Raymond
Daguerre dreamed of sandy beaches and crystal clear waters of the Bahamas
through closed eyes. This
much-anticipated vacation, which he badly needed from the rigors and mental
stress of computer programming, seemed a long time in coming. So, now he would enjoy it. Gladly, he sank
back in the comfortably cushion seat of the airplane, listening to the distant
sounds of the turbine engines as they flew over the sea in route to the
islands.
A
vague disturbing thought crossed his mind.
Did he forget anything? Maybe
he ought to recheck his carry on bags in the storage bin above to make sure he
had everything he needed for this trip.
Daguerre
opened his eyes.
“Holy
Shit!” he exclaimed, almost leaping to his feet.
Around
him were people in various stages of disgusting, rotten decomposition. The stewardess coming down the aisle had
half her face in ruin, with white bone showing through, while the other side
revealed moldy decaying, skin, with a dangling, partially, detached
eyeball.
He
was on a plane loaded with corpses, the destination, probably, Hell.
“Having
fun yet?” said someone seated behind Daguerre.
Daguerre
turned in his seat, and recoiled in horror.
It
was a dark colored man with two smiles who had spoken; the other smile below
his chin was his slitted throat, which steadily dripped red gore onto his
holiday shirt. The entire hideous
assembly of undead passengers resembled the cast left over from Michael
Jackson’s Thriller.
“Can’t
wait, Huh?” said the skeleton sitting across from him when Daguerre fell back
into his seat, horrified and speechless.
Daguerre
stared, with mouth agape.
The
skeleton nodded, cheerfully. “We’ll
have lots of fun when we get there,” he promised. He emphasized it by raising his bony arm, through a brightly
colored shirtsleeve, and pointed a skeletal finger at circular port window,
with the view of approaching land below.
Suddenly,
the aircraft’s engines stopped. The
airplane tilted forward, sharply, and then dived headlong toward the
earth.
And
the dead loved it, their gruesome skulls, collectively, bobbled in eager
anticipation.
Daguerre
gripped his armrest with taut fingers, ineffectually fighting the abrupt
incline. At which point, he found his
voice. And he screamed, as the plane
plunged, rapidly, downward towards disaster--
The
Gathering of Forces
I
ran as fast I could, glancing over my shoulders, every step of the way,
perspiration running down my face and neck, heart triple beating. As I rounded the corner, the shopping cart
tilted sideways, skipping on two wheels.
I
entered the deserted street before me, filled with vacant, dilapidated houses
on either side. The next deliveries would be toward the end of the street where
only a few people lived.
They
would be coming soon!
My
four-legged furry friends surrounded my cart and me. They numbered around
thirty. But, sadly I knew, they wouldn’t be enough against those who were
coming for me. Barking, they pleaded,
desperately, for me to hurry.
Disheartened,
I noticed as I turned that street corner, that there was no pay phone around or
down the street. And in 1966, cell phones for widespread use had yet to be
invented like in 2003 A.D. So calling for help was out of the question. I was
left to fend for myself. I did not want to die. There had to be a way out of
this. I just had to think of one.
They
would be coming, quickly and relentlessly, in a gigantic wave.
As
I fled pell-mell down the empty streets, my pals paced alongside of me,
yelping, anxiously. Desperately, I searched, for some kind of weapon. Every niche or alley, I looked into revealed
nothing of use to me. Where was a
broken bottle or fallen tree branch when you needed one? I thought.