THE
LIGHTS IN THE SKY
Nik Morton
Nik Morton
Ancient star cluster - Wikipedia commons
Soon be July, thought Josh,
contemplatively sucking a milky blade of grass. From the rise where he crouched
on his haunches, amidst a small colony of rosy-purple foxglove, he peered
through narrow weather-slitted eyes at his scrawny wool-clad sheep. The odd
forlorn cry pierced the pre-dusk air, the sturdy little lambs now trotting
confidently through the dew-sodden gorse, already independent of their mothers.
Josh filled his chest with pride.
Below,
the north Tyne's headwaters bubbled rapidly over smoothed rocks and makeshift
weirs. On the rim of the trees to his left, the rough-hewn cottage at the foot
of the slope issued its spiral of wood-smoke.
Ann
would be laying the table now. He looked across the valley, scanned the thick
copse on the far hill's brow, higher than this one. The cairn looked like some
ancient highwayman, even this close - possibly only a mile off. The gray-slate rocks appeared to take on the
guise of a footpad, Josh's imagination completing lines that didn't exist. If
he stared long enough, he would swear that the thing actually moved!
When
Josh looked up again, the clouds darkened. Dusk had fallen. He jerked up with a
start, unaccustomed to dozing in his present position. His knees creaked
painfully as he rose, gingerly unstiffening the old limbs. He inserted thick,
'honestly-dirty' fingers into his mouth to whistle for Ruff, his faithful
sheep-dog.
But
the lilting call froze on his suddenly bloodless trembling lips.
Weird
lights flashed over the far brow, hovering above the copse. Intermittent
disc-shaped mauves and scarlets gyrated soundlessly.
Josh
couldn't move. Coldness seeped into him as he stood watching the lights, now
mostly various shades of green as they descended towards the black silhouette
of the cairn.
The
lights dimmed. He stared wild-eyed, fingers still unmoving in his mouth,
poised, as a black shape at the now barely luminous lights' center lowered
alongside the cairn. The thing was twice the cairn's size, as tall as the
largest tree on the brow. Finally, all movement ceased and the lights went out.
Figures,
apparently human in form, parted from the dark silhouette and moved towards the
cairn. They looked unwieldy, bulky. At first, they circled the cairn; then the
headstone was removed as though a mere pebble.
Ruff's whimpering brought Josh
back to his senses. He blinked his eyes, his head still swimming maddeningly.
'Where?' Bemusedly, he reached out, supporting himself against the cottage
doorway. Ruff continued to whimper by the blazing warm hearth.
'Whatever's
come over you?' Ann whispered in concern, helping him inside. 'Where've you
been? Dinner's absolutely spoiled!'
He
shook his head; the contents of his skull felt very loose, making him giddy.
'Brandy - a drink...' he stammered, still wide-eyed though seeing little. He stumbled into his high-backed rocking
chair, sat down.
Ann
left him for a moment but was soon back by his side. 'You're as white as death,
Josh.' She handed him a full glass. 'It's not - not your heart?'
Without
answering, he sank the warming alcohol and scraped the rocking chair round to
face the fire. 'I - I remember my old man... telling me about some lights he
saw...' He squinted, endeavoring to resurrect the memories of fireside talks. 'The
way he described it, tonight's was the same...' He tried draining the already
empty glass. 'But that was forty years ago,' he said. 'I was only a
youngster...'
Ann
held onto his arm, knelt beside him and looked into his vacant unbelieving
eyes. 'Perhaps you remember your father's story, and just imagined it...'
'No,
I saw it all right,' he growled, adamant, color gradually returning to his
cheeks. 'It took off as fast as it landed.' His eyes fixed on hers. 'Ann, what
should I do?'
She
too was in a quandary. Biting her lower lip, she looked away. 'I'd keep quiet
about it, JOsh. People will only laugh...'
Josh
kept silent and stared into the embers of the fire, the red-glaring logs
constructing and destroying fantastic magical caverns, cairns and alien shapes.
After a while, he nodded. 'Maybe you're right, at that,' he said.
'What do you make of it, Jen?'
Nik asked his fiancee, handing over the 10x50 binoculars.
Inexpertly,
she leveled them on a distant brow of a hill, and Nik guided their direction to
the section beside a deep-green copse. The hill sloped behind another smaller
hill in front of them. 'It looks like a man. But he must be huge!' she
exclaimed. 'I mean, he's at least a mile away!'
Nik
nodded. 'Let's investigate.'
Jen
hesitated. 'Must we? I'm still out of breath with this morning's rambling.' Her
stomach rumbled in defense too. But Nik had not waited for a reply; impulsive
as ever, he'd run on ahead.
Hunger-pangs
aside, she was admittedly intrigued by the figure on the brow. 'Wait for me!'
She had to run hard to catch him up, and was soon breathless.
It
took a while to descend the slope for much of the couch grass was sodden, not
completely drained since the recent rains.
Eventually,
they reached the stream.
'There's
no way across,' Jen observed, not without relief.
After
an abortive search for suitable stepping-stones, Nik unzipped his leather
boots, pocketed his socks and threw the boots to the other side. He didn't
particularly relish the idea, but the brooding figure on the near-horizon
goaded him on.
The
stubby sheep-grazed grass felt prickly underfoot. 'Come on then, love,' he said
with a brave grin. 'I'll carry you across.'
'It
looks slippery, mind,' Jen murmured. And it did: green slime smeared most of
the rocks. Gingerly, he dipped a foot into the clear chill waters. Following
the first shock, it wasn't unduly cold, and he reckoned he could traverse the
slippery parts if he took it slowly. 'It's all right.'
He
hefted her into his arms. She circled his neck with an eager arm. Though slow,
he made it across in less than a minute.
The
climb up the other side took the wind out of them. Here, on the exposed slope,
the grass was dry and his feet were dried after the first few yards and he
replaced his boots, his feet now tingling hotly as blood rushed to warm them.
Gasping
in lungfulls of air, they reached the brow's summit. 'It's obviously a cairn of
some sort,' Jen said, panting.
'Bloody
big one, as well,' Nik agreed. It measured about nine feet high. Purple-veined
henbane clustered at the cairn's foot; its noxious smell wafted to his nose.
'Very
impressive,' Jen wheezed, her hand clasping his as they neared the edifice.
'Must
be a landmark, don't you think?' He reached out to test its firmness.
Shivering
uncontrollably, he buckled up double, sucking in air as a massive wave of agony
twisted in his stomach.
Eyes
horror-struck, Jen gasped as Nik's pain-racked hand squeezed hers. Her stomach
overturned, all of a sudden nauseous. 'What's hap...?'
'The
- cairn!' he choked. A clammy coldness, as though he'd been immersed in a black
airless arctic space, overwhelmed his entire body till he instinctively
staggered further back.
Rivulets
of sweat streaked his ashen face. 'It's evil!' he croaked, trying in vain to
master his excessive shivering bout. It sounded silly, unreal, but he could
think of no other word or explanation. He was revolved, aghast, yet unable to
comprehend why he should be affected so violently. He just knew, without
question, that the cairn was pure evil.
Absently,
he felt Jen's clawing hands on his shoulders, drawing him away. 'I know - I
sensed it as well,' she mumbled. 'It's as if - as though it were something dark
and slimy, black and ugly...'
When
they had reached the brow again, about three yards from the cairn, they
couldn't contain themselves any longer and vomited where they stood, bowed in
pain.
Without
looking back once, Nik gripped her hand and they both stumbled dazedly down the
slope. 'Must be some old black-magic place.' He coughed. 'A witch's burial
place, maybe...'
Earlier
in the day, before their rambling, they had made love in the dappled privacy of
a nearby forest, among aromatic tansy. The bird songs, the incurious sheep and
latterly the gallant stream crossing had all added to the perfection of the
day. They had been filled with a great sense of well being, a belief in the
invulnerability of their love.
Now,
without saying, they sensed that all this had shattered irretrievably.
This
is one day we'll want to forget for the rest of our lives, he thought.
Jen
was crying.
'Maintenance Party's completed
inspection of Sol III's mechanism,' reported Captain Gunsines. 'D-core's
functional. Bring-up for next inspection - forty Terran years hence. Over.'
Forty
years, Gunsines mused, his midriff tentacle switching off the sub-space
transmitter. That is, if by then these insane Earth creatures hadn't brought
nuclear warfare into space. Because if
they did, then the device tunneled from the 'cairn' to the Earth's core would
simply destruct.
Bang!
NO
EARTH...
***
Notes. 1) In the original, I used the
term ‘footpad’ but it was edited and changed to ‘footpath’ which made no sense
at all, since I was referring to a footpad as in highwayman. I’ve changed it to
‘highwayman’ for subsequent use! 2) 'Gunsines' is an anagram of Guinness, which I used to drink at the time of writing...
Previously
published in The Writer magazine,
1975.
Copyright
Nik Morton, 2014
My collection of crime tales, Spanish
Eye, published by Crooked Cat, features 22 cases from Leon Cazador, private
eye.
He is also featured in the story ‘Processionary Penitents’ in the
Crooked Cat Collection, Crooked Cats’
Tales.
Spanish Eye, released by Crooked Cat Publishing is
available as a paperback for £4.99 ($6.99) and much less for the e-book
versions – UK or COM.
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