Tuesday, December 11, 2012

THE CHURCH: PART 2

Sorry this took so long to post. I actually finished it quite a while ago and just never got around to posting it. If you need to reread the first part to reacquaint yourself with the story click HERE.

So there's good news and bad news. The good news: there's going to be a third part to this story. The bad news: it's not finished yet. I don't know if any of you read my 'About Me' section, but in it I admit that everything always ends up longer than I intend. That holds true for this story. I'd like to have the third part done before Christmas, but again, I'm not making any promises.

Anyways, I hope you enjoy.
 
After only a few feet down I lost nearly all of my sight. My hands became small white ghosts in the darkness as they felt their way along the length of the ladder and then disappeared altogether, but I kept moving. I understood on some level that if I were a character in a movie, I’d be the first one to die, but that wasn’t going to stop me.
I couldn’t get away from the feeling of endlessness that was the darkness, so imagine my surprise when I stepped onto solid ground only nine feet or so beneath the hole. I had anticipated another rung about a foot down from the last and nearly stumbled off the ladder when my foot hit dirt and rocks only a few inches later. The ground crunched and snapped beneath my feet as I caught my balance. I couldn’t see anything.
“Elia!” I heard Ruth whisper down in a worried voice.
“Are you dead?” Charlotte asked.
I could imagine them peering into the hole, looking for some sign of me: a flash of movement, the soft white of my face, the slight rattle of the ladder…
“I’m fine,” I said. “I’m at the bottom. It’s dark as hell down here though.”
“What is it?”
“I don’t know. A basement maybe, or a cellar… or a cave,” I added a moment later.
I stood facing the ladder as I spoke, or at least where I thought it should be. My eyes were wide and struggling to adjust to the darkness.
“What’s down there?” Charlotte asked.
I took a few steps back and slowly looked to my left. I could see nothing, but had a feeling that a wall of some kind was there—that had I reached out with my hand, it would have hit a barrier. I then looked to my right and was suddenly blinded by daylight. I squinted and held up my arm as a shield against it as it vulgarly assaulted my pupils. Confusion overtook me. How had I not already seen this?
“I can see light,” I said. “We can get outside from down here.”
“Sweeet!” I heard Ruth say.
My pupils began to contract and I was able to lower my arm. It took a moment, but I was eventually able to focus on what I was seeing. There was a cavity in the outer wall of the church big enough to walk through in a crouch in front of me. It puzzled me for a moment because I would have guessed the side of the church to be another fifteen to twenty feet away, but I set the thought aside.
Beyond the opening was a small grass and dirt incline that led up and away from the church. It explained why none of the light was able to infiltrate the hole I’d descended into, but it still seemed strange.
I held my forearm  through it. The contrast between light and dark on my skin was startling. It was like night and day without any dawn or dusk to connect them. The darkness was so great that what portion of my arm was in the light seemed suspended in midair, a phantom limb severed from it’s body. I rotated my arm, palm up, then palm down, enthralled with the way the light and dark fought against each other, neither willing to relinquish their hold.
I turned back to face the hole, which now appeared even darker before me. I looked over my shoulder at the light and already my eyes were stinging from the change. Both were equally blinding. I planted my back to it. If you want to see in the dark, you have to turn your back on the light.
I searched the emptiness before me for anything I could grasp: a shape, an outline, a shadow, anything that would help define the room I was in. All the while something unconsciously kept pulling my attention farther and farther to my left. I was nearly facing the light again when I saw it: a shadow within the darkness as though the darkness was purposefully lingering there.  It gave me the chills. I didn’t want to look at it, but I didn’t want to turn my back on it either. At the same time, I was completely enthralled with the mystery of it.
When most people would have taken a step back, I took a step forward
I didn’t just feel blind as I stared into it, I felt like I’d never been able to see to begin with. It was this spot that I chose to concentrate on. If my eyes could conquer this spot then the rest of the room would be a walk in the park. And so I stared and did my best to ignore the light to my left.
But the darkness never gave way. It stubbornly held its ground against my probing eyes. Frustrated, I glanced away and was stunned to see an old wall made out of wood planks and mortar before me. It was bowed from the weight of the years bearing down on it. The rest of the area was in roughly the same condition. This was no basement or cellar. This was exactly what we had been referring to it as the whole time: a hole.
“I can see now,” I told them. “You can come down. The ladder’s fine. It’ll hold your weight.”
I could hear them talking above me, but couldn’t make out what they were saying.
My eyes fell to the floor as I continued to look around and my heart skipped a beat. “Oh my God,” I said. What I had thought to be dirt and rocks snapping beneath my feet hadn’t been dirt and rocks at all. It had been bones—hundreds of animal bones piled just deep enough to completely obscure the ground.
Embarrassed as I am to admit it, I was excited; this was going to make for a great story one day.
“There’s like a million dead animal bones down here! I can’t even see the ground.” Most of them were from smaller animals like squirrels, raccoons and possums—I nudged a fox skull over with the toe of my shoe—but there were larger ones too—huge femurs and parts of a pelvic that looked like it belonged to a deer or possibly a cow. Thankfully, none of them looked human.
“They’re dead—really?” Ruth said. “There’s no live bones?”
“Ha. Ha,” I said. “Actually, there might be.” I honestly wouldn’t have been surprised if they decided to suddenly rise from the dirt and take form.
I eyed the ladder as I spoke. I could see quite clearly now. “Well, are you coming down or what? It’s safe.”
Ruth and Charlotte started bickering above me. With a sigh, I turned back to the only spot in the room still shrouded in shadow and willed my eyes to open to wider, to see more, to reveal what was hidden there. I held my hand to the side of my face to block the light intent on causing me so much blindness in the dark and slowly and almost deliberately the darkness seemed to give way to the faint outline of a circle.
“Hey, guys! There’s another hole down here!”
I continued to stare and eventually the ribbed form of an old, metal pipe appeared—a pipe big enough for an adult to crawl through on their hands and knees. I thought perhaps it was for sewage—it was certainly large enough—or to drain away water from the foundation, but it was dry and free of any kind of debris.
“Come on! You gotta see this!”
“Hold on, lady!” Ruth answered
Now that I could see every inch of the room I had descended into, my mind immediately began trying to puzzle everything together: the ladder, the hole, the pipe, the cavity, the darkness, the church, but especially the bones. How did they all get down here?
Did the animals come through the pipe and then get stuck down here and starve to death? Did someone kill them and dump their bodies here? Was the dark cavity just a convenient, safe place for them to die? How long had the gap in the side of the church been there? They couldn’t have been trapped with an opening that large to escape through. And what about the larger bones? A deer could have gotten into the hole through the opening, but I couldn’t imagine a cow getting through.
The sound of movement suddenly dissolved my thoughts. Ruth was slowly working her way down the ladder, one rung at a time. She stopped about three rungs from the bottom and clung to it as if she were afraid she would somehow lose it in the dark.
“Elia, where are you? I can’t see anything.”
“I’m right here. I can see you,” I said. Not only could I see her, I could see every detail of her, right down to her khaki pants, fake Birkenstocks and Bob Marley T-Shirt.
She hooked her elbow around the rung directly in front of her to keep from slipping off and then swiveled around to look behind her. Her eyes were wide and black and by the way they swiveled back and forth I knew she was trying to find me.
“Elia? Are you there?” Her eyes flickered towards the light and immediately scrunched up in protest.
“Don’t look at the light,” I said. “Just focus on the dark. Your eyes will adjust eventually.”
As she waited for sight, I continued studying the pipe. It looked like it went straight for seven or eight feet and then turned and started to veer up. From what little I could see of the incline, it didn’t look too steep to crawl up; especially with the helpful, deep ribs to brace our feet on.
Excitement started to pulse through me. We had to see where this thing went. I had to know what it was for and why it ended in this cavity so deep within the bowels of the church.
I turned back to Ruth. “Can you see me yet?” I asked. She was hanging off the ladder by one arm, looking around.
“Kinda. You look like a big blob.”
We talked for a while and after another minute or so, her vision was finally at par with mine. She seemed fascinated by the bones and looked curiously over them all.
“Well, are you gonna come down?” I asked.
She slowly finished her descent and walked lightly around the small area carefully avoiding the bones. I walked to the ladder and let them crunch and snap under my feet.
“Charlotte, are you still up there?” I called.
There was no answer. Ruth looked over her shoulder, eyebrows raised.
“Charlotte?” I repeated.
“Where else am I gonna go?” she said from somewhere above us.
At the sound of her voice, Ruth went back to her exploration of the hole. She still had her camera with her, but hadn’t yet taken any pictures. It was probably a good thing. The flash would likely blind us and we’d have to let our eyes adjust to the dark all over again.
“You gotta come down! There’s this hole we gotta go into! We gotta see where it goes!” I said excitedly.
Ruth looked in the pipe and while she didn’t voice any protest against my idea, she didn’t look thrilled by it either. The pipe probably freaked her out too. But that was the difference between me and most people. It wasn’t the fear that held me back, it was the fear that drove me.
“Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait… wait, wait,” Charlotte said. “Let me get this straight. You want me to go down the creepy, old ladder, into the creepy, dark hole, into a room full of dead things, into an even creepier and darker hole?”
I mulled it over a moment. “Yea.”
“Uuuuuhhh…” she trailed off.
“Come on! We have to go in there! It’ll be like one of those things we remember when we’re eighty-five, have Alzheimer’s and can’t remember our own children’s names! Oh, your name’s Joe? I gave birth to you? Well, that’s something. Now let me tell you about this really-fucking-super-cool hole my friends and I went into when we were kids!”
She didn’t say anything.
I groaned at her lack of response; this was going to be tricky.
Ruth climbed a couple feet up the ladder and settled back into her one-arm hang. I had a feeling that she didn’t like stepping on the bones. We goofed around with her camera for a while and continued trying to coax Charlotte down the ladder, but she wouldn’t have it.
“Will you just come down here!” I finally snapped at her. We had tried everything including bribery, logic, lies and a multitude of threats that mainly involved throwing her into the hole—if she cooperated and didn’t fight us there was a good chance that her legs wouldn’t break—but she remained stubbornly in the church.
“Hey, guys,” she suddenly hissed. “I think someone’s here.”
I let out an aggravated sigh.
“Just ignore her,” Ruth said.
“Someone is definitely here,” she continued, her voice carrying a wary edge.
“She’s just trying to get us to go back up there because she’s freaked out,” I said to Ruth.
“You guys! Oh my God! Come on! There’s someone here!”
Ruth shook her head.
“She’s just scared,” I said.
“What are you doing!? Hurry!”
Ruth sighed.
“Don’t do it,” I said, but she had already started to climb.
I watched her disappear and then listened as she and Charlotte started fighting above me. By the sound of their voices I would have bet good money that Ruth was trying to manually force her down the ladder. I listened harder, but couldn’t make out much of what they were saying until they were suddenly hushing me.
What is it?” I asked.
They’re voices slowly began to fade away. I was able to make out only a whispered, “Elia, be quiet,” before they disappeared completely.
“What’s going on?” I asked.
Silence.
I stepped back, away from the opening in the floor and towards the pipe. My eyes were fixed on the top of the ladder. Was someone up there? Would they come down? Did they exist at all?
The only thing I was certain of was that Charlotte and Ruth were safe. I would have been graced by the piercing shriek of Charlotte’s screams had they not been. That meant that they had either snuck out of the church or were hiding.
I waited alone in the dark, hyperaware of the ladder before me, the opening to my side and the dark shadow of the pipe behind me.
I have to admit, this part of this story was a bit harder for me to write. My memories of what happened are fractured and some are fuzzy. While I can distinctly remember some moments, other's are unclear or even missing. For example: I have a fuzzy memory of Charlotte snapping the last rung of the ladder. In half. But I can't remember her coming down into the hole or leaving it. I'm not even sure it's a real memory. I did my best to subtly work in or work around memories like this. Unfortunately, I couldn't find a way to work this one in and had to leave it out, which killed me to do because it's so amusing. Failing memories aside, I did honestly try my best to stay as true to the story & circumstances as I possibly could.
Copyright © 2012 by E.B. Mazza
All rights reserved.
No part of this written work may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without written permission from the author, except in the case of brief quotations for articles or reviews.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, and places are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is completely coincidental.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

THE CHURCH: PART 1

I cranked this story out rather quickly, but my mom read through it and gave it a good, little edit run, so hopefully it's not in too bad of shape. I originally intended to post it as a note on facebook, but my blog hasn't gotten any love in a very long time from me or anyone else and it is well overdue for some. There are two parts to this story and I had hoped to have them both finished by now as a Halloween treat for all of my facebook friends, but I'm only about halfway through the second part and I'm making no promises as to when it will be finished. It's too much pressure. Anyways, I hope you enjoy. :)
 
My friends, Charlotte and Sarah, now known as Ruth, used to explore abandoned churches, houses, barns, whatever we could find, and there was this one church in particular that I’ll never forget.
 
And so the story begins…
It was a hot day, but not yet humid, late spring maybe, and the three of us had made ourselves comfy in Charlotte and Ruth’s mother’s red Subaru. They’re sisters, you see, but aside from the sprinkling of freckles that color their faces, you’d never be able to tell. We’d been driving nearly forty-five minutes and had just taken the small jog at the end of the parkway onto route 18.
It was an immensely boring road that rarely veered from a straight line, but there was something unsettling about it. It was too boring, too plain, too straight. We all stared at a house decorated with hundreds of gnomes as the Subaru flew past; Ruth wasn’t exactly easy on the gas. People were strange here, nearly as strange as the road itself.
Ruth had been looking for any reason at all to drive and take advantage of her new license and so we had disembarked from our home town of Irondequoit on a journey to explore some abandon buildings I had seen passing through on the way to Buffalo, particularly the church. We hadn’t yet had the opportunity to explore one.
I was nervous. They were looking to me to guide them to our next adventure and I wasn’t exactly sure where it was. I was going off memory. What if it isn’t past that town? Is it five miles past that farm—or three? Is it really on the right side of the road? What if I’m getting mixed up from my trips back from Buffalo where it was on my left? Should I be watching both sides of the road?
I took a calming breath to maintain my composure. The air smelled of stale French fries and cheerios, courtesy of their younger brother Arun, and my window wouldn’t go down—child proof. Charlotte sat in front of me, having called shotgun before we left. The breeze blowing in through her window lifted stray wisps of her normally deep auburn hair around her face. Today in the sunlight, it looked ablaze with orange flames.
I looked past her through the front windshield. A smoke stack loomed before us in the distance puffing out light clouds of steam. We were lucky. On previous trips down this road, I had seen it leak out the thick refuse of pollution in long, hazy streaks that would hang in the air, unmoving, even as the clouds passed them by.
“How far away do you think that is?” I asked no one particular.
They both knew what I was talking about without having to ask. We’d been friends for a long time. “Five miles?” Ruth guessed.
“It’s about forty,” I said. That was the funny thing about this road: it easily tricked the eye, like a desert that would put out false hope to those who had found themselves trapped in it.
She didn’t believe me. I let it go.
I wondered for a moment if their mother ever really knew exactly how far we traveled on these trips. Naturally, she saw the odometer and gas readings, but did she just assume that we putted around town all day or did she suspect something more devious?
A distant, blinking, red traffic light signaling a town suddenly pulled my thoughts back to the road. It was hard to tell how far away it was. The road was endless. Was it one mile away? Was it ten? It was impossible to tell. And so I waited, my eyes never straying far from the flashing red light.
As we neared, my excitement began to grow. There was something very familiar about this town; the houses set too close to the road, the twisted curve of the trees, the rusty cars… This was it! This was the town the church was in! It had to be!
“I think it’s here guys,” I said. “It’s white and old and surrounded by pine trees.”
The speed limit dropped to thirty and Ruth slowed to forty. The houses and various establishments started to grow closer together.
“There’s a pine tree,” Charlotte said, pointing to her right at a small Methodist church. “Is that it?”
“Does that look abandoned?” I baulked. The small front lawn was mowed, the bushes were trimmed, and although it was a bit rundown, overall it looked well maintained.
“Well, it’s a church and there’s a fucking pine tree,” she countered. That was another thing about this road: there were nearly as many churches as there were houses and they were all small and inconsequential as though they had been built with the intent to be forgotten. “Look, there’s another pine tree.”
“That’s not even a church.”
“But it’s got a pine tree!”
“Shut-up! Where am I going!” Ruth cut in.
“I think it’s up here.” I was getting nervous again. We’d already passed through the intersection in the middle of town and were nearing the outskirts. The buildings were already beginning to thin again.
“Pine tree,” Charlotte said. “Pine tree,” she repeated a moment later.
“Church, Charlotte. Church.”
“Pine tree!”
“There!” I said. “That’s it! Right there!” I pointed through the front windshield. The old white church, exactly as I had described it, save for one thing, was coming up on our right.
“Where are all the fucking pine trees, Eh-leee-uh?” Charlotte asked as Ruth pulled up onto the shoulder. Her voice was tight with sarcasm.
“Well, there’s two pine trees,” I said.
“I thought it was surrounded?” We all got out of the car to survey the area.
“It is surrounded,” I said, mimicking her tone. I gestured to the church before us. “On one side.” And this time I spoke the truth. Two trees rose along it’s left side, sheltering it from the eastern wind that would otherwise have hammered it to near disrepair. These trees had been planted with purpose and now towered over the church itself to forever be its faithful companions.
Ruth walked around the front of the car to join us, her camera already slung around her neck—a loan from school for her photography class. She was nearly as eager to start snapping as she was to keep driving. I had my own tiny Kodak camera in my pocket.
She tucked a lock of her soft, black hair behind her ear. “Are you sure it’s abandon?” she asked. It was clearly no longer being used, but was in much better shape than most of the abandoned buildings we normally visited. Her eyes flickered to the house next to it.
“I think so,” I answered, already scrutinizing the same house. It looked nearly as rundown as the church and I would have thought it to be abandoned as well if not for the SUV parked in the thinning, torn-up gravel drive. The car worried me. Would someone see us and rat us out? Or, more importantly, did the church have caretakers? Did it matter?
“Let’s just go,” Ruth said. We’d driven all the way here and we all knew that we weren’t turning back now.
Together we started the short hike to the two tall and very green doors on the churches face. Save for a small circular window near the top of its pointed roof they were it’s only identifying features. We walked in step together, no one leading, no one following.
The church, like the road, was eerie in an unsuspecting way. It was dull, featureless, boring, but at the same time there was something disquieting about it, something that kept your senses alert, something that awoke the innate need in you to be cautious.
Maybe it was the lack of sunlight. It was a fact I hadn’t missed and was what set the church apart from the rest of the setting. There was no sun gracing it’s steps, brightening it’s front doors, lighting it’s face or sparkling through it’s lone window. It wasn’t exactly set in shadow it just wasn’t lit the same way everything else was. It was almost as if the sunlight itself was wary of it—not frightened, but wary, just as we were.
We reached a small set of basic stone steps that led to the doors and quickly ascended them. They had been worn over time and a couple spots had started to crumble, but were otherwise in good repair and we had no need to watch our footing.
We paused for a moment before the doors and glanced at each other. There was only one handle—one shot. We were entering new territory and we knew it. Most of the buildings we explored didn’t have doors and when we encountered ones that did, it was all too easy to push them open or find another way in. Sometimes we climbed through a window, sometimes we walked through holes where the walls had simply crumbled or rotted away, sometimes we broke through a rusted lock, but we weren’t going to have those options here. This door had to open and it had to do it of its own accord. We weren’t getting through it any other way.
Ruth pulled on the handle, but the door didn’t budge. Damn.
“Let me try,” I said, taking up position in front it. I pushed down on the little lever on the old brass doorknob with both thumbs and pulled for all I was worth. Nothing. Ruth tried once more, but to no avail. Locked, I thought. Shit.
“Let’s see if there’s another way in,” I suggested. A back door, I thought, hopeful. I skipped down the stairs and started for the left side of the church where the pine trees were. Ruth followed and took up pace at my side. I glanced back as we neared the corner of the building. Charlotte was still standing on the front steps.
“Come on,” I said. What was she waiting for?
“No. I’m not going.”
“What?” I said, completely exasperated.
“I’m—not—go—ing.”
In situations like these, Ruth and I normally had a very savvy way of just forcing her to do what we wanted through brute force—and by that point, it wasn’t beyond us to simply drag her around the side of the church with us—but we both knew that she wasn’t going to go without a fight. The commotion it would cause and her psychotic, high-pitched screams—developed over the years we spent waiting at the corner of the street during for the school bus every morning, screaming simply because we could—would definitely draw some unwanted attention.
“Just leave her,” Ruth said.
“Someone’s going to see you!” I said.
“I don’t care. I’m staying.”
Ruth and I turned around and continued to the corner of the church, growling our irritations to each other. Charlotte shouted something just as we were about to turn the corner, but I was far from giving her my attention by that point. She was being beyond irritating. What did get my attention was the fact that Ruth had suddenly lost pace with me and was no longer at my side. I turned around and was puzzled to see her hurrying back to the church doors.
“What is it?” I shouted down to her.
“She got it!” she shouted back.
“I got it!” Charlotte reiterated.
Figures, I thought. She was the smallest of us, the shortest and the youngest, and she was the one who got the door to open. I really shouldn’t have been surprised though. She had a knack for finding her way into places and finding her way out. If you put her in a maze she’d find her way out even before the rat.
By the time I reached the doors, Ruth and Charlotte were already peering inside.
“What’s in there?” I asked.
“I don’t know. I can’t see anything,” Charlotte answered. I saw that she had only pushed the door open a few inches.
“Well go inside.”
“No way.”
I let out an irritated huff of air and maneuvered to the front of our little group. I took a peek through the small crack and then carefully pushed the door open. It was heavy and opened slowly, but eventually the gap was big enough for me to fit through. I shimmied through the small opening and took a few cautious steps inside. I half expected to see someone waiting with a broom ready to chase me out, but no one was there.
The small entranceway I had stepped into was made completely of wood: wood floors, wood paneling, wood rafters… but I saw none of this. I saw only the room beyond and the red wall to wall carpeting that highlighted it. I guess this is where I’m supposed to make a creepy blood comparison, but nothing about this carpet was in the least bit creepy, and it was a far cry from the dark, pulsating red that’s normally associated with blood. This carpet looked like it was pulled right out of the seventies. It may even have been shag. And it looked surprisingly clean.
I walkedroom, entranced with not only the brightness of the carpet, but the brightness of the room in general. It wasn’t lit with sunlight or even manmade light, but it was bright nonetheless. We hadn’t seen any windows from outside and from where I stood I still couldn’t see any. Where was the light coming from? I took another step closer.
Ruth and Charlotte were standing in the partially opened door looking at me. “What’s in there?” Charlotte asked.
I didn’t answer; I wasn’t sure yet. My eyes continued to roam over the red room. It appeared to be big enough to hold mass in, but the idea seemed oddly out of place without any pews to fortify the image with. The room was completely empty.
Against the far wall opposite of me were two doorways, branching off into two different rooms. Perhaps there had once been a podium of sorts against the empty wall between these two rooms where the priest would give his sermons, but there was nothing now, just bright red carpeting.
The two rooms, however, were not empty. The one on the right looked as though it had been some type of kitchen and had cabinetry along the walls and the one on the left had an old vacuum cleaner in the doorway. It was the kind your grandmother might have—the kind that after fifty years would still be sucking away—the kind that you’d throw-out your back from just carrying around.
An uneasy feeling settled in the pit of my gut. Somehow I knew that we weren’t alone and it was more than just the vacuum and the coincidentally clean carpet. I could feel it in the air, sense it with my instincts, know it the same way you know when you are being watched. We weren’t alone.
“There’s a vacuum in here. I think someone’s here. Should we go back?”
“Let’s just look around,” Ruth said.
I took another step and the floor groaned a hideous wail. I looked down.
“Whooaaa,” I said, surprised. I looked back at the door. Charlotte and Ruth were making their way inside. “You guys! Be really careful. There’s a giant hole in the floor!” One more step and I would have fallen through it.
I then automatically looked up. It might seem like a strange thing to do considering that the hole was below me, but what normally creates a hole isn’t what is below it, it’s what is above it, and that’s often ten times more dangerous than the hole itself. Water could be leaking through the roof. The rafters could be rotted. The wood beams could be seconds away from collapsing in on us.
But the wood work above us looked to be in surprisingly good shape. There was no water damage, no cracked beams, no mold, no nothing. After scrutinizing the walls holding them up and deeming them safe as well, I bent down to take a closer look at the hole itself. It was big enough to throw a refrigerator through, maybe even two, and had an old wooden ladder descending into its extraordinarily dark belly. I expected to find the wood surrounding the hole rotting or brittle or in the least weakened, but it was just as strong as the rest of the floor. It was almost as if a giant had randomly decided to punch a hole through it.
“Oh man,” Ruth said, crouching down to peer in the hole with me.
“What’s in there?” Charlotte asked.
“I don’t know. It’s too dark.” I looked at Ruth and I know she saw that look in my eye. “Let’s go down there,” I said, a grin tugging up the left corner of my lips.
I’m not going down there!” Charlotte butt in.
“We should push her in,” Ruth suggested under her breath.
I stifled a chuckle. “Maybe if we knew she wouldn’t die from the fall.” We had no idea how deep it was. Was it five feet? Ten? Twenty? It was too dark to tell.
I took a deep breath and looked at the ladder, which was leaning almost too conveniently against the edge of the floor. Didn’t I think there was something odd about that? Of course I did, but you only get to live once and I’d much rather die while living than live like I’m dead. “Alright,” I said. “I’m going down.”
I walked over and manhandled it a bit to see if it was sturdy. It didn’t seem to weaken under my abusive treatment and what I could see of it before the darkness swallowed it appeared safe. Here goes, I thought.
I turned around and put my right foot on the third rung which was only a few inches deeper than the floor. Ruth and Charlotte both watched me attentively. What they were going to do if I fell, I wasn’t sure.
I then very carefully began shifting my weight from my left foot—the one planted firmly on the floor—to the one on the rung. I breathed slowly and moved with the utmost caution. When all of my weight had been completely transferred onto the ladder, I swung my left foot onto the rung and stood there for a moment, getting a good feel of it. It hadn’t creaked once and felt solid beneath my feet. I shook it a little and pulled it away from the floor a few inches, which startled Ruth and Charlotte, and then let it fall back into place.
“Jerk,” Ruth said.
I smiled. I hadn’t meant to scare them, but it was amusing nonetheless.
I shrugged my shoulders then. “It feels sturdy,” I said. I jumped on the rung a little and nothing happened.   I looked down below me, but still couldn’t see anything. “If you hear screaming though, that’s probably just me plummeting to my death.”
“Oh, okay,” Charlotte said. “I would have wondered.”
I chuckled and then slowly began to descend into the darkness.
 Copyright © 2012 by E.B. Mazza
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, and places are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is completely coincidental.