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The Extinct

Page 17

by Victor Methos


  A roar shattered the steady noise of the plains. It was deep and echoed through the valley. The group stopped to listen, Eric gripping his gun tightly in his hands. It was silent for a minute afterward but slowly the other animals began their cacophony of bellowing again, and the valley returned to normal.

  “I’ve never heard an animal make such a sound,” William said. He looked to Thomas but he was gazing in the dark, not paying attention.

  The hill was bare except for short green grass and had few places for large predators to hide. Still, Eric kept his gun ready, the thought of the tracker’s death fresh in his mind.

  “Keep moving,” Thomas said. “He has to attack from the base and charge. We’ll have an excellent shot at him from higher ground.”

  They kept walking, each step growing more difficult as the hill grew steeper. But the moon was bright and provided enough illumination to light their surroundings. Thomas had gotten far ahead of the other two and was surveying the land in front of them. He wasn’t entirely certain this hyena wasn’t part of a clan and they were extremely clever hunters when together.

  “How you holding up, Eric?” William asked.

  “I’m fine.”

  “You know, I noticed the way you drank last night. Like you’d never had the stuff before. Are you a recovering alcoholic?” he asked matter of factly.

  Eric grew embarrassed at his perceptiveness. “I’m a recovering everything.”

  “Then why did you drink?”

  “I don’t know. It was like I couldn’t control it.”

  “Eric, come on. That’s an excuse. We control our behavior, not the other way around. Still I didn’t know, otherwise I wouldn’t have brought that whiskey with us.”

  “It’s all right. It won’t happen again.”

  “We’re here,” Thomas bellowed.

  A hundred yards out lay a small clearing in front of a forest and Eric could see that they were on top of a flat plateau. The ground was entirely grass and flowers dotted the surroundings. Brown conical huts were built in a line along the edge of the forest and a few fires were lit here and there. Eric could hear, and smell, masses of cattle herded next to the village.

  As they approached, he could see the people huddled around the fires. They wore simple cloth wrapped around their bodies and jewelry made of bone and wood. Their faces appeared hard at first and the males grabbed various weapons and began to walk out to meet the interlopers, but one of them recognized Thomas and smiled, giving a command to the others who dispersed.

  “Namaste,” Thomas yelled out.

  “Namaste!” the man said. He wrapped his hand tightly around Thomas’s forearm in greeting as Thomas did the same.

  They spoke for a few moments, the man glancing occasionally at Eric and William. He eventually nodded and waved for them to follow.

  “We can stay the night,” Thomas said.

  “I should call Sandra and have her send someone to pick us up.”

  “No,” Thomas said sternly. “Not until it’s dead.”

  “You can’t be serious?”

  “We’ll have another jeep sent out soon enough, but we can handle this ourselves. Don’t call them yet.”

  “I’ll call whoever I damn well please. You know I think you’re losing your mind Thomas, dragging two people with no experience in hunting to chase this thing. Why didn’t you ask Jalani to go with you?”

  “You’re not calling them,” Thomas said softly.

  William took out his cell phone. Before he’d pressed even one number Thomas grabbed it from him and threw it far down the hill.

  “Are you fucking insane!” William yelled. He grabbed Thomas by the collar and pushed him backward.

  Thomas slipped to the side, easily loosening William’s grasp, and tripped him, William falling hard on the dirt as a cloud of dust was kicked up around him.

  “Don’t do that again,” Thomas said. He glanced at Eric. “Come on boy, you’ll like these people.”

  Eric helped William up as Thomas walked away.

  “I’m going to get my phone,” William said.

  “Not now,” Eric said. “We’ll get it in the morning.”

  William looked back to Thomas. “He’s crazy Eric, I’m afraid he’s going to get us killed.”

  “He’s not so bad, he’s just stressed right now I think.”

  “Why do you care for him so much?”

  “He saved my life.”

  “Well let’s hope he doesn’t think that makes it his.”

  CHAPTER

  42

  They sat around a fire as an elder told stories. He told them in a way Eric had never seen before, using his whole body to weave the tale as children sat at his feet, enthralled. Eric couldn’t understand what the story was about but he knew a storm was involved from the blowing sounds and the wave-like motions of the man’s hands. Thomas sat next to the man that had greeted him, talking and drinking. William was caught up in the man’s storytelling as well.

  “It’s amazing how entertaining this really is,” William said. “I wish I knew what he was saying.”

  Eric nodded absently.

  “What’s wrong? William asked.

  “Nothing, I miss home I guess. And I’m out in the middle of the fucking jungle chasing an animal that almost killed me.”

  “God puts us where he needs us.”

  Eric scoffed. “I don’t think God would want to help me.”

  “You know, there’s a parable I’m really fond of. A man dies and goes to heaven and he’s standing before St. Peter and Peter has his whole life written for him as footsteps on a beach. There’s two sets of footprints at the early stages of the man’s life and St. Peter explains that that’s because God was always with him. Then, in the more troubled times of the man’s life, there’s only one set of footprints. The man says ‘why did God abandon me when I needed him most?’ and St. Peter says ‘no, that’s when he carried you.’”

  William always got a look in his eyes when he spoke of his religion, a type of peacefulness Eric hadn’t seen very much. The only other person he’d seen that had it was Jalani.

  William put his arm around Eric’s shoulders. “Tomorrow’ll be better Eric, it always is.”

  CHAPTER

  43

  The night wore on and Eric grew tired. The elder’s stories had ended and the children were put to bed, the women with them. The men sat around now and ate salted chicken and drank a fermented drink out of a communal bowl.

  There was a commotion from something coming up the hill and the men jumped up, some grabbing their weapons. Soon, the dim glow of torches could be seen and Eric made out a group of people walking up toward the village.

  It was a group of about five men with a woman walking behind them. As they approached they were greeted with cheers and what sounded like congratulatory words. When they were close enough that Eric could see them in the light of the fire, he saw that the woman was bound with rope and being pulled by the men.

  “What’s going on?” Eric said.

  “I don’t know,” William said, looking over to Thomas. “What is this?”

  “Leave it.”

  The men rose from beside the fire and encircled the woman, who was cowering and trembling with fear. Eric could see a stream of urine run down her leg. The men began to grope her, feeling her breasts and buttocks and tearing at her clothes.

  “What the hell is this, Thomas?” William said.

  “I said leave it.”

  One of the men picked the woman up, holding her up in the air and laughing. He tossed her back to the ground and she landed with a thud on her back and began to cry.

  William jumped forward and Thomas quickly stood and got in his way.

  “It’s none of our business, Will.”

  “What’re they gonna do with her?” William said.

  Thomas didn’t respond. He just looked to the woman and then back to William.

  William said loudly, “What are they gonna do with her, Thomas
?”

  Thomas gazed in his eyes, unwavering. He had the innate ability to look through somebody, as if they just weren’t there. “They’re going to take her in that hut and gang rape her. They may or may not kill her when they’re through.”

  Anger gripped William. “Why?”

  “They’re a capture from a rival tribe. It’s the way of things out here. The police leave it alone, and so will we.”

  “The hell we will. We’ll stop them.”

  “We’ll do no such thing. Sit down, eat your food and drink your drink. This has nothing to do with you.”

  The woman began to fight as they dragged her into one of the huts, the men laughing and throwing their clothes onto the ground.

  “Stop them Thomas,” William said frantically. “Stop them now!”

  “I can’t.”

  “In the name of God stop them!” He tried to push his way past but Thomas wrapped his arms around him and held on with an iron grip.

  “If you interfere they will kill us. We’re their guests.”

  “God damn you!” William yelled, pulling away. Thomas swept his feet out from under him and William landed on his back.

  Thomas sat on his legs and pinned his arm to his chest. “I won’t let you kill us over this, Elder. Trust me, this not unjustified. The other tribe has done very similar wrongs to this tribe and no doubt they will want revenge for this. It will go on and on, as it probably has for centuries.”

  William fought with all the strength he had but his frail physique was no match for the surly Thomas. He stopped fighting, closing his eyes and praying instead. As he heard the screams, tears began to run down his cheeks.

  Soon afterward the men came out of the hut, some of them wiping bloodied hands on their bellies. Thomas sat back down near the fire as if nothing had happened.

  William rose to his knees and then stood up. “Damn you,” he hissed. He stumbled off, heading down the hill and Eric rose to grab him.

  “Let him be,” Thomas said, not looking up. “He’ll be fine.”

  Eric looked down the hill until William was out of sight. He turned back to Thomas who was busy getting drunk and staring at the flames. Eric came and sat across from him.

  “What?” Thomas said.

  “I didn’t say anything.”

  “By the way you’re staring at me I can tell you want to. So, just say it.”

  “You could’ve stopped them.”

  Thomas took a long gulp of the drink and absently held the bowl in his lap, running his fingers along the edge. “I had a dream the other night. It was of a pond I used to visit with my father when I was young, I think it was called Topps Pond. It was a beautiful place, a small body of water on the top of a mountain near our home, all the plants a bright green around the water’s edge. We used to fish, though, I found out later there were no fish in the water. My father just wanted to spend time with me.

  “I had my first exposure to death in that pond. It was an old dog we had, I can’t remember his name. He had a toy ball I used to throw around. One day we were at the pond and my father fell asleep in the boat. I threw the dog’s toy in the water, thinking he’d swim it back. For whatever reason, the dog couldn’t swim. I thought he was fine under the water. By the time my father woke up the dog was dead.

  “I hated the pond after that. I refused to go, and soon my father stopped asking.” Thomas finished off the rest of the drink and threw the empty bowl on the ground. “In my dream, I was at that pond again as a child. I was staring into the water and I was so full of hate. But I was looking at my reflection, and there was no hate looking back at me . . . the pond just didn’t care.” Thomas stared off into the distance, unblinking. He finally took a deep breath and looked at Eric, his eyes softening. “Anyway, I’ve waxed philosophical long enough. I’m drunk and going to bed.” He rose and stumbled off into the night.

  Eric stared into the flames. One of the tribe, a male who had raped the woman, walked to him and took the empty bowl off the ground. He went to a large vat across the village and filled it up again. He brought the bowl over to Eric and, smiling, offered it to him. Eric took the bowl and the man seemed pleased.

  The man still had smears of blood over his skin from the woman, but it didn’t seem to bother him. For the first time Eric realized these people were not like him. Not just in appearance or culture, but in soul too. They were part of the landscape, part of the jungle itself. And like the jungle they did as they felt.

  He tilted the bowl and spilled out the drink onto the dirt, watching as drops splashed into the fire. The body of the woman was brought out by two men and tossed near the forest. Eric used the empty bowl as a shovel and dug a hole near the fire, putting the body in and filling the hole. He watched the fire awhile and then kicked dirt onto the flames, extinguishing it and leaving himself in sullen darkness.

  CHAPTER

  44

  The next day came solemnly as the tribe gathered in front of the huts. They were discussing Thomas’s request for a few men to take out on the hunt. Thomas stood with them, speaking their tongue beautifully and without an accent. He nodded and gripped forearms again with one of the men.

  Thomas walked to Eric’s hut and peeked in. “Are you awake?”

  “Yeah, I’m up. Where’s Will?”

  “He didn’t return last night.”

  “What? We gotta go find him,” Eric said, jumping up and searching for his shoes.

  “We will,” Thomas said placatingly. “Relax for now, the tribe has agreed to loan us a few of their men today for the hunt.”

  Eric didn’t respond. Thomas sat down in the hut, his feet sticking out of the entryway, and took out his pipe.

  “You disagree with what I did last night,” Thomas stated.

  “You could’ve helped the woman. She didn’t do anything wrong.”

  “No, but she would’ve. Fifteen years from now, that young woman’s son or nephew would be doing the same thing to one of the tribe. Make no mistake about this place, this is not civilized. There’s no room to be soft.”

  Eric stepped past him and into the bright sunlight. “Maybe not for them, but there is for us.”

  The women and children stared and whispered as Eric made his way through the village and down the hill. He could see the environment clearly now; they were up on an embankment that connected to a larger mountain. Below them was green shrubbery and short grass. Elephants were in the distance, making their way to the nearest watering hole and he could see the striped lines of Indian deer sticking out of the landscape like paint on a canvas.

  Eric came to the base of the hill and looked back; no one had followed him. He took out his handgun and kept it low.

  “Will,” he shouted. “William!”

  He began walking past the shrubbery to a nearby rock formation. “Will!” As he made his way around the conical formation he got a better view of the tops of the lower boulders. Will was sprawled on one of them, his shirt pulled up over his head to keep out the light.

  “Will,” Eric shouted as he jogged over. “Will? You okay?”

  William belched and tasted whatever fermented drink he’d been served last night. He removed the shirt and squinted as his eyes adjusted to the daylight. “I couldn’t find my phone.”

  “I’ll help you find it now and then we’ll get outta here.”

  “You want to leave?”

  “Yeah, I don’t want to be here anymore. Let’s get someone to pick us up and go back to Kavali.”

  William, groggy and still half-drunk, nodded and started to get up. Eric helped him to his feet.

  “Where’s Thomas?” Will asked.

  “He’s got some of the tribe to help him hunt.”

  They made their way off the boulder and began searching the hill. It was soon made apparent how difficult this task was going to be. The dirt had been kicked up from the wind and the grass was just long enough to hide something as small as a cell phone. As they searched, they saw Thomas lead a group of four men down pa
st them. He looked at them and smiled wryly.

  “Keep looking, Eric,” William said, averting his eyes from Thomas’s.

  They searched for hours, taking only a quick rest to drink water and take care of toiletries behind some trees. In the end the task was impossible. And even if they did find it it’d fallen quite far and might not be working.

  “Let’s stop,” William said, his shirt sticking to him with sweat. “I don’t think we’re gonna find it.”

  “Maybe we can walk to a town?”

  William looked out over the brush, squinted, and rubbed at the burnt skin on his nose. “Without much food or water I don’t know how far we’d get. It could be days on foot. But I don’t think I can stay here anymore; not with these people. I’m going but don’t feel like you have to come.”

  “No, I’m coming.”

  William grinned, wiping the sweat on his brow with the back of his hand. “All right, get my rifle and as much food and water as you can carry. Leave a couple bottles for Thomas.”

  Eric ran up the hill and gathered what William had asked. The tribe didn’t seem to notice him now. They were busy in their day-to-day activities and didn’t have time to worry about an outsider. He took what he could and ran back down the hill. William was staring in the distance.

  “I think if we go west we should get there in about two days on foot.” He looked to Eric. “You afraid?”

  “A little.”

  “Nothing to fear Eric, we’re the righteous and God is with us.” With that, they started walking.

  They walked through the thicket of bushes, past the herd of elephants, and in less than an hour were out far enough that the village was an indistinct blur in the distance. “So where’d you go when you ran away?” William asked.

  “What?”

  “Well I don’t think you came directly to Andhra Pradesh, did you? Where’d you go first?”

  “Thailand.”

  “Really? I’ve never been. What’s it like?”

 

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