Read Shadowline Drift: A Metaphysical Thriller Online
Authors: Alexes Razevich
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Metaphysical, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Suspense, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Metaphysical & Visionary, #Science Fiction
Mawgis smiled and stepped closer.
“What do you think? Am I a devil?”
Jake
leaned away from him. “There’s something evil about you.”
“
What do you want, Mawgis? You’re not here from kindness or concern for me.”
The rain pelted down, tiny bullets against Jake
’s skin.
“
All right,” he said. “How do we give the shaman what she wants?”
He felt stupid, with no id
ea what he should say. The words didn’t matter, but tone did. Determination. Desperation. Anger. He dropped to his knees, folded his hands together, and looked up through the hard rain to the glimpse of gray sky above. Jake raised his voice for everyone to hear.
“Drive this foul demon away from me. Save the world from the death he wants to bring it.”
“
Ee-ee-ee,
” the women called. “
Gorum!
”
“It’s good-bye today, isn’t it?” she said. “I don’t suppose we’ll run into each other again.”
She hitched up one shoulder in a slight shrug. “I’ll be in Boston.”
“I wouldn’t forget,” he said, taking the stick. “Not Naheyo. Not you.”
Jake reached for the case. “Thank you.”
“Safe journey, Jake,” she whispered, and kissed him lightly on the cheek.
He sat in the front of the wood canoe and craned his neck to watch Knonee paddle, two hands on one oar, side to side, pushing them eastward on
the river. A second paddle lay on the floorboards. River water lapped over partially submerged trees, their branches reaching upward—arms and fingers trying to touch the sun. Jake turned forward. Frogs croaked on the banks. Schools of fish in all sizes and colors swam and leaped beside the canoe. Caimans opened their sleepy, wet eyes and flexed their great jaws as they passed by. The minutes seemed to drag. Jake thought about what he’d say to Ashne once he phoned the head of World United. How to get the truth about benesha across quickly. What to say to make Ashne believe him. He waved Naheyo’s cane, swiping at the wasps and mosquitoes that dove at their heads.
“Big stick against little bug,” Knonee said from behind him. “And you missed.”
Jake looked at him over his shoulder and shrugged.
Knonee grinned then, a smile full of straight, whi
te teeth, and Jake saw that he was playing.
Knonee frowned, as though trying to puzzle out the meaning of the question.
Knonee’s face brightened. “
Depois de escurecer.
”
“Can I help?” he asked, and mimed paddling.
Knonee smiled and shook his head.
“Knonee, have you ever seen green stones in the forest?”
The paddler grinned. “
You hunt the emeralds?”
Jake shook his head. “Not emeralds. Other green rocks.”
“Many rocks,” Knonee said. “Rocks everywhere. No green ones.”
“Any magic rocks?
Pedras mágicas?
”
“Plants with magic, sure. Plenty. But not rocks.”
Knonee guided the canoe up to the dock and called out. Moments later, a man appeared—short, Asian-looking, and in his sixties, Jake guessed, with a well-lined face and knobby knees below his tan
shorts. The man bent down and threw a line to Knonee. The Indian caught it easily, holding the line with one hand and the dock with the other to steady the canoe. Jake climbed out, using Naheyo’s stick like a third leg, for balance. He turned, expecting Knonee to tie up and come ashore, but the man had already pushed off, disappearing into the wild darkness before Jake could thank him.
He turned back to the trader, held out his hand, and introduced himself.
“I need to call the States,” he said. “Can I use your phone?”
The fish trader looked Jake over and nodded. “Credit or collect?”
The building wasn’t much different from Mawgis’s hut—the ceiling only a wood frame covered in thatched palm—though bigger by maybe five times, and with a wood-plank floor instead of dirt. A
large, rectangular, scarred-wood counter filled the center of the room like a square doughnut. The walls were lined with thick wood shelving
packed with variously sized aquariums in which exotic fish swam. The air smelled of salt and chlorine. The trader didn’t turn on the overhead bulbs. Aquarium lights cast shifting, watery shadows on the floor. The soft hum of small electric pumps filled the room.
Static crackled over the line, then stopped, followed by the hollow nothingness of dead air.
Toshi rolled his eyes, and the two men went through the routine a third time. Nothing.
“The call’s not going through,” Jake said, his voice as calm as he could make it.
“Gone,” he said. “It happens. The weather. Sunspots, or some shit. Knocks out the satellite access.”