- Home
- Discover Sci-Fi Special Edition
The Other by Marilyn Peake Page 3
The Other by Marilyn Peake Read online
Page 3
I opened it up and took a look. “Yurts!? We’re staying in yurts!?”
Nat laughed. “Yup. Forty bucks a night. We’re staying in yurts. Also, this is the only parking lot. The manager marked our yurts with an X. We gotta go find them.”
I looked back at the brochure. Yup. Two Xs. Unfortunately, they weren’t next to each other.
Sighing loudly, I opened the van door and hopped out. We grabbed our stuff from the back. Feeling a bit like a pack mule with all the bags I had to carry, I followed Nat across the parking lot and onto a path. There wasn’t much on either side of it. Just the dark outlines of scrubby brush off in the distance. It was a path only because rocks on either side outlined it.
An animal howled. Another answered, its eerie cry piercing the silence.
Nat commented, “Coyotes.”
I asked, “How close, do you think?”
Nat said, “Hard to say. Probably not on the grounds of our lodge, though. Speaking of which, keep your eye out for snakes. Those are everywhere out here.”
I looked down at the path. There were a bunch of tiny burrow holes, but no slithering reptiles to worry about.
We walked for fifteen minutes. Then, finally, we saw the yurts. Circular cloth buildings dotted the landscape like stranded UFOs, some emitting the yellow glow of electric light. We obviously weren’t alone. I wondered if the dark ones were empty or if they were rented by people who were already asleep.
As we continued up the path, I marveled once again at how vividly the stars shone out here with so little pollution. It was as though we’d been presented with a different sky, one filled with a lot more stars than back home. I wished I’d thought to pack my portable telescope.
At that moment, something incredibly bright lit up the sky. My first thought was that I was witnessing an explosion. It hadn’t started on the ground, however. It had simply burst into existence in the sky. Was it a plane? Had a plane blown up? A terrorist attack? I hadn’t heard a plane, however. The night had been eerily quiet, almost as though Nat and I were the only human beings left alive on all of planet Earth. As I tried to figure out the source of the illumination, desperately wondering if I should be looking directly at it since the radiance felt near-blinding, the ball of light started streaking across the sky, leaving a gleaming trail behind it.
Nat dropped his suitcase and grabbed his cell phone out of his back pocket. He started snapping pictures.
I should have thought of that sooner. I did the same.
Then, as though nothing had ever happened, the night sky returned to its previous state.
A sonic boom erupted, passing overhead like an earthquake of sound.
Then, once again, the Earth became shrouded in silence.
A few people stepped out of their yurts, looked up at the sky, then went back inside.
Trudging along the rest of the path to the encampment, we found our assigned tents. Mine was made of green cloth and had a wooden door painted blue. Nat’s was red with a black door.
Once inside, I flicked on the light. Thank God, these had electricity. Yurts were invented thousands of years ago as homes for the nomadic people of the Central Asian steppe. The ones we had rented had been modernized. It even had an electric stove, rather than the wood-burning iron type that usually sits in the middle of the tent, venting pollution out through the roof.
I looked around. It wasn’t bad. Colorful rugs hung from the wooden lattice that supported the tent skin. There was, thankfully, a tiny bathroom with a toilet and sink. I assumed there were public showers on the grounds somewhere. There was a kitchen area with a refrigerator, stove, sink, a small counter and a table. And then I noticed something that pulled me toward it with the force of a magnet: a king-sized poster bed with a thick quilt. Suddenly realizing how physically exhausted I was, I kicked off my shoes and climbed in. Pulling the covers up to my chin, I fell fast asleep.
Around 3:00 in the morning, I woke with a start. It took a moment for me to remember where I was.
I became aware of footsteps outside. A few loud gasps from a bunch of people. Someone yelling, “Look!”
Groggily, I threw off the covers, wrestled my shoes onto my feet with exhausted fingers and stepped outside. A couple outside the next-door yurt were gazing upward. The woman was pointing. A flash of light, brighter than lightning, lit up the ground.
I looked up. There, the same thing as last night: a ball of light streaking across the sky, a trail of light forming a wake behind it.
I went back into my tent, climbed into bed and fell fast asleep. These didn’t look like the comets we were used to seeing, the kind that got people excited enough to haul telescopes out into the country to view them without light pollution. These latest explosions…I thought maybe they were asteroids. Tomorrow, I’d start looking up the scientific reports, to see if there was any factual basis to worry they might come too close. Probably not because there had been no news reports from scientists warning about approaching asteroids. It felt disappointing, and more than a little alarming, that we were living in another historical period when people turned to superstition over scientific fact, immediately jumping to conclusions that we were being invaded by an alien race.
My thoughts stopped there, as I slipped into a deep, dreamless sleep.
Chapter 4
The next day, I woke up early, found the community shower, then went into the main building to see if the place offered free coffee. A large, surly guy working the front desk pointed a thumb toward a hallway and said, “Right in there. Breakfast.”
There was indeed breakfast. Not much of one; but it would do, especially since it was complimentary. English muffins and bread next to a toaster and different kinds of cereal and doughnuts. For toppings: butter and jelly, peanut butter and honey. For drinks: juice and milk and coffee.
Realizing I should eat for strength, I toasted bread and slathered it with peanut butter and strawberry jelly. Then I poured myself two cups of coffee, added cream from a pitcher and carried them back to my yurt.
Sipping coffee, slowly waking up from the caffeine, I plugged in my laptop, wondering if I’d have good enough connection. There wasn’t any. I turned instead to my cell phone, scanning scientific websites to see if there was any chatter regarding the things I’d seen in the sky last night. Only a few local reports. Local scientists saying it might have been an asteroid; they’re presently analyzing photos. Quite a few townspeople claiming it was part of an invasion of flying saucers from outer space. One guy claiming he’d been abducted and experimented on. He showed a scar that ran down his left side. I zoomed in on his image. The scar looked old and healed.
A knock on the door. It was Nat, ready to head on out to the compound. We didn’t know if we were coming back. If we managed to gain admittance to the cult, we’d be staying there, so I gathered up my things.
When we arrived at The Astral Plane, we realized we’d also arrived at a crime scene. A chill ran up my spine as I took it all in. There were many resemblances to a war zone. Yellow police tape imprinted with the repeating message in bold black ink, POLICE LINE DO NOT CROSS, had been strung across the front gate. Armoured personnel carriers were parked on either end of it. Police walked around, carrying assault rifles and submachine guns.
A helicopter hovered overhead, its rotor blades whoooshing through the air. The name on the side announced it belonged to a news organization.
A police officer wearing a helmet and dark glasses approached our van. Pointing his submachine gun toward the ground, he rapped on the driver side window with his knuckles.
Nat pressed the button to roll it down. He said, “Yes, officer?” His usual lightheartedness had been wiped from his voice.
Bending down to study Nat as though he were some kind of insect specimen under a microscope, the officer said, “What are you doing here?”
Nat lied. “Just wanted to see what was happening. We’re tourists here in Roswell.”
The offic
er said, “This isn’t for you then. This is a crime scene, not a tourist attraction.” Raising his gun, he pointed down the street. “Go that way. If we see you back here again, you’re under arrest.”
Nat replied, “No problem, officer. Have a good day.”
His hands shaking, Nat pressed the button to roll the window back up. He headed on down the street, a cloud of dust rising up from our back wheels.
I turned the radio on. Local news reported a murder in the compound we’d just left. A woman had murdered her two children.
An anxiety attack overtook me. Images flooded my brain. My father grabbing my hand. Running, running, my lungs burning…
When we had driven a few miles, Nat pulled the van over to the side of the road. Turning to me, he said, “We’re not giving up, right? I feel we need to get inside the compound now. Something happened in there. We need to know if it was the result of pressure inside the cult, something bubbling up, becoming more intense, or if it was simply a mother gone mad.”
I couldn’t find my voice. I just shook my head yes.
Nat pressed a finger against the screen of his cell phone. I heard his end of the conversation. “Hello. This is Professor Nathan Moore. I have an appointment to interview Leader Razkazeel today. The police out front gave us some trouble, threatened to arrest us.” A pause. Then: “Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Sure, I can do that. You’ll be waiting to let me in?” Another pause. “Oh, I see. Brother Zytavius. Thank you.”
Clicking off his phone, Nat turned to me. “I guess we should have expected this. There’s another entrance to the compound. It’s through a tunnel that starts about half a mile from the back entrance. I was told that someone named Brother Zytavius will meet us there. You game?”
I had brought Xanax along. The prescription bottle was tucked into a zippered pocket of my backpack. I reminded myself it was there if I needed it. I said, “Sure. If they’re letting us in, we should go.”
Nat typed GPS coordinates into his cell phone, then pulled onto the road, dust once again flying up into the air, enveloping the back of our vehicle. He said, “I have a hunch things are going to get interesting now.” He smiled.
He drove forward, turning right at the first intersection of two roads out in the middle of nowhere. As far as the eye could see, there was nothing but desert, patches of scrubby brush dotting the landscape, and an endless expanse of blue sky. The GPS told us we were outside the city of Roswell now.
Nat’s cell phone announced, You’ve reached your destination, in front of one lone building, an old dilapidated barn. We pulled off the road, loose dirt crunching under the wheels. Nat jumped out. I waited in the van, wishing that time would slow down and delay the inevitable, while he looked around.
I jumped at the sound of my cell phone buzzing. I looked at the screen. It was her again. The message sounded more desperate this time. I deleted the message, looked back out the window. How had she found me?
A man dressed in an orange outfit that looked like an astronaut’s spacesuit came out of a door on the side of the barn. He and Nat spoke briefly. Then the man waved, turned around and went back inside.
When he returned, Nat said, “We’re supposed to park in the barn.”
As our van moved forward, the large front doors of the barn opened. We pulled inside; it swallowed us whole.
The man waved us over to a darkened corner. We parked, jumped out of the van and grabbed our stuff.
Turning to me, the man in the orange spacesuit extended his hand. He said, “I’m Brother Jaxon. I’m happy you’re interested in our way of life. The Truth is in The Astral Plane. You’ll see. Your life will be altered in ways you couldn’t possibly have imagined before now.” He smiled, revealing two broken front teeth. They looked sharp, like daggers.
I shook his hand, hoping mine wasn’t so covered in sweat it would reveal my trepidation. I thought about the effect of swallowing half a blue Xanax pill, the entire blue oval if needed. The panic receded into the back of my mind like a rat slinking into the shadows waiting for a chance to pounce at the jugular.
Nat and I followed Jaxon into the corner of the barn across from where we’d parked our vehicle.
Reaching his hand down through a pile of hay, the astronaut with fang-shaped teeth grabbed hold of something that turned out to be a metal handle. The hay was all one piece, the individual strands glued together to camouflage a door. Jaxon pointed to the opening. He said, “Go on, now.”
I looked into the hole. Cement stairs spiraled downward into near-darkness.
Panic claimed me for its own. My hands shook. My head felt so dizzy, I worried I’d fall down the stairs, hit my head, die of a concussion inside the compound.
Sitting on the barn floor, Nat placed his feet on the first step. He stood and descended a few more steps, then turned around and said, “You coming?”
I followed, conjuring up images of the man in the orange jumpsuit slamming the door shut, coming back later to harvest our organs or feast on our flesh. Would we be dead at that point, or alive and experiencing every painful assault on our bodies?
Jaxon stepped down into the opening and pulled the door closed. As he did so, light flooded a passageway at the bottom of the steps. Passing us, he waved a hand and said, “Follow me.”
We followed him through a long tunnel.
Childhood memories flashed through my mind, making me feel so claustrophobic, I started to hyperventilate. Once again, I was a small girl crawling on my stomach through a tunnel, practicing escape from the military who would surely come to round us all up. I told myself to calm down, to breathe, to imagine swallowing the Xanax with nice, cool water.
The walls were dirt held in place by wooden frames. I ran my hands along both sides, using tactile sensation to wash away the anxious feeling of unreality coursing through my body.
After walking so long my feet ached, we arrived at a metal door. Jaxon punched numbers into a keypad hidden behind a wooden beam. As the door swung open, he stepped inside. After we followed him, he shut the door and locked it.
We had entered a cold, concrete basement. Light bulbs suspended from the ceiling provided the only light.
As my eyes adjusted to the dimness, I saw cages lining the two longer walls. Concrete cages with thick metal bars, a bed and toilet and sink in each.
My life would end here. Obsessed with fulfilling a grant for field research I found fascinating, I had defied all the red flags popping up and screaming in my brain to get out and go back home. A woman had murdered her two children inside the compound. The police had set up a war zone outside. They must have suspected a larger wave of potential violence inside this place where I now found myself hidden away, buried alive in my own terror down in the basement.
Crossing the room, Jaxon walked over to a set of wooden stairs. We followed. When the man in the astronaut suit opened the door at the top, swung it forward and flooded the basement with light, I felt some relief. We were getting out.
She touched the girl’s lips with the vial of poison, tilted it, telling her to drink. To this day, I hear her voice echoing through time.
I followed Nat up the stairs. We entered a large common room where people were milling about. They were all dressed like Jaxon, even the children.
In a crisp, hurried voice, Jaxon said, “Follow me.”
I noticed that all the spacesuits had the same two patches. In place of NASA’s official insignia patch, they had one that looked very similar. Imitating NASA’s, it was round and blue, had star patterns and lines in white and red. However, the initials were TAP instead of NASA and the white lines scrolled out like a ribbon of light behind a flying saucer. I assumed TAP stood for The Astral Plane. Similar to NASA’s blue rectangular patch featuring a set of wings and the astronaut’s name, these suits had a patch with the same design except that a row of flying saucers replaced the wings.
I found it hard to keep up with Jaxon. He was moving quickly.
When w
e left the main room, we entered a wide hallway with concrete walls. There were no windows, but it was brightly illuminated by circular lights built into the walls. They reminded me of the round lights—often multi-colored—around the circular rim of UFOs in much of the popular UFO artwork.
The floor was covered in blue carpeting.
When I looked up to inspect the ceiling, I found it had been painted blue and decorated with star patterns. There appeared to be distinct constellations, but I didn’t recognize any of them.
We turned several corners, each new hallway designated by a different color rug.
After walking to the end of the hallway carpeted in white (it was still in pristine condition without any stains) Jaxon opened an ornate wooden door into which had been carved suns, moons, stars and planets.
The door led into a hallway with metal stairs that spiraled upward.
As we climbed the stairs, holding onto an ornate black metal railing, we passed by woven rugs depicting various scenes with aliens and flying saucers or real-life astronomy. One particularly beautiful rug showcased the Milky Way. Another featured the Hubble photo, Pillars of Creation. I’d always loved that image, described by NASA as having a “multi-colored glow of gas clouds” with “wispy tendrils of dark cosmic dust.” The outer space aliens on the rugs were mostly the same: green skin, large heads and enormous black eyes. A few had gray skin. A few were short. The UFOs were also repetitions on a theme—round metal disks with lights in various places: around the rim, along the bottom, or shooting a beam out of the bottom to lift people up. One rug showed a terrified-looking man floating within the beam.
The stairs led to a landing that looked like a waiting room or reading area. Hardwood floor, leather couch, several matching chairs and a coffee table.
Jaxon walked straight across the area and knocked on a door.
A man’s voice inquired, “Yes?”
Jaxon gave his name and said, “Our guests are here to meet you.”
The voice on the other side replied, “Come in. Please.”