“Run
From The Darkness.”
By
RD Rivero
July
15, 1999
The
trees were incredibly tall and wide and they covered the sky almost completely
with their bewildering entanglement of leafy branches. Only occasionally were there patches clear
enough to catch fragments of the moon or of passing clouds up above. A misty haze clung to the earth down below,
it was not a fog, it did not adversely affect visibility any worse than the
darkness of night. The telltale sounds
of owls hooting, flying, wings flapping, bodies scrapping across branches rang
throughout the forest. Slowly advancing
with the pace of the mist, crawling on the ground, from the thick underbrush
came clear and distinct scuffling, shifting, rummaging. Pebbles and rocks on the forest floor would
press and rub upon each other alerting the presence of the unseen, lurking in
the cover of the seemingly dormant scenery.
Cold breezes would ruffle the trees together to form sounds too gruesome
to discuss any further except to say that they were like echoes of muffled
voices, crying out in fear and terror.
Tygra
sped through that harsh, uninviting environment toward a flicker of light far
in the distance. An unsettling worry
drove him without rest. He had come
through the trail many time before in the day light hours. At night he was certainly at a disadvantage
but his intuition was adequate. The
landscape guided him since the trees offered no help as far as direction or
location was concerned.
In
a moment of carelessness he took a wrong step.
Tygra slipped on a few smooth stones and he fell to the ground on his
side. Pebbles pummeled his arms, chest
and face repeatedly his left thigh in particular felt the brunt of that
onslaught. He felt an unusual sensation
in his hands and joints that made him want to laugh or giggle, it was not pain
exactly.
His
movements were sluggish and arthritic.
Groggily, painfully he arose discouraged and dejected. The unseen interlopers that he knew
surrounded him were coming closer, ever so closer, like vultures circling dying
prey. Just as quickly as before, if
only more cautious, he moved on and along to his beckoning destination.
At
last, at long last the trees cleared and were gone. Even the eerie mist had disappeared along with the pebbles and
rocks. The landscape opened into a
grassy plane. Its vegetation was
unnaturally thin and all around not a single plant rose higher than a few
inches from the ground.
For
the first time that night Tygra had a clear and unblocked view of the sky. The moon loomed in the heavens, its ominous
eye gazed unblinkingly at the few below awake at that ungodly hour.
The
shadow of absolute blackness cloaked the trees such that scarcely a detail of
texture was discernible. An unbroken
circle of swaying tree tops surrounded the clearing in a way that was both
comforting and terrorizing. The
liquidity of that vision was almost too dreamy. Overwhelming grandeur, blended with uneasiness, with snatches and
echoes of childhood fears of the night and the dark and the other worldly
creatures that dwelt in the unseeable and unspeakable, things he would have
rather not heard treading through the underbrush, over the forest floor, things
that had no doubt doused him with pebbles when he had slipped unexpectedly,
awed Tygra.
He
remembered where he was, it all came back suddenly. Tygra continued to follow the beckoning lure of the flickering
light from before until he reached a cabin near the center of that grassy
clearing. He heard a rippling echo that
remained a source of mystery until he had made it around the back of the wooden
structure where he found a small pond that crossed into brooks and creeks that
ran deep into the forest. The sky above
reflected uneasily upon its turbulent waters.
He
caught sight of the mist again. It had
spread up to the border of the clearing. It had a faint, green tint.
There was something else, something flickering deep in the woods,
something he did not want to see again.
Tygra returned to the business of the cabin. He treaded nimbly up to the front door and just as he was about
to knock it thrust open to reveal his friend Grune.
"Tygra? You shouldn't have come."
"They
you are in trouble. Are you all
right?"
"I
am, at least I think so. What on earth
are you doing out here? In the middle
of the night? You know how dangerous
--"
"You
called me, you're in trouble and you called me."
"Those
dreams again."
"Grune,
I'm here now, you can't send me back."
"I
just -- one was enough, not two, two don't have to -- all right, come in but be
careful."
Grune
led the way down the dark, narrow hall.
Tygra silently ran his hands across the walls. He felt the coarse, cut wood that seemed to give the whole cabin
a profound illusion of intimacy. Grune
opened a door unexpectedly. The
flickering light of a crackling fire place flooded Tygra's eyes.
Tygra
noticed that the inside of the cabin was larger, strangely larger than what the
outside of the cabin had led him to believe.
The thought was fleeting for the cozy den was most inviting. Gray stones mortared together in the feel of
a old, first earth design was the construction of the fireplace.
To
the left was a small table with four chairs.
In the background was a similar old-style stove. The only misplaced item was a metal case
resting on the floor, leaning on to the back legs of a chair. To the right were several large drawers and
shelves. There was also a small, indoor
bathroom, perhaps the most modern amenity in the place. On the wall next to the fire place was a wooden
stepladder to a room above the right hand part of the den, where the sleeping
bags were placed.
"Sit
right here."
Grune
directed his friend to the chair farthest from the metal case. Tygra was about to say something when he saw
that there was someone else in the room.
The man had a small frame and was bald, almost totally hairless.
"That's
right, you two've never met. Tygra,
this is, Etreum." The two shook
hands, Tygra felt intense cold come from the stranger. They were strangers still though they had
been introduced.
"Etreum
was another unexpected visitor."
Etreum
and Grune stared for a nervous moment that Tygra observed very well. He sensed right away that something was
going on, something far less cordial but he did not dwell on those misgivings
any further just yet. He wondered if
his intuition was not playing some trick on him.
Etreum.
"I
still can't believe it. After all these
years this place is finally yours. This
place, this desolate, lonely place in the middle of no where that you call
paradise. You were like a kid exploring
the wilderness when you first came to third earth and I could understand. I mean everyone wants a tree house at that
age."
"Yes,
yes, I've always wanted this cabin. I
used to hike up here every morning in the summer. When ever I had an excuse to get away from my Thundercat duties
I'd find myself drawn here."
Etreum allowed himself a slight smile.
"It's mine, Tygra, it's all mine."
"Well,
if that's the way it's going to be from now on I'll call before I show up,
especially when it's the middle of the night."
"Just
what drove you to come up here? You
never quite answered that."
"Grune
and I've been coming up here for years now, like we said but we've never been
in the cabin. When he said he was
spending the night here when I saw him last this morning I just had a funny
feeling, a bad feeling I'd say. Then I
had this very disturbing nightmare almost as soon as I shut my eyes to sleep in
bed a few hours ago. It's too bad that
all I remember of that dream now is darkness.
I don't always forget dreams so quickly. I was in such a rush to get here because I knew he was in
trouble."
Grune
lost his easiness and stood tense.
Etreum was visibly interested but changed the subject abruptly.
"Why
wouldn't you want to come up here at night again?"
"That's
just it. At night. You know all the creepy things that happen
at night? I suppose it's 'cause the
moon looks so much bigger in the woods."
"The
harvest moon, but you couldn't see the moon, I mean, not all of it at once,
until you got to the clearing around the cabin."
"The
trees were tall and they blocked out the sky.
There was almost total darkness.
Now there's nothing more frightening than darkness."
"I'll
grant you that," said Etreum.
"They will run and hide form the darkness for as long as they can
for the darkness is how it ends, not with fire, not with ice, not even with
explosions. There'll be no sudden
epiphany only emptiness, coldness, coldness.
Yes. If you think the nights of
today frighten wait until the end of times when we wind headlong into the open
and the infinite."
"If
I should ever find myself in that predicament."
"You
shall, as we all, as we exist our energies are ordered, in constant order the
there is consciousness. Soon, so soon chaos will rule and consciousness will
cease, will dissipate into the void, like a water spiral down the drain. A pathetic end."
"That
may be the case but I don't think it'll be happening soon."
"Time
has no meaning, Tygra, it's a persistent and stubborn illusion."
"A
most enlightening conversation, wasn't it.
What about a nice game of cards?"
"Anything
in particular?" asked Tygra.
"Hearts,"
said Grune.
"We've
only three, don't we need four players?"
"Nothing
is impossible, it will be provided shortly."
"I'll
take that. If it's a friendly game what
harm can come of it?"
Grune
shuffled and dealt cards, he divided the entire deck evenly among the three
players. One card was left over, it was
used to start the game. Tygra won those
first few games. He noticed that after
every dealing his friend Grune, to his right, looked older, frailer, weaker.
"So,
Etreum, you talk a lot about the end and how all things'll wind down. Tell me.
What about the beginning?"
"The
beginning?"
"How
did it all start?"
"Tygra. Etreum.
I'll let you two discuss the intimate mysteries of the universe all you
want. Let me just step out for a
moment." He excused himself and
walked limply to the bathroom. Grune
had become a man aged in his sixties, not the robust outdoors man of thirty
that he had been only an hour or so before.
Tygra
and Etreum were left alone. Etreum's character
changed completely. He grew disoriented
and stumbled out of his chair. He could
not walk straight and twice fell to the ground onto his left side, the same way
Tygra had when he slipped on the smooth stone.
The similarity did not end there.
Collapsed on the wooded floor, Etreum reacted just like Tygra had when
he dodged and fought off the pebbles thrown at him by what lurked out in the
deep forest.
Tygra
tried to help the small man up but each time Etreum let out a great roar. An animal in pain. When he managed to get himself back on his feet, he spoke about
the question Tygra had asked. Even his
voice had altered, now not merely one singular voice but the combination of an
untold number of other tongues that spoke in unison, in a manner much like what
Tygra had heard come from the trees, back in the woods, that would brush
together when the breeze blew.
"From
chaos. From order. From nothing. From everything. From
being and nonexistence. From all things
contrary."
Etreum
sat on the table again with his head in his hands in dire pain. Suddenly Grune returned, much younger and in
his twenties. Etreum's stable demeanor
resurfaced. He was groggy and promptly
excused himself.
"He
went crazy, didn't he? See, I came to
your rescue."
"Where
the hell'd you find him?"
"This
afternoon, when I first entered the cabin.
I have never been in here before, ever.
I had no idea someone still lived in this cabin. I had no idea anyone ever did. When I bought this whole place from the
Berbils no one in the village told me what I would find."
"Grune,
I think it's safe to say that outside you and me no one knows what's been
living in this cabin. Was he crazy
around you?"
"Yes. Now I tried to escape many times but every
time I'd get an idea he was ready. Chanting,
roaring, I couldn't handle him."
"It's
odd that he's calm when he's around more than one person. What can we do?"
"He
was going bonkers for hours without tiring.
I guess we could ignore all his barking and hollering it's just that,
well, the more he should've gotten tired, the more I did. He feels dead, Tygra, he's a corpse."
"He
talks like a demon. You'd think he was
from the future the way he's talking.
Why would he come here though?"
"Protection. Maybe he can travel backwards in time. I don't know but he's not remotely
human."
"What's
that metal case there?"
"It's
not mine that's for sure."
"While
he's out why don't we open it? There
might be a clue within?"
Carefully
and silently they brought the case up from the ground. It was superbly modern and had no markings
or features of any kind on its surface.
They opened it quite by accident.
Inside were maps of various parts of third earth, measuring tools, pens and
paper and other objects of such strange geometry that they had parts that would
appear and then disappear. Grune tried
to grab a long, gray ruler and discovered that it was not as flat as he thought
it was, it contained a whole other dimension that promptly vanished as soon as
he let it go. There were seven colored
spectacles that also shared that extra dimensional property. Tygra stuffed the red one into his pocket
while Grune was not looking. They shut
the case and placed it back where it had been just in time.
When
Etreum returned the room darkened in a haze of rolling smoke and mist. Only Tygra was alarmed, only he was aware of
the change. Grune dealt out the whole
pack of cards and unlike all the other times before no card was left over. Etreum went first with the two of
clubs. Tygra did not win the game. Grune dealt out another hand and again no
card was left but there should have been, so Tygra thought, since there were
only three at the table. Fifty two
cards divided into three must leave one card as a remainder.
Tygra
felt dizzy and disoriented but, as with the thickening, misty haze, no one
noticed or cared. He managed to pay
careful attention to how Grune parted the cards. The visual evidence was undeniable, the deck was being divided
among four players. Someone was sitting
directly to Tygra's right, where nothing more than an empty chair ought to be.
As
the game continued the phantom player made its presence felt, especially after
it had won the round. Etreum and Grune
had something to say about the phantom player's turn of good fortune but all
Tygra could muster was a slight grunt.
He was so exhausted, he could no longer hold his cards steady. His fingers were stiff, his joints squeaked
the same way from before, after his fall.
He looked to his left, the phantom figure was cloaked in shadow and in
the green mist that seemed to pour out of the very walls.
Tygra
looked at Etreum and Grune. Both were
astoundingly rejuvenated. Etreum had
grown a head full of hair. Tygra felt
drowsy, he was fighting sleep and the urge to shut his eyes forever.
He
got up and excused himself.
"Beware
of the trees, Tygra, the trees are the greatest parasites," said Etreum.
In
the small, well lit bathroom he looked into a mirror. He had an old man's face, thirty years older than what he ought
to be. Frail. He looked out a window and saw that the green mist had engulfed
the whole clearing around the cabin.
"Now
don't you think about doing something in there, Tygra, you get back to the
game, we still have a few more hands to play with you," said Grune.
Tygra
did not respond. He searched for a way
out but instead found the closet.
Grune's dying body was within.
He also looked much, much older.
"I'm
sorry, friend, I didn't know. Listen to
me, you must escape. That's not me out
there and he's already begun a copy of you.
It's too late for me, my twin's complete but yours isn't, you still have
energy, you can fight him."
Grune's
corpse withered into dust before Tygra's eyes, it was gone, not even the bones
had been left behind. Tygra was running
out of time and without further excuse he smashed the glass window with the lid
of the toilet chest. Gusts of fresh,
foggy air swirled into the stale room.
He threw his whole body out the small opening.
"You
can't leave me, you can't leave this place.
Get back! Get back! Etreum's attacking me! Help!
You don't know what you're headed into Tygra!"
Outside
Tygra dragged himself through the clearing to the lake, there he swam for a
while before he let the current sail him down a brook. His energy and vitality slowly
returned. The trees echoed Etreum's
voice, they called Tygra to return in vain desperation.
The
brook gave way to the river and suddenly the forests ended. The night sky was in full view, the heavens
were dark but manageable. The mist was
gone and the trees were silent.
Dry
on a moonlit, sandy river bank he remembered the glasses he had stolen from
Etreum's case. He put on the red
spectacles and found what he suspected all along. He saw into the future, surrounded by screams of terror, the
universe was rushing onto eternity forever, plunging deeper into the darkness
of death.
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