Friday, August 6, 2010

Cancer

The sunset behind the far hills striped the sky with colors as rich and beautiful as a stained glass window, but Michael paid it no mind because the trees were screaming. Arms and hands were fused with branches and twigs, the skin and bark running together in ways the eye seemed unwilling to categorize. Mouths spotted the trunks like shelf mushrooms, their lips always moving as they muttered and occasionally gave out a shriek. Michael felt his stomach lurch. He looked away, but not before he saw the wedding band on the end of one twig-finger.

“Jesus,” Henry whispered.

It was Henry's first time out on a search and rescue team, and Michael thought the young man was doing pretty well dealing with the aftermath of a breach. Plenty of people broke down or fled at the first sight of something the shouldn't have been but was. Henry looked pale, but determined. He locked his eyes forward and patted his extra ammo clips.

“Let's keep moving,” said Michael, shouldering his rifle.

They walked along a path that had once bordered a wheat field. It held a different sort of crop now, the spongy fungus-like flora that seemed to appear wherever the other world pushed itself into to real one. Meter high spikes also sprouted from the earth. Michael pointed toward the nearest one.

“That's a bad sign. Those are made of the same metal-tissue shit that the biomechanicals are made of. We may come across a walker, so keep your guard up.”

Their path curved around the base of a hill. As they continued on Michael spotted the buildings up ahead. The land sloped down towards a creek to the West. On the far side they could see a normal field of wheat.

“It didn't affect that big of an area,” said Henry.

“Nope, a square mile or two at the most.”

It was a fairly small breach. Michael had personally seen larger, and what word filtered in from the outside spoke of whole cities swallowed at once.

“This seems to be limited to the Terryson's farmstead. Most of it anyway,” said Michael.

Linda Terryson had been near the edge of her and her husband's land checking some traps when the change had came. She had ran towards town as soon as she saw the air start to shimmer behind her. At least that's what they had gathered when they got her calmed down enough to talk coherently. That and that her husband Doug was still back at the stable next to their farmhouse feeding the horses.

They approached the house warily. It was still partly recognizable as something built by human hands. It had a roof, doors and windows. The geometry was wrong though, right angles were hard to find, its lines had warped into something more organic. Strange outcroppings sprouted from it like tumors, some twisting into cruel spikes.

Henry spotted the movement before Michael did, spinning and raising his rifle as the walker skittered out from behind the house. Its headless torso was triangular and narrowed to a thin waist that sprouted dozens of piston-driven insectile legs. The two foremost legs were held upright like a crab's claws and ended in two cruel scythes. It hissed and clanked as it charged across the yard at them, as big as a horse. The crash of Henry's rifle snapped Michael out of his stupor and he raised his own to fire. The walker's shell was hard and metallic, deflecting their shots as it came on. It was almost on top of them when one of Michael's shots seemed to find the nest of tubes that hung from its abdomen in front of its waist. Its gate faltered as oily blood gushed out of the wound before it tipped over sideways. It took several minutes to die, twitching, before its legs curled up on themselves like a dead spider.

They stood there a little longer, waiting for the adrenaline to abate a bit. Finally, Michael gestured towards the stables. They found Doug and the horses in the middle of the pen. Their flesh looked like wax that had melted and solidified again. They wriggled and twisted as one solid mass. Doug Terryson's face stared out at them from what may have been a horse's shoulder. His mouth opened and closed.

Michael didn't remember shooting, just later when Henry had gently taken the rifle away from him where he stood dry firing the empty cartridge.

Later, as they were walking back to town, Henry spoke.

“Maybe it would be best if we never found him when she asks.”

Michael didn't answer, he just nodded. Yeah, the kid might do pretty well at this job.




6 comments:

  1. Interesting tale. What causes the breaches? Well written, I am a character person and would love to see more time spent on the characters, but the conciseness of the tale and it's pacing flowed and fit very well.

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  2. I don't have all the metaphysics worked out really. I've always liked stories where one world intrudes into another. The breaches might be the unintended consequences of military research into alternate dimensions ala King's The Mist.

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  3. Well wow. Perhaps I shouldn'ta been drinkin when I read that. Heavens. The horror, the horror.

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  4. I too love stories where one world intrudes on another. Enjoyed this. The slightly comic effect of Henry's last line adds to the whole thing very well.

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  5. Great story and concept. The touch of the wedding band really drove the point home.

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  6. Good job! I am completely horrified by the description of the walkers. I'm going to have Akira style visions of these things when I go to sleep tonight, I just know it.

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