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9 Tales Told in the Dark 17
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9TALES TOLD IN THE DARK #17
© Copyright 2016 Bride of Chaos/ All Rights Reserved to the Authors.
First electronic edition 2016
Edited by A.R. Jesse
Cover by Turtle&Noise
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9TALES TOLD IN THE DARK #17
Table of Contents
LAST BUS FOR THE FUTURE by George Strasburg
MIKEY MIKEY by John Grey
UPON A CANDLE by Sara Green
KNOCK by Kenneth O’Brien
SOME LIKE IT PUTRID by Karen Heslop
PIECES OF ME by Craig Steven
YEAR OF THE SPIDERS by DJ Tyrer
THE RIVER AND A KILLER by Adam Phillips
THE NIGHT FRIEND by Daniel J. Kirk
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TALES
TOLD
IN
THE
DARK
#17
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LAST BUS FOR THE FUTURE by George Strasburg
Gone are all the buses. Their stops remain, some of the flyers with the arrival and leave times remain, half plastered to the old booths. Someone made off with the benches though. In their place were two holes in the sidewalk, and rusty bite, quickly cut in the haste of what was most likely a theft of the benches. But no one cared. The public transit system was a wasted expense, and more money would’ve been lost collecting all the old benches to sell them off.
So they were forgotten.
But at least as the rain started, the booths, with their semi-transparent roofs provided shelter for a young boy, already too cold for comfort. The mist, on the other hand, was not restrained by the roof and came in through the one full open side of the booth as well as beneath the bottoms of the other three sides. If the bench had remained, the boy could’ve climbed up on top and stayed dry on three sides. Instead, he huddled into a corner, and let his ankles soak from the spray off the sidewalk.
He sniffled repeatedly, though not from any apparent sadness. He was just cold.
It had been a long time since he’d had anywhere to go, anywhere that he belonged. He’d dealt with those emotions, buried them in the back of his mind, walked around in them until the feelings were as worn as his sneakers. He pick up new shoes one day, when he came across them again.
Shoes seemed to have gone the way of the benches. Despite all the displaced homes and rubble, the boy never came across a wicked witch and ruby slippers. Though it wouldn’t have surprised him if he did. Things like that seemed possible. All the storybooks the boy knew seemed plausible now.
After all, his entire life he’d been assured dragons were make-believe. And yet, that’s not what happened.
Dragons came. Took. Destroyed. Came back. Took. Destroyed. And told the people where they could go. The last thing the boy heard there was a dragon in every city in the United States and Europe. Pundits lost contact with other countries and it was assumed they would be as well, but the boy, wiser than he should be, often wondered if the other countries had decided not to help their former enemies and allies.
Why should they get involved when it was the European Union that awoke the dragons?
Of course, the United States jumped in. But that’s because the world belonged to them. That’s what the pundits said anyway—back when the TVs still worked.
But dragons are bigger than any tank or F-18. The temperature of their bodies must be that of the planet’s core—because nuclear weapons failed to impress them. Then again, that brings up the one fact the storybooks got wrong about dragons. They didn’t breathe fire. Their body temperature caused it. A flap of their wings and the right spark and a whole field would go up in smoke. A smoke the dragons basked in.
They liked that smoke so much, they filled the skies with it. And Mother Nature brought the rain. But that rain would boil when a dragon was near. That was the only comfort the boy took from standing at the cold wet bus stop.
But as he shivered, exhausted from months of travel and survival, he lost his will. He just couldn’t move anymore—because there was nowhere he could go. Humankind had accepted the dragon’s command, and places like the one the boy had run from had done their best to please the dragons, offering them food and smoke of all kinds—as if the creatures could be bought over with tobacco or marijuana. The dragons were all too happy to enjoy the offering and then feast upon the charred remains of humans. Yes, the dragons loved the taste of charred flesh the most.
Though it had to be freshly charred.
The boy’s travels had been checkered with long overcooked corpses. Skulls that would burst into ash with the slightest touch, only preserved until the next rainfall muddied them up.
Or they were trampled on by desperate survivors or perhaps even driven over by a… bus.
A bus like the one that jittered down the road, producing an awful black exhaust to go along with the rattling of its old dented frame.
At first the boy accepted this sight as an illusions, a cruel joke of the desert cityscape. And he had no understanding of irony otherwise he would’ve counted his placement beneath a bus stop and the appearance of a working bus as something less than a miracle.
Instead, his eyes brightened and a hope that should’ve been long lost gaped his mouth—it was still too tired to remember how to smile.
The bus careened to a stop, air brakes hissing as everything inside the bus shifted forward, then back.
The bus door folded open.
“Well,” the bus driver said with a smile. Behind him, voices of the passengers urged him not to stop. Warned him of traps and stories they had heard. “It’s just a boy,” he told them and addressed the boy at the bus stop with a warm smile. “You looking to go anywhere in particular, kid?”
The boy shook his head. Shrugged, and then leaned back against the bus stop to show that he wasn’t waiting for the bus. There shouldn’t be any buses at all actually.
“Are you from Tent City?” the bus driver asked. “We’re not. We’re a different lot. We’re going to make a difference don’t you know.”
The boy shrugged. As the panic behind the driver rose to the point where if a hand had come out of the darkness and smacked the driver, it wouldn’t have been unexpected. Even the driver had raised his shoulders to brace for the likely impact.
“We could use the help,” The bus driver snapped at his passengers. Then he turned that smile of his back on and looked at the boy. “What do you say? It’s rainy, kid, but it’s dry in here. Why don’t you come along?” the bus driver asked.
The boy stepped forward, and wetness found the places where he was dry. It made him step right back before he realized it was no use. He might as well climb on that bus, if only to be dry for a little while.
The bus door closed behind him with an unpleasant creak that the bus driver tried to apologize for. “At least,” he said, “she still runs and if there’s a fire…well you know… it’s not like there’d be any reason to escape the bus.
”
The boy agreed and stood in the aisle looking for an empty seat. Of which there were actually plenty. Most passengers sat alone. There was an old couple who sat closely, clutching at each other, and avoiding the boy’s glance. There was another man entrenched in a handheld video game, that required both available seats, and had propped his fat legs up on the empty adjacent seats. Another couple wasn’t nearly as old, but might as well have been as old in the eyes of the boy. They smiled at the boy with a tinge of sadness that crept in and was extinguished—perhaps for the sake of the boy. They whispered things back to each other.
None of the faces seemed as hostile as their voices had implied when they were begging their driver to leave the boy. These seemed like good people—defeated, but good.
The evils that followed the arrival of the dragons had actually manifested themselves on the survivors’ faces. With just a look the boy knew who had crossed the line. Those that were good simply appeared tired.
“Why don’t you come on back here with me?” an older woman said. She had on a clean dress—good enough for Easter Sunday Mass about three decades ago. She’d likely found it in someone else’s storage container on the outskirts of town, or perhaps it had belonged to her mother and its sentimentality had made her preserve it through the chaos.
The boy didn’t get any other offers, and could’ve just sat alone. But he wanted company and so he took a seat next to the woman.
Her hair was curled and smelled of burnt hair—thought that was common enough given the conditions the dragons had left the world in. It was mostly gray but there were still strands of blonde and brown in it. The wrinkles in her face were carved by days on the beach, and the creases were filled with ash, though her cheeks had been recently powdered with blush. For some reason she wanted to look her best—even if that wasn’t possible anymore.
“What’s your name?” she asked.
The boy shrugged and looked at the driver’s rearview mirror. The driver seemed to have interest, though it was doubtful he could hear the woman’s question, given the awful sound of the engine. The boy barely understood her.
He shrugged.
“Well, it’s a good thing you’re coming with us. We’re going to do something very important.”
“W-w-what?” asked the boy.
She smiled and lowered her head beneath the head rest as if she could only tell him in secret. “We’re going to slay a dragon.”
The boy’s eyes widened. “R-r-really?”
The woman nodded. “It’s our duty. It’s all we have left to offer the world.”
The boy squinted incredulously and picked at his teeth with his tongue. “How do you plan to kill a dragon?”
The woman leaned back as if to keep that secret to herself. Her smiled hugged her face but never separated her lips.
“You can’t kill them,” the boy said.
A man popped over the headrest in front of them and said, “Oh but we can. You see we got letters from another city. They beat their dragon and told us explicitly how we can rid ours. All over the country, world perhaps, there are buses, cars, boats, what have you, all heading out on the same simultaneous mission. All at once, every dragon in the world will die.”
“We can only hope,” the woman said, and crossed herself as if Jesus Christ was going to vex the whole operation if she hadn’t.
“How are we—”
“We should probably stop now,” a man form the back called up to the front. “We’re less than an hour out.”
The bus driver agreed with a squeal and shake that threw the boy against the seat in front of him. He eased off it with the woman’s help.
“Are they all prepped?” the driver asked.
But while the rest of the bus responded with a ‘yes’ signifying their own preparedness, it was the man in the back you said, “I wanted to wait to pour the glasses until after you stopped.”
The driver met the man halfway back, and upon a tray, were several paper cups, like the ones children use to rinse out their mouth when they brush their teeth. There were even popular cartoon characters from a show the boy missed watching on Nickelodeon Channel. Again with the irony, that cartoon had dragons—a different kind, but still dragons.
“D-d-do I get one?” The boy asked, thirsty despite all the rain he’d encountered.
The woman smiled and waved the driver over, who handed two cups to her, one she handed over to the boy.
It was red and thick like cough syrup rather than blood or Hawaiian punch. The boy hesitated, examining the liquid by tilting his glass from side to side. The viscosity of it was certainly just as thick as the nasty cough syrup he’d suffered when he was sick, if not a little watered down.
“Drink,” the bus driver said. He urged the boy.
So did the woman.
And most of the other passengers. Except the fat man with the hand held gaming console and the two older couples. They watched in silence. But their silence was not noted in the boy’s decision making process.
The boy knew something was wrong with it, but he drank it anyway, because it smelled better than the water he’d been drinking out of old tires and in the potholes in the street.
It was bittersweet. It stuck to his throat. He couldn’t simply spit it back out, he had to try and swallow over and over until it felt as if his tongue was about to come off and go down as well.
“What—was—that?” he asked.
The bus driver nodded, but he didn’t answer the boy’s question, rather he addressed the passengers.
“You shouldn’t feel any effects for another hour—depending on your build and last meal, that is. I will drive fast. If you feel ill please note that I am limited to the number of antidotes, but you must tell me immediately, a dead body will not suffice. They will know something is up.”
The boy looked around trying to decipher the meaning of this. Just what he had drank he did not know, but suddenly he feared his predicament.
“W-w-was…is that medicine?” the boy asked.
The old woman tugged him close and kissed his ear as she whispered, “You will be rewarded for your sacrifice. There is a life after this one, one where we can be with our families and friends again. We will be granted that life because of what we do here today. We will be heroes.”
The boy, as young as he was, knew immediately what was about to transpire. Their bus was not just headed to the outskirts of their city, but to the cave the dragon had constructed upon its ruins. A mountain of devastation, built on the ashes of humans.
“B-b-but I don’t want to die!” the boy shrieked.
The woman was stronger than the boy gave her credit. She yanked him down, and pinned him to the back of the seat with her forearm across his throat.
“Shut your mouth, boy. God has asked you. You were not happy. You would not survive much more than another month on this planet, even with the dragons defeated. You have a higher purpose now!”
The boy squirmed and kicked.
“It’s too late,” the guy in front of them said casually. “Just relax, kiddo. In an hour or so you’ll die whether a dragon eats you or not.”
The boy cried. And while the rest of the bus tried to console him with stories of their own sacrifice and their own reasoning he blocked it all out and tried to imagine his escape.
“There, there, you’ll be fine. We’ll all be fine.”
But the boy remembered that the driver had not taken a swig of the red juice.
“How come he wasn’t poisoned?” the boy asked.
“Because he has to drive the bus. We will be dropped off for the dragon’s meal. The bus driver will leave, as he always does. The dragon will not, and cannot suspect a thing.”
“So he gets to live?”
“It wasn’t his choice. We chose him,” the woman said. “We chose him because he has the best reason to go on living. He’ll make a difference in this world. He will lead humanity from these ashes.”
The boy wanted to ask why not him, why
couldn’t he ride back with the bus driver. But he had survived this world for far longer than most his age because he knew to keep quiet. He had one intention and that was to steal the antidote. He just had to figure out when was the best time to do so.
A loud burp erupted from the fat man. “He crunched several paper cups in his hand and tossed them under the seats. While his crudeness was not appreciated, the other passengers regarded him with pride.
He was their secret weapon, his size likely capable of withstanding a greater dose of the poison.
And with that sound of his burp, some of the passengers began to sing (out of key) Amazing Grace. The bus trolleyed on, an unlit funeral pyre. The boy trembled in it. Though the vibrations disguised his fear and anticipation.
He gazed out the window, trying to remember where they were. He had wandered the ruins of the city for long enough that he’d discovered most of the landmarks, but he had been heading in a similar direction as the bus was going, only he intended to visit the old baseball stadium. If only to run the bases like he once imagined he’d do as an adult—in uniform—in the ninth inning of a recently broken tied Game 7.
Maybe if these people did succeed he could live that dream. There sure as heck would be a large enough age gap in the talent pools where he could sneak onto a roster. And it was that thought, that dream that could still burn within him that didn’t want to be fed to the dragons.
What if there wasn’t enough poison within them to kill it?
What if it tasted it and spit out the tainted charred meat?
Then all the boy and the passengers of the bus would just be dead.
Skeletons of ash until the next rainfall.
No time revealed itself as prudent until the last moment. Then as the passengers lined the aisle to march to their doom, a doom glorified by the doom of the dragon, the boy made his move.
Just as he passed the driver, he snagged the bag he was certain contained the antidote. Hands ripped at the boy’s tattered clothing, but it was dry rotted and tore easily, allowing the boy to leap from the bus.