by
Al Bruno III
(for Valerie Jones)
The
air was humid and thick with pollen. The path that led through the
field was uneven and uphill. The grass that bordered it was thickly
flowered with blooms the color of blood. Trees surrounded them, hemlock
spruces and white cedars. Occasionally a cicada-like hum would rise up
from all around and then fade away.
Joseph hurried after the old man trying to make him sell but the old man just wouldn't listen.
“Creer
family moved here in 1806,” the old man said. He was white haired but
broad-shouldered and thickly built, “The Protestants in New York hadn’t
taken too kindly to them ‘cause they kept to themselves and didn’t
worship in the fine respectable churches everyone else did. They bought
these acres, it wasn’t farmin’ land you see. Gully’s too deep and the
ground’s no good for tillin’.”
“Mr.
Fenner my company is more than willing to meet almost any price...”
Joseph paused to brush a burr from his slacks, he was sure that by the
time this was over his suit would be ruined. Not that he ever wore one
of his really good suits when visiting these hick towns, but he still
didn’t like the idea of getting grass stains or worse on what he was
wearing. Something whizzed past his head, it looked like the biggest,
pinkest bumblebee he had ever seen. Joseph had always hated the out of
doors. Camping and long walks on the beach were not for him. He
preferred the odors and sounds of the city, he’d take subway rats over
bunnies and woodchucks any day.
They
spied a post nearby, just a bolt of wood standing out in the middle of
the tall grass. A milk bottle hung from it. The old man made his way to
it and filled it from the watering can he was carrying. The fluid that
trickled into the bottle was thick and syrupy. “Now the Creer family was
all daughters...” he continued, “well that ain’t really true but they
had no luck with the male children. Those that weren’t stillborn or
simple ran away from home soon as they could.”
When
the old man came back to the path there were a dozen or so ticks on his
overalls. Joseph felt his skin crawl, he started brushing at his
clothes self-consciously. Was there one crawling up his leg now? Was
there more than one?
And why was it the old man just wouldn't listen?
The
tree line was growing closer, “Now the Fenner family married into the
Creers. The Fenners had made their fortunes in Mexico but they came back
up north right before the Alamo fell. Soon enough all the Creer
daughters married the Fenner sons. Most of ‘em settled here, they built
additions onto the house and made families of their own. Some families
moved in to town to make their fortunes,” the old man turned and gave
Joseph a ragged grin, “but I’m the last now. Last for miles, wife and
kids all gone.”
“So
why stay here?” They reached another post with another bottle, the old
man filled it. Joseph turned to look back and grimaced at how far they
had come. There was a weathered stone wheel lying near the path, there
had been writing on it once but it had been reduced to mottled shapes.
“All your neighbors have sold to us already. We want to break ground by
the fall.”
The
old man got back on the path and started walking again, “But ain’t
there enough stores in the world already? Besides, if I sell and you
plow all this under where will the Trochildae go?”
“Tr- what?”
“Trochildae, least that’s what we Fenners call them. Ain’t got no proper names really but they’re like hummingbirds.”
Joseph
groaned inwardly, he had thought the old man was a just a crazy old
coot but it was worse than that, he was a tree hugger. “Mr. Fenner there
is no record of any endangered species...”
“Well
of course not,” the old man replied, “but they're here, been livin'
here since before the Creers and the Fenners, since before any man lived
at all. Some say the Old Ones brought them down from the stars.”
They
followed the path into the woods, Joseph breathed a sigh of relief at
the cool shade. He watched the old man fill another bottle. He began
“Mr. Fenner I think we have gotten off the subject...” then his words
trailed off.
They
had reached a clearing in the woods, a rough circle where no plant grew
and slabs of stone protruded from the ground. There were figures tied
to the stones, men, women and children all bound and gagged with strips
of leather. Their flesh was pockmarked and torn. To Joseph's widening
eyes they looked like mummies.
But some of those mummies were writhing in place.
A
sharp sting of pain made him cry out. Joseph snatched at his cheek and
found his fingers warm with blood. There was something flitting around
his head, moving fast and filling his ears with a heavy droning buzz.
The
thing- the Trochildae- moved too quickly to be seen clearly but Joseph
could see it was only bird-like in the vaguest sense of the word. The
body was frail-looking and devoid of feathers, dark veins ran through
its flesh and its wings moved so quickly that it was impossible to judge
how many of them there were. Joseph screamed and swatted at it, backing
away and in to the old man's waiting arms. The old man was strong,
impossibly strong.
The
forest came alive with the sound of the Trochildae as Joseph was
expertly bound to a stone. Dozens of the creatures flew this way and
that in anticipation.
Over and over again Joseph begged for mercy, but the old man just wouldn't listen.
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