Read Shadowline Drift: A Metaphysical Thriller Online
Authors: Alexes Razevich
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Metaphysical, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Suspense, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Metaphysical & Visionary, #Science Fiction
“
Would you enjoy some travel?” he asked. “Benesha can take us many places.”
The benesha started to dry, making Jake’s skin feel tight and dirtier than it already was. With his mud-smeared face and torso, he felt like an
aborigine—or a patron at an expensive spa. The contrasting images made him laugh aloud. Mawgis’s mouth spread into a grin, responding to Jake’s laughter. Or maybe at the sight Jake presented. Or maybe, Jake thought suddenly, at the knowledge that the Tabna was pulling his leg.
An image of the tall, almost gangly Delacort
formed in his mind. Not as Jake usually saw him—on television giving an address or answering questions at a press conference, his dress immaculate, his hair cut military short—but in his bedroom. He stood in front of a mirror. A tailor knelt at his feet, pinning a pair of pants to the proper length. Delacort held a phone to his ear. The scene, bizarre in its normality, made Jake feel like a
voyeur peeping through the White House windows. The gauzy sleeve of a woman’s peignoir poked from a drawer. Delacort was a widower. Jake wondered who his lover might be, or if he wore the peignoir himself.
“
An interesting way to travel, is it not?” Mawgis asked. “No passport. No jet lag.”
“
Not at all. Benesha is a travel facilitator. Where else would you like to go? Tibet? France?”
Update. Agenda. Amaretto
. Definitely not Tabna words. Not even in the Tabna consciousness. But this was his hallucination, not Mawgis’s, and those words were common enough for him. He stood up. By stretching his arms above his head, he
could almost touch the lower corner of the hut’s A-framed roof. Outside, the howler monkeys were at it again with their storming
ahoooowagh
roar. There seemed nothing to do except wait for the monkeys to move on and the drug’s effects to wear off.
Jake sat down again, willing in his altered state to consider believing.
“
Of course,” Jake replied calmly. Who was he to cast doubt on his own hallucination?
“
Exactly,” Mawgis said without waiting for an answer. “But they were wrong.”
“
We will give you all the benesha your hungry food animals can gobble down. Why wouldn’t we?”
“
No trick. We want the world’s people to have benesha.”
“
Benesha is quite poisonous in its natural state.”
“
But the poison is filtered out or made harmless by passing through an animal’s digestion?”
Jake
nodded stupidly. He’d watched that scene a dozen times.
Jake nodded again, feeling more stupid by the moment. He was afraid he understood too well.
“
Then if a jaguar eats a marmoset that’s eaten benesha, the jaguar dies?”
Mawgis sighed noisily.
“You should pay better attention. Benesha is poisonous only to humans.”
Mawgis shrugged.
“More than the moon, less than the sun. The perfect amount.”
More than a month. Several months, probably. Less than a year.
Jesus.
His canteen lay on the floor next to the small pack that held his clothes and supplies. Jake uncapped it and sloshed water around in his dry
mouth. He grabbed two high-dosage aspirin from the med kit and used a thin razor blade to cut each tablet in quarters, swallowing the pills in separate gulps. He dressed quickly, worried the Tabna chief would disappear into the forest again before he could corner him and drag out the truth. Subtly, of course. With finesse.
My mirror image, Jake thought again
, seeing how Mawgis needed two hands to hold the mug, just as he would have needed two hands. Seeing again what others saw when they looked at him. Remembering the many meetings he’d sat in, using two hands on the coffee cup that others handled with ease one-handed. Those unavoidable meals with others who watched him struggle in public
with adult-sized cutlery. Did they want to lean over and cut his meat for him, butter the roll? All of which were nothing compared to the looks of shock he’d seen too many times when he first walked into a room. No one expected a well-respected negotiator to be a small man—as though the job itself demanded height to be done properly.
“
You mix journeys and dreams in your mind,” Mawgis said. “The visit to your president was real.”
Jake
, his face as blank as smoothed sand, gazed at the Tabna chief and waited for him to go on.
Mawgis raised his eyebrows and held out the mug. “Maté
.
You will feel better for it.”
“
Come,” Mawgis said. “We will walk.”
Winded and lost, Jake wondered where Mawgis was taking him and why. He was a fool to have followed
the man into the forest and to have kept following until he no longer knew the way back and had no choice but to stay with his guide. He was a
fool, and this was his job—to stick with Mawgis until negotiations were completed or had broken beyond repair. He silently cursed Mawgis and Father Canas, and his friend Ashne Simapole of World United, who had sent him here so ill prepared. His feet hurt and he cursed them too, but he kept after Mawgis.
“
You’re growing,” Mawgis said.
Jake rubbed his sore feet through the thick socks.
“I doubt it.”
Jake let a few moments pass, the silence between them broken by the hum of insects swirling
over the river and a flock of green parakeets flying overhead. He felt Mawgis’s eyes on him, but stared back toward the forest. Mawgis shifted on the rock where they sat.
Mawgis grinned. Jake drew a deep breath and looked around.
A half-dozen wood-sided buildings
now stood by the river, a different place than where he and Mawgis had first settled onto the rock—the water so wide here that Jake could no longer see to the far shore. Bloated bodies drifted on the greenish-brown
water, some facedown, some face up. More bodies lay on the ground outside the buildings, arms flung out or clutched tight to sides, legs twisted oddly, heads turned to the side. Men, women, and children, their faces distorted in looks of surprise or horror. Flies buzzed in the air, thick as lowering clouds. Vultures tore at the flesh. A distance away, chickens pecked at plates of feed—feed that was flecked with tiny bits of green stone.
Jake slammed his eyes shut to block out the sight.
Mawgis tapped his shoulder. “You can look now. It’s just the two of us again.”
Jake opened his eyes and glared at the other man.
“Why would you do this?”
Jake
’s throat went dry. “I won’t be returning to the camp, will I?”
Mawgis hiked up one shoulder in a shrug.
“You wandered off alone sometime last night or early this morning. Who knows why? To think, perhaps, or out of curiosity to see the forest. Your companions will spend a lot of time looking for you before they reluctantly give up and go back without you.” He smiled kindly. “They like you very much, you know. They were impressed with your bravery and clear thinking when the canoe turned over on the
river during your journey here. Except Ian, of course. He finds you disgusting.”
Jake
’s heart hammered, but he kept his eyes on Mawgis and said nothing.
Jake blew out a long, slow breath.
“What are you going to do about me?”