Monday, 28 June 2021

Zone Alfa - Fishing (Fiction)


A quick intro story to accompany June 2021 Contest Entry... just for fun...


- - -

Kilgore had been lying in position for at least two hours, his gaze steadfastly forward, waiting for signs of motion. He acknowledged the sun tracking slowly across the autumn sky, panning the shadows incrementally across his vista.

The sun was set perfectly to cast shadows towards him, his approach angle within the grove precise; this was part of his plan, part of his method.

He had arrived the day before and camped fire-less, unobtrusively next to a sandstone boulder, all the while absorbing the base-level sounds, smells, and feel of the location. The grove was typical bush; eucalypts at the edges interspersed with gymea lily, casual bracken, some sandstone protrusions with small, grey flannel flowers growing tenaciously in the gaps – simple, rugged beauty in an alternate time.

Lying on his belly he contemplates fishing – this was the closest thing he’d come to fishing around here, with the putrid, toxic creeks, stock dams and pools. Patiently waiting, quiet - serene stillness lest the fish senses his presence and scarpers.

He was not against technology.  Had in fact set up a contingent of motion detectors earlier to monitor the wider perimeter for endemic wildlife or transient intruders. But catching the artifact was something he chose to do by eye and by hand. This analogue thrill was the biggest drawcard keeping him in this forbidding patch of hell; not that he overtly recognise that fact - though he acknowledged the rush of success.

He had discovered this anomaly a weeks ago by chance. Set back from the trail and over a small embankment, the area looked relatively fresh, not gouged and haggard as it would be once the anomaly had been there a while and noused things up. There was precious little sign of activity around it too, animal prints, trails, nothing.

That didn’t mean that his weathered 45 wasn’t sitting inches from his head, within line of sight and in immediate reach. Lying prone and focused in the zone was about as compromising a position as one could be in; but he had confidence in his overall process, one of preparedness, of reading the environment. If anything was stalking him undetected, then, well, it probably deserved a hearty breakfast.

Having more immediate business to attend to last week, he’d thrown a fist-sized rock into the grove, had seen the rock deflect out in a trailing halo like a wrong comet, and called that ‘preliminary recon’ before continuing with his prior assignment.

Now the medium size Vortex hummed with grave power not far over his head. The anomaly was for all practical purposes static.

After dropping his pack yesterday, he’d used the time before darkness fell to study the anomaly. He’d sensed signs of movement below it, a slow smudge in the periphery of his vision indicating that an artifact might be being carousing around in there somewhere, virtually invisible so close to the anomaly.

If it was moving then just maybe it would wander out far enough.

So now he waited motionless, waiting for an ephemeral blur to pass into vision and within arm’s reach. He fancied he’d seen signs of it right after he’d settled into position this morning, but he’d chosen to wait and acclimatize. It wouldn’t do to waste the opportunity; to knock the artifact back into the anomaly's core - or graze the anomaly and risk having it rip his arm right off - or more likely have the anomaly swell defensively, draw him in, and smatter him out again as particulate goo like a god-like sneeze.

This wasn’t his first dance, and it wouldn’t be his last - he’d decided that before setting out, and it was the only way to approach the zone.

A faint breeze swept through the foliage briefly and dropped again, rippling the shadows from the trees. A storm was anticipated to pick up in the afternoon and he was hoping to be heading back to the settlement before then – preferably artifact in hand.

The settlement had been abuzz with the prospect of some new missions being launched by one of the scientific concerns, looking for guides, protection, meat-shields with guns. He wasn’t sure how he felt about that, contradicting his usual preference of rolling solo.

It wouldn’t hurt his negotiation position to literally drop a freshly plucked artifact on the table should he wish to participate though.

His periphery detects a movement, the slight change in brightness registering in that same place where his night-vision is the strongest. A ghost of a shape, a whisper, dust motes in sunlight.

His breathing slows, like it would before squeezing the trigger on a long shot.

The something moves into his field of vision, bobbling up and down like a phasing shiver, fading in and out of focus as though undecided as to whether it is there or not.

He gauges the input, calculates a path, watches for deviation, for aberrations in the vector. His concentration becomes fierce and singular, if ever there was a time for a predator to strike it was now.

His hand lashes out like a strike, his fingers curling at the computed apex, plucking at the tingling, energized air.

There is mass there too, he cedes with momentary satisfaction.

He hears-feels a sucking pressure escalate above him like a gigantic engine roaring quickly to life.

Rolling quickly to his left he snatches up the pistol. The anomaly howls as he dives away from the epicentre, clearing the clawing pull of the kill zone.

A backwash detonation of air shoves him from behind resentfully, tripping him.

Matt stillness settles within the grove in the aftershock of the anomaly’s indignant eruption, leaving a low ringing in his ears.

Kilgore waits on his knees, pistol in hand and eyes scanning while the ringing subsides enough for his hearing to partake in his protection once again.

Satisfied that the area remains clear for the moment he opens his hand and sees a glassy-smooth, brown moss/rock object sitting there. It remains cold despite the warmth of his palm, and distinctly lacks the nerve jarring effects of the radiation emitting artifacts. A Wrenched. He nods satisfied; radiation protection was always worthwhile within the zone.

He collects his gear - the backpack settling naturally into familiar position on his shoulders.

A breeze now ruffles the foliage constantly, accompanying the slowly progression of clouds far above – a growing weight of clouds.

Had the anomaly’s surge triggered the atmospheric change?

He racks the rifle, perhaps his luck will hold long enough for him to beat the rain back to base.

- - -

ende

No comments:

Post a Comment