Welcome to Chapter 5.
A quick thanks to my amazing editing team. Your grasp of the English language allows these stories to be what they are. Thank you to the rest of you for your comments, feedback, and high ratings for each chapter as well.
Now, on with the story.
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The morning had dawned in much the same way I imagined it had done on the Island for centuries. The crisp morning breeze drifted inland from the endless expanse of the Pacific, and the tropical birds in the trees sang their greetings to the rising sun. The soft winds were hardly cold; they were just that perfect degree cooler than the ambient air that wafted lazily around my skin as we climbed the path next to the waterfall and up into the clifftop. The gentle mists of the cascading falls were infuriatingly pleasant, and our group slowed to a near stop to enjoy them for as long as possible.
Everyone in the group had been outfitted with a sling made out of tied-together shirts, and each sling held a few bottles of water and some food. Liz had been clear that she hadn't seen many fruit trees on her last trip inland.
It was an odd revelation. Since arriving on the Island, I had never been further away from our landing area than the point where I had been woken this morning, just on the other side of the lake. But looking back over the area that had been my home for the past four days, I realized just how small it was. From this elevated position, it looked like the distance from the orange life raft on the beach was little more than two football field's length away from the waterfall; it only took as long as it did to walk from one to the other because most of the trek was spent walking around trees. As the bird flew, the two points were surprisingly close to each other. From this height, I realized that I had not even explored the entire beach.
"Looks like Steve is back," Liz said as she stood beside me, nodding to the dark shape sliding effortlessly through the water just beyond the shallows.
"Yeah, that greedy asshole has been fed every time he has turned up here," Ray said, looking back over his shoulder as he climbed up the last of the path. The rest of our group was strung out along the path behind him. I could already hear the giggles of my girls as Hayley and Robyn recounted the previous evening's festivities. "He is gonna keep coming back if he keeps finding food, and he is gonna get fat." He finished.
"Blackbird Betty," Liz chuckled to herself. Ray and I just looked at her questioningly. "Sorry, something from my college years."
"Well, we have time," I said. "Tell us about it."
Liz giggled again, subtly inching a little closer to me. "Okay, there was this goth chick when I was in college. Her name was Betty; she was a lovely girl. Every morning she would walk from her dorm to class, and on the way, she would stop at this bench and feed the birds. Crows and Blackbirds, mostly."
"You shouldn't do that," Zoe or Caroline said slightly breathlessly as they joined us from their ascent up the path. "Those birds are crazy smart. They can remember human faces."
Liz laughed again. "Funny you should say that because that's exactly what happened. After a few weeks, the birds would be there waiting for her, and the flock got bigger over time. Eventually, they sort of back-followed her to find out where she lived. By the end of the first semester, she would wake up every morning to find a flock of Blackbirds waiting outside her dorm for her, and they would follow her to school. It was like something out of
The Omen.
A goth chick walking through the park with a sky full of crows following after her. It freaked a lot of people out, which she thought was hilarious.
I chuckled, but Ray shook his head. "Yeah, I'd rather not turn a fifteen-foot Tiger Shark into a conditioned pet. All things considered, I'd rather have a dog."
"Ewww," Caroline or Zoe said, pressing into the other side of Ray. "I'd rather have a cat. I don't like dogs."
Ray just looked at her. "Nope, sorry, that's a deal breaker," he teased. "It was a good run, high fives all around, but I'm definitely a dog person. I don't trust anyone who doesn't like dogs."
I nodded in agreement, laughing along with Liz.
The four girls in my group, along with a smirking Amy, topped the path and joined us, only Tom and Louisa still making the climb behind them. "What has you all looking so happy?" I chuckled, looking at them.
"Oh, just hearing about your escapades last night," Amy smirked a little wider.
"What about you?" Hayley grinned, sliding in beside me and changing the subject. "What are
you
talking about?"
"What would you prefer as a pet: cats, dogs, or sharks?" I asked as my arm slid almost subconsciously around her.
"Sharks?" Hannah blinked, glancing out over the treetops toward the sea as she stood on the other side of Hayley.
"Is that an option?" Katie asked.
"Apparently," I shrugged with another laugh.
"Um, yeah, I'm gonna go with a dog," Katie said slowly as if she was trying to avoid a trick question.
"Me too," said pretty much everybody else, apart from whichever of the Zoe/Caroline twin-like girls hadn't suggested a cat in the first place. She opted for cats, too, unsurprisingly.
"Alright, I give up," I said, turning to Ray's companions. "Are you two related or something?"
"Err, no, why?" One of them answered.
"Are you sure? I'm sorry if I offend you, but I honestly can't tell you apart. You look almost exactly the same."
The two of them looked at each other appraisingly. "No, we don't," one of them said. I had officially given up trying to guess which one of them it was. "She's got darker hair."
"And her eyes are green. Mine are hazel," The other said.
"And her boobs are bigger." the first one said again.
Ray and I looked at each other. He was standing between and slightly behind them, his eyes flicking back and forth between them before raising to mine, giving a comical little wince and shaking his head.
"So... what you are saying..." I squinted at them, unsure that
any
of those observations were true, or at least not dramatically different enough to be helpful, "...is that the only way I am going to be able to tell you apart is if you are standing right next to each other and I am comparing your chests?"
One of them rolled her eyes as the other girls giggled. "What? Do we need name tags?"
"Yes, that would be very helpful, thank you," I grinned.
"You can tell us apart, can't you, baby?" One of them purred, turning and pressing herself against Ray.
Ray glanced nervously at me. His eyes flashed to mine for half a heartbeat before going back to her. The look in them was unmistakable. He had no idea which one was which. "You are both gorgeous to me," he grinned. I snorted loudly.
"Good answer," one of the newly-named twins giggled before kissing him.
"I can't believe she bought that," Liz whispered with a giggle of her own. "Okay, c'mon. Time is a-wasting."
Tom and Louisa were last up the cliffside pass, not through being slow or unfit or anything else like that. They were simply lost in conversation and were happy in just each other's company. With neither of them needing a break or a rest, Liz turned the group to follow the river inland.
Looking back towards the sea, I was able to see the entirety of my existence for the last four days, but looking inland was like gazing upon a new world. The only thing I could compare it to, in my admittedly limited experience, was looking out across the Serengeti, the great plains of Africa. Long grass, the occasional copse of trees dotted around, and the winding, calm, crystal clear river snaking its way between the foothills to our left. The land was almost perfectly flat around the ancient volcano, like the harsh ocean winds and wild Pacific storms had scoured any character from the landscape. It was only the lack of roaming wildebeest and grazing gazelles that reminded me of where we really were.
What was most surprising, however, was the size of it all. Liz had been anything but inarticulate in her description, but a statement like "it is about four or five miles across" will only ever be an abstract concept until you see it for yourself. The mountains blocked out our view to the left, but straight ahead and to our right, the land seemed to yawn out forever. I could make out the hazy shadows of hills to the far right, but without consciously reminding myself that the land was swallowed up by the ocean just beyond it, it was very easy to think that it just kept going. Straight ahead was a different story. The grasslands, as Liz had termed this part of the Island, entirely engulfed the SouthWest part of it. The winds seemed to forbid the growth of anything other than the most resilient of trees, but beyond that, in the shadow of the mountain where those wind currents were deflected by the slopes, the darker green outline of thick forests covered the entire northern horizon.
If I believed in that work of fiction, otherwise known as the bible, I would have said we had washed up on the shores of the Garden of Eden.
Well, if Eden was devoid of any form of land-dwelling life.