Here's the complete, edited version of my other story. I think it's funny. Hope you do too...
The winds of time blew. And a world was created. The winds blew. And the newborn world itself, gave birth to great continents that rose from the depths of the oceans. And the winds blew. The continents, in turn, gave birth to life. And man was born. And the winds blew. Man gave birth to civilization. And the winds became silent. This world was complete.
Birds chattered and animals made lazy noises at the river, deep in the jungles. A waterfall made a breathtaking backdrop to the scene; the kind of scenery that would have inspired anyone of a poetic nature to write, draw, or paint a masterpiece. If anybody would have been within a thousand miles, they might have. A great flash of light from high above startled the wildlife to a sudden alertness. The air shimmered, and then seemed to ripple, to bend. As if from a distance, a voice could be heard, "oooooooooooooohhhhhhhhhhhhhhh ssssshhhhhhhiiiiiiiiiIIIIIIIIIIIITTTTTTTTTTTTT!!!" WOOMPH! A body fell from the sky and landed in the pool, created by the beautiful waterfall. The animals of this particular region had their very first human encounter. They ran (which, incidentally, turned out to be a good idea for millenia to come). A figure slowly surfaced in the shimmering pond. A head broke the water and looked around. When he spoke, it was with a dry voice, in stark contrast to his soggy appearance. It was a voice like dried leaves scratching across a rough road. A timeless voice. A voice that held all emotions, and yet held none. A voice that was as gentle as a newborn baby, yet as rough as sandpaper in a sandstorm. The voice was ... ahem, well, anyway, this is what the voice said, as the figure looked around at the idyllic surroundings, "Great. Just freakin' great. Well, here we go again." That last was added with a heavy sigh, and the figure pulled itself out of the pond, helping itself with what appeared to be a long walking stick. Perhaps this would be the last time? Perhaps he could finally rest after this one? He doubted it, but still, some small spark of hope pushed it's way through the layers of doubt, and skepticism. Perhaps. The thought drifted away on the winds, as the figure walked it's lonely walk to civilization.
Micheal grimaced as he rubbed his foot. He was glad for the rest, the group of soldiors he had been assigned to had been patrolling hard for the last three days. This is hardly worth it, he thought to himself. Sure, CNN paid good money for jobs like this one, and the live coverage from the front lines made for good T.V., but there had been no action for three days; just endless marching. His cameraman came to sit beside him,
"How's it going, Mike? You think we'll see these Kentucky boys in action today?"
"Yeah, right! I think the only action we'll see is my feet swelling up like a couple a melons. I'm just about ready to say 'screw the pay', send my ass home, where I can cover a nice juicy story about... oh, I don't know, maybe a group of nymphos who are totally insatiable... and they loooove reporters!"
They both laughed about the thought.
"C'mon, Mike. I heard the sergeant say that he thought he saw somebody moving around at the top of this hill. Maybe it's the bad guys!"
"Mountain, Bob, it's a damn mountain. And there's nobody going to be crawling around on the side of a damn mountain. Trust me, the only thing out there is rocks, and more rocks."
A gruff yell came from the platoon leader, "LET"S ROLL OUT PEOPLE!"
"Great," said Mike, "Gary and Joe get to cover the bombing of Kabul, and we get stuck in the middle of nowhere, on a mountain, where I don't think anybody’s been for the last thousand years, with a guy who's watched 'Apocalypse Now' way too many times! Gung Ho army freak."
The two men laughed again as the platoon grabbed their gear, and continued the patrol.
"Halt! Who goes there?"
The voice whispered down the mountainside to startle the platoon. The sergeant gave a curt order, and his men spread out, taking cover and unslinging rifles. Mike's heart performed a series of somersaults; this is it! I'm going to get my story!
"Bob, are you rolling?"
"Affirmative, great leader."
The cameraman's voice sounded a little shaky too.
"Halt, I say. Who goes there?" The voice came again.
God, it sounded like...like...like dry leaves, rustling in the wind. With a timeless quality, with a slight echoing, that Mike didn't think came from the mountains. The voice was loud and firm, yet soft and giving. It was a voice to instill fear, yet, while giving confidence. It was a voice that.... Mike's thoughts were abruptly cut off as the sergeant yelled his reply. The sergeants voice was simply loud. "This is the United States Army. If you are with the rebel forces, come out with your weapon raised above your head, the magazine ejected and in your left hand. If you do not..."
The sergeant was cut off by the voice, "Very well, as you want it, so shall you have it."
The sergeant looked around at his men and shrugged. He got puzzled expressions in return. Damned if Mike knew what the voice meant, either. The sergeant repeated his demands, but no more reply came from the rocks above. Bob rolled film as the army men spread out and slowly advanced.
Mike stood by his cameraman, in breathless anticipation of the coming action. Hopefully there would be bloodshed, on either side. That always made for good T.V. A blur of motion caught Mike's eye. There, in the sparse bushes to the left. With no more warning then that, a spear hurtled out of the dried vegetation and impaled a soldier through the chest, the man gave one, short strangled yell, and was silent. The rest of the men turned as one, and with much profanity uttered, screamed, or yelled, proceeded to unload enough lead into the scrawny bush to satisfy 'Skillcraft no.2's ' requirements for a year.
The air filled with the acrid tang of cordite, and the guns fell silent. There wasn't much left of the little bush, and dried leaved still fell from the air all around. The soldiers all stared in silence until the sergeant's order came,
"Joe, get up there and see if we got the little sumbetch!"
"Yes sir!"
Joe scrambled up the small ledge and kicked the remains of the bush around.
"There's nothing up here, sir." He added with a grin, "but we killed the hell outta this shrub, sir!"
The grin left Joe's face as a spear came from underneath him, stabbing upwards. A look of horror spread across his face as he clasped his hands to his wound, and he slowly toppled sideways. The earth beneath where Riko had stood shook, and a figure emerged from the ground. Covered in dirt, it was hard to make out the details, but as the platoon stared in amazement, the figure leaped straight up into the air, spun at the top, and landed lightly on a ledge some ten feet above it. Then it launched another spear that punched through a kevlar flak vest, and took down another man. Again, a barrage of bullets spattered against the mountainside. Mike stared in horror at the dead men laid around him.
The sergeant, and his men, swore a lot more, and then proceeded up the trail to hunt the strange creature, and get their revenge. Bob started after them, but Mike grabbed his arm, "Bob, don't. I have a real bad feeling about this."
Bob shook his arm off, "What? Are you crazy? This is what I came out here for. C'mon, don't be a *****, man. Let's go."
But Mike couldn't. He stood at the trail, looking upwards to the action above. It didn't seem so glamorous as on T.V. he thought. The sound of gunfire streamed from above, and he heard more of those strangled yells of the wounded. Suddenly something shot over the side of the ledge and landed at Mike's feet with a wet plop. What the... Mike leaned closer, then spun away, retching and gagging as he realized what it was. He stared upwards again, and now he could make out quite a lot more body parts flying through the air. Like wood going through a chipper, he thought grimly. What the hell could be doing that? He decided to get the hell out of there, but as he turned to run, the strange figure landed lightly in front of him. Mike fainted.
The world slowly came into focus. Mike looked around as he sat up with a jerk. "What the...", he saw the strange figure sitting on a rock, staring at him. "Where am I?" The figure simply stared at him. As Mark's vision returned more fully, he could see that the figure was nothing more than an old man. A very old man, judging by the length of his beard! The thing put 'ZZ Top' to shame, reaching all the way to the floor, and then curling up. The old man stared at him from under thick bushy eyebrows that drooped down the side of his face to his cheek. He looked for all the world like some kind of... primitive caveman! But that stare! It was a stare to chill the blood in your veins. It was a look so full of knowledge, and wisdom, yet innocence and foolishness. It was a glare that outshone the sun itself, while being as dark as the night sky, on a cloudy night. With no stars in the sky. And no moon either. Or streetlights. It was a stare to stop time in its tracks, yet....
Mark shook his head, and tried again, "I said, who are you and where am I?" The old man stared at him even harder. "Goddammit! Answer me, you freak! Answer me, I say. CAN YOU EVEN UNDERSTAND ME?"
Hmmm, maybe this caveman only understood 'Halt, who goes there', Mark thought, like a taught phrase, that he doesn't understand. "Look, I am a huuummmannnn." He drew the word out, speaking loudly and slowly as if that would make the caveman understand. "I come from a world more technological than you. That makes me superior. Suuuppperrriiooooor! DO you understand?". Mark almost jumped when the old man answered.
"Yes! I can understand you, you idiot. I merely had my mouth full. It is dinnertime, you know. Sheesh!"
Mark saw that the caveman had a microwave dinner by his side.
"And as for you being more 'technologically' advanced, you moron, check this out..."
He pulled something out from his robe and held it up. A small flame appeared. "Yes, that's right. It's called 'fire', fiiiiiirrrrreeeee'", the old man used the same long, drawn out pronounciation as Mark had used.
Mark stared at him. "Ummmm, that's just a lighter, right?"
The caveman looked dejected as he put his lighter away, mumbling something under his breath. Mark thought he heard, smartass reporters, or something like that.
Mark decided to try a different approach, "Look, my name is Mark. I am a reporter for CNN. What's your name?"
The old man drew himself up, grandly. The pose he struck was a pose to inspire terror, yet instill peace. It was a stance to....
"Oh no you don't," Mark interrupted.
"What?"
"You're getting all...you know....descriptive, again."
The old man shifted his eyes nervously, "What are you talking about?"
"Like that thing you do with your voice. You know, when you try to sound like Clint Eastwood, or something and you get all...'soft, yet firm', and stuff."
The old man exploded, "AAARRRGGHHH! Clint freakin' Eastwood stole that voice from me! Me! I was here first, you simpleton! I've been here since the birth of this wretched worl....oops."
He clamped a bony hand to his mouth, but it was too late.
The winds of time blew. And a world was created. The winds blew. And the newborn world itself, gave birth to great continents that rose from the depths of the oceans. And the winds blew. The continents, in turn, gave birth to life. And man was born. And the winds blew. Man gave birth to civilization. And the winds became silent. This world was complete.
Birds chattered and animals made lazy noises at the river, deep in the jungles. A waterfall made a breathtaking backdrop to the scene; the kind of scenery that would have inspired anyone of a poetic nature to write, draw, or paint a masterpiece. If anybody would have been within a thousand miles, they might have. A great flash of light from high above startled the wildlife to a sudden alertness. The air shimmered, and then seemed to ripple, to bend. As if from a distance, a voice could be heard, "oooooooooooooohhhhhhhhhhhhhhh ssssshhhhhhhiiiiiiiiiIIIIIIIIIIIITTTTTTTTTTTTT!!!" WOOMPH! A body fell from the sky and landed in the pool, created by the beautiful waterfall. The animals of this particular region had their very first human encounter. They ran (which, incidentally, turned out to be a good idea for millenia to come). A figure slowly surfaced in the shimmering pond. A head broke the water and looked around. When he spoke, it was with a dry voice, in stark contrast to his soggy appearance. It was a voice like dried leaves scratching across a rough road. A timeless voice. A voice that held all emotions, and yet held none. A voice that was as gentle as a newborn baby, yet as rough as sandpaper in a sandstorm. The voice was ... ahem, well, anyway, this is what the voice said, as the figure looked around at the idyllic surroundings, "Great. Just freakin' great. Well, here we go again." That last was added with a heavy sigh, and the figure pulled itself out of the pond, helping itself with what appeared to be a long walking stick. Perhaps this would be the last time? Perhaps he could finally rest after this one? He doubted it, but still, some small spark of hope pushed it's way through the layers of doubt, and skepticism. Perhaps. The thought drifted away on the winds, as the figure walked it's lonely walk to civilization.
Micheal grimaced as he rubbed his foot. He was glad for the rest, the group of soldiors he had been assigned to had been patrolling hard for the last three days. This is hardly worth it, he thought to himself. Sure, CNN paid good money for jobs like this one, and the live coverage from the front lines made for good T.V., but there had been no action for three days; just endless marching. His cameraman came to sit beside him,
"How's it going, Mike? You think we'll see these Kentucky boys in action today?"
"Yeah, right! I think the only action we'll see is my feet swelling up like a couple a melons. I'm just about ready to say 'screw the pay', send my ass home, where I can cover a nice juicy story about... oh, I don't know, maybe a group of nymphos who are totally insatiable... and they loooove reporters!"
They both laughed about the thought.
"C'mon, Mike. I heard the sergeant say that he thought he saw somebody moving around at the top of this hill. Maybe it's the bad guys!"
"Mountain, Bob, it's a damn mountain. And there's nobody going to be crawling around on the side of a damn mountain. Trust me, the only thing out there is rocks, and more rocks."
A gruff yell came from the platoon leader, "LET"S ROLL OUT PEOPLE!"
"Great," said Mike, "Gary and Joe get to cover the bombing of Kabul, and we get stuck in the middle of nowhere, on a mountain, where I don't think anybody’s been for the last thousand years, with a guy who's watched 'Apocalypse Now' way too many times! Gung Ho army freak."
The two men laughed again as the platoon grabbed their gear, and continued the patrol.
"Halt! Who goes there?"
The voice whispered down the mountainside to startle the platoon. The sergeant gave a curt order, and his men spread out, taking cover and unslinging rifles. Mike's heart performed a series of somersaults; this is it! I'm going to get my story!
"Bob, are you rolling?"
"Affirmative, great leader."
The cameraman's voice sounded a little shaky too.
"Halt, I say. Who goes there?" The voice came again.
God, it sounded like...like...like dry leaves, rustling in the wind. With a timeless quality, with a slight echoing, that Mike didn't think came from the mountains. The voice was loud and firm, yet soft and giving. It was a voice to instill fear, yet, while giving confidence. It was a voice that.... Mike's thoughts were abruptly cut off as the sergeant yelled his reply. The sergeants voice was simply loud. "This is the United States Army. If you are with the rebel forces, come out with your weapon raised above your head, the magazine ejected and in your left hand. If you do not..."
The sergeant was cut off by the voice, "Very well, as you want it, so shall you have it."
The sergeant looked around at his men and shrugged. He got puzzled expressions in return. Damned if Mike knew what the voice meant, either. The sergeant repeated his demands, but no more reply came from the rocks above. Bob rolled film as the army men spread out and slowly advanced.
Mike stood by his cameraman, in breathless anticipation of the coming action. Hopefully there would be bloodshed, on either side. That always made for good T.V. A blur of motion caught Mike's eye. There, in the sparse bushes to the left. With no more warning then that, a spear hurtled out of the dried vegetation and impaled a soldier through the chest, the man gave one, short strangled yell, and was silent. The rest of the men turned as one, and with much profanity uttered, screamed, or yelled, proceeded to unload enough lead into the scrawny bush to satisfy 'Skillcraft no.2's ' requirements for a year.
The air filled with the acrid tang of cordite, and the guns fell silent. There wasn't much left of the little bush, and dried leaved still fell from the air all around. The soldiers all stared in silence until the sergeant's order came,
"Joe, get up there and see if we got the little sumbetch!"
"Yes sir!"
Joe scrambled up the small ledge and kicked the remains of the bush around.
"There's nothing up here, sir." He added with a grin, "but we killed the hell outta this shrub, sir!"
The grin left Joe's face as a spear came from underneath him, stabbing upwards. A look of horror spread across his face as he clasped his hands to his wound, and he slowly toppled sideways. The earth beneath where Riko had stood shook, and a figure emerged from the ground. Covered in dirt, it was hard to make out the details, but as the platoon stared in amazement, the figure leaped straight up into the air, spun at the top, and landed lightly on a ledge some ten feet above it. Then it launched another spear that punched through a kevlar flak vest, and took down another man. Again, a barrage of bullets spattered against the mountainside. Mike stared in horror at the dead men laid around him.
The sergeant, and his men, swore a lot more, and then proceeded up the trail to hunt the strange creature, and get their revenge. Bob started after them, but Mike grabbed his arm, "Bob, don't. I have a real bad feeling about this."
Bob shook his arm off, "What? Are you crazy? This is what I came out here for. C'mon, don't be a *****, man. Let's go."
But Mike couldn't. He stood at the trail, looking upwards to the action above. It didn't seem so glamorous as on T.V. he thought. The sound of gunfire streamed from above, and he heard more of those strangled yells of the wounded. Suddenly something shot over the side of the ledge and landed at Mike's feet with a wet plop. What the... Mike leaned closer, then spun away, retching and gagging as he realized what it was. He stared upwards again, and now he could make out quite a lot more body parts flying through the air. Like wood going through a chipper, he thought grimly. What the hell could be doing that? He decided to get the hell out of there, but as he turned to run, the strange figure landed lightly in front of him. Mike fainted.
The world slowly came into focus. Mike looked around as he sat up with a jerk. "What the...", he saw the strange figure sitting on a rock, staring at him. "Where am I?" The figure simply stared at him. As Mark's vision returned more fully, he could see that the figure was nothing more than an old man. A very old man, judging by the length of his beard! The thing put 'ZZ Top' to shame, reaching all the way to the floor, and then curling up. The old man stared at him from under thick bushy eyebrows that drooped down the side of his face to his cheek. He looked for all the world like some kind of... primitive caveman! But that stare! It was a stare to chill the blood in your veins. It was a look so full of knowledge, and wisdom, yet innocence and foolishness. It was a glare that outshone the sun itself, while being as dark as the night sky, on a cloudy night. With no stars in the sky. And no moon either. Or streetlights. It was a stare to stop time in its tracks, yet....
Mark shook his head, and tried again, "I said, who are you and where am I?" The old man stared at him even harder. "Goddammit! Answer me, you freak! Answer me, I say. CAN YOU EVEN UNDERSTAND ME?"
Hmmm, maybe this caveman only understood 'Halt, who goes there', Mark thought, like a taught phrase, that he doesn't understand. "Look, I am a huuummmannnn." He drew the word out, speaking loudly and slowly as if that would make the caveman understand. "I come from a world more technological than you. That makes me superior. Suuuppperrriiooooor! DO you understand?". Mark almost jumped when the old man answered.
"Yes! I can understand you, you idiot. I merely had my mouth full. It is dinnertime, you know. Sheesh!"
Mark saw that the caveman had a microwave dinner by his side.
"And as for you being more 'technologically' advanced, you moron, check this out..."
He pulled something out from his robe and held it up. A small flame appeared. "Yes, that's right. It's called 'fire', fiiiiiirrrrreeeee'", the old man used the same long, drawn out pronounciation as Mark had used.
Mark stared at him. "Ummmm, that's just a lighter, right?"
The caveman looked dejected as he put his lighter away, mumbling something under his breath. Mark thought he heard, smartass reporters, or something like that.
Mark decided to try a different approach, "Look, my name is Mark. I am a reporter for CNN. What's your name?"
The old man drew himself up, grandly. The pose he struck was a pose to inspire terror, yet instill peace. It was a stance to....
"Oh no you don't," Mark interrupted.
"What?"
"You're getting all...you know....descriptive, again."
The old man shifted his eyes nervously, "What are you talking about?"
"Like that thing you do with your voice. You know, when you try to sound like Clint Eastwood, or something and you get all...'soft, yet firm', and stuff."
The old man exploded, "AAARRRGGHHH! Clint freakin' Eastwood stole that voice from me! Me! I was here first, you simpleton! I've been here since the birth of this wretched worl....oops."
He clamped a bony hand to his mouth, but it was too late.
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