Tag Archives: forbidden love

An amusement park at dusk, neon lights reflecting off wet pavement. A towering crab-like humanoid carries a woman in a sleek black dress and turquoise heels. They leap from a rooftop, silhouetted against the twilight sky, while below, stunned officers and cheering spectators watch in awe.

The Monster of Blueberry Falls, Chapter 8

Longevity and Other Stories
A life without end,
stars call from the endless night,
time slips through our hands.
Buy Yours Here:
Amazon - Books2Read

This is a draft version of a chapter from John Saye’s book, Longevity and Other Stories. If you are daring, why not subscribe to my newsletter (they come few and far between), and I’ll send you a PDF copy of the book?

The police filled the theater. Well, fifteen did, including the mustache man, who seemed in charge. They walked through the back of the theater in the dark, searching for an eight-foot crab man and his tour guide girlfriend, who seemed to have lost her shoes in the last little while, as if they could just blend in with everyone else.

The rest of the cops, and there were a few, stayed outside to keep anyone else coming in as if this were the only entrance to the building.

They canvas out, and tiptoed the steps up and down the aisles on one side, the audience in the dark save for the few people who couldn’t help from recording video on their phones. All of them had a brief blur of light flashing on their face. The auditorium could hold a couple of hundred folks and be currently about half-full. On the other side, instead, a stage was a great big aquarium wall from edge to edge that looked out forever, even though it looked that way by professionals. In the tank, we’re a variety of fish, including a couple of lumbering, very well-fed sharks, and three mermaids, three ladies, dressed in mermaid costumes, with incredibly long flowing, floating wigs that surrounded every move they made with graceful edges. They were dancing to a song that was being piped into the auditorium and one of them; looked like the one on the left was mouthing the words like she was on Broadway and trying to project her lip-syncing to the very back row, and she did that exceptionally well.

Tubes floated about every three or four feet that bubbled, and though the ladies were incredibly adept at holding their breath, you had to breathe sometimes, and there it was.

As the cops crossed in front of the aquarium wall, their black silhouettes screwing up everyone’s video of the presentation, the mermaids started pulling air from the tubes much more often, to where the lead had to blow a huge bubble in the middle of her big part.

They then started a dance where they turned and flipped, and they flew into the sky, presumably gasping for air as it was Janet and Wen who helped there, up and out of the aquarium.

One of them was hiding in the dressing room.

One of them screamed, and another started giggling. They were backing away, their latex fins flapping when Wen spoke. “Please do not be afraid.”

“What are you, some kind of mascot for Captain Tacos?”

He smirked, which was interesting to watch because it involved lots of difficult muscle movements and his feelers popped up as well.

“No, I’m off the sea. I have a brief memory of wince I came.”

“Did he just say ‘wince?’”

“He did. Darling, you are hot.”

“He’s mine!” said Janet, and she was between them.

“I’m not butting in, but can y’all help us if you’re going to be up there?”

Janet scowled, but helped. They were just sitting there. With those fins on, they couldn’t get up.

“Of course,” said Wen. He picked each of them up, and Janet helped them out of their fins.

“Excuse us, coming through!”

While he, an eight-foot crab monster, Jan stood there, helping Janet get the fins off three beautiful young ladies, four clowns dressed like sea lions, passed through and went face-first into the water.

One of them yelled to the last one, get the shark thing on your way. Then they were gone. The last guy picked up what looked like a crazy harpoon gun before jumping in.

One of them popped up for a second and said, “New act?”

“No?” said, Wen.

Once the mermaid’s fins were hanging up, and they were standing there in bikinis, drying off enough to throw something on, one looked up, then at Janet. “It’s him, isn’t it?”

“Yeah,” said Janet.

“This is the monster of blueberry falls, right?”

“It is.”

Janet hugged him around the waist.

“How long has he been hiding out there?”

“Time? For a little over a year,” said Janet.

“My god. I should scream, but Janet, what are you going to do?”

“Run?”

“You can’t do that forever.”

“I know.”

“This is like a legit space man moment!”

“What?”

“I Jean, this is the thing where you too run like hell, and then eventually while you’re sleeping, the black ops guts get you, and string you up by your toenails and ask you tons of questions you don’t know the answer to, while they race him away and pack him on ice so he can’t hurt anyone.”

“Dizzying,” said Wen. “I wouldn’t hurt anyone.”

“Unless they went after her, right?”

“I suppose?”

“Janet, is he a good kisser?”

“Oh, so good!”

“Then you know it, those guts are probably about three to five minutes before knocking to get in here. Y’all got to get out!”

“What’s the best way?” said, Janet.

“Through the pool.”

“Down there?”

“Sure! It is full of bubblers, so every few feet you can get a gulp of air. Then, towards the back, there’s a rock. From the glass, it doesn’t look that big, but from the inside, it’s huge. There’s a tunnel down there that leads straight back to another tank where they keep fish we are getting ready to let into the big one.”

“Okay, don’t you think I need more than a bubbler or something to breathe? Are they on the other side?”

“Yeah, they go back. I know I’ve snuck boyfriends back there, and we made it fine.”

“More than once,” said another.

“Okay, frequently, all right? Gimmick a break.”

Three knocks sounded on the door.

“In you go,” said one mermaid, and pushed Janet into the pool.

“We peeked at her.”

“Well, I figured you’d be fine. Get in!”

Three more knocks. “We’re coming in police!”

He jumped in after her where Janet was struggling to get down to one tube the bubblers were pouring the air in with. Meanwhile, the mermaids threw off their robes to kiss the incoming cops to see how dedicated they were to their jobs. At least one got a new friend for life.

Wen pulled Janet down to the bubbler and waved at the cheering crowd while Janet got used to it and took a good breath and stopped kicking so much.

Her shirt rode up around her, filling with bubbles. Those trying to do their show were astonished by the crab man busying in on them. Only one of them realized he was a) completely at home under the water in that getup, and b) didn’t need the tubes to breathe anything.

One shark swam by and he caressed its smooth vellum belly as it passed. It came to face for more.

When pointed at the rock at the back.

Janet nodded her head, and he took her by the hand.

They swam, mostly him doing the work, pulling her along, and they entered the cave at the back, but not without waving to their cheering public, who were already blowing up their cellular data plans, uploading everything right away online.

They ducked down into the cave and Janet found something that made her love the girls upstairs in a heartbeat, a bubble tube she could carry with her. They swam down the tunnel, no longer decorated for anyone’s pleasure, and passed several fish who were usually out in the big tank on their way out to the other end, where there was a barrier.

After they floated there, Janet saw the pull and pulled it, opening the sliding door. The swimmers pulled the door behind them as they swam out into the next pool.

Janet looked up and saw about a hundred swirling stingrays. He smiled at her and, pulling her by the hand, swam up into the middle of the swirl. The stingrays reacted to him, scattering as they approached. Janet wondered was the magic was normal, but she was busy running out of air, so she sort of lost interest.

They popped up in the middle of the pool, and she took a huge breath.

“I have never wanted to talk so much in my life!”

“What did you want to say?”

“I do not know. Let’s get out of here.”

They climbed out. She looked fine. Her clothes were dripping.

“Shit, she’s right.”

“What?”

“Where will we go? They’re just going to find us.”

“Look, there’s a couch and a gym bag by the side. See if there’s a change of clothes. I’m sure they won’t mind if we take it.”

“Look like a towel, too.”

She dried herself off. He enjoyed watching her disrobe and toss her wet shirt aside.

Rummaging through the gym bag, she scoffed.

“I can’t believe this!”

“What?”

“There’s only a dress in here, oh, and shoes.”

“Shoes? That’s good, right?”

“High heels?” Naked, with the black dress over her arm, she held the five-inch turquoise heels up to show him. “I can’t run in these!”

“I’ll bet they look great on you.”

She rolled her eyes, and kissed him anyway, then pulled on the dress and screw it, the shoes too.

The mermaid show let out. After a series of other acts, each one a little more disturbing than the last, and no more sightings of the crab man, the doors opened, and everyone filed out. Several folks were milling around talking about the crab man. Several of them were on their way to Captain Tacos, some were talking to the officers. They were showing each other their videos and counting their comments and likes, and giving each other thumbs-ups.

The officers in the dressing area above the tank found themselves joined by the clowns in fins, and after waving goodbye, joined others chasing around and down the hall. They stormed into the back room, just as Janet jumped up to ride Wen out the door. He tore across them, swinging with his great claws, and knocked one man right to the ground, and another man down into the tank. He immediately started screaming and saying “sting rays,” repeatedly.

Wen bounded through an extensive set of double doors, carrying Janet at his side, kicked through, and bounded down the hall. Her hair flew behind her. Her eyes were bright, and she was singing as he trounced one officer after another. This one down, that one in the dirt, up on the wall, hooked on a giant hook by his jacket, down under a table, up through a window. He yelled a lot as he flew through, head first, shoes last, and lots of shattered glass everywhere. They bounded out the back door, slamming it with his claws.

They were a pair. He with his armored exoskeleton and she in her black dress and turquoise pumps. She thought, all I need is some nice shell earrings or something, right? No problem. He jumped across the alley, up on a pole. He hit a corner and broke it off. Then Janet, still holding on, jumped back on the roof of the building behind him, housing all the tanks. He got to his feet.

“Ready?”

“Ready!” he jumped off the roof, and out onto the ride building for the haunted house. He climbed to the roof, with Janet by his side, and everyone in the courtyard cheered. One of them got him on her camera phone again.

“Gotcha.”

“Thank you,” said the man next to her. He took the phone from her hand, without her even knowing it.

She couldn’t see his face, with its disguise, and she could almost concentrate on it. Then he stepped back.

“Where’s my phone?” She turned and lost where he was. She was by herself, looking around as Wen and Janet jumped from the roof of the haunted house and landed right in front of her.

“Hi.”

“Hi back,” said Janet.

“You look nice,”

“Thank you.”

They bounded off down the way.

A bustling amusement park with a pirate stage show in progress. A towering crab-like humanoid and a woman stand atop the mast, silhouetted against the sky. Below, cheering park guests and startled actors watch as they prepare to swing away. Authorities push through the crowd, desperate to capture them.

The Monster of Blueberry Falls, Chapter 7

Longevity and Other Stories
A life without end,
stars call from the endless night,
time slips through our hands.
Buy Yours Here:
Amazon - Books2Read

This is a draft version of a chapter from John Saye’s book, Longevity and Other Stories. If you are daring, why not subscribe to my newsletter (they come few and far between), and I’ll send you a PDF copy of the book?

They ran from the log flume, Janet riding the creature’s thigh while holding onto his waist. In the sun he looked a little bluer than red, and for the first time in good light you could see a raggedy loincloth over his midsection, his legs were more human than anything else, though still covered in patches of hard armor, and his face, out in the sunlight was larger than a man’s but had armor plates across his cheeks and forehead. His mouth appeared human, wide in a roar as they bounded through the park, people jumping left and right as they ran.

Around his mouth, what looked like a shaggy beard coming through the cracks in the armor was closer to feelers. They twitched as they ran, smelling the air. Nearby there was popcorn warming up, cotton candy being freshly spun, and the smells of fresh caramel and salt were everywhere.

A mane of shag behind him flapped in the breeze. You could call it hair when it wasn’t a wet mess, but it was closer to blue than any recognizable color.

They bounded through the kid’s section of the park where there was a large picnic field surrounded by rides, dairy food stands, and a grandstand where they were playing something relatively patriotic. 

On one side of the field was a spinning hat ride, three or four people per spinning top hat. As they bounded past, then through, people tried in vain to get a look at this monstrosity running through the ride. The ground already had a swirly pattern on it, and that mixed with the whirling heat made it impossible to focus on them. They were a blur of bluish-red, leaping through the psychedelic color palette. One child screamed while her mother sat next to her.

Another hat full of kids tried to get a look at him, leaned just the wrong way, lost their equilibrium in the worst fashion and all of them threw up at once in a spiral pattern. The ride operators all called it the open blender. Imagine a blender full of milk and your favorite fruit, maybe some pomegranate juice for good measure, and it’s time for a smoothie. You hit the button, but where is the top? Soon the smoothie is all over the counter, the blender, you, anything you own, and these kids looked like that, but it was total vomit lunch, the amalgamation of all things cotton candy, corn dogs, and a healthy amount of chips, and queso dip, with jalapeños, in all directions like a spinning top.

Janet and the creature were bounding through and could not see the carnage clearly, but she turned and saw some of it as it exploded out. The trouble was, as fast as the hats go, a kid can cover a lot of ground with a single or double hurl, and this would certainly mean they’d have to shut the ride down. Already the second hat exploded with vomit, and then a third, spinning and flinging vomitus muck in every direction.

Janet could hear them screaming, and varying how just over the sides of their hats as she and the creature bounded out into the field.

They ran through people hanging out, through packs of teenagers trying to be cool, and families attempting to give picnics that they had dragged coolers full of stuff into this park to eat. The father was already thinking of just tossing the coolers here because he was tired of carrying them.

They ran through the grass, his clawed feet digging into the dirt, and he felt free for the first time since he’d met Janet. His face was full of cheer. His smile was wide. He ran through a patch of butterflies, headed for the pond in the center of the park.

“No, not the pond!”

“It’s fine,” he said, and jumped into the pond, touching a series of rocks that either jutted above the water or he could see we were just under. He bounded left and right, then onto a statue fountain of a horse spewing water back into the pond, climbed it for a look, and found patches of people all around him, staring at the two of them, Janet riding his thigh as they bounded off into the Park.

People scattered like ants in little, almost telepathic groups to avoid them.

Janet was too busy holding on for dear life, but she wondered, was this what it would be like, to love a monster? “I need a name for you,” she said.

“Wen.”

“When?”

“Just Wen.”

“Well Wen, when will we get there?”

“I’m too busy being free!”

They bounded to the end of the park, jumped the fence, and crossed into an avenue where people were watching a bunch of pirates play a sing-a-long with the crowd. They were clapping and singing with vague accents. One of them holding a fake metal hook over one hand dropped it. It thunked to the floor as he flubbed his line. Another balancing on a peg leg just fell over. All the rest of them reached up and lifted their eye patches, complete with little ruby-eyed skulls on them, so they could see properly. About this time, Wen and Janet bounded through.

The kids screamed, and one pirate said, “bloody hell!”

“Just as folk, Janet, and the sea monster here,” she said.

“Wen.”

“Right, Wen, the mega crab!”

They bounded through.

“I’ve seen nothing like that,” said one pirate.

“I once saw a mermaid,” said another. “She guards me treasure, flowing hair and fins you couldn’t…”

“Darby, that’s just Esmeralda from the mermaid show you dolt.”

“What?”

“I think the thing was real.”

Janet and Wen ran back in, jumped clear over the pirates, still struggling to keep their audience, and grabbed the thick roles that were part of their stage, which was already designed to look like a ship, climbed the mast, and together they swung behind the building and vanished from sight.

“Look, it’s the best of the seven seas, Darby,”

“Oy, I See it, Ned. We have been too many days out there on this ocean to see something like that.”

“Did you see what e fad round his waist?”

“It looked like our fair maiden Janet it does!”

The crowd cheered.

“Three cheers for Janet and the monster!

“Hip hip!”

“Hooray!” went the crowd.

“Where’ve they gone?”

“He’s climbing the mast, I thought.”

Janet and Wen swung back into view at the top of the mast. Everyone cheered for them again.

“There they are! No doubt looking across the See for our next port.”

“You see any of them?” she said.

“Not yet,” said Wen.

“They’ve gotta be close. Can we keep running?”

“I don’t know.”

Wen held his great claw up to block the sun and could see them. “There they are.” Cops and a handful of other people were swarming in their direction.

“I don’t know how long we’ve got,” he said.

She kissed him, climbing up to his face. He cradled her body with his over-sized crab claw hands.

“I love you.”

He smiled, smirked, smiled, and waved his feelers around.

The crowd sheered. The outages cheered,

“I don’t show what’s going on, do you, Darby?”

“Not I. Maybe the park’s introducing a new character?”

“I never heard of him.”

“You remember Blueberry Falls?”

“The creature?”

In ran the police. They were in blue and were already drawing a crowd. One of them looked a little more official than the others.

“It’s the Authorities!” Both of the pirates went face down on the deck.

“Are they gone yet?”

“No.”

One of them peaked. “No?”

They stayed down.

The lead offers came forward. He had a grizzled grilled face with too many lines on it and a big, bushy mustache. He called up to them with a megaphone as the cops spread out. Some of them herded people away, and others pulled their guns but kept them down. They were ready, just not threatening.

“They haven’t gone around the back,” said Wen.

“What about the…”

“Let’s find out what he has to say.”

The creature sat down on one timber and clamped on with his legs. Janet stood up beside him. We crossed his claws and watched the men on the ground; he pointed down. “Look, the pirates are playing dead.”

“There are people on the way,” said the officer into his megaphone. “It’s best if you just come down.”

“What people?” said Janet.

“People,” said the officer. She looked at her man, her crab god, in this world, this day, this age. Certainly, she couldn’t keep him to herself. Could there be peace? She’d sure try for a couple of hours of it until humanity came for her. For them. She’d be studied as well. Where would they take her?

She imagined being taken to a white basement room with bright lights tied to a heavy table in the middle while government types across the room behind darkened glass asked her questions, to which she didn’t know the answers.

“Where’s your boyfriend from?”

“How’d he get here?”

“What were you going to do for money?”

“Do you have a little island paradise set aside?”

The lights snapped off, and she was in the dark. She opened her eyes and was in the same place, looking at the police below.

“It’ll be better if you just come on down.”

“Why?”

His voice was low. You could hardly tell where it was coming from.

“Because It’s best for her. Turn yourselves in, and we’ll make sure she doesn’t come to harm.”

“So, what you mean, is that someone is out to take us both in,” said Janet.

“Who?”

The officer opened his arms wide, then brought the megaphone back to his mouth. “Your guess is as good as mine. All I know is it is over the top. The security we don’t even know about.”

“Then how come a bunch of rent-a-cops is the fest thing cornering us now?”

“We’re here just to observe, contain, and follow you, as best we can.”

“Then you have no proper authority,” said Wen. “That’s What I wanted to know. You have nothing.”

He stood up, gathered Janet in his arms, then chose a rope that the performers often used to get down to the stage. They swung down, flying, and he landed carefully on the stage, next to the cowering pirates.

“Get up, my friends,” he said, gathering them up around them. The pirates got to their feet to rousing applause, while two-hundred nearby people were all streaming them live on YouTube, Facebook, or somewhere else on their phones, if they weren’t tweeting about him or screaming so loud. #crabman! The authorities stepped forward, and Wen jumped over them, kicking the leader in the chest. He went down.

“Come with the pirates!”

The crowd cheered. They laughed and rallied around him, blocking the authorities and hindering them as Wen and Janet bounded. Down the way and over to the front of a giant mermaid cave.

“See, there are mermaids!” said one pirate. A mermaid was sitting on each side of the entrance on a rock, with a couple of people standing by if they need to move or anything.

He stopped, and Janet stood by his side.

“Hi Janet,” said one mermaid.

“May we pass?” said Wen.

“Of course!” said the other mermaid.

They entered the cave as the crowd behind them closed off their camera phones.

Wen and Janet ran into the cave of wonders.

The officers burst through, but they lost Janet and the rest in the dark.

A thrilling amusement park log flume ride plunges down a steep drop. In the back row, a woman passionately kisses a towering crab-like humanoid with massive claws, as water splashes around them. Other passengers look on in shock, while the ride’s dim lighting casts eerie reflections off the water.

The Monster of Blueberry Falls, Chapter 6

Longevity and Other Stories
A life without end,
stars call from the endless night,
time slips through our hands.
Buy Yours Here:
Amazon - Books2Read

This is a draft version of a chapter from John Saye’s book, Longevity and Other Stories. If you are daring, why not subscribe to my newsletter (they come few and far between), and I’ll send you a PDF copy of the book?

They were face-to-face. The crackling and sparking of the dying computers in the elephant died down. They stood a few feet apart. Her hat was gone, and her hair fell, mussed at her shoulders. She breathed heavily, doing her best to stay calm and catch her breath.

There was a failing light. He drew closer to her and relaxed his arms. He’d been at the ready, struggling for so long. Nothing came out when he tried to speak.

She reached up and shushed his lips with her finger.

“Shhh. It’s okay. It’s okay.”

She grabbed his body in a great hug, drawing his powerful body to her. He was about eight feet tall next to her, five feet nine inches.

He reached his great arms around her, his claws pressing into the small of her back. He kissed her. It took her by surprise, and she let him draw all the breath out of her before they disengaged. She hugged him back, grabbing at his waist.

“Janet,” he said in the near dark. “I… I… Janet.”

“I know. It won’t be long. We’ve got to get out of here. We can’t let them find us.”

They could hear the muffled screams from the distance, people breaking through the back door, headed here to see if maybe the monster had killed the girl.

“We’ve got to hide.”

He turned his head and sighed, then turned from her.

“We’ve got to go now. I’d rather be with you and never see them again. They can’t find you, they’d just kill you.”

He turned his head again, this time in the sense of letting them try to kill him. In the meantime, however, he took her by the waist, incredibly delicate for the honking claw he had there, and reached up, and tore out the ceiling tiles with his other clawed hand.

He didn’t have claws like hey I’ve got claws over my fingers. He wasn’t a werewolf. There was a crab in this picture. His claws were long, red, hard chitinous shelled single clasping claws. Little teeth-like ridges lined the claws on the inside. Imagine grand clipper limb cutters for hands covered by thick muscle and armor, yet with a delicate touch.

He tore the ceiling out just as they heard the cries for “Janet! Janet! Has it hurt you? Janet!” They broke into the room just as the monster lifted Janet lightly onto his left hip and jumped into the ceiling, using his other claw to pull himself up into the structure of tubes, rafters, and the backside of all that interior fake cave facade.

“It’s got her!” yelled one of them.

They looked like a combination of cops and park security. Some held guns, some were holding baseball bats, and one had a rake. Janet wasn’t sure what he thought he was going to do with all that.

They vanished into the ceiling. The men below argued about shooting or not shooting, using ‘he’s got her’ as a reason either way. Janet watched them below with a smile on her face, holding onto her man, her monster. She pressed her nose into his armored chest and smelled a faint salt and sweaty smell. He was working hard, but lifting her with him wasn’t hindering him that much. On his own, he’d been hiding in here for some time.

He looked back at the men arguing about how to continue and laughed as he jumped to the next platform and ran through the caves. The spotlights never went to the caves where he was up high. He ran across the catwalk with purpose, but in near silence. Only the occasional padded footfall made a noise, and his breathing was up.

Janet hung on his hip, but eventually climbed to his shoulder as he traversed the caves. They watched below them as men, still. A compilation of regular police and park security ran across the cave floor, totally missing them because they were riding the line of shadow so well.

The creature jumped from one catwalk fifteen feet to another one, with Janet clinging to his face. Her shoes were gone. She grabbed on for life, but felt secure with him.

Below them, Janet saw Jeff was now leading the pack. “Janet! There she is!”

They pointed flashlights up and saw Janet and the creature bounding from platform to platform up in the ceiling. They stomped past flood lights, fog machines, and speakers that were bolted to the walkways. She wrapped her legs around his waist to hold on.

 The people climbed and climbed.

“You can make it,” she said. “You can do it. Nothing is impossible.” They leaped to another ledge, and the creature punched a hole into a floor above the caves. It was a secret floor where people gathered who were member card holders were.

There were about twenty-five of them in the lounge, looking out at the park through tinted windows disguised as a rock on the outside, drinking champagne from little flutes. They wore suits and dresses, hardly park material, and were more interested in impressing each other than anything else.

Below them, the floor in the lounge, which had plush leather couches scattered around and art on the walls they only bought because someone convinced them it was cool, cracked open and the creature tore it open, shining a bright shaft of light down into the caves. He pulled his way up, jet hanging from his shoulders, occasionally caressing his face. He pulled himself up and jumped into the lounge.

A gentleman wearing a polo and a sweater tied over his shoulders fell through like a rag doll toward the men searching below. He hit the walkway like a ton of bricks, and rolled, crushing one man’s left arm, and snapping, breaking his ankle. He didn’t fall with a scream, but more of a ‘huh?’ He lost his sweater on the way down, and with the pile of men under him, he said, “What about my sweater?”

One cop elbowed him in the jaw and decided he’d deny that later when they were in court. It felt good.

Everyone else in the lounge screamed, except one woman, who had had one too many already and might mix her drugs and alcohol. She said, “oh, neat, is this what we’re doing now?” She jumped, or rather simply fell, through the hole into the caves, drink in hand, and with a scream of delight, fell to the cave floor to land in a great pool of water. Three men jumped in after she splashed down to save her. They pulled her up to the surface. Dragging her, she now sees through a white dress out of the water. “That was great!” She kissed the guy on the right and started telling anyone who would listen to her what her phone number was.

In the lounge. The creature stood, full red crab man, in full light. Janet clung to him up the wall but jumped to the floor to run with him.

“This way.” She ran towards the door, a black electric thing, and he ran after her, lumbering under the roof that was now too low for him as business people, a couple of yuppies, and their second wives ducked for cover left and right, jumping over couches or diving under glass coffee tables.

They bounded through the room and the creature exploded through the electric sliding glass door. It shattered everywhere as he tucked Janet up onto a hip again. She kissed him and held onto his neck as they ran out into the sun.

Inside the cave foyer, Jen was trying to help the lady. One of them gave Terri’s jacket to her and was trying to lead her out, but she kept talking to another guy, who didn’t want to leave her alone.

They brought up the house lights, so you could see everything, and the cop with a baseball bat in his hands said, “Now, why didn’t we do that, to begin with?”

They scattered, after hearing Jeff say “the private lounge.”

As they led the young lady to the exit, her eyes bugged out when she saw one of the chiming clocks in the gift shop.

“Oh, I want one of these!”

Janet and the creature ran together through the open, no longer disguised as a big credit card door.

Was he real? Was he a monster, a character, someone in a costume, or someone they should fear? Pepe dodged them. They got out of the way more because they were running through the middle of everyone than anything else.

He waved his big crab arms, jumped over carriages with various people in them, and bounded by elderly and otherwise disabled people, one of which was wearing a fedora and dark glasses, and careened through and ran behind another ride building.

“In there,” said Janet. “Back door.”

They knocked open an emergency exit, which briefly blinded everyone on the dark ride. There was a series of boats headed around the bend, and in a nearly empty boat, they jumped into the back. The boat splashed, jolting everyone.

A lady dropped her camera into the water where she was videotaping a bunch of singing animatronic animals. Another man nearly fell out trying to stand up to the creature, but when Janet smiled at him and gave him the shh with her fingers on her lips, with a great smile, he turned around and just sat there wondering how it was going to go when they got out of here, would they all just get shot?

The boat stuttered. It stopped. Over the public address someone, a young girl, said “Janet, is that you?” Janet waved, looking around for a camera. It was hard on the monitors not to miss an eight-foot-tall thing in the seat by her.

The boat started back up again. “Were started up again folks, sorry about that.” before she could drop the phone and turn off the thing. “This might not be the best place to hide.”

“I’m tired of hiding.”

“I know. I don’t know what else to do with you. Out there, they’d kill you,”

“You know that’s right,” said the other guy in the boat. The lady, almost noticing for the first time they were sitting in the back row, turned her hand to get them in camera, realizing she had no camera anymore for the first time.

“What?” she said.

“Camera trouble?” said the creature.

“Um, I think so.”

“Come on, we’ll take a selfie. I’m Janet.” She pulled her camera out and helped the other lady, then got the other guy in the picture and took it. The flash rebounded through the ride, disturbing some of the light-sensitive machinery.

“Please refrain from the use of flash photography while enjoying this attraction,” said a youthful voice.

They looked at Janet. “Ah, I figure I’m in enough trouble as it is, right?”

“Right,” said the guy. They turned a corner and went down the region’s longest indoor log flume drop. It blew Janet’s hair back. The picture the automatic cameras took is of everyone, including two incredibly frightened middle-aged people covering their eyes and Janet kissing a giant crab mobster with her leg up over his lap while her hair blew back, eyes closed.