The Extinct (19 page)

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Authors: Victor Methos

Tags: #Fiction, #Horror

BOOK: The Extinct
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“I don’t know if I believe in a soul.”

“Really? I believe everything has a soul. In my tribe, we believe that the soul, at least a small part of it, leaves the body with the breath. If two people breathe into each other, they will be part of each other forever.”

Eric smiled.
“You find funny our beliefs?” Jalani said playfully.
“No, it’s just amazing the things people like to believe in.”

Jalani glanced over at the group. They were all around the fire, dancing and singing in melody to the music. “Will you dance?” she said. She stood up and motioned for him to follow.

Eric stood up and followed her close to the flames. Her slender figure appeared exotic next to the fire, her silhouette like that of goddess; darkness against flame. Her dance wasn’t like the others’ drunken movements. She was very purposeful, her hips moving in line with her legs and her muscular upper body. She took Eric’s hands and wrapped them around her hips. He ran his hands up and down her body as they danced. When they were coated in sweat and their muscles were warm and stretched from the movement, she turned to him and put her arms around his neck. She put her lips to his, and breathed in. He pulled away and saw the mischievous grin she had before she leaned in and kissed him.

 

 

CHAPTER

34

 

 

Dawn over the plains began with a smoke-gray sky. Soon, the red and orange of the sun would come over the mountains and paint the landscape with color. Then the heat would begin. The waves would come up off the ground creating mirages in every direction one looked. The smell of hot grass and dirt would overtake one’s senses and the day would officially begin.

Eric awoke in a tent next to Jalani and Douglas. Douglas snored like a bear the entire night but Eric was so tired he had fallen right to sleep. Jalani had slept against him, her body warm through the night. He woke and gently removed her hand from his chest before he climbed out of the tent into the bright day. The tribe was up and around. He noticed that the men were gone and only the women and children remained. Some of the children stared and giggled as he made a face at them.

Thomas was seated on the ground, leaning against a tree near one of the tents and sipping at some tea. He nodded hello to Eric as he walked over and sat in the shade next to him.

“Quite a sociable people, no?” Thomas said.
“I like ‘em. They have no sense of ‘mine’; they share everything. They’re not really a tribe I found out. More like a town.”
“Sleep well?”
“Not bad, but I was drunk. What was that drink anyway?”

“Milk mixed with the spit of all the tribe and then left to ferment in the sun.” Eric got a look on his face that Thomas couldn’t help but smile at. “You’ll be fine,” Thomas said. “So what do you think of Andhra Pradesh?”

“It’s beautiful. I can see why my dad came here.”

Thomas took a sip of tea. “You’re father died not far from here, maybe two or three day’s journey.”

A robin chirped in the tree above them, dancing among the branches before flapping her wings in a furious display and then darting off.

“Will asked what I’m going to do after we kill the tiger.”
“Oh? And what did you say?”
“I said I don’t know.”

“Well, if you prove yourself a useful hunter, I suppose I could use an apprentice. You could stay with me in Hyderabad until you found a place of your own. There’s a lot of money to be made in helping tourists see the sights and make a kill. You could do it a few years and save enough to go and live wherever you want.”

“I don’t know. I’m not much of a hunter.”
“That’s yet to be seen. You can only tell when you’re eye-to-eye with the beast.”
William crawled out of a tent on the far side of the village and waved hello as he stretched his back.
“How do you know Will and his wife?” Eric asked.
“I attended school with Sandra. We were, at that time, quite the item.”

Eric never even thought that Thomas was interested in women. Not that he thought he was a homosexual, but more like asexual. He seemed like he’d be perfectly content with a solitary life. “Really? What happened?”

“I moved away and she didn’t want to leave London. I couldn’t stay; it was getting a bit tight for me. I needed breathing space.”

Sandra came out of the tent after William. She was wearing shorts and the tan smoothness of her legs made Thomas stare a bit longer than he should’ve. She walked over, a smile parting her pink lips.

“Hello boys,” Sandra said playfully. “Ready for your big manly kill today?”

“Oh,” Thomas said, “I don’t believe we’ll get him so quick. He’s a couple days away by now I would figure.”

“Big Thomas,” she said, “always on the hunt. You know Eric, he was a ladykiller back when we were in college. All the girls thought he was so tough and mysterious.”

“Tough yes,” Thomas said with a grin, “though I can’t attest to how mysterious I am.” They looked at each other a moment and then Thomas said, “We should probably get moving soon, don’t want to waste any daylight.”

“Where are all the men?” Eric asked.

“Hunting and foraging. The women stay and tend to the homes and children.” He stood up and wiped some dirt off his pants. “Come, there’s much to be done yet.”

After a quick breakfast of coffee and eggs cooked over an open fire the jeeps were off again. Next to Eric in the backseat of the second jeep sat a tracker from the tribe. He was wiry and had an intense glare in his charcoal eyes. A rifle sat next to him and he didn’t remove his hand from the barrel for a second.

Eric thought it odd that Sandra only traveled with Thomas, and even odder that William didn’t mind.
“Where we going?” Eric asked Jalani.
“There was a killing yesterday near another village. If they still have the body, we’re going to see it.”
“Why?”
“We can tell if it is a tiger from the way they kill.”

The day dragged on and the driving was rough as the paved road turned into a rough path that few cars had driven down before. Grass was growing again over the path and the earth was now fine red dirt, almost like sand. Eric took inventory of the supplies while they drove; the second jeep had all the food and water and the first was loaded with the gasoline. He wasn’t sure the food could last more than a few days for this many people.

At the base of a large green hill was another village. This one was larger than the last and had some of the tin huts made from scavenged metal found in the plains. The people dressed and looked different from those of the other village even though they were only a few hours away from each other. There was a monkey tied to a post near the edge of the village and a group of children were throwing food at it, their laughter a welcome sound after hours of nothing but roaring jeep engines.

The jeeps parked near the children and one of the boys ran back to the village and into one of the huts. A few moments later a man emerged with him. He was dressed in a dirty blue button-up shirt and jeans. He smiled widely as he saw Thomas approaching.

“Namdi?” Thomas said. “What in God’s name are you doing here?”
They shook hands and Namdi looked over the group. “Dangerous for tourists here, no?” he said.
“Special group this,” Thomas said.
Namdi saw Jalani and nodded. “How are you?”
“Good, Doctor. You?”
“Fine. What are you still doing with this old man?”
“He pays too much to kill him.”

Namdi laughed and slapped Thomas’s arm. Thomas turned to the rest of the group and said, “This is Doctor Namdi Said, an old friend. This is Eric, Sandra, Will and Douglas.”

Namdi bowed his head. “Pleased to meet you.”
“So,” Thomas said, “you still haven’t answered my question. I thought you’d be in South Africa?”
“I was doing some contract work for the government here when I came across the injuries. They led me here.”
“What injuries?”
Namdi gave him a puzzled look and then said, “Follow me.”
Thomas looked to Eric, “Come with me. The rest of you wait here.”

They walked through the village, Eric lagging a little behind as he watched the faces of the people that peaked out of doorways to steal a glance at him. Many of them looked frightened and the rest looked aggressive. One small boy pointed at him and said something as he walked past.

Eventually they came to a massive tent. Namdi parted the hanging flaps that were used as a door and held them open for the others.

“Actually,” Thomas said, “I was told you have a body, Namdi.”
“We have many bodies.”
“Fresh one from last night.”
Namdi nodded.

They walked from the village heading south into the brush. Thomas explained to Eric that the dead were kept away from the villagers in case their smell attracted scavengers. In the middle of a thicket of green bushes was a path cut out that led to a small tin shack. Namdi opened the door which had a padlock on it.

Inside was the corpse of a man, at least what Eric thought was a man. He had to glance away and prepare himself before looking again.

“Go and get Jalani,” Thomas said quietly.
“He needs to be buried,” Eric said.
“They don’t bury the dead here,” Namdi said. “Hyenas dig up and eat corpses. We burn the dead each night.”
Thomas spoke softly and laid his hand on Eric’s shoulder. “Go get Jalani.”

Eric walked through the village, watching the crowds of women laughing and giggling as he walked by. Some of them appeared somber and averted their eyes. He saw his group drinking water and eating beef jerky by the jeeps. He called to Jalani and they walked back together

“What is the matter?” Jalani said.

“I don’t know.”

Jalani walked into the shack and inadvertently held her breath when she saw the corpse. She looked to Thomas. Eric watched them but didn’t understand what was going on. The corpse looked like he expected someone to look like after being eaten by a tiger.

“Is this fresh?” Jalani asked.
Thomas nodded. He stood up and walked out of the shack without saying anything. Eric followed.
“I don’t understand,” Eric said.

“You didn’t notice the color of the flesh? That body had the blood drained from it before death; the animal had drunk his blood. Tigers don’t do that.”

“I don’t get it.”

“It means, young Eric, that we are dealing with a different type of animal. Are you familiar with the story of the lions of Tsavo?”

“Not really, just what Douglas said.”

“They were man-eaters that ate a hundred and forty people. They too drank the blood of their victims. They enjoyed it, as I think this animal enjoys it. If it is the same phenomena, these animals are killing for pleasure, not food.”

They walked back to the jeeps and Thomas began speaking with Douglas. Sandra and William were playing cards in one of the jeeps and the tracker was standing at the edge of the brush. Eric walked behind him. The man was squatting and in full concentration. He was staring into the tall grass unblinkingly, his muscles tense and his rifle slung over his shoulder.

The man didn’t move when Eric approached. He didn’t acknowledge him. He stood perfectly still, staring. Eric looked into the grass. It was longer than he’d seen, about chest high and a dull green-brown. The wind was whipping it back and forth and it had an eerie voice-like quality from its motion.

The man slowly raised one hand up to his rifle and began to bring it down. He froze mid-motion a few seconds, and then continued. Before it was near his chest Eric heard the grass split apart and a warm spatter of blood hit his face as a shot rang in his ears. Something knocked him on his back as the tracker screamed and was pulled into the brush. The world spun and suddenly Eric was staring at the blue sky, a puffy white cloud drifting over his vision.

The screams died down but Eric couldn’t hear anything. He didn’t hear Sandra and William standing over him and yelling or Thomas and Douglas running into the brush with their rifles ready. He didn’t hear the screams of the children as they ran for protection in their homes, or the roar that thundered through the warm air.

 

 

 

CHAPTER

35

 

 

Eric floated from a mound of grass to a cloud that sat next to him. The cloud moved purposefully, turning at an angle to fit perfectly between him and the grass. He moved toward the sky and the sun was bright on his face.

“Son?”

Eric was in the backseat of a car. In the passenger seat was Jeff, staring at the road before them. His father was driving and turned back to Eric. “Son?”

“Yeah, dad.”

“You have to make sure there’s no water in your shoes. You can’t get trenchfoot. Wear your boots without socks and stop every hour and dry your feet. It worked when you were in Vietnam. Your grandpa saw you there.”

“I will dad.”
“There’s the dam.”
A large dam sat in the middle of the road, water leaking from millions of little crevices.
“Looks like it’s going to burst,” his father said.
“Yeah,” Eric said. He looked to Jeff. On his head was a clear bowl of water with a scorpion floating inside.
“Son?”
“Yeah.”
“We needed to take a detour.”

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