TIME LOVES A HERO
By Michael James Jaquish
Suddenly, a piercing scream split
the quiet of the moment, freezing Troy
in mid-sentence. He jerked his head toward the sound and went numb as his mind
registered that the pygmy in front of him was tearing desperately at the
blood-covered tip of a spear protruding from the center of his chest. Troy
watched in horror as the victim abruptly ceased screaming and flopped over on
his side with his little feet and arms twitching uncontrollably.
"Troy!
Get Down!"
Instinctively, he dove for the
grass just as a second spear whizzed right past his ear. Keeping his body flat
to the ground, he frantically surveyed his surroundings through the grass and
discovered that the peace of the afternoon had been suddenly and brutally transformed
to a scene of complete and utter chaos. Bloody screams filled the forest as
pygmies dashed madly in all directions, some colliding with each other in their
haste to escape. The buzz of spears and arrows through the air sounded like a
hive of mad hornets stirred from their nest. Most seemed to be coming from the
trees directly across the stream.
Two arrows bit into the earth
simultaneously less than twelve inches from his face, kicking up a shower of
dirt that sprayed his eyes. He shook his head and suddenly realized he was
completely exposed. With his face in the grass, he gripped the turf with his fingers and began a frantic crawl away
from the stream toward the protection of a low bank several feet to their rear.
"Damn it!" he cursed,
rolling over the rim of the bank and dropping directly on Eden
with a squishy thump, "I should
have known this was too good to last!"
The screams continued to increase
and several more arrows whizzed over their heads. Troy
struggled to get off Eden and
finally succeeded in rolling down next to him in the narrow, shallow gully,
placing several more precious inches of earth between him and the arrows. He
could hear the soft thuds as one after another imbedded in the opposite side of
the bank.
"I think we're being attacked
by those cannibals I was telling you about," panted Eden.
His voice had raised several octaves, and he was clearly fighting to keep from
hyperventilating in his panic.
"No kidding, Einstein? Who
clued you in on that one?" Troy
felt a familiar tinge of anger bubbling up at Eden
again as his mind flashed briefly over the fact that the entire mess was due to
their Zarnian abduction. But there was little time to devote to such things
now. Cautiously, he raised his head to peer over the edge of the bank.
Another hiss of a flying arrow followed by a slicing thud caught their attention and they turned to see a pygmy fall
face down into the draw with an arrow protruding from the back of his head.
This one didn't squirm or kick a bit. He died instantly. A stream of crimson
trickled slowly from his ears onto the dark soil as they watched.
"What do you think?"
breathed Eden. His face was only
inches from Troy's, and it was a
mass of sweat and dirt. Troy
glanced at him momentarily, and then peeked cautiously over the bank. The enemy
could now be seen edging into the shallows on the far side of the stream,
coming right at them about a hundred yards away. They were pretty
vicious-looking. Dark skinned, loincloths, arm and leg bands with what looked
like human hair dangling in the breeze. Their faces were painted white with
black circles around their eyes, and they had bones or something poked through
their noses. Troy ducked just as
another volley of arrows cleared their cover by mere inches.
"What do I think? What do I think? I think we better get the hell
out of here, that's what I
think!"
"Right," nodded Eden,
clearing his throat nervously, "right. I agree."
Savage yells of glee reached
their ears, and he poked his head up to see twenty to thirty cannibals, armed
to the teeth, fording the stream unimpeded. The small bodies of half a dozen
pygmies floated in the water, staining it red with their blood. A dozen more
lay dead or dying on the shore between them and the water. Undoubtedly, a few
had escaped to the forest behind them, but they were long gone now. It appeared
that only he and Eden remained alive on the bloody battleground. And they were
totally defenseless. His mouth went suddenly dry as he contemplated his own
demise. He'd imagined a lot of things in his short life, but one thing he'd
never considered before that particular moment, was the possibility of being
gutted by the spear of a cannibal in some remote jungle. His life started
flashing before his eyes, and he shook his head savagely to clear his thoughts.
"Damn!" he cursed,
"Damn! Damn! Damn!"
Eden
poked his head up and went pale as he saw the advancing party. "I thought
we were going to uh, make a break for it."
he inquired timidly. His voice was weak and shaky. Plainly, he was not up to
this.
"Yeah, right," answered
Troy, "make a break for it.
"Here we go again, making a break
for it." He sighed as he rose, wondering how much longer they would be
forced to endure this gift of unsolicited adventure the Zarnians had blessed
them with. Once he was on his feet, he turned and glanced behind them. Between
them and the jungle lay a good thirty yards of open, upward sloping hillside.
"I wouldn't give you two cents in hell for our chances," he
murmured.Tensing for the inevitable, Troy