“Blue Pills”
By R. D. Rivero
[Introduction, (A)]
“Down
here! Down here!”
Tygra tossed and turned in bed in
tortured movements. The bed covers had
acome from the mattress. The warm
blankets hung off the side to the cold ground.
The pillow under his head slowly eased to the floor. Naked and exposed, he stopped for a brief
moment of relaxed comfort only to resume the restless toil.
“I’m
right down here! Don’t ignore me!”
“What?
Willa? Willa! Who’s there?”
Covered in sweat, he shivered, he grunted. Tygra sat up, he looked down upon himself
stunned at his condition. He quivered in
shudders of horror for what he saw, for what he saw that had stirred him all
along.
The room everywhere, already in shadow,
darkened further but for the faraway corners that glowed eerie light. “You know me!”
“By Jagga! No!
Not again! No.”
[Introduction, (B)]
Wileykat knocked on the door. The sound echoed in a dense timber. He waited patiently before he tried
again. His sister passed by on her way
to the kitchen. She teased his mane to
his objection.
“You and Liono better save me some of
the pie this time.”
Wileykit gave no response. He saw her fade away while she continued
through Cat’s Lair’s interior. He knew
she had heard him and knew she would pretend otherwise.
He knocked, rather, he tried to knock
again but instead he opened the door. He
boldly entered. Though undamped sunlight
poured into the bedroom from bare windows, the high ceiling was cloaked in
shadow. Still, he could see faint
features, features engraved in stone and in memory.
Across the floor he saw the bed
unoccupied and so completely disheveled that it required his immediate
attention. The bed covers, the blanket,
the pillow he had to collect from the floor where each had fallen. He closed the open windows that filled the
room in cool currents of fresh, morning air, morning air florally scented in a way that was oddly
melancholic.
An arc of light came from around the
bedroom door. Wileykat approached cold
slowly. To his left the bathroom door
was wide open, Tygra stood in front of the sink, rubbing himself with his
hands. Wileykat did not know what to do
even though he had both seen and done such things before. His impulse was to turn and run away but
instead he came to the naked, quivering, shuddering tiger with his arms
outstretched.
He whispered softly to himself but
Tygra noticed.
“You
want to do it! Look at him! Look at him!”
“Kat?
What’s wrong?” The boy had his
arms around his waist.
“It’s all my fault. It’s all my fault.”
Tygra knelt down to the boy’s
eye-level.
“Why?
What’s wrong?”
“He
knows! That’s what’s wrong!”
“Are you feeling OK?”
Tygra laughed: “Of course I am.”
“Kill
him! Kill him!”
“I had a rough night. That’s all.
That’s all. I’ve been working too
hard. You worry about me?” Wileykat nodded. The tears that welled in his eyes shimmered
in the dead light of the fluorescent fixtures.
“Of course you do.” Tygra hugged
him hard, drew him up close to his body, up close to his warmth, up close. The boy did not object, the boy remained
entirely passive to the tiger. “But it’s
my job to worry about you, remember?”
Wileykat nodded, Tygra slightly petted his mane.
“Now’s
your chance! Fool! Fool!
Wring his neck! Do it! Do it!” The voice, the timber faded and withered,
evaporated into silence.
“It’s time for breakfast.”
“You wanted me to remind you about
today, about Willa.”
“Yes.
I know. Now go eat the pie before
the others finish it, OK?”
Wileykat gave Tygra a quick kiss on the
cheek and turned and walked out reluctantly.
The bedroom door closed shut behind him. So quietly, so quietly that
even his breath was inaudible, he thanked Jagga the boy had not seen or at the
least had not noticed the blue pills scattered on the floor next to the toilet.
The tiger picked up the tablets and put them back into the small, into the
plastic bottle that had fallen in the sink.
Only twenty doses were left and soon he would have to refill the bottle
with a more potent recipe.
[Introduction, (C)]
Tygra stood in the kitchen doorway in
utter disbelief. He shook his head to
try to get the images out of his mind.
Liono sat at the end of the table.
He held a cup with both hands while he conversed energetically with
Cheetara. The cloudy liquid swayed
violently over the rim in the exaggerated gestures of his gesticulations. Liquid spilled on both of them but neither
cared. Panthro and Bengali arm-wrestled
over the crumbs left of that morning's pie.
Their hands, their arms, their bodies covered in a brown grease, the two
smeared everything in sight with that oily substance. Snarf waited on the table, drooling, snotting
all over himself while he served the others.
The kittens were not there, thankfully, the kittens were not there.
He did not know who was first but
eventually they all rested their eyes on him.
The unbearable drone that had filled the room turned deadly silent. He tried to step in closer but Snarf was too
near him already. He stared with his
mouth wide open before he could summon the will to speak.
He weighed the value of each and every
word very carefully: “Willa. Um.
The warrior maidens. I have to. Um. I
have to go. I’ll.”
The terrible drone returned though a
hundred people dined rudely in that small chamber. He turned around and in his mad rush to leave
that place he nearly trampled over the kittens.
He was about to grunt or to growl but stopped himself. He reached out and petted the boy behind the
ears. While Wileykat looked on Tygra
disappeared, dissolved into nothing.
[Part One]
Outside, the sky was clear, crisp and
clear. There were no clouds visible,
there were no winds beyond the gradient of breezes to storm the
tranquility. Even the sun had risen
free, broken free from the entangled branches of the trees of the forest. Even the air, though replete with mist, was
quiet, quiet with only the faintest hints of birdcalls. Nothing more.
For the first time in a long time --
since that night, since that morning -- Tygra felt at peace. His heartbeat had settled, his breathing had
slowed and had paced. At last the blue
pill had taken effect and that voice, that horrible voice had ceased.
He had decided not to take any form of
transportation. He wanted to go on
alone, on foot. Willa and the warrior
maidens were not more than two hours away.
Over the open meadows that surrounded
Cat’s Lair, leaves of grass swayed gently and ruffled softly underfoot while he
treaded. The ground was only slightly
moist, remarkably still wet though there had not been much rain in quite a
while.
Well into the woods the image of his
home could be seen through the tree tops, the tall tree tops. But as the miles slowly evolved in his path,
as he entered the deeper parts of Amazonian country, he lost completely the
guidance of that benevolent landmark of his own creation.
Green and brown. Roots that shot up from the ground. Rocks.
Pebbles. The occasional pond
where the water’s surface rippled in circular, intercepted waves. Right through his quivering reflections he
could see long, thin, brightly colored fish swim within in the lakes: red, orange, green, eyes always black, fins
always clear.
For a few moments, for a few clouded
moments Tygra imagined himself a fish, swimming through the clear water,
swimming through plants that swayed in the current, through dark mazes of
smooth rocks, the abyss below. He
wondered why he feared the water. He
wondered how it would be to dive into the blue without the need to be
invisible. He wondered why the ethereal
beauty of the naturalness of third earth came easily to him. Few of the other Thundercats were as
comfortable in that alien environment as he.
He continued on his trek and nearly
walked into an enormous spider web. The
vast construction sparkled in the dew that had collected on the threads earlier
that night. The web quivered violently
but there were no strong breezes, there were no sudden winds, there was not
even a sound.
He peered closely into the central
portions where a red spider was busy dealing with a large dragonfly that had
ensnared itself on the trap. The insect
struggled hard but was no match for the spider.
In one swift move the arachnid pressed
down with its fangs into the insect’s abdomen.
Blood and mangled globs of internal organs, complete with unhatched eggs
squirted and erupted around onto the ground, onto the fabric of the web in the
pop, in the sudden burst.
After very little time the dragonfly’s
struggle ceased, ceased, ceased and slowly its fight died out, it moved no
longer. Then and only then did the
spider begin its daunting task to devour the prey.
[Part Two]
A deep gorge, covered in dirt and
dried, browned leaves broke through the ground before him. The tiger turned right and closely followed
the unstable edge of the cliff to a large oak tree that stood, superimposed, onto
the local scene. Tied to its prominent
roots was a raggedy suspension bridge, ravished and disfigured by time.
Some of the wooden boards were loose,
some others were rotted gray and would no doubt break as soon as be stepped on,
yet some were missing altogether.
Carefully, with his eyes pointed down to his feet, he made his way onto
and across the dangling, swaying bridge.
His hands tingled with thoughts of
falling into the gapping darkness beneath.
His head swayed in unison to the flimsy structure. He became nauseous, disoriented. The bridge seemed to at once stretch out
forever and at once fall down deeper than usual. He feared it would give way yet he did not
want to run across or even up-pace himself in the slightest.
At last Tygra had made it past the
midpoint of the structure. The bridge
rose once again. Then one of the boards
broke free from the hemp ropes that tied it in place and fell down. Down, tumbling down, spinning down, down into
that chasm that he could now see just a little bit more of, just a little bit
more of than he wanted. He never did
hear the broken board impact at the terminus of its voyagerous, odyssial fall
or was there even a bottom to the gorge?
Safe on the other side, his heart
raced, the beating pounded visibly against his chest. He would have to talk to Panthro about
building a new bridge when he returned to Cat’s Lair sometime that evening.
“Wait a moment,” he said aloud. “Wait a moment. Talk to Panthro? I saw him this morning? What?
What?” His eyes hurt, his vision
clouded, his head pounded in rhythm with his heart. He felt hot all over. Tygra fell dizzy onto the ground, onto his
back. He wanted to throw up but nothing
would come out. Panthro was dead. Panthro had been dead for years.
From a pocket on the inside of his
shirt, which he had loosened, Tygra pulled out the plastic bottle. A single blue pill rested in the cup of the
palm of his hand. He looked at it,
studied it before he put it into his mouth and swallowed it with his then
acidic saliva.
[Part Three]
Tygra sat up on the sloped ground, he
faced a small brook where fallen trees, hollowed out over the years, lay across
rapidly flowing water. Moss and shrubs
spread out, moved out in the wake of the currents. Rocks and boulders dotted the landscape. Before him, on the other side of the river,
the earth was flat and smooth and covered in only the slightest dusting of
grass. Past the small meadow the rest of
the trees of the forest rose above the horizon.
Yet further in the distance, white clouds, dense clouds without
perceptible outlines clogged the elsewise blue sky.
“Don’t
ignore me!”
Quietly he wondered to himself about
Willa. He was supposed to meet her there
but apparently he had arrived early. Or
maybe she was there, spying on him through the underbrush. “No, no, why would she do that?” Why would she spy on him? Did she like him? Did she think about him the way he thought
about her?
“You’re
a man and she hates you! Kill her! Kill her!
Burn the village down!”
“No, that’s not true.” Or was it true? “No.
It is not true! She wouldn’t have
asked me to come if she hated me. She’s
not like that at all.”
“That
voice that shatters glass!”
Tygra pictured Willa in his mind: she sat in front of him, her hands on his
thighs, running up to his chest, dropping back down, feeling him warmly,
deliberately. “I push back her hair
gently. I look into her eyes. I kiss her lips.” He spoke softly, the birds that called and
flew nearby drowned out completely his speech to his own ears. He could no longer tell the difference
between what his mind thought and what his mouth spoke.
“Kill
her! Kill the whore! Kill her!”
“She wraps her arms around me, she
pulls me close to her body.”
“Burn
her alive, skin her alive, claw her to death!”
“Snug, in bed, in soothing softness.”
“Hunt
her down! Pounce her down!”
“No!
Not by Jagga! No!” He shook his head violently, he dropped his
head into his hands in tears.
“Tear
her flesh out!”
“No!
No! No! Why have you done this to me?” Tygra looked down upon himself once more. In total revulsion he crawled back away from
the horror, back away from the fear but no matter how fast he was he could not
escape the completeness of its presence, as though the voice was, as though the
voice could actually be a part of him.
“That’s not true! That’s impossible!” The impact of the terror was unavoidable and
undeniable and in a thousand years he knew then he could never escape that
source of evil.
Tygra took out the plastic bottle and,
with the foamy water from the brook, he swallowed yet another blue pill. He sprayed his face with more of that
refreshing liquid but he felt no better, no better.
“Eat
her!”
[Part Four]
His heart still pounded when Willa
arrived but at the least he had his breathing back under control. Tygra was a little nervous and edgy around
her at first but he wanted to make sure she would not notice what was really
wrong. He walked in the fringe between
the clear ground and trees, cast in shadows and surrounded by fresh, cool air,
in which evolved the strong aroma of mint and lilac. Fortunately Willa had other things on her
mind. She had been speaking from the
moment she had arrived but only then was Tygra finally paying attention.
“The ruins are ancient, of course, a
million or more years old but it’s amazing how much survives intact. Most of the city is made from rock, not
concrete, not steel even.”
“Rocks erode over time.”
“Yes.
It helps that the city was covered by earth and by ash, from the cliff.”
The trees cleared and there was no
where for Tygra to hide. He was calmer,
though, the pill had taken effect. “The
mile-high cliff.”
“We’ll have to walk around the long
way, the short route is crossed by a strong and innavigable river.”
There was a long pause and in the
meanwhile the two had managed to hike through about another few miles of
ankle-high, grassy meadow. The clouds
Tygra had seen before were still there but just then he noticed that the white
swirls were in fact wrapped around the promontory length of the mile-high
cliff. A single peak in an otherwise
flat plain, the extreme portions of the monolith were perpetually obscured by
clouds.
“It’s quite rare to find relics from
second-earth. Especially ones in as good
conditions as you described.”
“And there’s more, I just know it,
there’s still more to the city buried in the ground and yet unexplored. Oh, it’ll be so much fun, Tygra! You know, maybe we should have prepared for
an all-night trip instead of this brisk excursion?”
“Then we’ll make time, just for
ourselves, just for the two of us. I
have no reason to hurry back home so soon, any time soon.” He did not want to take that line of thought
too far.
The earth below them transformed from
fertile to barren desert, from green, to yellowed to no grass at all. The trees and the rest of the forest in
general were faraway and distant.
The mile-high cliff loomed in the scene
as nothing else could, as nothing else in the universe possibly could. There was no where to run, there was no where
hide, there was no where to go to escape its omnipresence. Massive, deformed, jagged rock formations
scarred the thin, sliverous, steppe faces cast before them to the unimaginable
heights above where the cloud cover masked in ignorance the full, the clear details
of the peak and of what ever other unthinkable, invaluable ruins may have
remained up there.
“Do the mutants or anyone else know
about the ruins?”
“The mutants are just brainless
freaks. I’m sure Mumm-Ra knows but
there’s nothing much to interest him.
Second-earthers were more into science and technology than wizardry or
sorcery.”
“A whole city of stone. What did second-earthers have for pets?”
“Bugs.”
“Bugs?”
“Some bugs got larger after
first-earth.”
“The radiation from its destruction.”
“I doubt we have much to worry
about. Those second-earth bugs don’t
exist anymore. At the least none that
we’re aware off. We’ve never really seen
them. All we have are mere legends and
handed-down stories.”
Tygra wanted to reach out and touch
her, just once, draw her close to him, hug her in some way that would seem
innocent more than anything else.
“There’s so much for me to learn, Willa and you know what that means to
me.” She smiled at him but kept most of
her face away, covered in her long hair.
“I want to tell you all about Thundera one of these days.” Instead it was she who drew close to him, she
rubbed up against his side gently and may have said something under her breath
or may have not. The two walked steadily
in the open, flat plain, side-by-side, inches apart but whole worlds away.
[Part Five]
The ground did not feel right to Tygra,
the soil was too loose, too airy. With
no plants, no trees anywhere on the deserted wasteland that surrounded the
coast of the mile-high cliff there was no reason for the dirt to be that way.
Willa noticed the problem, too. While she treaded in circles she kept her
eyes fixed down on her feet. Her feet
sank deep into the soil, to the point that they were almost completely buried
in the ground.
“Tygra.
Look at yours.”
“My what?”
“Your feet. The ground’s up to your ankles.”
Tygra looked down upon himself oddly
relieved that nothing else was wrong.
“It’s not quicksand.” He waddled
to her. “It’s only soil that’s really,
really loose.”
“Unnaturally loose.”
“Look!”
Tygra pointed to a wide area where the ground was indented down toward
them.
“I --” but it was too late. The indentation grew instantly into a deep
crater. The very ground beneath them
shook. “Tygra!”
“Hold on to me.”
“Down
here! Don’t ignore me!”
Tygra grabbed her just in time, he
wrapped his arms around her just in time.
The crater collapsed, the two free-fell into the darkness, past the
surface, into a shaft of immeasurable proportions. The two fell through the air faster than the
soil. Engulfed and immersed in the dirt,
they coughed, they choked, they screamed, they tumbled and spun around each
other. At length, after no less than an
eternity, the ride ended. They bounced,
they scattered in wild directions when they hit the bottom.
Moans and groans followed while Tygra
and Willa tried to recompose themselves.
Willa looked over the body of an unmistakably nervous Tygra to check to
make sure he was all right. The tiger had
a partially dislocated shoulder but at the least that much was easy to fix. Anxious, his hands trembled when it was his
turn to look her over. She had landed on
top him, she was marred only by a slight bruise on her forehead.
Tygra felt something very strange when
he got up. Something sharply stabbed the
side of his chest and he feared the worst.
He loosened his shirt and impulsively stuck his hand into his
uniform. He pulled out the plastic
bottle that had been smashed apart in the ordeal, but he pulled it free so fast
that the blue pills flew into the air, to be lost, to be forever mixed with the
ground and with the darkness.
“No!” he caught himself and
stopped. Willa had seen it all from the
distance, half-in, half-out of shadow.
Tygra walked to her side and refitted his clothes. “You wouldn’t happen to have any aspirin of
your own on you?”
“Good
boy! Good boy! Let her think it was something else!”
“We have more important things to
consider.”
“You
stupid looser! She didn’t believe
you! You’re a stupid junkie and she
didn’t believe you!”
“Those were aspirins, I swear!” Willa may have grunted, may have said
something to herself but she turned away.
“She
doesn’t believe you! She doesn’t believe
you! She doesn’t believe you!”
Tygra looked up at the hole they had
fallen through. The shaft was
square-shaped, not circular and deep, maybe one, maybe two hundred feet
deep. Certainly well out of the range of
Tygra’s whip. The walls were rough,
uneven. Roots and fungi shot out and
dotted the faces. Small rocks and
pebbles, handfuls of misty dirt continued to fall in by the action of the
wind. The pressure in the shaft was low,
the air was cold and arcidly scented.
The two found it easy to maneuver
through the ground for it now had the proper consistency. Thankfully there had been enough loose soil
to cushion the fall, the landing. The
only problem they faced was the abject darkness. Though sunshine broke through the shaft’s
entrance only some parts of the ground and some faces of the walls were
illuminated.
“Tygra, come here,” she called and the
tiger ran to her as fast as he could.
“What is it? What’s wrong?”
“The walls here, the walls here aren’t
made of dirt.”
Neither could see particularly well in
the shadows but they could feel. Tygra
ran his hands across the wall under Willa’s hands. Yes, at the least that much of the shaft was
unnatural. “The stones are all about the
same shape, the same size.”
“There’s mortar between them.”
“How far do you suppose this extends?”
“Let’s find out. You walk along that way and I’ll walk along
this way.”
They parted on their search. Tygra’s path was enshrouded in darkness but
Willa found herself in the fringes with the light for a good portion of her
search. Tygra had stopped and she
worried.
“I’m all right. I found something important over here.”
“I’ll be right there. The masonry extends throughout the whole of
the shaft.”
“Yes, but it’s not more than twenty
feet high.”
“What did you find?” Without thought she bumped into him
face-to-face.
“She
felt something, didn’t she! She likes
it! She likes it!”
“Oh, oh, I’m sorry, Tygra, I’m
sorry.” He could not see her blush, but
she turned her face away in embarrassment.
“That’s all right, Willa.” He took her hand and placed it flat against
the wall where the stones had been replaced by riveted metal, cold to the
touch.
“A door? Great.
Where’s the door knob?” She asked
excited about something else.
“I couldn’t find one, there are some
hinges over here on my side. We could
force it open out to us if we could grab it from the edges.”
“Then let’s hope it’s not locked.”
Willa dug her fingertips into what
crevice she could find between the metal door and the stoney frame. Tygra had the advantage of claws. Together the door began to squeak, softly at
first, the loudly. They sweated, they
raced for breath, but they had pulled the door out barely an inch. She poked the staff into what improvement
hand been made and with the lever action the door pried open much more.
But there was a problem. “There’s a spring mechanism that’s driving
the door shut. I can only hold on to
this for a little while.”
Willa got under the staff and ran into
the absolute darkness behind the metal door.
Tygra sprinted to the side and with his back to the stoney frame -- had
his grip faltered the door would have smashed him in half lengthwise -- with
his legs he opened the doors wide enough for him to enter. First Willa’s staff fell down to the ground
with a clang, she rushed to grab it, then when the path was clear Tygra swiftly
dashed in.
[Part Six]
“Don’t we have matches or something?”
she asked.
“Now’s
your chance! Kill her! Kill her!”
Tygra saw an eerie light come off the
upper edges of the tunnel the two were now in.
Odd that Willa was unaware of it.
“I can make out some details.
Here, hold my hand.”
“Or
something else?”
“All right.”
He detected a hint of levity in her tone. What did she think was funny? -- he wondered
out loud by accident.
“Just that you seem to be talking to,
someone else.”
“No.
There’s no one else. No. Have your eyes adjusted?”
“Somewhat. Is there light up a head?”
“I see the green glow too.”
“First thing’s to find a way out of
this place.”
The hall, the tunnel through which
their footsteps rang loudly, terminated in a series of steps basked in bright
green light. The steps led up to a vast
chamber where the light came from five orbs, confined in grated cages,
suspended by chains that hung taut from the imperceptible ceiling above. The gargantuan figures wobbled though caught
in the way of a current neither Willa nor Tygra could detect.
The faraway walls appeared to be made
of the same stone pattern encountered earlier.
The ground was sandy, the floor was adorned with large, circular holes
elevated slightly.
“I take it that these are some of the
unexplored ruins of second-earth.”
“Unnatural.”
“Were these fountains once?”
“They go down deep, they go down to the
bowels of third earth.”
“The size of it! The thought of it! What could be so immense, Willa, do these
ruins go on forever?”
“These are passages to even more remote
chambers.”
“But there could be no way to use them
unless one could walk on walls.”
“Let’s look at some others.”
Many openings were indistinguishable,
merely different entrances to the same cavern complex, perpetually cast in the
shadow of ignorance. A state air, tainted
by foul odors, evolved from them. Other
openings were lighted in green with steps, with regular passages and
antechambers.
“Slash
her! Split her gut open!”
“Do you hear that?”
“What?
No!”
“Eat
her alive!”
The two were silent. Tygra was even more nervous than usual. In the background of audibility came soft,
high-pitched humming, vibrating.
“Maybe it’s the sound of the lights,
maybe it’s the power generator.”
“Shut
up, boy! Kill her! Kill her!”
“It’s louder below,” Willa said.
“I don’t think there’s anything more up
here.”
“Shut
up, boy!”
“We shouldn’t go down there, into the
openings. We want to go up, not
down. There must be some parts of this
room that we’ve not looked at yet.”
Tygra agreed. He did not want to say it but he thought he
had seen something move in one of the openings.
The light was so glaring, so bright that he did not trust his senses and
he did not want to upset Willa needlessly.
The two walked toward the walls
together.
“She’s
trying to get you killed, idiot, can’t you see that? She wants to skin you and turn you into a
throw rug!”
“Stop it! She would never do that! Stop it!
I’ve had about enough of you!
You!”
“Tygra!”
Willa looked back. The tiger was on the floor convulsing. His body flopped around violently. She tried to restrain him but she shook her
off with his wild jerks. He got up
suddenly, he walked to her menacingly.
With the staff she tripped him. He fell face-forward onto himself. She grabbed the whip, stood over him,
hog-tied him. She secured his hands and
feet together very tightly.
“What the hell is wrong with you?” She turned him to the side. Tygra was still awake, she thought. His eyes were open but unfocussed. He panted for breath. His heart beat tremendously fast. He was unresponsive. She began to cry: “God damn you! Did you think you could fool me? Aspirins?”
Though she had made every effort not to
look she saw to her utter surprise and confusion that the cause of her
embarrassment, Tygra’s ‘condition,’ had not changed and, if anything, had
gotten far more pronounced. Gently she
dragged him to an entrance in the wall she had discovered before he had gone
mad.
Stooped over him she waited for his
heart to calm down and for him to snap out of it, out of what ever controlled
him that time. She could do nothing for
him until he was ‘normal’ again, conscious again. Slowly, ever so slowly the tiger began to
fall asleep, his eyes shut, his panting ceased, he fell back relaxed, totally
relaxed, visibly relaxed.
[Part Seven]
“Tygra!
Tygra! Tygra!”
Willa’s voice broke through the
darkness of his mind and clawed him awake from beyond grasp of sleep. He tried to get up from the cold, damp floor
but stumbled over to the side. He hit
his face and cried out in pain. His
hands and feet were tied with his own whip, no doubt, he thought. His clothes were loose, his insignia had been
removed and was no where to be seen.
“Willa!”
“Help!
Tygra! Help!”
“I’ll be right there.” He rubbed his wrists together, he squeezed
his hands tightly. The whip loosened
somewhat and he swiftly turned. Again he
hit his face only on the other side. He
repeated the maneuvers until he freed his right hand. “I’ll be right there.” He was so tensed and so irrational that it
actually took him longer to free his left hand than it ought to have. “I’m almost untied.” Tygra sat up and undid the parts of the whip
still tied to his feet. “Where are
you? Where are you?”
“Find the opening on the wall right in
front of you.”
The tiger did not take long to see the rectangular
orifice. Tall and thin he was barely
able to squeeze in. He was immediately
confronted with a series of steps that led up and on and on forever.
“What’s wrong with you? What’s your condition?”
“I’m stuck.”
“Is there any one with you? Is there any one threatening you?”
“No.
I’m alone. I’m in the only room
you’ll find. Just keep walking up.”
The stairs ended in an equally thin
hallway. Tygra had to crawl through it
on his hands and knees. He was careful,
very careful for the ceiling was only three feet above his head.
“I’m almost through the tunnel. Willa?”
“I’m still here. I’m still intact.”
The hallway terminated in a wide
opening, a circular opening formed along a wall of a darkened room. Tygra slid down to the floor beneath and he looked
up. The tunnel he had been in was
elevated several feet above the ground he had fallen on. The hallway was still accessible and emanated
the faintest, eeriest light he had seen yet.
The new room he was now in was not a
room at all but only part of a larger chamber.
He got up and walked forward.
While the right wall, adorned with the glowing, circular tunnel opening,
the left wall receded. Sprawled before
him was a vault of considerable proportions.
Fifty feet by fifty feet, the roof was high above, so high above that it
remained imperceptible. The light came
from a glowing circle of undeterminable character, suspended by impalpable
forces by a hundred feet over the floor, or what he thought was the floor.
“Tygra!”
“Willa!”
“No.
Don’t come closer. Don’t come
closer.”
“Why not?”
“Look around.”
Willa, who he saw clearly, lay flat on
her back, arms and legs spread out over, over, over what? There did not seem to be anything under
her. Then he gasped, he gasped when he realized
what had happened. Willa was caught on a
spider web, whose thin threads were barely visible. The effect was caused by the distorting
action of the chamber’s one and only light source.
“The web is too strong.”
“I’ll throw the whip on around you and
try to pull you free. This might sting.”
“It doesn’t matter, just don’t miss.”
Tygra posed and aimed but waited a few
moments before he let the whip loose.
With an echoed crack the lash made its way to Willa and had almost,
almost caught a good hold of her.
But:
“Oh, Tygra, it’s no use, the web is too meshed.”
Tygra could not recover the whip. He tried to pull and to pry the whip with all
his might but nothing budged, nothing gave way.
He approached closer artfully aware that the network of the web was all
around him.
He froze.
Below the web there was no floor, there
was nothing more than a pool of water.
The surface was calm and smooth and beautifully reflected the scene,
like mirrors, like black mirrors, shining, glimmering.
“It’s the water, isn’t it? I tried to use the staff but it broke in half
and fell into the water.”
“I’ll get you free. I’ll be there with you. Willa.”
He sat on the edge between the cold,
stone ground and the cold, deep water.
First he let his feet drop in, then he eased closer, then a little closer
still, then, slowly, so slowly he let the rest of his body fall into the
water. The surface wobbled and churned
but not violently. He shivered. He shook.
The water engulfed his clothes.
Up to his neck, he treaded to the image of a struggling, captive
Willa. She may have spoken to him, she
may have said something but he was too enthralled in the fear of that
experience to notice.
[Part Eight]
“What’s wrong with you? What’s happened to you? Tygra?”
Tygra wanted to turn his face away but
he forced himself to utter the words.
“All my life I’ve seen things, I’ve heard voices. Bad voices.
Evil voices. Terrible
voices. Willa! I can’t stop it. I can’t stop it. Please don’t be mad at me.”
“Tygra.
I. I. What were those ‘aspirins’?”
“The blue pills, silence the voice for
a little while but it always comes back, always stronger.”
“What does the voice say?”
“To do things.”
“What kind of things?”
“No.
Don’t make me repeat it. No.”
“Please, Tygra, tell me.”
“To kill, to hurt people. I can resist it, I can fight it sometimes,
but I need help.”
“Tygra!”
“I love you.” He reached out and ran his fingers down her
cheek, pushed her hair away from her face.
“I’ve always loved you.”
“I love you, Tygra, I’ve wanted you for
so long, I’ve wanted to be in your arms, wrapped in your arms for so long.”
Tygra eased himself up and kissed
Willa. The two were passionately
interlocked for but a few fleeting moments and no more. He parted back astonished.
“Can you hear the voice now? Has the voice come back?”
“No voice. No voice.”
Tygra put his arms around Willa as best as he could without getting
caught in the web himself.
“I had to tie you up. You were convulsing. You were frightening.”
“I know and I’m sorry, I lost control,
I, I lost all the blue pills after the fall.”
“When you were out I searched through
your clothes and I found one, there was one left.”
“Did you give it to me?”
“Yes.
I fed it to you. You really don’t
hear that voice now, do you?”
“It’s silent.” He stopped and grabbed the whip that was
still stuck to the web, a broken half of the staff lay nearby. He grabbed a long, loose length and passed it
under Willa’s head. He rubbed it to and
fro around her back, from her neck down.
The adherence began to come off but slowly, very slowly. “I think this is working.”
“Can’t the web be set on fire?”
“You might be harmed if the flames get
out of control.”
All around Tygra the water vibrated,
the web vibrated. A loud machine
suddenly whined in the distance. In the
far corner of the vault a part of one of the walls acame to a square patch of
absolute blackness.
“Get out of here, Tygra --”
“No.
Never. I’ll never leave your
side.” Tygra shook his head. “No!” he said.
The dull humming and vibrating the two had
heard before came louder, far louder from that shadowy alcove. The web rocked violently and Willa
screamed. Tygra reached out to comfort
her but he had not seen those parts of
the web that were the closest to him. He
had gotten unwittingly stuck in place, along side her, the two lay close
together lengthwise but were too far apart to touch.
“What’s going to happen?”
“I don’t know.”
[Part Nine]
At first there were only legs, two or
three legs that stuck out of the dark alcove.
The legs were segmented into two longer, thinner parts and one smaller,
flat section at the end that could have only been the foot. The legs were oily black, tar black and
glittered with sharp, pointed hairs, bundled in small groups that dotted the
form of the appendages throughout. The
legs moved in the most frightening mechanical way. Then more legs came into view, neither Willa
nor Tygra could or would count them.
The crazy humming and vibrating echoed
and resonated in the vast chamber, on the violently swaying web and through the
pool of water below. Tygra saw clearly
the massive set of red eyes, red dots that crawled to him. “Don’t look, Willa, keep your eyes shut.”
“What is it? What is it?”
Willa could not turn her head to see
the red dots, the red glowing dots, the red angry dots. Three large eyes formed a triangle, five
small eyes surrounded the figure in a near-perfect circle. The head was small, about as small as either
of theirs but grotesquely offset by the presence of two fangs formed in the
shape of claws that pointed down. The
fangs were wet with some unknown, odorless liquid that dropped on the web in
large, yellow globs or outright dripped loudly into the water beneath. The fangs were several times the size of the
head and in between the mandibles a rough, red tongue licked those moving outer
jaws and whipped the air to sense the location of the next meal.
Behind, the head narrowed to the
thinnest neck possible. A neck so thin
that Tygra -- to divert his mind’s attention from fear -- wondered in amazement
at how it could support the weight of the body at all. Past the neck was an equally deprived chest
that was not bigger than the head and at which the legs -- all eight of them --
were attached to. The strange and
surreal sound the two had heard came from the chest, from the dense packing of
the legs above the chest where the course hairs rubbed and smacked against each
other.
The great bulk came only at the
end. The abdomen was truly the most
horrific part of the beast. The abdomen
was serrated in radial sections.
Beginning from the waist, each section was thinner than the last, each
section was slightly above the last where, in between, a slick oil evolved from
the quivering air holes in thin bursts of vapors. The very end of the abdomen terminated in
four fingers that were not really fingers but spinners from which fresh webbing
poured out at will. The abdomen was not
exactly round, its soft exterior gave it a flat appearance, though it would
squish itself by the action of its own heavy mass.
Completely elevated from the sticky
thread a good two feet, the spider crawled to Tygra and Willa in a circling,
spiraling path. The web around them
conformed to the beast’s presence much the way a mattress would, the two were
bounced around violently, jarringly. The
ends of the legs brushed up against them, they reacted in quick, electric
shudders.
Tygra closed his eyes. Willa whispered rapidly to herself. The tiger felt something hard and pointed
stab the nape of his neck. He jerked his
head back uncontrollably while his body shivered in wild tremors. She screamed.
She yelled. He opened his eyes
just then. The spider was completely
over them, passing over them. He saw the
underside of the abdomen where yellow figures were carved into the course flesh. He saw the chest that was diamond in shape
and incredibly flat, thin. When the head
brushed their bodies a gooey, yellow pus spewed onto them from the open hole
between the fangs.
The strange substance began to eat away
their clothes, fizzing in incredibly hot, in incredibly painful chemical
reactions. Gray fumes smoked up into the
air. Tygra began to scream when the
acidic excrement reached his skin. He
could not move, he could not move for the agony was too intense. He did not know what was going through her
mind but she was awake, alert, her eyes fixed on the spider.
The head raised and pointed up, the
legs stretched and the spider lifted itself yet further. The snaking tongue could not be seen, no
doubt retracted into the safety of the interior. “Willa!
No! No!” The tiger shot up screaming, screaming, blood
burst forth free from the gaping wound burnt into his flesh from that yellow
substance. He turned his body, the upper
half of which he had freed from the hold of the web through sheer will of
force, to act to cover her.
The spider’s fangs came down in a swift
movement but Tygra caught them in his hands.
To the limit of his and strength he kept the sharp stingers away from
her. He tried to twist the head but the
neck was incredibly powerful. The spider
began to rock back and forth violently, the web began to deform
uncontrollably. The tiger was pressed
down into the water of the pool, the mesh work around him began to tear.
The spider turned abruptly to be over
him. Willa screamed and there was a
great burst of blood but Tygra did not notice, or did not attempt to notice for
he was too busy at the time trying to keep the fangs away.
More of the yellow pus, the acid spewed
out of the head’s mouth. His hands and
fingers were smeared in it and began to bleed and began to dissolve. He had no choice, he had to let go. The spider drew back into the darkness but
its red eyes were still unmistakably present.
His upper arms swayed, jiggled.
Some of his fingers were gone.
His palms bled thick streams of blood, his palms were clumped in
together, like globs, like blobs of boneless meat. All over, his appendages had the consistency
of gelatin.
“Willa!
Willa!”
Worse had befallen his one and only
love.
“Tygra.”
Her voice could not possibly rise any
higher than that whisper. He saw to his
horror that the giant spider had trampled over her. A large gash had been carved along the side
of the body, from her ribs to her waist.
Blood and just the slightest traces of internal organs came out of the open
rent. The webbing around her had also
loosened, elongated and was missing in some areas. Her arms moved, she wailed them in the air,
nearly spent, nearly without energy. She
could no longer resist, she could no longer fight. She turned her head to face him. Blood came out of her mouth.
The tiger himself was almost free from
the spider’s trap but, alas, he was pointed headed-down, headfirst into the
pool of water. He tried to lift himself
up from that precarious and dangerous position but the pain was too great. He could not
just grab some part of the web for leverage since he had no real hands
left and in any case he would have only gotten stuck again.
He wanted to say something to her but
at the end even his voice failed him.
The yellow pus was more than digestive, it was a poison, it was a
sedative. His movements were arthritic,
sluggish. His breathing was heavy. His heartbeat began to cease slowly, slowly,
slowly. He felt all over an overpowering
sense of completion and as he came to total rest, as he succame to vulnerable
weakness there was a certain pleasure that tingled throughout his body.
The spider jumped down hard on Willa,
the fangs were buried deep in her chest, the head shook violently. The sounds of her screaming were accompanied
by the relentless noises of ripping and tearing. Willa was sliced in half, jaggedly,
slowly. Spewed forth everywhere forever,
in explosive eruptions, came gnarled and churned scraps carrion flesh, came
wild, multi-hued assortments of organs, came fountainous squirts of dense,
dark, red blood and other, foul bodily fluids.
The legs and lower abdomen remained glued on the web while the head,
arms and upper torso slipped with a dull splash into the awaiting water below.
Tygra watched the whole thing, he could
not shut his eyes, he could turn his head away.
The tiger saw her, her face still turned to his, her arms still flayed
while she swam, sank deeper, deeper into the dark pool. He saw her disappear in darkness surrounded
in flowing, growing red clouds of blood.
He mouthed to her but he doubted she could have still seen him, he
doubted she could have still been alive or at the least he hoped so anyway.
[Part Ten]
He felt the cold water on the top and back
of his head crawl steadily up down his back while he slowly drooped from the
web into the water. He was
disoriented. He had lost a lot of blood.
“Don’t ignore me! Don’t ignore me! Don’t ignore me!”
“So
what have we learned today, boy?”
“I thought --”
“You
thought what? You thought what,
boy? That you could beat me? That you could silence me? With those puny, little blue pills of
yours? Those aspirins of yours? Don’t make me laugh, boy!”
“You don’t frighten me anymore. I know what you are. You don’t have power over me anymore.”
The voice laughed. “I am you, you are me. Forever!
I am power, your only power, don’t fool yourself, boy, nothing else you
have, not the whip, not the Thundercats, no, not even the Sword of Omens comes
close to me. And what about your
precious Thundercats? Where are
they? Where are they? Coming to your rescue? Not this time! Code of Thundera! I mock your pretended morality, your
holier-than-thou, snotty, stuck-up attitude, your ‘Honor, Truth, Justice’! Who’d you think you were fooling? You’re an animal! An animal!
Everyone knows that, Liono, Panthro, Cheetara, the kittens. Everyone knows that, everyone and especially
Wileykat and especially Willa.”
“Willa loved me! She loved me, not you! Wrong, you’re wrong, you’re wrong, or do you
forget that I know what you are. You’re
nothing! Fool! You’re nothing!”
“Oh,
you know what I am? Enlighten me, boy!” The voice laughed. “Is
that what you think of me? Is that what
you really think of me? After all this time? I suppose it’s my fault, I suppose I’ve
taught you nothing. I’ll tell you what I
am, boy, at the end I have to do everything for you. Well let me tell you what I am. I’m what turns you invisible, not that
useless whip Jagga gave you. I’m what designed
the Tower of Omens and Cat’s Lair. I’m
the sole source and singular cause of all those gifts and the many, many others
you never tapped into, that you could never imagine you could ever tap into,
boy, I’m your mind, I’m your head, I’ve always been up here, always. It’s you that’ve put me down there, you and
your weaknesses, your petty desires and ambitions, your urges, your perverted
urges. Hunt? Kill?
Eat? Those were all you, all you,
all along.
“It was I who conquered my fear of
water! It was I who spent years
studying, cultivating my profession! It
was I, for all those things and more, it was I.”
“What
are you? What are you? The body, the gross and the base, the
animalistic. Not me. Not me.
What? I’ve never needed you,
never, you were but a mere, a mere useless, a frail vehicle for my absolute
genius. And you were never any good at
even that meniality. Worms in the ground
chewing dirt would have been better than you, boy, you’ve suffered me one
addiction too many. What would you have
been without me? NOTHING!”
“You’re afraid! Yes!
You’re afraid and I don’t believe you.
All my life you have been the one that tormented me, you have been the
one that lied to me, you have been the once that caused me more pain than I
care to recall. But at the end, but at
the very end it’s I who’ve destroyed you!
Right here, right now. I’ve
beaten you! I’ve willed you away! I’ve
torture you back with every last ounce of anger and hatred that I’ve suffered
with you! You are nothing! You were never anything! Now look at you, boy, look at you, stare at
yourself, stare at your wounds, at the flowing blood, at the opening gashes, at
the spilling guts. You’re a bloody pulp! You’re a crippled bully. You can’t resist me now, now you’re at my
mercy! You are dead because I have
killed you. How did you think I got
stuck on this spider web in the first place?
An accident? An accident, boy? Fool!
Fool! I did that!”
“Did that?” The voice laughed. “Did that. Yeah, sure, of course, you did that. You conquered me, boy, all right, you conquered me. I never thought you would ever have the guts to do that, but then it sure took you a while to figure it out, didn’t you? I yield, yeah, I yield, but, hey, you’re dead, too. In me did you exist and in my death see my image -- which is your own -- see how utterly you have destroyed yourself. You’re dead!