Forest of the Genres
“This is a stupid
argument.” Delia said.
“I swear, I saw
it.” Roger told her, sitting in the kitchen eating breakfast as
normal.
“They do not
exist. They cannot possibly exist.” She answered.
“It was a zombie.
Just like in the movies.” He said.
“Okay, answer this
question. If Zombies eat brains, then how does a brainless body
become a zombie?” She asked him. “It can't.”
“I didn't ask.”
He admitted. “I don't think it could talk.”
“It would rot
within days and then no more zombie.” Delia said and laughed. “This
prevents any zombie apocalypse even if it was real.”
“It was a zombie.”
Roger said, sure of himself.
“Okay, describe
it.” Delia told him.
“It had one arm, a
bad limp, a bloody face, a rasping moan and glassy, unseeing eyes...”
Delia rolled her
eyes and sighed, “How would you know if they were unseeing?”
He shrugged.
“Elderly amputee
stroke victim, fell down hard on his face. You should have called an
ambulance instead of running away.” She told him. “Shame on you.”
Roger shook his
head. “No way. It was definitely a zombie.”
“Yet, no zombie
outbreak. You left a poor stroke victim in the woods two days ago.
You'd better hope nobody finds out when they discover the body.”
Delia said. “140,000 people die annually in this country from
strokes and how many zombies are there every year?”
“Nobody knows.
It's covered up.” Roger said, defensively, playing with the
remaining cold scrambled eggs on his plate. This made Delia guffaw in
exasperation.
“Okay, come with
me. Let's go back to that place and see what we find.” Roger said.
He finished off the last remaining orange juice. “You and me.”
She thought about
it. “I don't know if I want to find that poor man's body though.”
So they climbed into
the pick-up truck and drove toward the forested area near the levee
in the flood control area of the city. To get there they had to pass
over the old wooden bridge that the local preservation society had
adopted to maintain.
“Such a pretty
bridge.” Delia said leaning on her husbands shoulder. “Kind of
romantic in the moon light.”
“It's a full moon,
though. There might be some crazy people out and about.” Roger
answered, “I'm trying to drive, don't lean against me.”
He had pulled off
the road and onto a dirt road and the forest loomed ahead of them.
“This is it.” He said, “Should we walk?”
She shook her head
looking at the wall of trees and bushes ahead in the headlights. “I
think I changed my mind.”
He handed her a
flashlight and took a bigger one for himself. “There's nothing here
that isn't here in the day time, babe. We'll stay together the whole
time, okay?”
They entered the
woods, Delia stayed right next to her husband. His warm shoulder
against hers was calming. He was tall and strong and he was very
alpha at the moment in her eyes.
Something made noise
to their right and they both shined their flashlights in that
direction and saw a rabbit.
“It's just a
rabbit.” He told her, as they continued walking deeper into the
forest. “I didn't think they came outside at night. Guess I was
wrong.”
“This place feels
very weird.” She said. It felt like she was dreaming even though
she could feel the occasional stone beneath her running shoes and the
breeze on her face as they walked. There a faint blue light coming
from their left but it felt like it was far away. “Maybe it's the
light of the city”, she thought to herself.
There was a moaning
sound. Both of them froze. It didn't seem to have come from any
particular direction. She leaned on him even more. Then in front of
them the grass and bushes were being trampled and a dark shape was
moving toward them.
“I should have
brought a weapon.” Roger said, thinking these might be his last
words. The shape emerged from the shrubbery and into the light from
their flashlights. The horrible countenance of a giant furry beast
was before them. It lifted its head and gave a shrill cry that made
their blood run cold.
“Big foot?”
Roger whispered, “Seriously?”
It took a step
toward them and it came to the couple to flee but they were both too
scared to move, their legs felt like dead weight. Just then another
higher-note scream came from their right and a shape darted straight
at the hairy beast and tackled it. The new shape looked almost like a
man in tattered clothes but it had rabbit-like ears and two large
fanged teeth.
It stopped battling
the big foot for a moment to look at Roger and Delia and said, “You
can run away now.”
As if this freed
them from being spell-bound they both turned to run but within
several feet found the way blocked by the diffused blue light and
shadows the shape of small creatures walking amongst it.
“Aliens?” Roger
wondered out loud. Then he pulled her to the left.
“What's going on?”
She asked, confused.
“Genre-creep!”
He answered her, running out of breath as they moved. “It looks
like the fiction shelf all melted together in this forest.”
“That's insane.”
She told him.
“Zombies,
were-rabbits, big-foot, aliens… who knows what else, how else can
it be explained, Delia?” He said, stopped for breath.
Before the big flood
of 1993 this area had been next to an annex of the city library but
had been demolished for the expansion of the flood plain. The forest
had been considered part of the city but had been totally abandoned.
“It's like the
ghosts of the old library annex still lives in the forest.” She
said, “Like some kind of ghost or another dimension.”
Then another voice
said, “Sounds serious. Maybe I can help you with something, Delia?”
She shined her
flashlight at what turned out to be a handsome man dressed all in
black but his face had a shiny complexion. The man spoke, “I can
keep you safe, forever, Delia. Just come to me.”
Delia was mesmerized
and took a step toward the man, who smiled. Then another light shone
on the handsome man and she heard Roger yell, “Vampires don't
sparkle!”
Roger grabbed
Delia's hand and pulled her in a different direction. Some tree
branches in the way caused her to hold her hand up and block it. She
came away holding a switch. When they paused again she laughed and
swished it and said “Abracadabra.”
A flash of
lightening exploded from the tip of it and destroyed a tree in front
of them. They were both startled and grabbed each other. Somehow past
the downed tree they could see the shadowy shape of the truck.
“Thank goodness.”
She said. They began walking toward the truck and soon left the
forest behind.
They climbed into
the truck and just sat a moment watching the dark forest in front of
it.
“How many genres
did you count?” He asked.
“Several of them,
but I wasn't thinking about it.” She answered, “Why?”
“Something was
missing.” He answered. “I guess if we had stuck around longer, we
would have seen a lot more.”
“I think we saw
enough for one night.” She answered, “I want to go home.”
He turned the key in
the ignition but nothing happened. The headlights and interior lights
had come on but blinked and then died again. Suddenly the car was
bathed in light from above.
“But we already
saw some aliens!” He said. Suddenly some kind of space ship landed
next to them, not a saucer but a boxy shape. The side opened up and
armor-suited guys carrying big guns exited and looked around.
“Space marines.”
Roger noted, “My favorite.”
Except that the
truck had been surrounded and the guns were all pointed at the
couple.
“What, no
dragons?” Delia asked. Then she embraced her husband tightly.
END
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