FACE THE STRANGE by Crazy Baron
Chapter 3: Needs Must
What followed next was quite possibly the most surreal part of my
adventures so far. It could well have been just a hallucination, a
dream, or perhaps a dream within a dream--but then again, much the same
could be said about everything I had experienced ever since I had left
my city apartment a couple of days before Halloween.
It began with total, complete darkness. Breakers Woods, Dawn, Willow,
Giles and the others disappeared into thin air in a heartbeat, and then
there was nothing. My first thought was that I had fainted or that
someone had knocked me out cold, but I immediately understood that was
impossible. I was clearly able to think and sense, so I had to be
conscious.
Something cold and moist was pressing against the bare skin of my hands
and my right cheek, and this led me to the terrifying realization that I
was lying face down on dirt. Another startling observation followed on
the heels of the first one: I was indisputably back in my own body and
once again a male from head to toe. For better or worse, my move to
Sunnydale and into Buffy Summers' life had not been final after all.
Not wasting another second, I rolled to my side and sat up. Slowly my
eyes began to distinguish lighter shades of gray above me, and after a
little more time had passed, I recognized the view as a cloudy night
sky. The air was chilling and my clothes were wet in places. Shivers ran
through my body and my sore muscles protested when I clumsily clambered
to my feet and looked around to see where I was.
A wide open space surrounded me. I was standing in the middle of a
barren field that was covered with dead grass and hay. My eyes caught no
signs of trees, notable elevations or human habitation anywhere in the
vicinity; the land seemed absolutely plain and monotonous. In the
distance, it faded into an indistinct, dark and shadowy mass that joined
the sky at a barely discernible horizon. This was a dreadful place to
be, and I was completely alone and without any kind of shelter.
Before panic could get a firm hold of me, however, I noticed a faintly
visible strip of light gray perhaps a hundred yards away to my left. It
had to be a road, I reasoned and started making my way towards it.
Unless my luck had completely run out, I might be able to flag down a
passing vehicle.
The ground was moderately wet and my shoes got dirtier on every step, as
did my trouser legs. My outfit, a pair of comfortable jeans and an old
tattered denim jacket with a red pullover underneath, had not been
selected for plodding through fields in late fall, and I would have
happily traded every cent of my meager savings for a warm overcoat,
boots and a knit cap.
Finally, I reached the side of the road and jumped over a shallow ditch
by its side, but even as I was approaching my destination, I had to face
a bitter disappointment. The road was nothing more than a narrow
driveway with a coarse gravel surface, hardly the sort of communication
lane that had plenty of traffic and offered ample opportunity to hitch a
ride. I could well freeze to death before the first car came past.
Be that as it might, I was not willing to give up yet. I looked in both
directions and, to my surprise, spotted a rectangular shadow some
distance off. Maybe the darkness, abetted by my desperation, deceived
me; but the shape looked exactly like a parked car. It was my best hope
of finding help, and I began to jog towards it without delay.
It was further away than I had estimated, but as I got closer, it
started to seem more and more familiar to me. Nevertheless, I wanted
positive confirmation and kept my rising spirits at bay for fear of
another, potentially fatal setback. From twenty paces or so, I could
just about read the letters and numbers on the front license plate, and
then there was no more doubt. The car was mine.
"Thank God!" I breathed and fumbled my jacket pockets for the keys. They
weren't there, and for a short but scary moment I considered my
remaining options in case I could not get into the vehicle (without
breaking a window, for which I had no tools at hand) and start it. A
hard, small object was pressed against my thigh in my trouser pocket,
and when my fingers reached it, I recognized it as the missing car keys.
I sighed in relief, opened the door lock and let myself in. I very
nearly collapsed on the driver's seat and closed the door, immensely
grateful to have a roof of some kind over my head.
The feeling of cold assaulted me for a second time now that I was no
longer moving. The cabin had cooled down, so the car must have stood
there for quite some time since its engine had last been running.
Fervently wishing for yet another stroke of good luck, I pushed the main
key into the ignition with a shaking hand and turned it. The engine
hesitated for a second and then rumbled to life, settling to a steady
purr on idle. "Yes!" I burst out in gratitude to the powers that be and
put the heater on its maximum setting.
The heating system needed a few minutes to gain enough leftover energy
from the engine, which was as cold as the rest of the car and only
slowly building up heat, but then the interior began to warm up
gradually. Even a moderate increase in temperature was heavenly after
what I had had to endure outside. I wondered how long I had been lying
out in the field; likely not more than an hour or so, I surmised, as an
extensive exposure would have been a serious health risk under the
current conditions. The fabric of the jacket and that the trousers were
moist on the surface but thankfully not wet through and through
everywhere, nor anywhere near as dirty as my shoes, but the clothes that
I had on couldn't have kept me safe from hypothermia for long. In sum,
it seemed I had escaped this trial virtually unscathed, aside from the
lingering cold and the beginnings of hunger.
When I had basked in the lovely heat for a while with my eyes closed, I
could finally afford some thought to finding out more about the
situation. I risked turning on the headlights for a few seconds to see
what was in front of me.
That revealed little, though. The deserted road continued forward in a
straight line, crossing through the equally deserted farmland. No
movement was in sight anywhere. However, when I switched the high beams
off again, I believed I could just detect one or two very dim specks of
light almost directly ahead. They had to be in the windows of a house,
but the building was nowhere near me. Above it, roughly where I assumed
the horizon to be, the sky had gotten a fair bit lighter than it had
been when I had come to in the field. Unless I was seeing artificial
illumination reflected by the clouds, the morning was about to break.
I had something of a headache already, and it duly increased in
intensity as I tried to make sense of all this. My car being parked out
in the open, apparently in the middle of fallow farmland, and my clothes
suggested that this was what I regarded as the "prime" reality, the one
where I was a middle-aged man writing my PhD dissertation and supposed
to be going on a vacation with Jake, Scott and Charlie. Even if that was
true, though, the logical flow of events must have been disrupted here.
As far as I could recall, we had been traveling with Dan towards the
town of Bedford to drop him off when we had gotten lost. After driving
on for a while and crossing a wide river via an inordinately long
covered bridge, we had ended up at the homestead of one Lady Cinnamon, a
hippie woman living with a group of girls in a farmhouse. She invited us
to tea and also asked us to stay overnight, which became inevitable when
she had spiked our drinks with a strong sedative. I ran out of the house
with Charlie on my heels as soon as I had figured out what was going on,
lost my consciousness and then regained it in the kitchen of our family
home.
However, that dream (if it was one) very soon ended with me waking up in
my car with Charlie in company. We had set out to liberate our friends
from Cinnamon, but a strange trip or a vision followed almost
immediately. In it, a man dressed in a bizarre horse costume had led me
to an idyllic but psychedelic garden where I had briefly conversed with
him, along with Faith and a little girl whom I had never met before. At
the end of all this, the mysterious force that was toying with me had
returned me to the mid-2000s Greensville and the Buffy form. As a
result, it was absolutely impossible for me to tell the actual and
imaginary events apart.
However happy I was to be alive, reasonably well and in possession of a
functioning automobile, that was only the beginning. Staying here
indefinitely was out of the question, but coming up with reasonable
other courses of action was not easy.
I glanced over my shoulder at the back seat and spotted an item that had
slipped from my mind completely: Jake's AR-15. At least the expensive
rifle was accounted for, I thought with a wry smile. I wouldn't have to
explain to Jake how I had misplaced it.
Seeing the weapon there, within easy reach, had a strange effect on me.
Desperation and passiveness instantly gave way to resolve and
fearlessness. I suddenly knew exactly what to do. I would rescue my
friends at any cost, just like I had rescued Dawn a few minutes ago.
Granted, I didn't have Slayer powers or Buffy's mace at my disposal, but
the AR-15 was most definitely a factor to be reckoned with in this
reality. I was alone this time--if the person who had accompanied me had
actually been Charles McGee, as opposed to a mere phantasm conjured up
by my disturbed mind or some magic spell--but I would make up for the
lack of a buddy with my sheer determination. Anyone getting in my way
had better be prepared to withstand 5.56 NATO hits in their center mass.
I didn't find the spare magazine, but the one in the rifle was still
full and there was a round in the chamber, precisely as I remembered. I
had loaded the rifle myself when I had moved out with Charlie to
ascertain what had happened to my other friends and Dan. I
conscientiously locked the car and slipped the keys in my pocket,
checked the weapon once more and took off. The sky was now becoming
noticeably brighter by the minute, and the increasing illumination did
indeed reveal a red house on top of a little hill in the distance,
surrounded by a few trees and a smattering of small outbuildings. That
was Cinnamon's home, my objective.
I began by walking on the road, so as to shorten the time I would need
to get to the house, but when I was close enough to make out details of
the buildings and the garden, I jumped over the ditch on the right and
continued across the field with the intention of circling around to the
back of the premises. The miserable soggy dirt stuck to my shoes and
soiled them further, and the moisture was starting to seep in. A pair of
good rubber boots and dry socks to wear inside them would have been
worth their weight in gold to me, but as with many other things, I had
to make do with what I had, ignore the discomfort as best I could and
hope there would be a chance to rest someplace warm in the near future.
The sun was already climbing over the horizon somewhere behind the
looming clouds, providing more and more light and very slowly warming up
the air.
The field ended and the tended lawn began without a clear demarcation,
aside from a tiny, less than knee-high bank of sorts that sloped down
into the field. The ground rose slightly, and only a few yards further
away stood a line of birch trees that had dropped their leaves for the
winter. I crouched and then knelt on the ground behind one of the
birches to observe the place, with the AR-15 in my right hand and its
barrel pointing in the general direction of the house.
In front of me, I saw the back yard of the house, the long, red-painted
farmhouse itself, a large garage or a shed and a smaller building that
seemed like a cabin, perhaps serving as guest accommodation. What
attracted my attention, however, was the person, a man, standing on the
lawn. He was wearing a thick white robe, which covered him from his neck
to almost his feet, but his head was bare. His features left not the
faintest doubt as to his identity. The stringy, sand-brown, unkempt and
unwashed hair; the small eyes with an empty gaze behind the large lenses
of his glasses; the pudgy, dull-looking face of an overweight and
mentally disabled man approaching middle age, with a triple chin, a
small mouth and a round nose--these were instantly familiar to me. The
man was none other than Daniel Mancini, staring at the eastern sky with
his mouth hanging ajar.
Without a conscious decision, I took up a shooting position on one knee,
steadied the butt of the rifle against my shoulder and aimed. Dan's robe
filled my sights. The range was not more than twenty yards, Dan was
completely unaware of my presence and I had a clear shot. The tip of my
index finger pushed the selector switch from Safe to Semi and then found
the trigger, feeling it and resting on it lightly. I wouldn't miss; I
couldn't miss. My mind was overflowing with wrath, but not of the
explosive, uncontrollable kind. Mine was icy cold and it followed its
own unyielding logic. Dan was a danger to me, my loved ones and the
entire Universe. He was the one who wanted and was attempting to release
Angronok, and maybe the reality distortions and every bit of grief they
had caused me had originated with him in the first place. Therefore he
had to die.
The front sight was moving up and down as I breathed, assuring me that
my firing stance was correct. I could effortlessly imagine that I was
back at the boot camp rifle range, eager to score as high as possible
and listening to what my instructors were telling me. There was nothing
more to this, I told myself. I was only putting a couple of bullets in a
target. Dan had chosen to serve evil and condemned himself to death.
I felt my forehead itch, and I had to remove my finger from the trigger
for a second, but then the sensation passed and I pointed the barrel at
Dan again. The rifle had become heavier and the sights were no longer as
stable as they had been. I took a firmer hold of the weapon and braced
for the ear-splitting cracks of the shots. It was pointless to delay the
inevitable. To be sure, firing at Dan would alert everyone in the house,
and I might become the hunted instead of the hunter, but I'd have 18
rounds left in the magazine if I were to dispatch Dan with two. I would
be far from helpless.
Once more, I raised the rifle to gain a better position and target
picture through the sights, but when I resumed aiming at Dan, my index
finger refused to go inside the trigger guard anymore. "Fuck this!" I
cursed quietly, but the words sounded excessively loud in the silence of
the desolate land.
Just as I had often tacitly feared, I was too soft to go through with
what I had to do, despite my talk and posturing. So much for the
military training I had received, or childish dreams of becoming a hero
on a battlefield one day.
Nevertheless, I could deny Cinnamon Dan's membership in her commune and
take him away from here. Angry but full of new determination, I rose to
my feet, safed the rifle and jogged to Dan, despite the risk of being
seen from the house. The man, whose life had been hanging by a thread
only seconds prior, merely turned his head and cast an impassive look at
me when I was standing right by him.
"Dan," I addressed him. "Dan, what are you doing out here? Where are
your clothes?"
"Hi, Mike," he replied in his customary high-pitched monotone. "Where
have you been? We've been waiting for you to come back and join us,
thusly, because that is what you're destined to do."
"I'm asking the questions here," I retorted and suppressed the
temptation to threaten him with the AR-15. "What's going on, Dan?"
"I'm meditating," he said. "Cinnamon told me I should meditate, to rest
my sound mind and spirit and groove on the power of Mistress Morning.
It's good for your respective body and soul, out and out."
"Okay, that sounds nice. Where are Scott, Jake and Charlie?"
"Your bully pals are in the house," he said, and I thought I could hear
a smidgen of malicious, triumphant joy in his otherwise flat and
emotionless voice. "Cinnamon said she'd take care of them."
"What did she do to them?" I demanded. My anger was receding and worry
for the safety of my best friends was moving in.
"Something cool," Dan replied, and his lips curved into a smile. My
heart sank at that instant. It was as good as certain that all three had
been forced into skinsuits by now. If I ever ran into them again, they
would be living their new lives as adolescent or even pre-adolescent
girls, essentially unfamiliar people who had no connection with me
anymore.
"Cinnamon told me she's giving me a skin baby too," Dan continued after
a while, "but first I need to purge the bad stuff from within my soul,
thusly. Then I can be a lovely girl like I always wanted." His smile
widened into a grin that impressed me as exaggerated and robotic, much
as the majority of his other facial expressions and laughter did. For a
split second, it made me want to smash his yellowed teeth in with the
butt of the rifle.
"Dan," I said with every last bit of calmness that I could summon, "you
need to come with me. We have to leave for Bedford as soon as we can."
"Why?"
"Because we have to go there. Your cousin Flint is waiting for you at
the bus station, remember?"
"It's not important anymore," he asserted. "Kent Noggin said, and
Cinnamon said too, that my life is here now. I can work for the better
future of everyone and my friends from here."
"Dan, this is not a fucking game. We must go."
"No. You're just another male bully, Mike. You've always been mean to
me, out and out. You only want me to do stupid and boring and useless
things, and not what I really want. I don't have to listen to you."
"Somebody has to tell you to do those things because you don't know
what's good for you. Look, Dan, you think flying cartoon mice are real
and that they talk to you in your head. You're a child, even though
you've got an adult man's body."
"I protest that name-calling!" he responded, agitated and in a shrill
falsetto that was sure to wake up Cinnamon and her flock. "I'll have you
know---"
"Alright, fine," I cut him off. "Have it your way, but for God's sake,
shut up!"
To my immense relief, he closed his mouth and resumed his former staring
at the sky. As far as Dan was concerned, I had ceased to exist. I was at
a loss as to how to handle this development and yet again feeling cold,
alone and out of ideas.
I decided to head for the cabin and check it out. What drew me there was
assuredly something other than cool, sound judgment. I risked being seen
and apprehended, and there was no guarantee I would find anything even
remotely interesting or useful in the small hut, but I was not ready to
leave without at least trying to help my friends. So I advanced in a
forward-leaning posture, as if going to battle, holding the rifle with
both hands. I couldn't bring myself to walk casually and upright across
the lawn, no matter how comical I probably looked like.
I saw no movement in the windows of the house and made it to the door of
the cabin without incident. The door was not locked, and I pressed the
handle and pulled, letting the door open partially but not stepping
inside until I could see there were no nasty surprises waiting for me.
The room had no windows, and so it was totally dark, apart from what
little light could sneak in through the doorway. The temperature
difference between inside and outside was very noticeable at the
threshold, although the room was not nearly as warm as the living spaces
in the house had been. Cinnamon was possibly using the cabin as a
workshop, I reasoned. A worn, old-fashioned light switch box was mounted
on the wall next to the door, and after hesitating for a second or two,
I decided to turn the lights on.
A dim incandescent lamp, hanging from the ceiling without a shade, came
to life and revealed the contents of the room in their entirety. This
was indeed a workshop or a studio: a good quarter of the floor space was
taken up by a large table with a bewildering assortment of bottles and
cans sitting on it, together with a multitude of other similar items,
such as paintbrushes, syringes and small knifes. A merry disorder
apparently reigned supreme. However, the most chilling discovery by far
was resting on a hanger on a coat rack opposite to the door. It was an
empty skinsuit, waiting to be worn.
Cinnamon herself had told me and my friends that she made these suits,
but I was nonetheless shaken by the sight of one. Realistic and detailed
in the extreme, they resembled actual flayed human skins so closely that
gruesome mental images and associations always surfaced in my mind. The
mysteries surrounding them only added to my fears, rational and
irrational alike. It was my understanding that they were not so much
fabricated in any traditional sense as they were bred. They were
biological entities instead of simple inanimate objects, whether they
could be regarded as living beings in their own right or not. Either
way, the smart thing to do under normal circumstances was not to get
involved with them, or the people making and wearing them, in any manner
whatsoever.
Then again, my situation was probably as far from normal circumstances
as it could possibly be. I was currently trespassing on the property of
a skinsuit-making hippie lady who had drugged and captured my friends, I
didn't have a clue as to where this place was, I had nothing to eat or
drink and I was toting around an AR-15 that I didn't own, with a full
magazine of live rounds locked and loaded. All I had to go on was an
instinctive conviction that come what may, I was obliged to take Dan to
the town of Bedford, never mind the problem of finding my way there.
Ignoring my principles regarding the skinsuits and largely also common
sense, I went to take a closer look at the specimen on the coat rack.
When donned, the suit would turn its wearer into a pale-skinned, portly
and tallish woman, with long hair dyed a harsh, unnatural shade of neon
red. Several large tattoos adorned the skin, from a butterfly above her
buttocks to the female symbol on her left upper arm. The headpiece of
the suit was resting on her breasts, which were conspicuously large even
though they were hollow at the moment. Her face appeared to be wide and
round but by no means unattractive as a whole. There was a piercing
under her lower lip, a silver stud, and she sported a small ring on the
right side of her nose, too.
Since the skin was unoccupied, her age was difficult to estimate. She
was certainly an adult, twenty or twenty-five, but not much older than
that. If I had passed her by at the University campus, I would most
likely have categorized her as just another left-leaning humanities
student who had mild to moderate feminist tendencies and interests--in
short, a type of person I could maybe tolerate but was not keen to
socialize with.
A baggy, unisex brown winter jacket was keeping the skin company on a
separate hanger. In addition, there were piles of clothes on a small
table next to the rack, that is, sweaters with and without hoods, pants
and jeans, tennis socks, bras, a number of t-shirts and women's white
boxers, as well as several knit caps and a ragged beige backpack. As for
footwear, a few pairs of sneakers and one pair of black combat boots
stood on the floor. The selection was certainly meant to be worn with
the skinsuit. None of the items could really be said to exude alluring
femininity, but they did seem practical and comfortable and served to
cement the initial impression I had gotten of the redhead's personality
and style.
The suit, by virtue of being there, suggested a plan. Dan had on several
occasions in the past made it abundantly clear that he disliked and
despised men in general, and I was no exception. He saw me and the rest
of our entourage, Jake in particular, as despotic bullies who delighted
in ordering him around and threatening him with violence when he refused
to obey. But the skin could change the entire picture. If I disguised as
a woman, my chances of gaining Dan's trust and being able to talk him
into leaving the commune with me would skyrocket.
The idea was perfectly rational and realistic, especially considering
Dan's strong inclination to take things at face value. It had only one
serious flaw. For it to work, I had to put the skinsuit on.
The prospect was downright appalling to me, and I spent upwards of a
quarter of an hour mulling over the state of affairs, mainly trying to
discover a good alternative to using the suit, but it began to seem
there was none. I had rejected killing Dan and then driving away,
regardless of how easy and safe (from a technical viewpoint) that might
have been; openly threatening him would be unlikely to give results, at
least positive ones; and my sense of loyalty and duty, combined with the
aforementioned conviction which had proven impossible to get rid of,
prevented me from fleeing by myself and abandoning the others to their
fate. I hadn't found Charlie, Scott or Jake, and I was unable to help
them anymore, but I could still get Dan.
I placed the rifle gently on the floor, took a deep breath and started
to undress. I emptied my pockets carefully and peeled the denim jacket,
the pullover and the jeans off with great reluctance, piling them on the
table. The underwear and socks were even less pleasant to shed, both
because of the low temperature and the eminent sense of vulnerability
that ensued. If Cinnamon were to barge in now, I thought, it would be
all over for me in a matter of seconds. True, I might well end up in a
skinsuit nonetheless, but one of her choosing, and then the next decade
or so of my life would be spent as one of her brainwashed girl
disciples. I briefly wondered if grabbing the rifle and using it to
shoot either Cinnamon or myself was justified when confronted with that
kind of a future--assuming that I could get my hands on the weapon
before she could get hers on me.
At any rate, the backpack was a godsend. Thanks to it, I wouldn't have
to leave my own clothes behind or carry them along in some exceedingly
awkward manner. Of course, I fully intended to take the skinsuit off at
the earliest opportunity, and then the girl's clothing would no longer
fit. I stuffed my garments inside, disregarding the musty smell that
filled the air as soon as the main zipper was fully open. The cell
phone, wallet and the car keys, however, I would put in the pockets of
the girl's jacket and trousers for convenience. At last, I was ready.
Despite telling myself that I was out of options and that I was in truth
already fully committed to doing this, I still hesitated even to touch
the suit. Its smooth surface, a flawless imitation of normal living
human skin, felt cool but soft my fingertips, but it was the natural
feeling itself that made the whole thing so repulsive to me. The Buffy
skin had given me the exact same impressions, I recalled, when I had
first put it on. The similarities didn't end there. Like the Buffy suit,
this one had an opening in its back that extended from just below the
nape of its neck to a few inches above its buttocks, cutting the
butterfly tattoo in two when the skinsuit was held up by its shoulders.
The headpiece, in effect a full-head mask, was attached at the front of
the neck, and I would pull it up over my head when the rest of the suit
was on me.
"What am I doing?" I groaned to myself as I clenched my jaw and pushed
my right foot inside the suit through the opening. There was plenty of
space to go around. In contrast to the petite Buffy Summers, this girl
was neither short nor very thin. The toes, the foot and the entire leg
all the way up to my hip slid in place with less effort than I had
needed with the Buffy skin. I repeated the process with my other leg and
expended a good amount of mental energy attempting to dispel the thought
that the suit was actually swallowing me. I could easily imagine that it
yearned to have me inside of itself, which was not a mere figure of
speech in this case.
I lifted the suit to my waist and let my male parts settle in the
crotch. Not that it mattered much--in a minute, they would no longer
exist--but I wanted to give myself every last bit of comfort there was
to be had. My penis was more cooperative than last time. The poor thing
knew what fate awaited it and it showed no signs of rising, allowing
itself and my testicles to be easily pushed into a small pouch behind
the as-yet shallow and flat genitals of the skinsuit. The girl I was
about to become was clearly not in the habit of shaving her nether
region, I observed in passing.
I proceeded to lift up the torso so that I could push my arms into the
sleeve-like hollow ones of the skinsuit. Again, there was no trouble.
Every single digit found its proper place immediately, as did the arms
and the shoulders. The suit did its best to accommodate me, with its
inner surface caressing my skin as it covered more and more of me. The
sensation reminded me of touching a very fine silk cloth, now slowly
warming up due to the heat from my own body.
Having reached this point, there only remained the closing of the back
of the suit and pulling on the headpiece. As it happened, the skinsuit
had decided to spare me the trouble. I could feel it tighten around me,
but I had barely had the time to realize I was not responsible for that
when the mask part literally jumped at my face in a jumbled mass of red
hair and skin-colored substance. I would probably have screamed if the
suit matter hadn't blocked my eyes, nostrils and mouth so incredibly
fast.
I had become blind and deaf in half a second. The only thing I could do
was to stay still and wait. In short order, the tactile sensations
disappeared as well. My prior experience had taught me that there would
be no pain or danger of suffocation, and while that knowledge did help
me rein in the beginnings of a panic, I was anything but at ease.
The transformation was over sooner than I had assumed. My vision
returned, blurry at first, and then the sense of touch and balance were
restored too. It was like landing on the ground after floating in the
air, with the weightlessness suddenly gone.
I also very nearly found myself face down on the floor immediately
afterwards. My legs were unsteady and struggling to support the body
mass that had shifted every which way but not diminished much, rather
the opposite. Two heavy globes hung from my chest, and below them a
sizable belly bulged out, denying me a view of my new crotch, which was
duly sending out the kind of signals that I had become familiar with in
my Buffy form. Another mass of flesh and fat was concentrated in my
pillowy bottom. The dyed hair cascaded down my back and swept across my
skin whenever I turned my head.
A small, somewhat dirty mirror hung on the wall opposite the large
table. Curiosity got the better of me and I trudged to it in small
steps, a little displeased at the ungainliness of this body. The girl
stared back at me from the mirror with her lips lightly pressed
together. She had a beautiful pair of blue eyes, a fine smallish nose,
slightly pointed chin and moderately pronounced cheekbones, although
this delicateness was seriously undermined by the copious excess bulk in
her cheeks, under her chin and in other parts of her body. Her skin was
on the pale side, with faint freckles sprinkled here and there. She
showed her set of clean and straight teeth when I forced myself to
smile. As she was, I considered her attractive in her own way. If only
she had taken better care of herself and not allowed her body to become
so bloated, she would have had the potential to be a real knockout.
"Hi there," I said to my reflection. Her voice was about average in
pitch for a young adult woman but clear and bright, entirely free of the
grating nasal tone I had more or less expected. "Who are you?" I asked
her and tilted my head, and the girl did the same. "Who are we?"
I was genuinely intrigued. Was she a copy of an actual person or just a
generic character thought up by Cinnamon? For what purpose had the suit
been made? Then again, not knowing the answers to those questions was
probably a blessing.
The coldness of the air finally spurred me back to action, and I readily
helped myself to the clothes laid on the table. I started with a pair of
boxers and then took out a white bra, nondescript aside from its
considerable cup size. Fortunately, it had been adjusted to fit the
woman's body shape, and so I had no particular difficulty in putting it
on. I stretched my new thick arms behind my back to close the clasp,
which succeeded after a few failed attempts, and then pulled a pair of
socks on. They, in turn, were followed by warm dark-colored hiking
trousers with a belt. A gray hoodie, the combat boots and a black knit
cap completed my outfit, and I additionally picked up and donned the
winter jacket in case I would have to spend a lot of time outdoors.
I couldn't resist taking one more peek in the mirror after I had lifted
the backpack on and was holding the AR-15. A subdued, almost involuntary
little laughter in the woman's voice came out of my mouth the moment I
saw my new look. The rifle transformed her from a tomboyish liberal city
girl into a crazed militant preparing to participate in a communist
uprising in an old fallout shelter. If only the weapon had been an AK-47
instead and the pants had had a camouflage pattern, I noted with a wide
grin, the image would have been absolutely perfect.
I walked cautiously out of the door and around the back of the yard, all
the while trying to get used to the movements and dimensions of the form
I now wore. Although I did my best to tread lightly and not make any
more noise than absolutely necessary, it was as if the girl body were
stomping the ground on its every step. The combat boots, while
undoubtedly a good choice from the practical viewpoint, accentuated her
heavy footfalls.
Dan was standing at the exact same spot, gazing towards the eastern sky
and the rising but mostly hidden sun with squinted eyes. Like before, he
didn't react to my presence until I was within a normal conversational
distance and right in front of him.
"Dan," I addressed him. My new feminine voice sounded alien in my ears,
but I strove to keep my tone as natural and casual as I could. "Can you
hear me?"
He turned to look at me slowly. His face was nearly devoid of any
interpretable expression, as usual, but in his eyes there was a passing
tiny flicker, which I took for a muted sign of excitement. Dan possibly
knew the woman whose shape I had assumed.
"Hello," he replied and went on to rattle off his typical litany of
introduction: "I am Daniel Sparklestar Mancini from Chesterton; pleased
to meet you. Anyhow, you can call me Dan. My friends do, so thusly if
you want to be my friend, you can call me Dan."
"I already did," I pointed out, to no effect.
"I'm a big name artist and also a champion of this world, and all the
other worlds, in the fight against closed-minded, evil people and forces
and things and such. Anyhow, it's fine for you to just call me Dan."
"Nice to meet you, Dan," I said. "I'm... Michelle. The thing is, we---"
"Michelle?" he repeated back. "Is that your real name, or a full name?
What is your last name, Michelle? How should I call you?"
"Just Michelle."
"Why do you have Mike's gun, Michelle?" he inquired and pointed his
finger at the AR-15.
"I found it," I lied. This was the critical part of my plan because
everything hinged on Dan's inability to make the obvious conclusion.
"Someone had dropped it, I guess, and it was lying out there on the
lawn. I needed to pick it up before the little kids stumbled on it."
"I don't like guns," he commented. "They are bad, out and out, in ways
that they are used to hurt and kill people."
"This one won't do those things. I'll make sure of that."
"Good. I feel better because you're taking care of it."
"Dan," I continued, "we need to leave fast. That superhero friend of
yours, Kent Noggin, spoke to me a couple of minutes ago, and he told me
to go get you and then drive to Bedford together. Remember how you were
supposed to go there with Mike and his friends?"
"Yeah."
"This'll be a little like that, only you're traveling there with me and
not the guys. We can take Mike's car."
Dan needed some five or six seconds to process this information. There
was not the slightest perceptible change in his facial expression, but
his brain must have been hard at work for the entire time. "Okay," he
said at long last.
"So you're coming with me?"
"Sure. If Kent Noggin told you thusly that we've got to do that, then we
go to Bedford. He's my friend, so I do what I can to help him, out and
out."
I hardly believed my good luck, even though I was by that point well
aware of Dan's cognitive limitations. Not even the rifle or the mention
of Bedford had tipped the retarded man off.
It was dangerous to remain near the house any longer, so I made Dan walk
to my parked car. The journey seemed to take ages. I led the way in
Michelle's cumbersome stride, and he was bringing up the rear, plodding
along apathetically. We both had bodies that were physically out of
shape, and unfortunately that showed. I had to wipe some sweat off my
forehead when we arrived at the vehicle.
I unlocked the car doors and shoved the rifle and the backpack on the
back seat. Dan, of his own accord, sat down on the right front seat and
buckled up while I took my place behind the wheel, put the keys in the
ignition and started the engine. It responded at once, and then I began
to turn the car around. I had no reason to believe Bedford was any
easier to reach by going that way, compared to continuing in the
direction we had been heading before the Cinnamon incident, but doubling
back at least had the advantage of taking us further away from the
commune and its mistress.
There was just enough space between the ditches on either side of the
road to accomplish the maneuver, but it took a fair amount of time,
reversing and going forward, as well as a few instances of stepping out
and checking where exactly the front or rear wheels were, to make sure
we wouldn't go too far and into one of the ditches. I was soon sweating
again and cursing under my breath, but my efforts were ultimately
rewarded. Dan remained quiet during the whole operation.
If my recollections of the previous stages of our trip were in any way
reliable (which was admittedly a tall assumption), the road should have
taken us to a mighty river in a short while. It crossed the river by a
preposterously long covered bridge, continued forward and then connected
with a blacktop road at a T-junction. Unfortunately, I could not for the
life of me remember the distances or times, only that the trip in the
opposite direction, from the junction to Cinnamon's house, had not taken
us very long. Quite likely I hadn't paid close attention to the odometer
or the console clock in the first place, and even if I had, the days
spent in Sunnydale in the meantime had done much to erase the fine
details. There were no other roads and we were traveling away from the
farm, so we would necessarily encounter the river soon, then the
junction, then the abandoned gas station where Cinnamon kept a stash of
skinsuits, and then the other station where we had had a coffee break.
The hazy line separating the bizarre and the normal world had to lie
somewhere between the two gas stations. To reach the other station would
mean to leave the Fairytale Land behind.
"How are you doing, Dan?" I queried, more out of a desire to break the
silence and distract myself from endlessly agonizing over the situation
than actual interest in having a conversation with him.
"I'm okay," came the characteristically vacant and dispassionate answer.
"I'm a little hungry, though," he added after thinking for a moment, and
I bit my lip, already regretting that I had asked. We had brought no
food with us, and I had no means of keeping him satisfied in this
respect.
"Can you last a little while longer? We should get to a diner or caf? in
an hour or two."
"Yeah, it's not a problem. I'm okay."
Both the gravel road and its surroundings stayed the same, a straight
line cutting through flat or very gently undulating open land mile after
mile. There was no other traffic, no cars or trucks or tractors, in
point of fact no traces of human activity whatsoever apart from the land
itself, which had been tilled and used to grow crops in fairly recent
past. We were alone under a gray sky, on our way to nowhere. I longed to
see other people, ordinary human beings as opposed to folks like
Cinnamon and her Kids, and to talk to them and be bored by them;
anything to get away from this eerie place which felt as though it
existed on another planet.
"Do you still have your cell phone, Dan?" I asked him after another ten
minutes or so. Even Dan's petulant whining was beginning to appear
preferable to a complete quietness, which gave the oppressing and
foreboding atmosphere of this place a chance to sink in.
"No," he said.
"What happened to it?"
"Cinnamon took it."
"Why?"
"She told me that it's not working anymore, as such, and that I won't
need material possessions like that when I become a girl. Are you going
to take me back there when we've met with Kent Noggin and Flint Brand,
Michelle?"
"Sure, but Bedford is number one on the list. You can talk about your
future with Kent and Flint when you see them, but they have to give you
their permission if you want to stay with Cinnamon."
"No, they don't," Dan argued. "Not anymore. Kent is already accepting of
my upcoming transformation and he endorses it fully from his sound mind
and soul. He said so in telekinesis speech when I was meditating in
Cinnamon's garden just now. Flint Brand has no say in this, when it
comes to that, but I think it is still good for us and him, from our
respective viewpoints, to tell him about it and the things that will
follow from it thusly."
"I'm glad we agree on at least something."
The road climbed and entered a shallow cut at the top of a low hill or
ridge. As we crested the modest elevation and were again greeted by the
sight of open farmland stretching practically as far as the eye could
see, I suddenly spotted a flatbed truck standing sideways on the road.
There was also an old barn to the left, close to the truck. I was so
flabbergasted to come across indisputable proof of civilization still
existing in this world that I lost several crucial seconds and simply
drove on, surprised and then curious instead of prudently cautious.
My initial reaction was to assume that there had been an accident. Maybe
the truck had collided with another vehicle and we would have to help
the injured. Our resources were poor, as I didn't even have a proper
first aid kit in my car, but I would do what I could.
A number of people were gathered around the truck. This gave me pause,
but turning back would have been difficult because the road was
extremely narrow here. It was also too late. The members of the group
had definitely noticed us, and they spread out and took up positions.
They were all carrying long weapons, I noticed and my skin crawled. This
was not an accident site, but a roadblock.
One of the personnel, a middle-aged man with a heavy chin, walked in
front of the truck and raised his hand as a stop signal. He was wearing
an old woodland camouflage Battle Dress Uniform, complete with a patrol
cap and a utility vest of some description. His boots were caked in
brown mud. The man had a hunting rifle with a scope slung on his
shoulder, while his men were holding a mixture of rifles and shotguns in
their hands, ready to provide support for their chief in case of
trouble. It was with extreme unwillingness that I lifted my foot off the
gas pedal and pressed on the brake, allowing the car to come to a halt
just a yard or two short of where the man was standing.
The man walked up to the driver's window with long, determined steps,
and bent down. Knowing better than to try anything creative and
proactive, I rolled the window down. Brisk outside air promptly streamed
into the cabin.
"Morning, Miss," the man said in an unexpectedly high-pitched but
forceful voice. He had a stout figure, I remarked, with the beginnings
of a beer gut bulging out. In addition, when seen up close, he was not
quite as tall as I had estimated at first. However, the stern features
of his face and the equally stern, no-nonsense expression he had
deserved for the occasion effectively canceled out any comical
impression he might otherwise have given me.
"Good morning," I replied politely.
"Sorry for the inconvenience," he explained in a tone that conveyed he
was actually not very sorry at all. "We're authorized to check every
vehicle passing through here. You can't continue until we have
established your identity and made sure you're not carrying contraband."
"Excuse me, sir," I asked him, careful not to sound condescending or
argumentative, "but I don't know what's going on. What's the purpose of
this?"
"Orders from the headquarters."
"What headquarters is that? What's your organization?"
"The militia," the man responded curtly, and I realized that this would
most likely be the extent of background information he was willing to
disclose. "Remain in the vehicle, Miss, and do not step out unless
instructed to. Keep your hands where I can see them."
Another man, considerably younger than the chief, left his place on the
right side of the flatbed truck and approached. The two proceeded to
examine the car, peering in through the windows. "Open the trunk," the
chief ordered, and I did as I was told. The men vanished from view,
presumably going over the luggage stored in the trunk. After a good five
minutes, the lid slammed shut and the chief again appeared in front of
the open window.
"Step out of the vehicle, both of you," he said. "Slowly."
I unbuckled, opened the door and got out with deliberate movements. Dan
followed suit. I was constantly afraid he might open his mouth or do
something that would prompt the posse to shoot us, but luckily he had
the intelligence to stay quiet. After closing the door, I stood next to
the car while the chief eyed me angrily and suspiciously, with his hands
on his waist, from a couple of paces away.
"I see you're in possession of an assault rifle," the chief said
emphatically and aimed another grim look at me. The little nuances in
the man's demeanor and gestures showed that, as opposed to a
professional law enforcement or military officer, I had run into a
civilian who was intoxicated by the position of authority to which
someone had appointed him. He was supposed to maintain a checkpoint on a
rural road in the middle of nowhere, nothing more glamorous or important
than that, but he clearly loved it. The man's attitude towards his job
and travelers such as us was exactly what made the situation so perilous
to Dan and me. "Weapons like that are contraband. I have to confiscate
any firearms before I can let vehicles pass this point."
"Oh, you mean the AR-15? It's the property of my friend," I explained
hurriedly. "I'm... uh, we're looking for him right now, as a matter of
fact."
"What friend?" the chief asked.
"That's... He's a man named Jake White. The rifle's completely legal,
and besides, it's only semiautomatic."
"Makes no difference," the chief grunted, maintaining his stony
expression. "I need to see your papers. Do you have a driver's license
or any other valid form of ID on you?"
The skin on my cheeks and the back of my neck felt as though it were on
fire, and my hands were trembling. This was not a contingency I had
prepared for. I had simply donned the Michelle skinsuit and her clothes
without considering that she might need identity documents. I had nursed
a glimmer of hope that the chief might let us continue our drive after
taking Jake's rifle, which would have been a grievous but acceptable
loss, but now there was no saving us. We would be captured and held,
possibly even punished somehow.
"No, sir," I responded quietly.
"I see," the chief said and nodded to the younger man.
Both Dan and I were subjected to a quick pat-down search by the chief's
assistant. He was not particularly careful but did find our cell phones
and my wallet. Again, I wished fervently for Dan not to resist the
procedure, and again he submitted meekly, to my amazement. No weapons
turned up, so the man handed the phone and the wallet back to me with a
small, sympathetic smile. I put the items in my coat pockets, returning
the smile and feeling grateful that I would at least be allowed to keep
them.
"You have to come with me," the chief declared after the frisking was
complete. "As of this moment, you are under arrest for violating the
provisional firearms and transportation regulations and failing to
produce a valid identification when requested by an officer. Follow me."
I broke out in clammy sweat as the men marched Dan and me into the barn.
My feet felt like a pair of lead weights, and I wondered once more how a
casual, innocent vacation trip could have gone wrong this badly. If not
for the fear of summary execution, I might have laughed out loud
bitterly at the whole thing.
"Sit there," the chief ordered and pointed at a pile of moldy bales of
hay. "Martinez, Burkhart, guard them. Don't let them out of your sight
for one second. We don't know who they are and what they're doing here."
I heaved a weary, forlorn sigh and lowered my soft feminine butt on one
of the bales resting on the worn concrete floor. It was moist to the
touch, like most other surfaces in the barn. The air was cold; there
were two large steel sliding doors on opposite sides of the building, to
enable a tractor with a trailer pass through with ease, and for whatever
reason both doors had been left fully open. Regardless, the smell of
rotting hay and other plants, as well as that of wet dirt, was strong. I
saw no light fixtures of any kind (the barn appeared to lack electricity
altogether), and so the only illumination came in from the outside in
the form of weak, cloud-filtered sunlight.
The chief went back out while Martinez and Burkhart remained to watch
us. The pair of militiamen formed a stark contrast, in more ways than
one. The older of the two--Martinez, if the Spanish name and his
appearance were any indication--was presumably somewhere between 45 and
55, a tall and stocky man with an olive-colored complexion, straight,
cropped jet black hair and a neatly trimmed, thin mustache lining his
fleshy upper lip. He had bushy eyebrows and dark green eyes that probed
the world around him in an alert manner. A pink scar began from his
right brow and continued to the middle of the cheek, maybe as a
permanent reminder of some nasty accident in his past. Unlike the chief,
whose outfit was at least an attempt at obsolete Army and National Guard
regulation dress, Martinez had on a pair of camo pants, a wide leather
belt and a khaki-colored hunter's jacket. The open zipper revealed a
warm green turtleneck sweater under the jacket. His rifle, which I
identified with some uncertainty as an M1A, rested casually on his lap
as he sat on another pile of hay bales. Martinez seemed entirely
relaxed, even tired and a bit bored, but something warned me against
underestimating him. He struck me as a man who would more likely than
not act fast and shoot straight when push came to shove.
Burkhart, on the other hand, was much less convincing as a citizen
soldier. Whereas Martinez gave off an air of easygoing confidence, his
companion, who was barely past his teens, was skittish and nervous. He
remained on his feet and was constantly pacing back and forth instead of
sitting down. His thin and relatively short body was dressed in
oversized hunting suit and a boonie hat, both a size or two too big. He
had fair skin and red, curly hair spilling out from beneath the hat.
Fittingly, his blue eyes were big and lively like a girl's. Prominent
freckles adorned his cheeks. A long double-barreled shotgun served as
his personal weapon and further reinforced the impression that Burkhart
had gotten lost on his way to shoot ducks, rather than having joined the
chief's unit out of his own free will and preference.
The immediate consternation and worry for our physical safety subsided
gradually over the next minutes, and they began to give way to regret
and outright anger at my own slow-wittedness for not having taken any
precautions. I had driven blithely and blindly into a trap. Whatever it
was that had happened to this area and possibly the entire world, I
should have known better and expect the unexpected, no matter how
freakish it could be. I had forgotten the one lesson my misadventures,
regardless of their objective reality or lack thereof, should
unquestionably have taught me. I had no excuse.
Nobody said anything for a while. I used the pause for intense thinking,
which thankfully also consumed some of the energy I would have otherwise
spent on blaming myself. All I could do was to plan ahead, so I
concentrated on trying to come up with a strategy to survive and
hopefully to regain our freedom, however little I had to go on.
To start with, any chance of escape was extremely remote. Martinez and
Burkhart were too alert to let me simply get up and run away. In a few
hours, their attention might begin to slacken, but unless the chief was
incompetent or negligent beyond belief, he would assuredly arrange fresh
men to relieve the two guards before long. Distracting them was
difficult and overpowering them was impossible. If I had still had
Buffy's strength and reflexes, I might have been able to surprise and
knock out one of them, but then the other would have pumped me full of
lead. And finally--even if I had somehow managed to flee, there was
nowhere to go. The barn and the road were surrounded by flat farmland
that continued for untold miles in every direction, without so much as a
grove of trees to seek cover in. A car was vital to have, especially
because I couldn't leave Dan behind, not after going through all this
trouble to save him in the first place. In an incredibly ironic twist,
the well-being of a man whom I had set out to kill not two hours ago had
become one of my main concerns.
Thus, the only rational choice was to wait patiently. The chief of the
militia unit had mentioned regulations, and I assumed that he was taking
orders from some more or less legitimate authority, civilian or
military. If so, he would have to report to his superiors at some point
and notify them that he had us in his custody. What their reaction would
be was unknowable, but with any luck we would be questioned and perhaps
allowed to leave after anything they deemed contraband was confiscated.
Then again, there was the distinct possibility that the chief was acting
completely on his own. If that was the case, all bets were off.
Michelle's clothes were basically adequate for spending time outdoors,
even in this weather, but since we were restricted to staying put, cold
inevitably began to take a hold of me as I sat on the bale. I tried to
keep warm by hunching my shoulders and wrapping my arms around my body.
Dan was slowly rocking back and forth, his eyes cast down and lips in a
pout. He was undoubtedly struggling to comprehend and understand the
recent events just as I was, though he had a far more limited brain
capacity at his disposal. His body notwithstanding, Dan really was for
all intents and purposes a child, and he could only deal with other
people and life in general in the manner and to the extent a child
could. I was unable to ignore the feeling of unease that seeing him in
this state caused in me. If he threw a tantrum, I wasn't sure I could
put a stop to it, and there was no telling what an incident like that
might lead to in the end.
These fears of mine proved well founded and they nearly came true.
"Michelle," Dan spoke up abruptly. "I'm thirsty."
"So am I," I said, "but we don't have anything to drink."
"My throat is dry, oh so dry," he continued to complain in an uncannily
theatrical manner. "It's like a desert, out and out. I'd love a nice
soda pop."
"You'll have to wait a little longer," I told him emphatically. "It'll
be alright, but you can't have a soda right now."
"Yeah," Martinez chuckled. "We're fresh out of soft drinks here, pals.
Sorry about that."
"But I'm thirsty!" Dan insisted. "My throat feels funny and itchy. I
want a soda. Sprite, if you have that."
"How about a glass of nice single malt whiskey?" Martinez suggested and
chortled heartily before reassuming a more serious attitude. "Buddy,
something tells me you're not quite getting the picture here. This is
not a McDonald's and we're not your friendly waiters."
"I'm thirsty," Dan repeated stubbornly. "I want a refreshing soda pop."
"Jim," Martinez addressed Burkhart, "go and see if you can find some
water for him. I don't want the fatbody over there to die on me on my
watch."
"Sure thing," the younger man responded crisply, adjusted the sling of
his shotgun so the weapon hung more securely from his shoulder, and
marched out of the door.
"I'm not a fatbody!" Dan protested loudly. "I'll have you---"
"Shut the hell up already!" I snapped at him. My prayers were answered,
and he fell silent before any more damage was done. My false female form
no doubt played an important part in convincing him to give up his inane
bitching.
"You're a pretty unusual pair to be traveling together around these
parts," Martinez observed in a conversational tone. "What are your
names?"
"I'm Michelle," I introduced myself, "and this is Dan, Dan Mancini."
"My pleasure. We are you guys from?"
"The next state over," I said and gestured with my hand randomly towards
the road and the fields. "A couple of hundred miles from here, by my
reckoning."
"And where are you headed?"
"Bedford. Dan's relatives live there, and I was planning to take him to
see them."
"Okay."
Martinez scratched his chin and nose, pretending to be disinterested. I
waited intently for him to continue the conversation. It had been off to
a promising start, and if I could keep it going, it was likely to work
to our advantage. After a period of time that felt like hours to me, he
finally gave in to his curiosity.
"So, is Dan related to you, Michelle?"
"No, he's not," I said. "I met him on the road and decided to give him a
ride."
"That was kind of you," Martinez commented, "but not very smart,
considering what's going on. There are some really strange folk out and
about, and you should be extra careful of who you trust. Anyhow, is
he... you know, retarded?"
Dan opened his mouth but, in a flash of extraordinarily good judgment
for him, thought the better of it and said nothing.
"Mentally disabled, yeah," I confirmed and nodded. "I don't know what
the exact diagnosis is but Dan has trouble living on his own and
understanding how things work. That kind of stuff. He's totally
harmless, though."
"Having a person like that in your family can be tough. My younger
brother has a severely autistic son who goes to a special school. His
family loves him, and I do too, but the kid is a pretty heavy burden at
times, to be honest."
Things were going better than I had dared to hope. Burkhart had not
returned yet and Martinez was showing the first signs of opening up
about personal issues, so I decided to press on, discreetly but with
determination.
"You said there are strange people around," I remarked, "and lots of
things don't seem normal to me. What's up with that?"
"You're seriously out of the loop, aren't you?" Martinez responded and
gave me a wry smile.
"Pretty much," I admitted. "I was driving with Dan towards Bedford when
the cell service disappeared, and we got lost some time later. As a
matter of fact, we haven't got a clue where we are now."
"I also said you shouldn't trust every stranger you meet without
reservation, so I'm not going to share all I know with you right off the
bat," Martinez pointed out. "But I can tell you this. There have been
these weird lights in the sky for two days and nights in a row, plus our
communications are cut. Radio, phone, TV, internet, everything is down.
We reckoned this can only point to a national disaster--a limited nuke
attack, maybe, although we have no idea who's behind it. I'm guessing
the Chinese or the North Koreans, but it really could be anybody." He
added with a small laugh, "Little Jimmy for one is so high-strung he's
babbling about an alien invasion, and Gittins thinks this is a psyop by
the Feds."
"That's... a lot to take in," I said, not knowing of what to make of the
news.
"You bet it is. But none of that matters much at this point. We're
keeping ourselves and our community safe, and we'll stay out here until
we get the word that everything is back under control and order's been
restored across the country."
"I like the sound of that," I commented and flashed a smile at Martinez.
An idea was taking shape in my mind. It would be an extremely daring
gamble with absolutely no guarantee of success, but I was so sickened
and frustrated with my inability to do anything meaningful that I put it
in motion. "I've always appreciated a man who's ready to step up and
protect the weak."
"So have I," Martinez said and smiled back. As we were exchanging these
kind words and gestures, I furtively studied his face and eyes,
attempting to gauge his attitude towards me. I drew a blank, by and
large, but at least he didn't seem definitely averse to my overtures,
which was encouraging in itself.
"Thing is," I went on while doing my best to affect an air of
seductiveness with a flirtatious smirk and an inviting look at him,
"being on the road alone was, like, really scary. I missed having a
strong and reliable man by my side, someone who could take care of me
and save me if something bad threatened to happen."
"Dan wasn't much help in that respect, I'd wager."
"No. He... I mean, he's a nice person deep down if you ignore his
disabilities, but he's no alpha male, not by a long shot. He can't keep
me warm at night."
"And you think I can?"
"You sure look like that," I purred and let the smile on my face develop
into an openly lustful grin. "I'm getting antsy because I haven't gotten
any in days, never mind the weird stuff."
"You want to get laid?" he asked and grinned as well.
"Yeah." I arched by back to tease him some more and moaned, "I need to
get laid. My panties are dripping wet when I even think about it."
"A nice little quickie can make your day, no doubt about that," the man
remarked and winked at me. "There's only one problem."
"Oh? What's that?"
Without warning, Martinez's features hardened and his gaze became
patently hostile. "I know what you're trying to pull," he said in an
even but menacing tone. "It's not going to work."
My breath seemed to seize up and a violent icy shiver, like the stab of
a knife, ran through me. To drive his point home, Martinez stood up and
walked towards me with slow, purposeful steps. The smell of grimy,
unwashed clothes arrived along with him. My heart raced madly in my
chest and my pulse pounded in my ears but I was petrified, unable to do
anything but to wait for what was to come. The militiaman held the rifle
with one hand, in a relaxed grip, but one part of me fully expected him
to aim the barrel at my head and pull the trigger at any second. I was
too afraid to look him in the eyes when he finally stopped and hovered
above me.
"I read your face like an open book," he told me in the same understated
but very frightening manner. "You wanna know what you are? You're a
parasite. You live in the city where you enjoy the safety soldiers like
me provide you, where you eat the food the farmers of this country
provide you, where you can speak your mind and read what you want,
thanks to the freedom of speech this country provides you--and you
despise and hate all of those things. You hate them because they don't
live up to some fucked-up Marxist ideal of yours of how the world should
be. You say you want justice and equality and freedom and you shit on
them everywhere you see them. You do nothing but complain and incite
more hatred, just because. Well, have I got news for you, baby. That
ain't gonna fly anymore."
He bent a little closer to me and continued, "And as for fucking you, I
guess I need to inform you that as a rule, I don't find fat commie lesbo
whackjobs like you attractive. Not one goddamn bit. But if better
alternatives are lacking after a day or two... Well, then we'll just
have to get back to your offer, won't we?"
I was unable to speak; I needed the whole of my willpower to prevent my
body from shuddering uncontrollably. I had done everything wrong. My
decisions had made me a prisoner and a potential rape victim, and I had
no reason to assume this would be the end of my plight.