Saturday, January 24, 2009

Part XXXIII

Part XXXIII

There was a light breeze that kept the heat rolling up off the dirt from getting too unbearable, as Carl and I headed across the arid plain. We'd both grabbed a piece of gum before we started so at least the mud in our mouths had a pleasant, if not somewhat gritty, spearmint flavor.

I'd left Carl to carry the water, and I took the bowling ball bag. I'd figured that the short time we'd be here shouldn't attract too many death runners.

About 20 minutes into our walk, my spine went cold and I held up a hand to stop Carl. I walked in an ever dwindling spiral until I felt the energy under my feet. I dropped the bag and turned my head while it made a plume of dust that drifted slowly away on the breeze.

I want you to turn away Carl. Look at the van.

Oh come on, what they hell'd you bring me out here for if I can't watch.

Carl, I need you to watch, but I need you to watch the van and tell me if you see any cars coming down the road. Can you do that for me?

Carl kicked the dirt and turned back to the van.

Fine.

I laid my hands flat just over the soil and moved them around to pin point the energy. Satisfied, I mumbled under my breath and made my arm vibrate out of phase. I plunged it into the soil up to my shoulder and squirmed around until I found what I was looking for.

This was going to be delicate. I mumbled again and unphased my arm in the earth and reached my hand around what felt like a fist sized rock. Phasing again, I pulled my arm back out of the soil. I let it vibrate a bit more and slowly returned it to normal, I wanted as little dirt as possible under my skin.

When I looked down, I had smooth black river rock in my fist. I set it down on the ground and unzipped the bag. I pulled the clear bowling ball out and laid it on the dirt next to the rock. Just for the fun of it I turned it so the skulls eyes could look at what lay before it.

I placed a hand on each of the objects and dug deep into my mind to make sure what I was about to do was as accurate as possible. Unlike normal, I started under my breath, then moved the words to my tongue, and then to my teeth, where they resonated. Then, I brought them clean out, crisp and clear. In my periphery, I saw Carl scream, cover his ears with his hands and drop to his knees.

A crack started to form under me, small at first, as the Earth tried to reclaim the stone. I shut my eyes hard, just before the brightness slammed into my lids, I turned away and felt my hands on fire. The smell of of the hair burning off my hands wound its way into my nose, and then it was over.

It took my eyes a bit to adjust, as though I'd stared at the sun, but when they finally settled, the rock was porous, like a dried sponge, and I crushed it to dust in my hand. The bowling ball was warm to the touch, but not too hot to handle. I put it back in the bag and zipped it back up. I wobbled for a moment, but finally stood and went to Carl. I placed a hand on his shoulder and he took his hands from his ears and rose like as though from a baptism.

Carl didn't say anything as we walked back to the van, but I knew he was scared of me now. He'd always been a little scared, but now he was just enough to be unsure, and a part of me was glad. Maybe this would send him back where he belonged, out of danger.

Back at the van, I rolled the side door open and placed the bag down. I unzipped it again and pulled out the bowling ball. I didn't know what I was looking for, and it didn't seem to have any answers. I set it down and stared into the skull's eye sockets. Nothing. Then, the Old Man sauntered over and gave it a whiff. Then the Old Man rubbed his face along the smooth surface and began to purr.

That was good enough for me.

The ball secured back in the drawer, I played apothecary, and made an unguent for the burns on my hands. They hurt like hell, but it felt good to hurt. This was the kind of hurt I could endure, the kind that wakes you up and makes you feel alive and full of purpose.

As we headed out of town, Carl refused to look at me and had rebuffed the few attempts I'd made at conversation. I'd get us separate rooms tonight, so he could have some time alone to think. Just as we hit the interstate, Carl stuttered out a question that even caught me by surprise.

I don't really know you Aubrey, do I?

I didn't hesitate.

No Carl, you really don't.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Part XXXII

Part XXXII

For the next six hours we rode in silence. Carl had the laptop perched on his lap, but angled toward me. The map Bruce had given me pulled up on the screen so I could find my way to the first piece of what was left of my Uncle's soul.

It was getting dark when we arrived at a small motel, that sat just off the road like a hitchhiker disillusioned with the world. The vacant stare from the office window told me they'd have a room.

Inside, Carl on his bed watching an old western on the TV, and the Old Man curled on a pillow at the head of mine, I looked at the map and tried to figure out exactly how I was going to find what I'd come all this way for.

If we were actually in a town, it was one by name only. It felt more like a border between towns, a nebulous rural outpost that struggled to survive on the fringes.

It took a while to find what I was looking for, but when I did I was sure. In August of nineteen seventy-four there had been a tornado that had struck in Ash Valley. Those that had seen it, were convinced they saw a face rolling out of the tornado's cone. It had been on such a clear day, that the film footage taken is crisp and I found a link to it on Youtube.

While I saw what they wanted me to see, I also saw something else. This had been an incident that still ran through the minds of the people who lived here. A demon in a tornado is the stuff of urban legend. That's where we had to go. I had to find the exact place it had been when the footage had been shot.

I closed the laptop and Carl took his eyes from the screen and moved them to me.

Find what we're looking for?

I hope so. Get some rest. Tomorrow we go hunting demons in tornados.

Carl gave me that quizzical look he always kept in reserve for when I spoke.

The Irony of the whole thing was that we had to drive away from where we were going in order to find someone who could tell us what we needed to know. The area around where the twister had hit was painfully remote. I knew that the best way to get some answers was to find the people who kept the local knowledge. We couldn't find a barber shop, so we found the next best thing.

The Diner sat by a gas station, the only one we'd seen in a while, near a crossroads in the middle of nowhere. The Pick-ups parked outside told me it was the right place since none of them were newer than the late 80s. Inside, Carl and I pulled up to the counter and ordered some breakfast. The sideways glances we got weren't predatory, just curious.

I'd waited to drop the question until I'd finished sopping up the egg yolk and bacon grease with my toast. As the waitress smiled and started to take my plate away, I licked the tips of my fingers clean and smiled.

You wouldn't happen to know where we can find someone who could tell us where the '74 twister touched down could you?

I'm not sure if it really happened or if I was just thinking it did, but it sounded as though every fork in the place dropped onto a plate at once and every conversation came to an abrupt halt. The smile on the waitress's face half hid and she took my plate away. She returned with the coffee and refreshed my glass. Everyone waited for her to give the OK, and when the first word slipped through her teeth, the Diner perked back up and the silence faded.

If you're some kind of storm-chaser, we don't really get that many. That one was a fluke.

We're not storm-chasers. I've seen the footage and just wanted to take a look.

People who go looking for Demons usually end up findin'em.

The statement had come from an old man sitting at the counter just down from Carl. He'd paused his consumption of toast and cigarette and was giving me and Carl the look of a man who knew what he was talking about.

So, you can tell me where we can find it?

I can do better than that, I can show you. It touched down on my farm.

My name's Aubrey.

He took a bite of toast and a drag off his cigarette, then followed it with a swig of coffee.

My breakfast is on you.

I laughed a little bit and then wondered whether or not he was lying to get a free meal.

The farm road hadn't been graveled in a long time and dust plumed up from behind his pick-up so that my visibility was ten feet at best. When he finally came to a stop, I almost had to slam on the break to keep from rear ending him. We sat in the van for a second to let the dust die down before we hoped out. Even having waited, I could feel the air turning to mud in my mouth and tried my best to not spit.

The area looked like it had from the old footage, except the field was desolate now and had not been farmed for many years. Even so, there wasn't a single weed as far as I could see. The field on the other side of the road was coming along fine.

That twister killed the ground. Never got crops to grow on it again. People said it had taken all the top soil and that was why, but I re-topped the soil four times and it didn't do any good. The big smart fellers from the University even came out and took samples. They said the soil had plenty of nutrients and there was no reason the crops should be growing. They even took some back with them, they didn't anything to grow either. I told 'em it was because the Devil had walked here. They thought I was crazy.

He turned to me and Carl, and took a drag off the cigarette that seemed eternal in his hand.

I don't set foot on that ground anymore, but the place you're looking for is about three hundred yards that way.

He pointed with his cigarette and I watched the smoke roll from it, it looked like a little twister coiling up.

Thanks, I appreciate it.

You're welcome to it. I've got things to do.

He got back in his truck and left me and Carl coughing and chewing on dust the devil had walked upon.