glance to the immobile waterfowl. The two of them spent
their morning and afternoon chasing each other around various
battlefield maps, wishing they had an internet connection to play
online.
"Man, I am baked. You got anything besides Call of Duty? How about
something that's not a first person shooter?" Dan asked.
"I have some others over there in the duffel bag. Grab Outland.
It's a solo, but I think I'm all video gamed out right now." Jake
laid down his controller.
Dan walked over to where the bag lay and removed Outland from its
case. He looked out the window and saw that the three ducks were
less than five feet from shore.
"This is tripping me out, bro. What do you think they are? Zombie
ducks?" Dan asked.
"Seriously, man? You're hallucinating. I think my boy was right
about this dope."
Nothing moved on the water. Not a head, a wing, no ripples on the
water. They were just there.
"Dude, there they are almost in the yard. Let's go check it out!"
Dan yelled.
"I'm about sick of you and those damned ducks, Dan!" Jake yelled,
and joined Dan outside, hands on his hips.
"You're right, they are closer." Jake was legitimately
surprised.
"What do you think they want?" Dan asked.
"I have no idea, but why would they want anything, besides food?
They're ducks, bro! Do we have any bread we can toss at
them?"
"I'm going down there; bring the bat in case they try something."
Dan said.
Jake laughed, but he was beginning to get nervous. Why would they
just sit there, not moving? Dan was freaking him out, and the large
amount of pot they had both inhaled not only made him paranoid, but
he was pretty sure that he himself had been hallucinating for over
thirty minutes. The two walked slowly toward the still, dark, lake
water. Trees reflected off the murky surface making it seem like a
forest of tall pines was lying flat on the lake. The closer they
crept; Dan was looking over his shoulder for assurance that his
friend would help him take care of business if this all went south.
His heart beat loudly in his ears, and he began to feel silly that
he was afraid of a bunch of stupid ducks. He was now two feet from
them, and standing in the water up to his ankles, Jake right behind
holding the bat, like a mugger was about to jump out at them. There
was another tense moment and then the water exploded like a bomb,
as three alligators that had been waiting with patience for the two
men to come closer sprung forward in a tornado of prehistoric teeth
and muscle. It was over in minutes. Dan and Jake were dragged
lifeless into the lake and never seen or heard from
again.