Tag Archives: supernatural suspense

A massive underground cave with eerie green lighting. A monstrous, crab-like humanoid with sharp claws and a partially human face smashes through a fiberglass rock formation. In the foreground, a soaked woman stares in horror, trapped against a stone wall as the beast looms over her. Water drips from above.

The Monster of Blueberry Falls, Chapter 5

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 creature dropped into the middle. The lights above it crashed, and a fog was still going off somewhere with a soft pink glow of lights. The rock on which the creature landed cracked, then it slid down the middle, and everyone could see re-bar and Fiberglas under it. The rock was hollow.

It stood on two sturdy legs. They ended in great huge clawed feet that grabbed onto the destroyed fiberglass like it was nothing. It cracked under its feet as it clawed and jumped to the floor. Most of its torso was still in deep shadow or leftover artificial fog, but its chest was enormous. It had a great hard shell and covered its arms in the same shell, ending not in hands, but in great huge crab or lobster-like claws.

It snapped them, and he roared, not the sound of an animal, but of a man. His face had bits of the hard shell here and there, as did its legs, but it was a human-shaped head, with long unkempt hair and a very human voice.

He snapped at the adults.

He screamed at the kids, and everyone scattered.

“This way,” yelled Janet. “Through this crack!”

She waved them her way. A tunnel was there they could all fit through. It was knee-high, but no one cared. Only cable noticed there was still a working handicapped door to the side.

They crawled through, but the creature cut them off. He slammed into their exit, sending kids scattering. Left and right.

Janet ducked and rolled out of the way as he swiped at her. He took the bait, running to chase her. He was jumping, loping, and running, his clawed feet still kind of skittering on the floor where they weren’t destroying it.

“No!” she said to the creature. Who seemed to listen, then to her group, “Through the hole! I’ll meet you on the other side!”

She ducked another swipe, and smiling up at the creature, swept her legs under him, and he tumbled gracefully to the ground. He landed, rolled away, and then scrambled to the hole to follow her group through it, the last of them making it through the hole.

She avoided one snap from his claws as he tried getting up and getting her footing. She scampered and led through the hole. The others, who were now backstage, couldn’t believe what they were seeing. She scrambled through and the creature, still snapping, got a hand through, and snapped, but he couldn’t, for his big shelled torso got through. He growled and snarled, and yelled, then after exhausting himself from all the scrambling, slowly withdrew,

“Janet,” they could hear him say, briefly, among the snarls and whimpers.

“Does it know your name?”

Tears were streaming down Janet’s face. She was on the floor crying. “I guess it’s not too late to tell you. The falls are fake.” She sniffled.

Everyone stood up, the shadow of the creature still pacing around on the other side of the hole. They were on the back side of the caverns, the reverse of the rock wall, hollow and unpainted. It was all fiberglass and re-bar, two-by-fours, and catwalks. They could see the backside of a tall wall and a hole in the cavern where a green floodlight was. There were catwalks up to it so you could change it out.

“The caves are fake. I’m sorry, but the monster, as you can tell, is real. It’ll figure out how to get to us soon. I’ve got to get you out of here.”

The creature snapped its claws, then it started beating on the handicapped escape door.

“It only has to pull, but I don’t think it knows how.”

It beat on the door again. Everyone jumped.

It banged a third time. Janet thought for sure she heard a crab shell cracking, and the door came down. Fog filled the busted doorway, fog, and pinkish light.

“This way everybody.” She jumped up. “No more time for laying down.”

She grabbed several shaking kids by the Gabe’s and ran.

They turned a corner, leaving the doorway behind them, and started running down the halls. “I think I think I think…” she was saying, while in her mind, Janet was trying to figure out where to hide everybody.

“The elephant rock,” she said, “down to the fang rock,” she gathered the group. There was plenty more backstage to run through, nice wide open spaces, but she wanted them back in the caves. Janet could hear an alarm going off somewhere in the distance.

“Janet? Are you okay, dear?” Came a little old lady voice over the public address system.

“No, it’s after us!” she yelled to the ceiling as she brought everyone through a doorway, usually used as an emergency exit out of the so-called caves, and was waving everyone back in. They were running the wrong way on the trek, headed down the corridors of a cave, the wrong way.

You could see it all, where the lights were, where the fog machines were, where speakers and spy security cameras were.

“Oh my,” said the old lady over the PA.

Supplies for haunted attractions lined the room.

“How many people ever just look back and see all this stuff?” said Cable.

“No one.”

“Never?”

“Never.” They were moving fast, so she could only get little phrases out.

They turned another corner. “People just don’t look. “

They came around to Elephant Rock, and it was a sight, especially from this angle. To be of hand-holds, tons of ways up. The shape looked like a colossal statue of a hairspray elephant with human eyes, and as they climbed up the feature, they could all feel him despite its dressing. It was not a slick, stiff piece of rock, but a fiberglass shell.

“Head for the eyes, everyone up there now, tell find us any minute!”

“Will we fit in there?”

“There’s room inside. We sometimes use it as a spot to trigger Halloween effects, up up!”

They climbed. The kids made the trip easier. They just followed the pattern, and as she said, get up there, but the adults were slower. They were still fighting two major thoughts in their minds, which were I don’t want to be the jerk that breaks it, and I don’t want to slip.

They heeding have worried, but that’s fine. One by one, they dived through the eyes and slid into the room inside, behind the elephant. Janet sludged in behind the last kid, feet first.

“Everybody quiet, right?”

“He’s getting closer.”

In the room, which was pretty big for being up here, was a desk table, a sort of temp table set up with a computer and a couple of monitors.

“Alice, turn on that computer?”

Alice got under the desk and found the switch, which was an older tower model. It woke up. The screens came on. There was a mouse. Keyboard and a little plastic microphone hooked up to it.

The room itself was lit with a bare bulb, and the floods were old scruffy tile.

Janet yanked the chain to turn out the light. There were also a couple of metal cabinets back there filled with plastic Halloween decorations from three or four years ago, and a door,

“Where’s this lead?” said one adult.

“Bathrooms, and another corridor we can get out through. I just got to call the office quick.”

“You can from the…”

“Computer.”

It flipped up, ready, a series of icons. One kid, still watching through an eye, saw him. “There he is. He’s down there!”

“Shhhh.”

She pulled them down, so they weren’t right in the eye, then clicked an icon for the microphone. It opened up.

“Can you hear me in the office? Janet here.”

“Hello Janet, where are you?” said the old lady behind the register.

“Looks like our creeper is real. Boy, is he real.”

“Ooh, yes! I always wanted a real…”

“Hit the alarm. You can’t let anyone else down here.”

“You want me to call the park?”

“Yes, everybody should know.”

“Where are you?”

“In the elephant’s head. Can you see him in the monitors, this old computer?”

“Oh yes, I see him. He’s so cool. Isn’t this Frankie? God makeup.”

“Fran, Frankie is off today. This is not him.”

“Oh, well, whoever it is… he’s clumping the elephant. Look at those claws!”

Everyone could feel the wall shake as the creature jumped from the floor twenty feet over to land halfway up the elephant. It crushed the fiberglass with each major punch and grabbed underneath at the rebar and iron framing and climbed up the side; it scrambled and grabbed, pulling and yanking at the fiberglass until its face was up in the eyehole’s cavity, it stuck its head in.

“Everybody out, I think!” They scrambled out the back door.

Over the speaker, the old lady said “oh dear, ugh, here he comes!” As he flung his clawed arm in through the eye, knocked the monitors out, and tore one of them away. He couldn’t fit through. But this was no challenge. He reached in and tore the eye open, and landed on the floor of the room as the last kid scrambled out, with Janet shutting the door behind them.

They cluttered the corridor with boxes, mostly seasonal supplies, “help me, shove this stuff in front of the door,”

They toppled a great pile of boxes. At the least, they could slow him down.

The pack was breaking up, with some kids and adults way ahead, but lucky enough she knew where this hallway went. There was just one way out at this point.

The pretty straight hall came to a junction filled with boxes and junk, and they opened through an exit door under the Great Blueberry Falls themselves. They came out one by one, through an exit door on one side. There was a grand circular room with great falls. It looked magnificent, cascading down from a big hole that appeared to be a great indoor cavernous waterfall, heading into a large pool at the bottom.

A pump brought the water up out of the pool. The water came up to an enormous fountain at the top again.

“This way, the other exit on the other side of the falls!” yelled Janet. They ran around the walls, each one of the, looking up. And wishing this is what they saw in the first place before the moment was over, they ran around the falls, some under it, to the other exit on the other side, they passed through those doors, then after about half of them were careening down a brightly lit hallway, piled with boxes and junk, the monster exploded from the falls itself and forcing a huge spray of water all over everyone down there, it jumped, arms out, then pulled them in and dived into the pool below splashing everyone again. Janet, who had Cable by the hand, took most of it in the face.

She ducked and continued pushing people out of the way and through the exit door until she was the last one there.

A claw reached out and stopped the exit door, holding it closed.

She was last and trapped, face to face with the beast.

Everyone else flopped through a nondescript door in the gift shop. Half of them were wet. Half of them had a crazed look in their eyes, and all of them were out of breath,

They flopped on the floor and sat on display tables to gather their breath and recover just a little. Outside, police gathered, and a fire rescue crew stood by. They came in and started helping properly, taking their blood pressure, and looking into their eyes.

Behind the counter, the old lady hit a switch, and metal doorways closed over the nondescript door and the entrance.

Then she quietly hit another switch and started a spark, a fire inside the elephant’s face where the little office was. She flipped off her monitor before a cop could see.

“Janet!” said Cable, “She’s still in there!”

A vast underground cavern illuminated by eerie green and magenta lights. A group of children and adults stand frozen in shock as a monstrous shadowy creature, with elongated limbs and glowing eyes, drops from the ceiling. The jagged rocks and misty air create an ominous atmosphere of suspense and terror.

The Monster of Blueberry Falls, Chapter 4

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?

There were children everywhere inside the shop area for Blueberry Falls. Janet straightened her hat and walked into the middle of a pack of charging six-year-olds and broke them up.

“I understand someone here has ordered, bought, and paid for the extended tour.”

The kids continued barging around, screaming, and throwing things. One of them, a kid with pale skin and incredibly dark hair was mashing the face of another child while digging his hands elbow-deep in the display of precious stones while another child toppled a display stand full of t-shirts with the Blueberry Falls logo on them.

“Okay,” she yelled. “It’s clear that I’m going to have to find some of you to feed to the monster of Blueberry Falls. You are the biggest, loudest, most obnoxious group so far. Just the way he likes them. Okay, line up now, let’s go. Time to march to your deaths!”

All the kids stopped. They gathered around her, as well as a handful of exhausted-looking adults, glad that for once someone else was doing all the yelling.

“Is there a monster?” said one of them.

“Yes, and he loves eating children, just like you lot.”

“You’re lying. This place is just as fake as everything else here. There are laws. You’ve got to keep us safe all the time.”

“Hands and arms inside the car at all times, kid. I can’t guarantee your safety, especially if you are stupid enough to leave the path, go under a safety railing, or otherwise leave the safety of where I tell you to go and where I tell you it’s safe to go. So, you see if you were to get away from the group and me, or one of the other responsible adults here didn’t notice you were gone. I’m not responsible when the monster eats you while I’m not looking.”

“That’s not true.”

“It’s in the contract on your tickets. Your parents and guardians here signed them when you bought the extensive tour, so read ‘em. I’ll get the elevator. The one that goes extra deep.”

At some point, she’d gotten down on their level. She crossed the room, righted the stand of t-shirts, and hit the button on a second elevator. She turned and waited, grabbed a clipboard from the old lady at the front, and started ticking everyone in the tour group off.

Five adults, all tired already, and three of them looked like they might be high, and twelve children, a kindergarten class. Three were teachers, and the other parents were along for the ride. At least one teacher smelled like dope and she was the intelligent one.

The kids were all terrors.

Janet watched them try to line the kids up to head down, and it was fun to watch. Half of them were fine, but the other half, well. She shook her head.

“Jake, where are you?”

They found him sticking his hand up a teenager’s skirt, who was trying to buy a redundant ticket. They dragged him back.

“Maryanne, don’t do that!”

She was trying to pull one of the lower product shelves down by climbing on it. They got her back, batting her left and right to find…

“Cable, get out of that!”

He was climbing into a bin full of videos, kicking DVDs and CDs out onto the floor.

Cable came back, and no sooner, Alice was gone.

“Where’s Alice?”

“I’ve got her,” said one parent. “She was trying to get out of here.”

“Caught her headed out the door.”

“Cute. Alice, stay with us, honey.”

Janet wrote ‘screamer’ down next to Alice’s name, and this proved true the second the doors closed. The elevator opened, Janet called for everyone, led them in, and then turned to face the group. The doors shut behind her, and Alice started up.

She screamed. There is a piercing level of screaming that a girl her age is capable of, and Alice was perfect at it. She squealed a high-pitched wail that was so pure, Janet Thought that’s what her call in life might be if she made it to nineteen. Complete movie scream queen. Who knew?

She smiled. The other five adults were whimpering, and Alice was just getting going. Janet had rubber earplugs in. She leaned down, put a warm soft hand on Alice’s shoulder, thinking she wasn’t supposed to, and she hoped no one heard she did this later and said “Honey, if you keep up that beautiful screaming,” Alice didn’t even seem to need to stop to breathe, “then you’re just going to attract the monster faster.”

Alice dropped silently and grappled with her momma’s hand.

“That’s right. Everyone, adults included, has to behave from this point on, or you will certainly bring the monster down upon us.”

“Isn’t that the point?” said one adult. “You come in here, guided tour through a bunch of fake caves, and get scared by the monster who pops out once in a while?”

“That’d be nice, wouldn’t it? I wish this was just a haunted house sometimes. Real caves. Real monster? Truth is, I’ve never seen him.”

“So you’ve heard it?” said a kid.

There was a lurch in all their stomachs.

“We’re here, thousands of feet down, and yeah, I’ve heard some strange things down here.”

The doors opened, but behind all the kids on the other side of the elevator.

“Everybody out, please, and I’ll take you into the natural hall of mirrors.”

The kids shuffled out, and the parents kept them surrounded as best they could. There weren’t enough parental hands to catch everybody, so a couple of kids had to be the second link in the chain, and they didn’t like it,

The mirror chamber was enormous, round, and admittedly largely man-made. Rock walls, a large cave room, well lit, and surrounded with strangely shaped fun house mirrors. It was clear they’d been brought down here for the tour. The top and bottom borders of the mirrors were all different colors.

The kids immediately spread out, looking in all the mirrors, terrorizing the under-prepared adults. One of them handling four kids seemed pretty competent.

“Look I’m tall.”

“I got a goofy head.”

“I look like an elephant.”

Alice wasn’t talking anymore but was standing before a mirror that made her look like a short kid with an enormous head.

“Bunny ears.”

“Welcome to the hall of mirrors. Yes, this is a natural cave, and we brought all these fun-house mirrors down for fun, but they are all real. They are here to highlight the real smooth cave face. This wall itself is a natural fun-house mirror.”

She gathered them together. One parent came in last. The entire class could get in front of it, with parents and teachers behind them. In this single mirror, all the kids were super tall, others super short, and everybody was wavy up and down.

They jumped up and down, waving their arms, watching their reflections bounce and wave all over the place.

“Very nice,” said Janet, “come back everyone, let’s keep it down some. Don’t want to bring him in too quick.”

“Wait, what?” said Jake.

“Yeah, wait a minute. I thought you said…”

“What I’m allowed to say on the ground floor is not all I’m allowed to say while we are down this deep into his territory.”

“So the monster is…”

“Real, oh yeah.” Several of them got out their camera phones. Later they had full hard drives of dark videos inside a cave, maybe some shadows, and a few times, the bounce of someone dropping it. You couldn’t get good videos while trying to keep kids from getting away from you.

Janet knew it, handing one adult their phone back after dropping it again while trying to catch Alice.

“Thank you.”

“No problem.”

“Around this corner, we’re getting out of the hall of mirrors, and deeper into the caves than we go almost any other time. In just a moment, we’re going to see the grand tortoise, a significant feature, before we connect back up to some tunnels from the main, shorter, tour that leads to the falls themselves.”

The grand tortoise looks like a huge turtle, and we’re going to walk right over it.

“We are?”

“You wouldn’t think, but it’s the one place in the caves. We are encouraging you to get off the path and feel the cave floor and features for yourself.”

She led them around, and there was a low ceiling. Everything was lit with green floodlights. The railing came around, and there was a four-foot gap, where there was a gate. The floor across the room thirty feet long across looked like an enormous turtle shell. It connected to another passage out on the other side.

“We can let them go?”

“Sure, just somebody gets on the other side to catch and get everybody together again to go into the falls when we’re ready.”

She smiled and gave them the gift, knowing what was going to happen.

She slid to the other side of the domed shell-like floor and hung out on the other side, looking around. Then the teachers and parents tried it, and they slipped everywhere. Parents went down, and kids slipped and slid left and right.

Jake and Cable were crying and sliding around, holding onto each other. Everyone was sliding down to the outer edges.

They climbed and slid and eventually grabbed onto the handrails around the outside, and started dragging their way to the other side.

Alice fell and, sliding slowly on her shoes. Janet slid out, almost skating across the slippery shell. She nabbed Alice and brought her back, then went to get two more off of the side.

Now that it was over, they laughed and screamed about it.

There was a thump and a crash above them. Something scraped its way through a crack near the ceiling. A shadow obscured one of the green lights.

“What was that?”

“What was what?”

“That shadow!”

“I don’t think he’s found us yet.”

She led them around, and into a section of a tall cave that was about twenty feet tall. Bats crawled on the ceiling, which got the kids yelling. They were echoing all over the place.

Another shadow flew across one of the magenta floodlights. Janet could tell which one. While everyone was looking at the ceiling for something, what was making the shadows was already clacking, and nearby. Behind them. It clawed and rumbled around.

“Where is it?” Everyone looked up.

Steam jetted their feet, and an old fog machine with an air puffer blew into the area. It made them all jump. Kids tried to spill over the sides. The parents grabbed and tugged, trying to keep everyone reined in.

Janet grabbed Cable by the belt. He turned around, and Janet looked him in the face. “Cheap tricks, lights, fog machine. All on timers, kid. He ‘invades’ every time we bring folks on this trek.”

He was out of breath, panicked, and sweating. “For sure?” He managed.

“Every time. I do this tour five, six times a day.”

“Okay.” He started getting himself together.

He straightened his shirt, pulled up his pants, and smacked a couple of his friends, telling them to be cool. They gathered in the middle, hearing their teachers now,

There was a crack. Rocks fell. Kids jumped. They screamed, and then the creature dropped from the ceiling and landed in the middle of them all.

A dimly lit underground cave system, illuminated by eerie blue and orange lights. A group of tourists walks along a narrow path beside glowing pools, unaware of a towering shadowy figure lurking just beyond the light, its long claws scraping against the stone. Water drips as unseen eyes watch.

The Monster of Blueberry Falls, Chapter 1

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?

“My name is Janet,” she said, opening her arms wide to the twelve people gathered for her tour. They dressed in the standard tourist getup, sneakers, shorts, and probably too much hauled in various backpacks. A couple was old, some young, but they were all there for the same thing.

Janet wore black shorts and a safari shirt with a ranger hat. Thick chestnut hair fell around her shoulders. She wore boots up to her knees. She strapped one of them with a long knife.

“Thank you all for visiting blueberry falls. We’ll be descending in just when the elevator arrives to take us down.”

They stood in the space in the middle of the gift shop. Their elbows brushed the merchandise racks on the floor. Janet smiled, but kept her eyes on the elevator door, trying to will it to pick her up.

“I know it’s a little cramped up here. I’m sorry about that. It’s kind of like the coffee cups, magnets, and buttons that want you to buy them. After we get to the bottom and see the falls, you might just want one of those on the way out.”

A man with a fishing hat on humphed.

Her eyes flicked back to the elevator, but it still wasn’t budging.

She let out a sigh that she hoped no one saw. Let’s see, she thought.

In the front were five children.

“What are your names?”

“Ryan.” He had a bowl haircut or was that a ‘little boy haircut?’ and a striped shirt on.

“Colin.” He was a little blond boy, probably the shortest one there. Blue shirt with angry birds on it.

“Rachael.” She was wearing corduroy pants and a yellow shirt. She had two braided pigtails.

“Ted.” He said it so quickly. He wore black and red sneakers, but he held his elbows, trying to act like he didn’t want to be there.

“Missy.” She was thin, tall, and platinum blond. She wore thin sleek glasses that had a slight cat’s eye corner on them.

Behind them were seven adults, and Janet had zero idea about who belonged to who was there. She reached out with an open, non-threatening hand and swept through each of them.

“Harold,” was the older guy with the hat. He was looking at a birdhouse he didn’t want to put together later.

“Martin,” waved to her. His mustache hung down in huge furry bars on each side of his face. He tugged at his jeans jacket. It looked like he was looking for another patch to add to the back of it. He was fingering through several options.

“Sheila,” she waved, then quickly put her hands down, keeping them tightly together.

“Don,” said another. “I don’t know what I’m doing here.” He brushed his hair back. His eyes sparkled with darkness. What was up with this guy?

“Annie.” She looked at a cuckoo clock on the wall. It was about to strike ten o’clock. Janet wanted that elevator to arrive with the previous group soon, all this game stuff.. she blinked at the clocks herself.

“Robbie,” he was taller than anyone else. Janet wondered how he would do in the short spot. There were a couple of tight spaces. He waved. He was confident.

“Samantha,” she was wearing red overalls and a long sleeve black t-shirt, long bright, obnoxious pink hair down to her waist.

“Hi, Samantha. I think our elevator is almost here.”

“Why can’t we just go down on our own?” asked Martin.

“Well, it’s a guided tour. It is possible to get lost and on the wrong path down there. Besides, it’s down so far in the ground before it becomes walkable. Where all the cool stuff to look at is where stuff is lit up.”

Ding.

The doors from the elevator opened with a stutter. Sometimes they didn’t want to go all the way.

“Okay, Great, come on, folks. This way to the Blueberry Falls.”

Could we feel there first? She opened her arms and carefully guided her people toward the doors as the previous troop came back up. They passed right through Janet’s group, and right as the previous guide passed Janet, bumping her shoulder back while looking her in the eye, chaos ensued as every crazy clock on the wall started chiming. Three cell phones and the noise from ten cuckoo clocks, five Beatles commemorative clocks singing Hey Jude, and thirteen alarm clocks that lit up and appeared to spill water in an illusion from a pipe at the top designed to look like the falls all went off at once.

Janet couldn’t hear herself think.

Someone asked her a question, she thought, but she couldn’t hear it. What she said was “I’m sorry,” even if all the kids saw was lips moving. What she thought was a lot different.

The elevator was now clear and most of the last crew was out. She looked back at the other guide. He wasn’t looking at her. She called him names in her mind, closed her eyes, and waited for the noise to die down as the doors closed.

“Okay folks, here we go.”

Lights slid back and forth as they descended. It wasn’t like any actual lights or anything was sliding by, but we built them into the door, and Janet had long forgotten they were even there.

“Is it true there’s a monster?” said one kid.

“That’s bullshit,” said one adult.

“Excuse me,” said Janet. “There’s no truth to those rumors. There might be a raccoon or possibly a bear on certain levels, but not anywhere near where we are going.”

“No monster then?”

“Not unless you consider bats monsters, I guess.”

“Not really,” said one.

“Bats are boring,” said another.

“We’re getting close. Almost there. In the caves, you’ll see stalactites, stalagmites, and everything in between. We’ll pass several lit structures and lots of natural limestones, and if you’re smart, you might even notice where the old stairs are. We don’t use them anymore, except in times of emergency, but trust me, they are there.”

“Did you ever have to climb them?” said the guy with the mustache from heck.

“Yes sir, everyone on the team has to climb them once a year, and when they first start and lead groups up, when the elevator is out. You can purchase a ticket to climb down into the caverns on them if you’re interested. It’s an interesting tour, and you can see some things you don’t normally see.”

“Anyone ever take that?” said the guy in the angler’s hat.

“Rarely.”

The doors opened, and she took them out. “This is what we call the grand foyer.”

“It’s dark. Why do you call it that?”

The light slowly rose, and everyone could see. “As you can see, it’s four stories tall at this point and is a large area, big enough for tours and a great starting point. We can go in two directions from here, but I’ll be taking you this way today.”

The lights went down one path, slightly pink. “This way everyone.”

One kid, the girl with the pink hair, saw behind them at the side of the elevator a set of stairs, concrete, but stained so they blended in. It was lit up with exit signs here and there.

“If I was a monster. I’d sure hide down here. This would be the perfect place,” said Samantha.

“I assure you, the most interesting thing you’ll see there here might be a rat gone wrong, but since there’s not much food this far down for them, there’s little chance of that.”

They passed under an arch. Janet stepped them through a careful spot where the ceiling was only five feet high. Robbie put his hand up and felt the cave ceiling as they went through, and stooped. They could all tear up and hear the rush of water somewhere in the distance echoing through the caves.

“To your left, you’ll see Frankie’s elephant.”

One kid watched Janet hit a switch on a remote control that softly brought the lights up to the left. There was a bar on each side of the path so you couldn’t, or at least weren’t supposed to climb up there, but on a ledge, fourteen feet up was a formation of cave rock that resembled a large elephant, glowing with soft turquoise light.

Water dripped around.

“I could hide behind that if I was a monster,” said one of them in the darkness.

“I heard that. Yes, the creature hides in this series of caves to the right, behind us all the time,” said Janet.

She brought up big spots, and they all spun around to see a couple of caves about ten feet up with deep shadows.

“Don’t say that.”

“Nope, just people I guess, still no creature. Nothing.” She waved them forward. “Blueberry Falls this way, folks. We’re almost there.”

She led them through, around the corner, towards the falls in the distance. Once they’d all made it out of the room safely, the lights faded on the Great elephant. Then the blue lights faded on in the next chamber.

All was quiet.

The lights dimmed back down to the lights along the sides of the footpath. Soft orange.

Drip.

Drip.

Something landed on the floor in some footlights. It lived in shadow, and breathed like a ninja, barely whispering as it took huge breaths that took three minutes a piece. It was tall, dark, and scraped the floor ever-so-slightly as it clicked down the path and jumped into a side path like a rabbit.

“This way folks,” said Janet. “The tour is headed this way. Yes, right over here.” She mentally counted her twelve people as she brought them into reflecting pool number one. The path wound through the caves left and right. On the left and the right of the path were three feet of pool, lit with various underwater lamps. The bottom of the pool glittered with coins. Some of the twelve tossed in theirs. One of them complained as he did it.

“Tossing coins is, of course, not mandatory, but the luck of the caves will follow you home, or if you do.”

More coins splash into the fountain in the dark.

Somewhere it sounded like a foot

Somewhere it sounded like a foot splashed into the fountain.

“What was that?”

“This way folks, around the corner, we’re almost there,” said Janet.

“I thought I heard something,”

“A splash.”

“I don’t know. Maybe it was down the hall, where the big falls are.”

“I thought it was behind us.”

“Daddy?”

A flock of bats came through, covering the noise of what Janet thought were more plunks in the water, to be sure.

Kids were screaming, but a second later it was over.

“This way, folks.”

Ten minutes later, having seen the falls, such as they were, the twelve left through the gift shop, not returning Janet’s smile as they passed the coffee cups, badges, and clocks behind.

She smiled and waved, trying not to be like her counterpart earlier, but they streamed out anyway, clearly all on their way somewhere else. She heard the words fudge shop and lunch before the whole place started chiming eleven o’clock and drove her out into the parking lot as well.

Glenda, behind the register, who hadn’t been able to hear for years anyway, just sat through it.

“Why do I always come up right then?” said Janet.

"A man with a glowing weapon and a transforming humanoid face monstrous creatures emerging from an unstable portal under a starry sky, as energy pulses illuminate the battlefield."

The Man With Three First Names, Chapter 3

The Man With Three First Names
Rabbits leap through time,
Portals hum with shifting fate,
Night and day now split.
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This is a draft version of a chapter from John Saye’s book, The Man With Three First Names.

There he was, standing face to face with the janitor. All around them, snarling beasts with odd numbers of legs and eyes circled as the mist faded and the stars above them shined brighter than he had ever seen them shine before. Michael stood there, thinking about all the things he’d seen and realized that his odd and strange life was flashing before his eyes, and on over the back of his neck, making him shiver in all the wrong places.

One of the creatures snarled at him as it made another circuit.

The trollish looking beast, now half human and half janitor watched him without making a sound or even a noise. The man-beast seemed to regard him with distaste, or was it even disinterest, slumping to the side so as to appear to be staring through his left shoulder. He shook it off. It didn’t mean anything. It didn’t matter at all.

A creature, a strange combination of a black panther, ravenous viper, and a six-foot-tall raven-thing lashed out. It jumped Michael and knocked him to the ground.

Michael took out a small umbrella from a back pocket that definitely didn’t look big enough to hold it, and jammed it in the creature’s mouth, hitting the open button. The creature’s mouth split open and expanded with the umbrella, sending it reeling off to whimper on the ground in just enough time for a second one of the little demons to jump him.

Michael was able to fend off the creature with a punch to the side of its immense head. As it hobbled back, it stumbled on its undersized hind legs. A third one jumped over the second, landed square on Michael’s shoulder and knocked him to the ground. Just as Michael’s back hit, the creature used the forward momentum to flip over, and land on him again, this time with its butt in his face. One fierce fart later, and he jumped in the air, intending to do the trick again, but it never made it to the ground. Instead, he just hung there in the air. It took Michael a moment to realize the janitor had grabbed the creature in mid-air and held it there in the air. It was unable to reach the ground, grab anything or gnash its teeth on anything worth gnashing.

Simon, what there was of his mind, threw the creature aside, breaking its back against the wall, and the side of him that was now a monster in its own right, let out a screaming yell, then gibbered for half a moment, crouched, and cleared his throat. He grabbed Michael and leaped out of the hole that was now in place of the testing facility. He landed a hundred feet from the hole, and Michael marveled at how careful the creature was being with him.

He expected to be dead.

Simon laid him down, next to his car, and then stood there, panting.

They could hear them, the creatures pulling themselves up and out of the facility. It wouldn’t be long before they were surrounded again.

One of the creatures popped its head up. Simon turned around and flew off, his arms flailing in rubbery directions, landing on the creature’s head. Simon was as large as a car himself and punched his fist down and into one of the creature’s eyes. It popped like a grape, and the fluid flowed over the janitor’s ragged coveralls.

Another one popped its head up from the great hole in the earth, now a bastion for evil natured creatures. Michael pulled from a concealed shoulder holster, a silver-tipped pistol that appeared alien in nature. He pulled the trigger. It had been designed for use by creatures with three suckered fingers. He fired it, blasting the creature with silver light that caused it to vanish without a trace.

Smaller creatures were now starting to spew up and out of the circular crater in the ground. They had mutated into something closer to ants with sixteen legs each, hard and black, about the size of a large shoebox, maybe something boots might come in. Michael stepped on one of them, and it splattered into five or six more creatures, the same in shape, only fewer legs. He blasted them, each in turn and jumped on the hood of his car. They had surrounded him.

Simon wasn’t faring much better than Michael was. Thousands of the tiny creatures covered him, each taking great piercing bites into his flesh. He threw them off, and rolled around, flailing in all directions. The wounds from his bites covered him in a foul black ichor.

Simon screamed, no longer able to speak the words he needed, and slumped down to his knees, willing himself to just sit there and take it, for them to tear him apart, certainly that would be the answer, the thing that would bring him peace.

Michael didn’t want to receive one of those bites for anything. He kicked the roof of the car, and the sunroof began to open, but there wasn’t time. He wished he hadn’t because the little creatures were just falling in there with him.

He hit the engine, cranked the car to life, and revved it up, the little bugs were starting to get the better of him, nipping him here and there. He slapped them away, and then stood up, to blast a larger creature coming out of the hole, pushing with great thin legs as it shook slime from its great huge wings. The creature exploded in the light, spraying its foul green lunch from another world all over everything.

At that moment the portal below flickered. It danced, and shimmered, almost closed for good, but then the ground shook with an enormous pulse that knocked everything to their feet.

It flipped Michael’s car over, and it landed on its wheels again.

The blast blew out from the portal. The creatures, the blood, everything except for the hole, the portal itself and Simon seemed to get sucked back through.

Michael ran to Simon and picked him up. He was shivering but normal otherwise. There was still some slime from his creature form on his forehead. Another pulse and he might not be so lucky. He looked over the edge, leaving Simon behind for a short period.

He watched as the portal flickered.

“It’s not long now,” he said. “It’s either going to go critical or fizzle out, you never know.”

It pulsed again, but it was a false alarm.

“I haven’t got long.”

Michael helped Simon up, and half walked, half dragged him to the car.

He plopped them in and revved it up. They were going to have to come up with a plan. He was going to need some help.

He pulled out, and once up to sixty-six miles an hour, he flicked the switch and the car vanished from the side of the road and reappeared a hundred miles away at an abandoned warehouse where he kept his office. At least that’s where it was this week.

He pulled in, and Simon followed him blearily up the steps to a small office, in the middle of the otherwise abandoned building.

The office had it all.

It had the half-frosted glass door with the lettering. It was totally, and blissfully computer-less, though he did have his gadgets here and there. It had an old-style rotary phone, sitting on a telephone book that was so old it was almost completely faded white. The office walls were covered from floor to ceiling with great and gloriously dusty bookshelves.

Behind Simon’s desk was the most interesting shelf, he called it his curio cabinet, even though there wasn’t any glass there. In the curio cabinet, there was a wide variety of items from every culture he’d encountered so far. He had alien artifacts as well as stuff from Earth. There were spiritual items as well as electronic gizmos. There was a helmet covered in gold next to a trio of shrunken heads, each clutching a sharp diamond in their teeth. Next to that were voodoo dolls, alien tech sensors, a lava lamp for the hell of it in purple and red. One of the oddest pair of things he’d ever acquired was the living undead zombie heads of Felix and Faustus. The zombie’s heads were each seated on a small dinner plate to keep the orange pus that was leaking from their necks from getting on the books.

Felix turned his head the moment Michael came into the room. “Well well well, if it isn’t the man with three first names then, back for another go?”

“Shut up Felix.”

He ignored the talking head as it sat there, rotting on his shelf, covered in maggots that Michael knew were nothing more than a trick of the mind designed to freak people out.

Faustus looked around but wasn’t impressed. He stopped when he saw Simon. “What’s with the stiff over there?”

Michael raised an eyebrow. “His name is Simon. He’s a Janitor.”

“He’s been touched, you know,” said Faustus.

“I know.”

Michael pulled open a drawer and rifled through it. Not finding what he was after, he pulled the whole drawer out and threw the entire thing aside were junk and old pens splashed to the ground.

Felix turned his head on his plate and twisted his remaining eye back at an unreal angle to watch what Michael was doing. “It’s not in that drawer, It’s in the red book this time.”

Michael had just finished turning out another drawer out when he looked up at Felix. “The red book eh?”

Felix tried to nod, and almost toppled off the shelf.

Michael jumped forward and climbed the first two shelves near the floor so that he could reach the red book, which was a large three-inch-thick tome, covered in dust.

He opened the book and saw within it a set of goggles, made with real eyes, bloodshot and darting that regarded him with fear, and a syringe filled with an orange liquid that seemed to glow with its own faint light.

He grabbed the goggles, and put them on, looking through the darting eyes at Simon. He took the syringe, and held it up then, as if he were blind, and not trusting the eyes he was looking through, he stepped forward, and took Simon’s arm.

“What are you going to do with that?”

The eyes were darting hard left and right. It made Michael wobble.

He took the syringe and watched Simon’s arm.

“It’s the toxins from the gate. This can slow down the transformations. There could be another pulse at any time, and the next time, you might not make it.”

He plunged the syringe in, seeing now the floating purple and orange spots floating in the eyes of the goggles. He shot the liquid into Simon’s arm.

The scream was unreal. Simon thought he was hearing someone else do it. It sounded like someone trying to scream while gargling three feral cats and a bucket of fried chicken.

There was still a little bit of raw strength there, and he struck out and toppled onto the desk, sending papers everywhere.

“Good one Mike,” said Felix.

Simon stood up, and began to transform, clutching his arm.

“Oh yeah,” said Felix, “make him change early. Nice. He might get worse next time now.”

Simon stood and roared, his mouth splitting as his head began to change and his hair began to grow and muscles became better defined. His shirt tore, and he clawed his hands across the bookshelves sending cheap paperbacks in all directions. He jumped through the door, luckily open, and bounded out into the open warehouse.

“Crap,” said Michael.

“You better get him quick Mike,” said Felix.

“Yeah, right.”

“It’s good you’re the only one at the office. It’s hard to fire yourself.”

“I’ll have to remember that. Firing myself once in a while might feel pretty good.”

He’d chased a lot of zombies in his time. He’s chased them over garden fences and into the back yards of many a housewife looking in on her above ground pool full of kids while there was nothing else left to do but go after them with a shotgun. It was the best way to kill zombies, so no judgment there. You had to make sure their heads came off or you were screwed.

Michael was running flat out, as fast as he could. He was keeping up with Simon though, who had flung into a rage.

“Crap.”

He dodged a low hanging branch as the troll-like beast half lumbered, half catapulted through the back yards of several nearby houses to the warehouse. He wondered if he could catch him. He wasn’t breaking a sweat yet. The number of aliens he’d chased through these woods, only to lose them as the ship took off, the number of zombies, which seemed to keep cropping up, and then there was the werewolf, but you couldn’t call that a clear case of lycanthropy. The snout wasn’t right. He didn’t believe it anyway.

He jumped like he had so many times before and found his footing on a ledge that he didn’t even have to look at anymore as he crossed it. He flew past the creatures, diving to the left, and down an embankment that faced a nearby park where everyone would be out in the open. The hill was edged with a twenty-foot layer of the forest, and on the other side was a park with four baseball fields that all faced each other.

Michael landed at the edge of one of the baseball fields. Was the High School not playing here anymore?

In the middle of centerfield stood Simon in the moonlight. His skin was gray-green, and silvery, glistening with a thin layer of slime that seemed to ooze from his skin and coat it. It glistened. His work shirt was torn, and the overalls were hanging on him. Any shoes he might have been wearing were long gone. Simon now had large and oversized claw feet. His hands, though sharp nails protruded from the fingertips, were deft, and almost delicate. The fingers were long and strong. His muscle structure reminded Michael of a wrestler after a recent fight with a bowl of cocaine, and the teeth just didn’t make any sense. It was almost as if they got wilder and wilder based on how crazed Simon was at the time. He seemed more like a vicious troll than a zombie.

Michael shook off the zombie line and stepped out into the field from the first baseline.

Simon turned around and howled in his direction.

Michael froze, closed his eyes and lowered his arms to his sides.

He imagined the beast calmly returning to him, and Simon recovering enough to come back to the office with him. He was doubtless going to have a call by the time he got back there, and he did not want to miss it, He knew he’d need some help pretty soon.

He stepped forward, and Simon leaped forward, landing right in front of him.

Michael almost stopped breathing, and turned his palms out, allowing Simon to smell him, hoping this was like meeting a dangerous dog.

He wished he had some bubble gum with him. Though cheese would be better.

Simon stepped back and lowered his head once after getting a clear sniff of Michael. He blew a wad of snot and phlegm into Michael’s face, and after a last and final sniff, he blew Michael’s hat off with ribbons of the stuff.

Michael winced but otherwise stood perfectly still. He’d seen a friend of his, Mathers, last year try this same thing with a gargoyle in Central Park, and it had cost him his life, but he needed Simon. He could feel it.

When he opened his eyes, Simon Dunbar was standing in front of him, shivering in the night air.

“How much time?” he asked.

“What?”

“How much time have I been… it?”

“Just a few minutes.”

“Can you help me?”

“I think so. Come on.”

Simon hobbled next to Michael. Maybe the trollish piece of him could slough off the more dangerous elements of the chase, but it hurt later.

Together they walked off the field, and up onto the main street that cuts through the neighborhood, so they could get back to the warehouse.

“Simon, right?”

“That’s me. You’re a janitor at the facility?”

“Yes. I’m not supposed to talk about it.”

“I know. If it makes it easier, I know all about them. The Sublight Group, I think, right?”

“Yes.”

“I used to work for them. Experiments in dimensional travel. It looks like they were trying to open a portal.”

“They have been doing that a lot lately.”

“What, other portals? That wasn’t the first?”

“No.”

“Does anything ever come out, like this time?”

“Not usually. I’ve seen space, and other planets, strange landscapes, usually it’s just a blue star or something, over a planet covered in trees and grass.”

“Nothing intelligent?”

“Not that I’ve ever seen. Until tonight, the most intelligent thing I’d ever seen was something like a polar bear with a huge central tusk, like a rhino or something like that. It was coming up through its bottom jaw. Well, that’s true for the portals anyway.”

“Was it furry?”

“Yeah, white just like a regular polar bear except for the horn and like a flat double nose. They kept that portal open too long looking at it, the machine’s never worked the same since.”

“Was it erratic, or what?”

“It was just shaky. That’s the best way to describe it. Shaky. It was one of those things, you know?”

“Like what?”

“It’s just a window. It’s a window with the most interesting things in it, the only problem is there’s a thousand-foot drop if you try to climb through it.”

“Deadly?”

“Serious deadly.”

“One step through and it tears you apart anyway. We had a strike team in the facility. They were acting all-important, and stomping around like they owned the place. It was three months ago, they opened the portal, and everyone walked through. We could see them on the other side of it.”

“What happened?”

“When they stepped through, they turned around, and couldn’t see the portal anymore, it just wasn’t on their side at all.”

“Nice.”

“Yeah. We sat there and watched them, trying to get them back, but they never saw the portal again. It just wasn’t there on that side. We watched three of them get killed by some kind of pterodactyl, and the other ones, we watched as they stopped breathing. The atmosphere just wasn’t right. It took a long time.”

They turned the corner up towards Michael’s warehouse.

“Do you think you can help?” asked Simon.

“I think I can. I’m not sure. The only thing I’m sure of is that I think I’m going to need you. You were right on that portal, and a piece of you has been changed by it and you survived. Do you remember anything from it?”

“You mean besides the monsters?”

“Yeah.”

“Yeah, I do. They had one on the other side this time.”

“A portal generator?”

“Yeah, and they were looking at us the moment we were looking at them. We both had them turned on at the same time.”

“What are the odds of that?”

“Like a million to nothing,” said Simon. He rubbed his arms.

“You have any clothes at that warehouse of yours?”

“Yeah, I’ve got lots of stuff.”

They entered through the back door. This used to be an old television studio before it closed, there was a small costume room and something like a two-car garage sized area full of rolling racks full of clothes.

“Take your pick. I’m going upstairs to get some coffee going. Pick out two or three things, and a shoulder pack you like. Anything that fits, you are welcome to it.”

Simon nodded.

“We want to make sure you have some options if you bug-out again, so make sure you get shoes as well.”

Simon nodded again, and Michael left him there, alone to look through the clothes.

Simon sat down in the middle of the room and sobbed for a moment on a large oriental rug. As much as he’d seen today, he wondered if the rug might fly should he know the magic word.

He shook it off, and stood up, looking at the racks of clothes. He decided to ditch the over-all look. He picked out a couple of sweatsuits with hoods, a load of underwear and socks, a couple of baseball hats, several pairs of shoes and a cheap suit. There were more expensive-looking suits over there, but this one was comfortable and understated. He put on one of the sweatsuits and noticed the shower room just off the wardrobe here. He availed himself of the showers, and then donned his sweatsuit again, grabbed his shoulder bag, kind of a smart satchel with lots of pockets, and made his way up the stairs to the smell of perfect coffee.

“Well, if you’re going to be like that Mike, then to hell with it,” said Felix as Simon entered the room and sat down.

Simon reeled, not just at the fact that it was a gross and decapitated head sitting there talking, but that there were two of them, and nobody around thought this strange at all.

He was greeted with a cup of coffee, and he noticed that the talking zombie heads on the shelf were sucking their own coffee through straws.

“Where was it going?”

“Simon, these are Felix and Faustus. Don’t be alarmed.”

Felix turned his good eye to Simon. “How’s it going? I hear you transform into some kind of beast.”

“Troll, I think.”

“Right, Troll Man, yeah.” Felix took another sip of coffee. “Crap Mike, that’s hot!” he said, and then burst into hideous laughter. “What are you trying to do, kill me?”

Faustus turned both his eyes, for he still had two, and blinked a friendly hello to Simon, but did not speak.

Simon took the coffee and a cookie or two from the table. “What are we going to do?”

“I’m still working that out, but we don’t have much time. I know there’ll be another pulse soon, and I think we need to get back into town before that happens. We’ve got to do whatever we need to do to shut off that portal, and clear that area. I’ve called in a strike team to surround the facility and keep people from getting too close.”

“What kind of team?”

“An effective team.”

“I think we’re due for a pulse or two before, maybe a micropulse.”

“What’s that?”

“What you’re having now. Take off your shoes.”

Simon was starting to shake.

“Not again!”

He took his shoes off, threw them in his satchel, and then faster than ever, he transformed into the troll-like creature, this time much more smoothly and he looked a lot cleaner, without ripping the clothes. His hair was wild and long but fell back in long black-green locks behind his ears.

He stood there looking at his arms and legs, feeling his hair.

“Michael?”

Michael looked back at him with both eyebrows raised.

“Simon?”

The voice there was normal.

“Is my voice… is it clear?”

“Clear as a bell, my friend.”

He slumped into Michael’s chair, and broke it to pieces, sending a cloud of dust into the air.

“Sorry about that!”

He got up, dusted himself off and looked around.

Felix rolled his eye.

Faustus kept drinking his coffee. One of his eyes was twitching from it. The eyelid had flopped off on the other side, so there was no help there.

Michael pushed over a wooden box, might have had the ark of the covenant in it at some point, and Simon sat on it. It didn’t break.

A great gong sounded in the air.

Simon looked around. “Dinner?”

“No, a phone call.”