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The Redmadafa

Page 24

by Gary Foshee


  spring rains.

  From the towers, gogs launched two harpoons with curved

  bronze tips. Long cedar logs hummed through the air, cutting

  the water with a blunted splash. The hooks glided through the

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  water and attached between the scales on his back. Feeling the

  tension on the rope, the gogs locked the wheels and fettered a

  thick twisted rope with a rusty hook to a large trol . The trol ’s body cringed under the massive weight as he walked down the

  wall slowly towing leviathan from the deep.

  Leviathan spun sharply and dove. He flicked his tail stretching

  the rope to its max. Small cords popped and unfurled. Leviathan

  flicked his tail again, pulling the troll from its fortified perch, col apsing the tower and spilling several guards into the sea. He swirled back around and headed for the mouth of the cave.

  In the cave, and gaining momentum, his body snaked through

  the tunnel generating a giant wave. Gogs, standing guard at the

  end, heard a loud rumble right before a wave tsunamied around

  the corner. They scrambled from their posts, running up the

  stairs trying to escape, but the wave, which was accompanied by

  a stream of flames, overtook them drowning and roasting them

  al . Leviathan spun around, opened his mouth, and vomited

  Caboose onto the rocks. He then thundered down the tunnel,

  quickly disappearing back into the depths of the sea.

  A large pile of slime, which resembled the afterbirth of a

  croaker, lie curled up on the rocks. Unsure what had just hap-

  pened, Caboose opened his eyes. Everything was blurry. He

  wiped his eyes. Strings of slimy mucus streamed from his fingers.

  He shook his hands and then wiped his face again. Still trauma-

  tized by the whole event, he stood up. Strewn around the cave

  where dead grike trol s and gogs—the stench from their roasted

  flesh was unbearable. Not realizing what had happened he walked

  up the stairs uncertain of his whereabouts.

  Long shafts, burrowed in the rock, branched out in many

  directions. He noticed a flickering light down one of the shafts and followed. Small torches clawed into a long winding tunnel

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  that splintered into numerous tunnels underneath the throne.

  The light cast an ominous glow on the dirt floor. His eyes scanned in all directions. He turned left and then right and continued

  straight.

  Back at the stairs, two gogs found the bodies and sounded

  the alarm. Trol s and gogs filled the tunnels searching for any-

  thing out of place. Caboose heard footsteps coming his way. He

  ran back down the tunnel and squeezed into a crag he had past a

  few yards back.

  “Do you smell that succulent stench?” spit a gog walking

  toward Caboose.

  “Yeah, it smel s like, rotten fish,” said a trol .

  “It smel s like rotten fish and grunter,” answered the gog.

  Their eyes leered down the dimly lit passageway. They

  searched every hole and overhang. The gog stopped. He held

  his light up and sniffed and then shined it over the hole hiding Caboose.

  “Hey take a look at this,” said the trol , just before the light revealed Caboose.

  “What is it?”

  “Tracks; grunter tracks.”

  Turning to take a look for himself, he tripped over Caboose’s

  tail. The gog fell on his light breaking it and setting himself on fire. He rolled around on ground trying frantical y to put it out.

  Embarrassed, he jumped to his feet.

  “What is it?” shouted the trol .

  “Nothing! Nothing!” he shouted, embarrassed over what had

  happened. He turned around to examine the trip hazard, but in

  the dark, Caboose’s tail looked like a rock.

  The troll dropped to the ground, sniffed the tracks and then

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  backtracked. They faded into the darkness. With the coast clear, Caboose peeled out of the hole and started to walk away.

  “There he is!” cried a small throne slave with his arms full of

  bloody garments.

  Caboose glared at the poor hopeless creature and then darted

  down the tunnel searching for a way out. He rounded a corner and noticed a door in the distance. He ran around in a circle and then ran down the tunnel to the left for about twenty-five yards. He

  then tiptoed backwards to the fork and ran headlong for the door.

  Hearing voices back at the fork, he burst through the door,

  slamming and locking it behind him. With his back against the

  door and eyes closed, he sighed deeply.

  “Boys, dinner is served!”

  He opened his eyes and froze—he had run into a room full

  of gogs playing bones.

  Without hesitating and tired of being scared, Caboose flung

  his tail around and smacked two of them off their stools smashing them against the wal . The other one grabbed his battle-axe and

  hurled it at him. The axe spun end-over-end sticking in the door inches from his left ear. Caboose’s eyes cut left and then focused back on the gog. Both of their eyes then cut right at the sword

  leaning against the wall at the other end of the table. Caboose

  bellowed a war cry, lowered his head, and charged horn-long, as

  the gog dove from his stool reaching for the sword.

  Caboose charged across the room smashing everything in

  his path. He rammed the gog in the stomach with his horn crash-

  ing them both through the wall into the next room.

  Red blood burst through the hole covering Caboose and the

  gog who was holding his stomach trying to stop his own blood

  from spilling out onto the ground.

  Caboose panicked.

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  Dr. Gary Warren Foshee

  Lying on the floor, he frantical y searched his body. He wiped

  his hand down his leg thinking he had been injured. He sniffed

  the mysterious fluid dripping through his fingers and then tasted it—Thunder Juice. He had crashed into a room filled with thousands of casks of Thunder Juice. It was everywhere. Pools of it

  formed on the floor all around him and it had spilled out into the passageway.

  Caboose pushed the barrels off of him. He ran down aisle

  after aisle of wooden casks stacked from floor to ceiling searching for a way out. Finding a door, and without stopping, he scuttled from room to room looking for an exit or a place to hide.

  Many of the rooms under the throne were large storage

  rooms filled with supplies and various objects used around the

  colosseum. Behind him he could hear gogs and trol s from the

  tunnels searching the rooms for him, following the scent of aged Thunder Juice left behind by his tracks.

  He ran into a room and squeezed behind a mammoth dark-

  stained trunk with copper handles: The handles looked like ropes twirled together and were attached to two copper plates on both

  sides of the doors.

  The room was dark and cluttered with crates, ropes, pulleys

  and various sized wheels. Caboose pulled a pile of crates stacked high into the air in front of the crack hiding him and softened

  his breath.

  He listened.

  Footsteps stopped outside. The door opens.

  Terror caused his heart to beat wildly.

  A gog walked in and searched the room. He jabbed his sword

  into a crate. He threw ano
ther one across the room, smashing it

  against the wal .

  He walked over to the crates beside the trunk. He plunged

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  his sword into the middle and then wiggled it around trying to

  get it unstuck.

  Caboose drew in his stomach. He looked down at the silver

  blade slightly slashing back and forth inches in front of it.

  He let out a short gasp.

  The gog freed his sword and walked around to the front. He

  grabbed the handles and swung the doors open. A thin gaunt

  man, with sunken eyes, a long scraggly beard, and extremely long fingernails, jumped out of the trunk yelling, “No! I’m not going back! Please don’t take me back!” The gog spun out of the way

  and smashed his face into a crate. He yelled to the others and

  then dragged the unconscious man from the room.

  He paused at the doorway, looked around the room and then

  shut the door.

  Caboose waited several minutes. He moved the crates out of

  the way and walked over to the door.

  He quietly opened it and looked both ways.

  Torches lined the wal s leading down the hal way. A slight

  breeze jostled the flames. Hearing footsteps, he entered a cold, dusty room that smelled rancid of flesh and blood; the putrid

  odor wrenched his stomach causing him to gag.

  Barbed hooks hung hauntingly from ceiling planks above

  his head. The chains clanged against each other as he walked

  through.

  Blood-stained stones screamed out in agony as he walked

  across their surface—his skin prickled with the thought of what

  this room was used for. Terrified and feeling sick, he spotted an old weathered door in the back corner. Carved into its wood

  was a foreboding figure of a serpent with a stinger-forked tail.

  Without thinking, he opened it and walked around a stone wall

  and froze—he had just entered the Lair of the Serpent.

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  Dr. Gary Warren Foshee

  Stacked high, in the center of the room, was a pile of bodies.

  Hundreds of serpents slithered sinisterly in and around the pile gorging themselves on soulless carcasses. His first impulse was to run, but he didn’t move. Besides, he didn’t know where he was nor did he know where he was going. He edged against the wall trying to make it around to the next door without being noticed, but there was no escape. The long scaly beasts wound tightly around his feet and body with their sinuous coils. Lifting him from the ground,

  they took him to two gogs standing guard at the death cel s.

  The gogs smiled.

  The dark and dire cel s stretched ominously underneath the

  colosseum and were filled with hundreds of frightened souls

  awaiting destruction in the pit. As he passed by, prisoners of

  fantasy scratched frantical y at him with dirty hands. The gog

  slammed its club against the bars driving them back. He swung

  the door open and bowled Caboose in.

  Caboose rolled across the floor and crashed into the people

  standing in front. He stood up and looked into each battered

  face searching for his Papa. Each face stared back unable to hide the horror lying within, their eyes filled with tears and hopeless-ness. The people looked comatose, like they were in some kind

  of a trance. All their hopes and dreams lost; drowned in a sea of fantasy and delusion. They were scared, real scared, and so was

  Caboose. Surely his Papa was not in a place like this he thought.

  “Papa! Papa! Are you here, Papa?” he shouted, asking peo-

  ple if they had seen his Papa. He yelled at the top of his lungs,

  “Chesty Puller, can you hear me?” Papa, are you here, Papa?”

  From across the cell a head popped up. “Caboose? It can’t be.”

  He stood up, “Caboose is that you?”

  “Papa, I’m here.” They pushed their way through the crowded

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  cell to each other. Surprised and disappointed, Caboose stopped.

  “Mack! What are you doing here?”

  “I was just about to ask you the same question.” Mack didn’t

  say it, but he was sure glad to see a familiar face.

  “I’m looking for my Papa. Have you seen him?”

  “No.” Mack hesitated. “You haven’t seen my Mom, have you?”

  “Your mother, she’s here too?” responded Caboose taken back.

  “I don’t know. I haven’t seen her since I deposited that stupid

  coin in the tree.”

  “Oh yeah…me too,” said Caboose rolling his eyes.

  “Some mansion, uh?”

  “Yeah,” replied Caboose.

  A gog walked by leashed with two howlers. He slammed his

  club up against the bars and then spit. One of the howlers stuck its head through the bars and snapped at them.

  Caboose and Mack made their way to the back of the cell

  and took a seat. Many questions ran through both of their minds.

  Both of them had a parent lost somewhere in the valley and nei-

  ther of them knew what to do about it.

  “They’re going to kill us, I know it,” said Mack, fidgeting with his hands.

  “Don’t talk like that. Everything is going to be just fine.”

  “No. I know it—we’re all dead. I can smell it in the air. Death

  lives in these cel s.” He looked up at the wal s. “Whatever you do, don’t read the wal s.”

  Caboose looked up at the wall and then back down again.

  “Why?”

  “Just trust me. Where have you been? Everyone at school

  thought for sure you were dead.”

  “I’ve been lost in the valley for months trying to get here.

  How long were you in the valley?”

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  “What valley?” replied Mack, with an offended look on his

  face. “All I remember is putting a coin in a hole in the middle of a tree. A trap door opened up and I fell down a long tube right

  into a wagon with several other people in a tunnel. The wagons

  hauled us to a ferry, which sailed across the sea and then I was brought here. Is that what happened to you?”

  “Not exactly,” responded Caboose, realizing something was

  definitely wrong.

  “I have something I want to tell you,” said Mack hesitantly.

  “Before I die in this place, I want you to know…that…well—”

  “What is it?”

  “I’m sorry for being so mean to you. I don’t know why I acted

  like that.”

  “It’s alright, a lot has happened since then.”

  “No…no it’s not alright. I want you to know why I did

  it…I…I was jealous of you.”

  Caboose was not expecting to hear that. All kinds of reasons

  raced through his mind, but not that one.

  “Jealous, of me? But why?”

  “I was jealous of the life you had. You had the perfect family.

  You guys always went places together and did things as a fam-

  ily. The way you and your Dad spent time together laughing and

  playing, it made me mad that I didn’t have the same.”

  ‘ Caboose is a goose and he smel s like a moose.

  Caboo boo is coo coo.

  I’m different. I’ll never be like everybody else.

  But my leg, it’s my short leg.’

  Voices, excuses ran through his mind. They had become a

  crutch, a life-line, a way to cope with life, a way to feel sorry for 238

  THE REDMADAFA

  himself. But it was a
ll built on a lie. It wasn’t his leg that was holding him back from life. It was his belief that it was.

  Caboose didn’t know what to say. He thought it was his leg.

  All these years, he thought it was his short leg. “I…I don’t know what to say. Thank you. Thank you for telling me.” He reached out and placed his hand on his shoulder. “Can we be friends and put

  all this behind us?”

  Mack’s eyes glittered. A smiled cracked across his face. “You

  mean you want to be my friend after everything I’ve done and

  said about you?”

  “Any man that can lay aside his pride and say he’s sorry, and

  look another man in the face when he does it, is a pretty good

  man to me. That’s the kind of friends I like to have.”

  Mack didn’t know how to respond. Something was different

  about Caboose—something good.

  A few cel s down a burly-looking man looked over and said,

  “Hey. You. Don’t I know you?”

  A face looked up, “I don’t think so.”

  “Yeah, you’re an elder at the temple. Puller. You’re Chesty

  Puller. I just heard someone calling your name.”

  “Are you sure?” Chesty couldn’t believe his ears. He shoved

  his way to the front and yelled, “Caboose! Caboose is that you?

  Son, I’m here. I’m here!”

  Caboose jumped up from his seat and pushed hard to the

  front. He looked down the corridor and there he was. His dirty

  wrinkled face looked like an angel glowing with the radiance of

  the sun. They both just stood there in disbelief. Caboose had

  done it. He had found his Papa.

  “Papa, I found you. I found you. Don’t worry. I’m going to get

  you out of here.”

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  Dr. Gary Warren Foshee

  “Are you alright? How did you get here?”

  “It’s a long story. Papa, I’m so sorry for leaving home. I never meant to bring you here. Please forgive me.”

  “No. I need you to forgive me.” His eyes held him for a moment.

  “Papa, it’s because of me you are here.”

  Mack stood there crying. It was the most beautiful thing he

  had ever seen or heard.

  “No son. I should have told you a long time ago but I didn’t.”

  He paused and then said, “I’ve been here before.”

  Caboose dropped his head, Seven was right. “But how,

  why did—”

  “Son, we all have skeletons in the closet, things that we’re

 

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