The pig-man dragged Garrett by his hair
to the rock where he had sat moments before and propped him against it like a
floppy, rag doll. The thing backed off and grunted while blunt, square-shaped
hands dug through its fur covering to pull out a slim, narrow box. What looked
to be no more than a spot of light shot out, and a rapid succession of grunts
followed as the thing leaned down to lift Garrett’s arm for Garrett to see what
he had done.
This can't be real, Garrett thought. He
must be delirious, or in the grip of a nightmare. No spot of light could punch
through flesh and bone leaving his arm hanging, bloodlessly, attached below the
elbow on only a thin string of flesh. That was something straight out of Star
Wars, and he wasn’t in any movie. It couldn’t be real. He had to wake up.
Boss’s screams were real. They had fallen. That had to be what had happened. He
was unconscious, and Boss was hurt. He had to wake up.
The thing stepped back, pointed the box,
and a second spot of light shot out. The same succession of grunts sounded as
it moved back. Garrett decided it had to be a sick laugh as the thing grabbed
him by the hair and pushed his head down to see the bigger hole neatly punched
through the right side of his chest.
He floated. There were sounds, soft and
hushed, singing and soft whistles. Nothing disturbed him until the light came
on.
“You can understand me?”
Garrett blinked against the bright blue
light. He thought he was waking up in a hospital, and a nurse was talking to
him. “The light is too bright,” he murmured weakly.
A hand moved to shadow his face. His
eyes followed up a white shrouded arm to blue-violet eyes. “You can understand
me?” she asked again.
He understood what she said but nothing
else. A patch of bright, blue light covered his body. There was only darkness
beyond it and her.
“I must question you,” she told him.
“Were you upon your beast of burden when you were attacked?”
She spoke English, and Garrett stared.
Her words didn’t move with her mouth. It was as though he were watching a dubbed
movie.
He answered in a weak whisper, confused
and in shock. “I thought he was a man at first, not some kind of animal,”
“The Karoz is a male humanoid of a
primitive race,” she told him crisply. “Were you upon your--?”
“Humanoid?” His characteristic sardonic
smile twisted his lips even as weak as he was. “If I’m not delirious, I’ve got
to be crazy.”
“Delirious is from fever of which you
have none. However, your vessel of life is weak. The time of questions must be
short. Were you upon your beast of burden when you were attacked?”
The question seemed important though
Garrett couldn’t understand why any question, either in dream or craziness,
would be. “No,” he said and closed his eyes. “I was on the ground when that ape
thing came at us. Boss…” His eyes popped
back open. “Is Boss suffering?”
“Boss is your beast of burden?”
“Yes, is he suffering?” He struggled to
get up, but the only thing he could move was his head.
“No, and do not exert yourself.”
He gave up, too dazed then to panic. “I
could hear him screaming, but I couldn’t move. Can’t move…must have hit my
head…damn I’m tired.”
“You are weak.”
Garrett gave her a slight smile and told
her faintly, “Lady, if any of this was real, I’d be dying or dead.”
“Well this is. Also see what like I.
Your custom it is, believe I, hands to grasp in greeting friendly. For a time
pleasure forgo we must as alone the yayantz may the blue light enter without
paralysis to some and pain to many. Their nervous system quite different is
than of humanoid. Another answers this of your questions?”
“Kind of figured that,” he murmured.
Mystaleah chuckled deeply. “Much
comprehend you, man called Garrett. Offense you have taken to an arrogant air,
mocking to pretend ignorance. Successful you be. Weak of mind believes she you,
but remember pretender are all, if pretend think they must be.”
“What does she pretend?”
“To one only refer I did not. A warning
give I. What will see you and what hear you may not be as seems.” He lifted a
hand to rub his eye, “Important most what feel you.”
Garrett got distracted. Mystaleah’s hand
was long and slender with only two fingers and a thumb. He was not an oversized
human as Garrett had assumed. His dream, Garrett thought, was definitely being
influenced by his watching of too many episodes of Star Trek.
“Ah,” Mystaleah drew out slowly. He held
his hand closer so Garrett could see it more clearly. “The form of my hand your
feelings have altered?”
Garrett looked back into his eyes.
“You’d make one hell of a basketball player.”
“Basketball? A brief description,
please.”
“Two teams match up to see who can throw
a ball through a high hoop the most.”
“A game, a sport, yes?”
“You’re speaking English!” Garrett
exclaimed. That was why Midradina’s mouth hadn’t moved with her words. “That’s
what she meant when she asked if I could understand her. What did she do, and
how do you--?”
He didn’t finish. The blue light flashed
across his head, freezing all movement. An instant later the yayantz hovered
over him, closing his eyes. He could hear, but he couldn't do anything else.
“Excited you have I,” Mystaleah said
softly. “Forbidden it is. Too delicate is your healing.” His robes rustled as
he moved to his feet. “Later come I.”
What excited him wasn’t Mystaleah.
Mystaleah had just warned him, told him what he saw and heard may not be what
it seemed. Midradina had attached or implanted something to translate their
language into his while not distorting other sounds. They had done something to
him without his knowledge or permission. His life wasn’t his own, not even his
own body. Something alien had been planted in him to devour him a cell at a
time. He had no way of knowing if it was transforming itself to him or him to
it. He only knew that while it was happening he was a prisoner.
The panic built until his sense of the
ridiculous popped up. It was silly to get worked into a panic over something
that wasn’t real. He promised himself that when the wild dream was finally
over, he would never read another science fiction book or watch another science
fiction movie. His fascination with both had to be the source of this crazy dream
or— a new idea occurred to him— maybe he actually was crazy. Maybe the fear of
what his real future held had pushed him over the edge, and he’d slipped into
some kind of illusion to escape from it. Whether he was asleep, unconscious, or
walking around mad as a Hatter, what was happening to him wasn’t real. It
couldn’t be.
It's a story that will delight readers of many genres including, but
not
limited to, mystery, romance, war, and science fiction. I recommend
Looking
Glass Portal as a fast and fun-loving read.
Alternative-Read.com: REVIEW: Looking Glass Portal ~
Larraine ...