Postby familygibbs » Fri Aug 21, 2009 6:52 pm
Thanks Esoteric. It has been a while since I looked back at chapter 1 and I certainly agree now that it starts too slow and I wrote way too much about Elayne when the story does not even centre around the woes of her school and her struggle to fit in. I will have to shorten it down to get to the action.
Now for chapter 2.
Chapter 2
John opened his eyes to find himself flat on his back. His vision whirled for a second and he thought he would be sick. He propped himself up on his side and took a heaving breath. He was lying on mossy ground covered in sticks and leaves and little twigs were poking into him from all sides. He staggered to his feet and brushed himself off. He was standing on a steep slope with trees and bushes all around him. The air was crisp, damp, cool and so fresh that it surprised him. He gazed up into a leafy canopy so thick that he couldn’t see the sky. It was strange. He seemed to be in a mountainous region, but there were no evergreen trees or plants that he would normally associate with high elevation. It looked more like a tropical rain forest than anything else. But a rainforest usually had huge ancient trees. These trees were thin, but still tall and very leafy and it wasn’t as wet as a rainforest would be. Where were they?
“John,” called a voice near him. He looked around and saw Elayne standing a few feet away looking just as dazed as he felt with bits of forest debris stuck in her hair.
“Do you know where we are?” she asked worriedly.
He shook his head. “I have absolutely no idea. Where’s Horace?”
“Here,” called a surly voice. Horace emerged from a bush, tearing at the branches that were trying to tangle him. A leaf was stuck in his hair and there was a slight cut on his cheek. He looked like he had been crying a moment ago.
“Nice of you to show up. You’re here to bring me back, right?”
John glanced at Elayne. Neither of them said anything. There was a long silence. Horace began to look panicked. “Didn’t my dad send you?” he demanded.
Elayne shook her head. “Your dad’s still out lecturing. It has only been twenty minutes or so since you left. We came after you because we didn’t know what else to do. We left a note for your parents on the counter.”
Horace sagged. “I had hoped my dad had come back early,” he said despondently. He started breathing fast, and his face twisted with emotion. “Why did you have to push me anyway?” he asked shrilly. “It was just a joke and now look at the mess we’re in. What if there are wild animals or cannibals? I’m going to die in some God-forsaken wilderness thanks to you.”
“Firstly,” replied John angrily, “you should be happy we came after you at all. Secondly, you started the whole thing. If you hadn’t been such an obstinate idiot, this never would have happened.”
Horace looked like he was trying to think of a good comeback. His fists were clenched and his face was red. John crossed his arms and gave Horace a daring look. Let him try to get out of this one.
“I wish you were never born!” shouted Horace finally. He looked about to start crying again.
John sniggered. “You’re such a baby. You…”
“Enough!” yelled Elayne, stepping between them. “This isn’t helping our situation. We need to figure out where we are and where we should start heading.”
John exhaled. He would have liked to chew out Horace a little more. “You’re right.” He looked at their surroundings. “Maybe if we climbed this slope we could get a better view of the area.”
“Why don’t you take out the compass,” suggested Elayne.
“That doesn’t really help unless you know in which direction civilization lies,” replied John. Nevertheless, he pulled it out of the bag.
“We could just pick a direction and head along it,” suggested Elayne. “We’re bound to run into someone sooner or later.”
“No,” interjected Horace forcefully. “We can’t leave. My dad will figure out some way to get us back. We just have to make camp here.”
John wasn’t really listening. He was staring intently at the compass. “This is weird,” he muttered. “It can’t seem to find north.”
“You brought a faulty compass?” shrieked Horace. “Are you trying to kill us?”
John threw the compass to the ground. “Shut up and let me think,” he shouted back.
“Better think quickly,” said Elayne dolefully, picking the compass back up and wiping it off. “It’s getting dark.”
True enough, the forest was darker than it had been when they first arrived. John ran his fingers through his hair in frustration. In survival training he’d been taught to stay in one spot until rescue came. But wasn’t that only if someone actually knew where you went missing? He doubted Uncle Andrew could track where they had gone. What were they going to do?
Just then, Elayne grabbed his arm and pointed with wide eyes at something behind him. He spun around, expecting some sort of animal. Instead he found himself looking at a young man a little older than himself. The young man was carrying a bow in his left hand, an arrow notched on the string, but pointing to the ground. He was dressed in brown pants, an off-white linen shirt with a leather jerkin over it, and a green cloak. The colors were such that he blended into the forest quite well, which is why they hadn’t seen him approach. Not that they had been looking. The young man had wavy dark blonde hair that grew to the nape of his neck and a youthful handsome face, but he carried himself with confidence and there was an aura of danger about him. There was a bit of hair on his chin and his eyes were blue and had an intensity and life that one doesn’t often see. Those eyes were fixed on the three of them, studying them with curiousity.
“Are you friend or foe?” asked the stranger quietly. He spoke in a strange accent that tended to soften the words and stretch them out, but nothing like a Texan drawl or an Australian accent.
“I think we’d prefer to be friends,” replied Elayne nervously. John nodded.
“I am glad to hear it. What is your business in these woods?”
“We were teleported here through a science experiment,” explained John. “I know it sounds crazy, but we just came from Workington, England.”
The stranger frowned in puzzlement. “I have never heard of such a place or of such a means of travel.”
Horace snorted. “You don’t know where England is? What planet do you come from?” He stopped and looked suddenly nervous. “You aren’t a terrorist are you?”
The young man did not reply, his face taking on more and more of a perplexed look.
John broke the silence. “We could really use some help. Do you know of some lodging nearby and communications service? Telephone or even mail would be great. I’m sure there will be a reward out soon for our safe return and we can ensure that you are compensated for any trouble you take on our behalf.”
John felt he had put things very well, except that the stern young man still looked as perplexed as ever, if not more perplexed.
Finally the young man spoke. “The safest place would be the my home, the Fortress of Bethsaide. It lies down in the valley.”
“A fortress?” asked Elayne with a start. “Could you please tell us where we are?”
“Not here,” said the young man in a low voice. “We need to be out of these woods before dark and the light is fading as we speak. My father will talk with you once we are in the fortress. Will you follow?”
John nodded and picked up their duffel bag, but Horace grabbed his arm. “I don’t trust him,” he whispered. “He looks like a Soviet rebel who’s hiding out with a poorly equipped group in the forest. He’s probably getting us into coming with him so he can capture us for ransom. Besides, how is my dad supposed to find me if I’m gone off somewhere?”
“He doesn’t act like a rebel,” contradicted Elayne in a low tone. “I’d rather take the risk and end up captured instead of dead.”
“Fine,” muttered Horace. “Just don’t say I didn’t warn you.”
The armed stranger was already a little ways ahead, watching them impatiently with an occasional glance at the forest around. John wondered what he had meant by having to be out of the woods before dark. When they reached him, the young man led them single file through the forest undergrowth, stepping as surefooted as a deer. John took the rear, trying to mimic his movements and follow the same tracks. At least he was having better success than Horace who was stepping heavily on dry sticks and leaves that snapped and crackled. Still, they kept falling behind and the stranger had to continually wait for them to catch up. John could tell he was becoming more and more agitated by the delays.
It was getting darker. The light took on a reddish tint as the sun dipped below the horizon. Suddenly their leader held up his hand for them to stop. He raised his bow, scanning the lengthening shadows.
“What is it?” whispered Elayne.
“Hush,” replied the young soldier softly.
Elayne glanced back towards John with a worried look. John didn’t know what to make of the situation. Had they landed in a war zone? But where in the world were they? It didn’t seem like any fight zone he’d heard of on the news.
But now was not the time to question. He crouched down. Elayne and Horace did the same. John looked back up the hill from where they’d come, his eyes trying to distinguish objects in the shadows. Nothing moved. All he could hear was a slight breeze rustling the leaves above him.
“I believe it is safe,” whispered the stranger at last. “Hurry.” He got up and darted once more down the hill, weaving his way between the trees.
John got up and followed the others, checking every once in a while over his shoulder. The light was almost gone now and at times he thought he saw something in the shadows. It was probably his imagination playing on his fears.
A man can no more diminish God's glory by refusing to worship Him than a lunatic can put out the sun by scribbling the word, 'darkness' on the walls of his cell.
C.S. Lewis
Salvation is from our side a choice, from the divine side it is a seizing upon, an apprehending, a conquest by the Most High God. Our "accepting" and "willing" are reactions rather than actions. The right of determination must always remain with God.
A.W. Tozer
The chief end of man is to glorify God and enjoy Him forever.
Westminster Confession