The Storm World
by Floyd Looney
*Public domain image |
The ship rose and fell as the waves
became larger, flooding the top deck of the ship with freezing water
and sometimes ice. The four deckhands grabbed onto something just
before every hit by instinct. Even wearing several layers with a
waterproof outer layer did not keep out the mind-numbing cold, only
working did that.
Securing the stack of seven-hundred
pound cages, call pots, meant climbing all over it, and hanging on
for dear life when the ship hits one of the heaving waves of
seawater. The radar and weather radio also indicated a storm was
brewing and there was no way the Bravado was going to be able
to avoid it. It had swelled up out of nowhere, Captain Harry Philman
had been shocked to see how fast it developed.
He ordered the deckhands to secure
everything and then get inside. They would have to ride out the
storm. It looked strong on the LCD screen but thankfully also pretty
small. The squall was going to pack a punch, no doubt, but they had
made it through storms like this before.
When the four deckhands were off the
deck and inside safely, Captain Philman said a silent thanks to God.
The winds outside and the tides were throwing icy water over the deck
at twelve second intervals, no one should have to go outside if it
was not absolutely necessary.
Three days out of Dutch Harbor and the
Bravado had caught no red king crabs on this run. The season
for this delicacy would be over in less than a week. It was
frustrating because the Captain was also the ship owner and it cost a
lot of money to run. Money that came out of his pocket.
“Captain. Here's some coffee and
grub.” The youngest of the crew aid handing over the meal and
tankard of hot coffee. Jett Janson was the greenhorn and he was only
looking to get about 2% of the haul after expenses and the Captain
got his cut. It would really be less than 1% of the value of the
catch. The young man had taken to the job like a professional and
worked as hard as the other hands.
It was soon in the dead of night. The
ships lights meant that much of the sea was obscured but once in a
while, on calm nights, Philman would turn some of them off and look
at the stars. He would look for the same stars that seamen had looked
for ages ago.
This was not such a night. This night
was a roller-coaster ride. He doubted any of his hands were getting
much sleep. That meant they would be slower and less-aware tomorrow
when they went back to work baiting and dropping the pots into the
ocean. Sometimes he might asleep at the wheel but this night kept him
on his toes.
The Bravado was trying to turn
to port for some reason. Something might be affecting the rudder, he
decided, but keeping the ship from being hit in the side was getting
tougher. The weather radar showed they were at the center of the
storm, this was the worst part. He felt like the entire ship was
going airborne at the crest of every wave.
Suddenly the darkness outside was
pierced by a purple light. This light grew larger and stronger. At
first the Captain thought it might be another ship and was prepared
to call them on the radio, but the radio did not work. He hadn't
noticed when the radio chatter had died.
There right in front of the ship was a
large bluish-purple ball of light, like a plasma. The Captain
furiously tried to turn the ship to avoid it, but it seemed to be
pulled toward the light. Philman had no idea what that was and he did
not want to find out.
Suddenly the whole ship was surrounded
and all he could see through his eyelids was that purple light, even
with his hands over his face. Then it went away. The storm went away
too, the boat was barely even creaking, there was no noise. The
electronics were dead except for some lights. The sea outside seemed
calm too.
At first Captain Harry Philman went
back to the galley and sleepers to find all four hands sound asleep.
He was confused how they could have slept through all of that. Then
he opened the hatch and stepped outside. The clear night sky above
was dark, but tinged maroon. The sea as calm as a mountain lake and
to his right he saw land.
Impossible.
But there it was, all the same.
A large beach sloping out of the water
and up towards something. It was dark but there could have been a
forest up there. Closer to the ship, though, was a large rocky
outcropping that must have went straight up more than fifty meters.
It was also not cold at all. There was
no way they were still off the coast of the Aleutian Island chain of
Alaska. There was also no way they could be anywhere else. A storm
isn't going to push one across the Pacific ocean into Asia.
Philman went back inside. He could not
comprehend what he had seen. It just didn't make any sense.
He started making breakfast. There was
enough food to feed this motley army generously for several more
days. He would have to think about cutting the rations after this
meal if they could not figure out where they were. The radio, radar
and GPS were totally out of order.
The smell of coffee, biscuits, bacon
and eggs woke up the weary crew. He knew they probably hadn't got
enough sleep, but they would all have to go to shore and investigate.
The Captain waited until everyone was at the table and eating before
he told them anything.
“It is dark as night out there but I
have to assume that daylight will be here soon.” He said, Derrick
looked at his watch and looked confused. The Captain continued, “The
GPS, radio and radar are all out and we aren't in Alaskan waters any
more.”
They looked at each other. Joshua, with
the bushy beard spoke up. “What do you mean we aren't in Alaska?”
Jett Janson ran onto the bridge and
looked outside. He slowly walked back to the table like he had seen a
ghost. “It's warm in there and the sky is red. Where are we?”
The last comment was directed at the
Captain, who answered. “That is what we need to determine. We're
going to take the dinghy to that island or whatever, where we will
try and find any house or clue as to our location.”
There are many islands off Alaska that
are not populated. The older deckhands knew there was a good chance
they would find nothing, or maybe an abandoned camp. They still
thought they were in or near Alaska. The Captain then motioned for
them to follow and led them outside.
“Where in the name of hell are we?”
Derrick asked, forgetting that he held a mug of coffee. In front of
them was a red sky, it was getting brighter and brighter red. There
was an island and there seemed to be vegetation of some type on the
horizon but it was too far to be distinguished. The rock outcrop
looked alien, almost too sheer. They had all seen ice a bit like
that, but this was rock.
“There was a bright blue and purple
light, it surrounded the ship. Then we were here.” Captain Harry
Philman told them.
Derrick, Joshua and Cory started
walking all the way around the ship, taking stock of everything they
saw in different directions. The Captain and Jett Janson followed
them at a slower pace.
“I wonder where we are?” The
greenhorn asked, rubbing his hairless chin.
“Not in Alaska or Kansas, any more,
Toto.” The Captain joked.
The three other men came back to them.
“We should go and check it out, you
two should stay here.” Foreman Derrick said.
The Captain shook his head. “I'm not
sure we should split up.”
Derrick wasn't going to listen. He
pointed at the possible vegetation.“Someone is staying with the
ship but not alone. The three of us will go up there and look around
and come back. Then we can decide what to do next.”
The dinghy was lowered to the water
from the Bravado. Derrick, Joshua and Cory climbed aboard and
tried to start the engine but failed. They used the two oars inside
to paddle their way to the huge beach, maybe a hundred yards from the
boat. Once they arrived they pulled it ashore and began walking up
the slight incline toward the distant horizon under the red sky.
Jett had fetched his binoculars and he
watched the men walk. He had a bad feeling. Philman had the young man
also go and get two rifles, one for each of them. The sky was still
red. A morning reddish sky shouldn't be so uniformly red and it
should not last so long. The thought that the sky might really be red
was likely the cause of his bad feeling.
Soon enough the men were on the
horizon. They were outlined in the red sky, the vegetation he thought
he had seen was no more than knee-high. Not a forest after all. The
three men just stood there, they were talking to each other. He
wished the walkie talkies had worked, he wanted to know what they
were seeing.
When the three men returned and got
their dinghy into the water, he breathed a deep sigh of relief, they
hadn't been eaten or anything. By what, he had no idea. When they
reached the boat they tied the dinghy to the ladder and climbed back
on board.
“Well? What did you see?” he asked.
The three kept looking at each other until Derrick finally said
something.
“We saw domes. Many domes, made of
red-packed dirt,. A whole village down in a small valley and we saw
the locals.” Derrick explained.
“People. So we can find out where we
are and get home.” The Captain replied, clearly relieved. He didn't
understand the calm sea and the red sky, but it could all be a fluke
if they could get home.
Joshua shook his head and said, “They
aren't human.”
“They looked like ants.” Cory said,
“Segmented bodies and everything.”
“Except they are obviously a sentient
civilization. They have houses, stoves, we saw them using nets in a
small river to catch fish.” Derrick was telling them. “This is
not Earth.”
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I have no idea if there will be a part 2.
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