Thursday, June 26, 2008

Sisyphus

It was early morning when the whining of tiny wings woke me. They were invisible, somewhere in the vicinity of my ears but because of my cursed cataracts, or perhaps simply the dim light of dawn, I couldn't glimpse them. Despite my lethargic attempts at swiping them away the sound stayed constant.

It was a few seconds later that I realised the fuzziness of my vision wasn't clearing, and a short while after that I realised it was in fact midday, not dawn, and that I was somewhere in the jungle.

The jungle, fantastic.

At least Galen had been considerate enough to drape a thin mosquito net over me before running off to god knows where - although in a few hours, I would know where. Here in the heat of central Africa the mosquitoes were perhaps the least of my worries, but it would be unfortunate to have to add some new disease to my repertory, and so while I tried to shake the last of the sedatives off, I was careful not to move enough to shake the net away.
Secobarbital is useful in treating insomnia - and a tasty addition to martinis I now know, but the side-effects I would probably be feeling that afternoon were not pleasant, and I would only be around to experience that if I was lucky enough to make it to some water before then.

Eventually I rolled over and was able to stand - albeit slowly - and the mosquito net finally fell unceremoniously to the forest floor. With a squint, I then noticed the dark liquid smeared on the fabric. Attractant. Thankfully it had rained in the early hours (as my socks attested), and the scent had obviously failed to bring an audience. Still, a quaint thought. My vision still hazy and the balance not quite it's best, it was time for some deep breaths and a strain to listen for anything remotely recognizable; cars, voices, water. Much to my chagrin there was nothing except the rustle of the canopy in the warm midday breeze... and apparently some creatures somewhere being tortured if their screeching was anything to go by.

I hate the jungle.

The forest floor was littered with leaves and organic detritus, which obscured most of the soft soil beneath and devoured my feet with each movement, and yet there through the clutter I noticed slight impressions. They soon proved to be footsteps. At least there was an indication now of where Galen had come and gone..
With the loping hobble of a wounded hyena, I followed them slowly into the surrounding forest, however not a couple of steps later my mistake became clear, and it was an about-face to begin walking in the opposite direction. Sure enough the real set of footprints that Galen had failed to hide soon appeared. Inwardly my grin was wide, Galen was as predictable as so many cheap paperback novels.

Within an hour my vision had improved noticeably, and by chance a small stream then appeared from which I drank and filled my canteen, and then pressed on. Never think you are better than the jungle. Anyone foolish enough to stumble around this mass of glorified protein strings with no direction is bound to meet suitable demise. I had lost the footsteps that ran along the floor a while back, but looking for a way out was not my main priority now, instead I was looking for a gap in the canopy. Blythe would be found soon enough, but calling for assistance came before any of that. Soon a hole large enough for a decent signal came into view, and reaching for my ankle I retrieved a small GPS locator. Extending the oversized antenna and switching it on, the wait began for the small green LED to blink in readiness.
Orange. Orange. Orange. Green. Excellent, it was time to exit this screeching, damp, virescent hell. This had been an amusing diversion, but Galen had once again failed to appreciate and foresee my-

-Blip.

The locater suddenly flicked off, and as my eyes narrowed in confusion the device suddenly grew hot in my hand, much hotter than it should have been. I tossed it into the underbrush just in time to see it burst into flame and the batteries explode out the metallic backing with a sharp and deafening pop.

That explained the soldering gun.

With a sigh and a glance at the fading daylight, I traipsed back into the jungle to renew my search for the first set of footprints, bowing for a moment to expel the water I had just imbibed thanks once again to the secobarbital. His turn had been amusing, but his mistake as usual was trusting his own ingenuity and not being strong enough to get his hands dirty. My turn would come next, and would not be fraught simply with ways to slow him down.
Finally finding the trail, it became clear that I hadn't lost it due to carelessness, it ended quite suddenly, and what I had missed the first time was a small wooden box sitting in the dirt after the final print. I bent to pick it up and cautiously opened the weathered lid, readying myself for a jet of some corrosive liquid or some kind of diminutive poisonous forest inhabitant to leap free. Instead, out tumbled a small, inflatable travel pillow.
Under my breath, I cursed Galen Blythe.
.

8 thoughts are now mine:

Jimzip said...

Once again, I apologise for the massive length of the post.. I do keep size in mind when I'm writing, but there's a lot in these posts that I have to get through and breaking them up would smash my mood-setting to bits! Small, less-effective bits I say!

I hope it's clear to you all who this story is coming from too. :)

Jimzip :D

Anonymous said...

yeh was a little long but is fun to read. i'm enjoyng it anyway.. (know who i am yet?! )

Luke said...

Odd name, Anonymous - parents can be so cruel.

Keep the large, effective bits coming! I'm enojying it. Although I'm now confused - I'd assumed it was ryan and we'd jumped forward in time. Now your comment has got me wondering if it's ryan's dad (because of the cataracts) and we've jumped back in time... or is it Ryan still? I liked the mosquito net bit in particular! Eeeeevil (but in a fun, cheeky way).

Dale said...

Brilliant! Absolutely smashing! Long shmong. Haha. It's great fun to read. It's got me entwined in it's intricate/clever netting too.
Echoing the slight confusion about perspective, but it didn't detract at all. If anything made it more interesting!

Luke said...

Ok, I change my guess to DeVeaux.

Jimzip said...

Haha. Ok I wish I could edit posts, I'd take out that last line in mine above. It's not meant to be clear until you hear the next bit but I totally sank that ship.
Oh well!

The next entry will be much fun!

Jimzip :D

Luke said...

Oops! Didn't realise that was supposed to be a secret. Sorry.

Jimzip said...

Haha. Not at all don't worry, it wasn't really a secret. ;)
I think it's funny when I spend like, two days writing an entry and then I give away something in a comment though.. I laugh at my own foolishness!

Jimzip :D



Blogger Template by Jimzip