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
Fireflies came out, thousands of them, lighting the blackness to dim shadows. Fireflies, and loneliness. Loneliness and fear. Lost in the jungle, with no means of protecting himself beside the knife. Alone, with no one to hear if he screamed or
cried. His stomach knotted with hunger. A few figs were not enough for a day spent sloughing through the forest. He ate two more, saving the last three in his pack. He’d been lucky today and found food. Tomorrow he might not be so fortunate.
In the distance an animal screeched—a terrified sound, ending in a scream.
A parrot screeched in a nearby tree. Jake was surprised to see it was alone. Parrots
, he’d been
told, usually traveled in flocks. He watched the green bird watch him, turning its head from side to side, and realized the parrot had only one good eye; the other was gone, leaving a dark hole. He wondered if its flock had turned the damaged bird out. If he’d had any figs left, he might have offered it some. Instead he picked up a thin, almost-straight, fallen branch to use as a staff and waded into the water.
He
knew he had to get them off, or he’d go crazy. With one hand over his mouth to keep from gagging, Jake dug the heads from below his skin
with the dulling knife. His eyes watered and his nerves howled with each cut, but he dug out the leeches and cut them into pieces, one by one.
Memory dredged up, too, the look on his father
’s face, tears behind stone, when he finally gave up hoping Jake would turn out to be the tall, strapping son he’d wanted. He was twelve that year and his father, forty-two. Yet another doctor had reviewed Jake’s case history and run tests, prescribed treatments that didn’t work, and finally thrown up his hands in frustration. Jake’s father had played semipro baseball during and after college. He’d hoped for athletic sons, children he could brag
about. He’d scored high with Jake’s brother, but in Jake he’d gotten a shrimpy kid who read a lot and gave up sports for good as soon as his parents let him.
The surrounding shrubs quaked and a wild boar dashed into the clearing—a big male, with tusks a mile long and teeth as sharp as a chef’s blade. The stench of his musk filled the air. Jake stood statue-still, his heart pounding. The forest had gone silent around him, as if all the birds and insects had fled. He knew boars had no fear of people and could attack. The animal stopped and snorted. Flecks of froth flew from its snout. It dropped its head, its
black eyes locked on the small, scared thing in front of him.
The sloth yipped and swiped its sharp claws at empty air. Something broke in him,
the rulebook
chucked aside. He threw the sloth to the ground, and before it could right itself, grabbed a large rock and smashed down as hard as he could on the animal’s skull. The sloth was dead, but Jake kept banging the rock on its skull until the dirt was red mud and the sloth’s brains had oozed into the ground.
In the field, three Indian women sat cross-legged, cutting the charred canes into pieces small enough to fit into their woven baskets. They
’d surely heard him coming. Jake hadn’t learned to walk with the stealth Mawgis managed so effortlessly. He’d crashed through the forest with all the grace of the boars that had scared him the day before. They’d heard, perhaps, his moans, low and sorrowful, and now they saw him and stood up.
Two of the women stepped back in alarm, but the youngest came forward. She looked twelve or thirteen, with thick, straight black hair that hung loose over her shoulders, small bare breasts, and a short skirt made of fresh green leaves. Twine or something like it was tied over her left shoulder and under her armpit, or maybe it was a tattoo. The same decoration circled both her wrists. She glared at Jake, holding her machete tight in her hand, not like a weapon, but with caution, as though ready to use it if necessary.
Jake held out his hands like a beggar.
“
Please,” he said, or tried to say, or thought he said. He took a couple of steps forward.
Only one of the three women returned. Not the one with the machete,
but one of the older ones, with hair chopped off short and thin lips. She wore
a leaf kilt, a faded green T-shirt, and plastic orange flip-flops. She’d brought a nun.
“
Good grief,” she said. “What happened to you?”
English. Thank God she spoke English.
The
room was small, maybe nine by nine feet. Dun-colored mud walls—probably part of the U-
shaped mud-brick compound
he’d glimpsed across the cane field, but not white inside, not gleaming. One small glassless window was cut into the outside wall. Mosquito netting over the rough-cut hole was held in place with rusted screws. Below it, water stains formed abstract art spreading out down the wall where the rain must have come in. A huge centipede was making its way across a blue-and-brown-striped rug lying on the hard-packed dirt floor. Something about the bug made him queasy—too many legs pumping along. Other than the cot and rug, the room was empty—a cell. It was too much. He slept.
“
Hello,” he said, his voice rusty from lack of use.
“
Have you been here? Six days.”
“
Phone,” he said. “The States.”
Pilar
took the few steps to the cot and dropped to her knees. “Where is it worst?”
She pulled the blanket up—an Ace bandage, ripped and tied
first aid-style, was wrapped around his ankle—and pressed her thumbs into the balls of his feet. Jake focused on the pressure from her
hands, pulling his mind away from the searing, knotted pain in his calves. She moved her thumbs, applying pressure to his insteps, then back to the balls of his feet. The knots began to untie. His ragged breathing grew smoother. He stretched out his legs slowly, fearful that the movement would bring back the pain.
“
Thanks.” He drew in a breath and let it out in pieces. “Nurse?”
People went by outside—women
’s voices floating like petals on the breeze.
“My watch.” He knew he sounded panicky.
“
It was a gift,” he said, fumbling in his attempt to strap it on.
“
From someone with an eye for quality,” she said. “Wife? Girlfriend?”
He couldn
’t get the clasp to close.
“
How are you feeling?” She adjusted a couple of links. “Other than the leg cramps. In general.”
“
Thank you,” he said, and thought how silly it was that he felt better with his watch on.
He had to reach a phone. How long until he
’d have enough strength to walk? Ten miles was a long ways, though he’d probably walked further than that already. He tried pushing himself up to a sitting position again and made it this time. The effort was
exhausting. He closed his eyes. When he opened them again, he saw Pilar coming back into the room with a pile of something in her arms.