"Turn left," the GPS' nasally voice said, as Tatiana approached the corner. She turned slowly around the bend, peering around at the wilderness. All she had wanted was to go for a hike on her Saturday off, and instead she had gotten lost. She thought the drive was relatively easy, when she had looked at Google Maps the night before, with most of the drive along the freeway, before taking Exit 16, which she had done, and then a left at the second roundabout, which she had also done. But now, according to her GPS, she had managed to drive past the start of the hiking trail, and after an awkward U-turn was still hopelessly lost.
"Turn right in 500 metres," the GPS instructed. Tatiana slowed, but she couldn't see a right turn. She slowed right down to a crawl, as the GPS told her to turn right. There was no right turn, only trees that seemed to press closely in on themselves. She cursed under her breath and kept following the road.
"Perform a U-turn when possible," the GPS barked at her. It always seemed to her that the lady in the GPS sounded irritated when it told her to perform a U-turn, and she turned the volume on the GPS down. The road was too narrow and twisted to perform a U-turn safely, Tatiana decided. She kept driving ahead, turning around the left bend slowly. She was cautious of other drivers, but the road seemed to be deserted.
"Perform a U-turn when possible," the GPS repeated.
"Shut up," Tatiana muttered back. What a waste of money, she thought to herself. Brand new, and it had gotten her lost.
Still, the view was nice at least. The forest seemed to press tightly in on her, urging her forward along the road. All roads had to lead somewhere, she reasoned to herself, and when she got to that somewhere, she could turn around and try again. She turned another bend to the left, and then another to the right -- or was it to the left again?
"GPS signal lost," her GPS chirped up, the screen glitching.
She was truly lost. Fortunately, she had left early, so there was still plenty of daylight hours for her to find her way home. She just had to keep following this road, until she came out the other side of the forest or found a safe place to do a U-turn.
There were worse things than going for a scenic drive, with a playlist of her favourite songs to keep her company. If she was lucky, Tatiana reasoned to herself, she might still get time to go for that hike if she manages to find her way to the trail. Her stomach grumbled and she hoped she found the trail soon.
She turned another bend before skidding to a stop. The road abruptly ended, turning to a narrow, wooden bridge across a creek. On the other side of the bridge was a footpath, snaking up into the forest. Tatiana cursed to herself and turned her car off. She felt like a dark cloud was hanging over her and she resolved to improve it by eating the sandwich in her backpack and seeing if her phone's map could help.
She pulled her peanut butter and banana sandwich out of her backpack, and holding a triangle in one hand, turned her phone on with the other. She took a bite and let out a heavy sigh as the phone's screen lit up. She checked her signal -- Emergency Calls only. She clicked the screen off, and angrily tore into her sandwich. She cranked her window down, and let the warm summer breeze in. The sound of birds kept her company as she ate her sandwich in her car, taking a swig from her drink bottle. At least it was a beautiful forest. The babbling of the creek seemed to soothe most of the foul mood away. With food in her belly, and the peacefulness of the forest around her, she felt more at ease. She would reverse out and follow the road back. She just needed to do a three-point turn, and it would be fine. Tatiana looked around her surroundings. It would probably need to be more than three-points, but at least there was no one around to watch her bad driving. She turned the key in the ignition, and her car sputtered.
"No, no, no, no, no," Tatiana said, desperately trying to get her car to turn on. It briefly came to life, only to reveal the frantic blinking of the fuel light, and the fuel gage at empty. "You've got to be kidding me!"
She was certain she had filled it up that morning, in preparation for her drive. She got up out of her car angrily, how had she not noticed a leak in her fuel tank? Tatiana inspected underneath her car but found no evidence of a leak. No smell of petrol, nothing on the ground underneath her car. She kicked a tyre in frustration.
No signal, no car, a broken GPS, and no idea where she even was. She could walk back the way she came, but as she looked down the road a chill seemed to creep up her spine at the thought. The gravel road twisted and turned, and the trees loomed menacingly. She hadn't noticed how tall the trees were, or the way their branches seemed to bend out towards her like claws.
Ahead was the wooden bridge and the path. She could follow the winding path upwards, and hopefully find a signal. Tatiana bit her lip as she pondered her options. What were people supposed to do in this situation? Stay where they are so that it would be easier to find them? That probably only helps if people know you're lost, she reasoned to herself. But her parents were accustomed to her not texting for days, and she'd just broken up with her boyfriend so she doubted he would notice her going dark on social media. Maybe her colleagues would notice? But she didn't work for another three days, so that likely wasn't going to do much good for the immediate short term. Besides, Tatiana reasoned, this path had to lead somewhere, right?
A rustling noise in the trees behind her startled her, and she whipped around. Her blue eyes frantically searched the forest line, but she saw nothing lurking in the trees. It was probably just a bird, or a rabbit, or a fox. Hopefully nothing bigger.
She took a deep, steadying breath. She didn't want to stay here. She didn't want to walk back the way she came. If she followed the path, she was sure to end up somewhere safe. She knew that she would, as surely as she knew her own name. She wasn't sure how she knew, but she could feel something pulling her down that path.
She grabbed her backpack and keys, cranked up the window, and locked her car. Not that there was anything worth stealing in her car, but she'd rather be safe than sorry. She cast one last glance behind her at the road that had brought her here and shuddered at the sight of the trees stretching towards her with their horrible claws.
Determined, she stepped onto the wooden bridge. A calm feeling swept over her, assuring her that she made the right choice. She kept walking, her backpack snug. The forest offered leafy shade, as she crossed over the creek and made her way along the path. It ascended at first, and Tatiana took her time to admire the nature around her. If nothing else, she could at least enjoy her walk.
The path continued its upwards climb for a while, and Tatiana soon found herself running out of breath. Her legs burned, but just as she was beginning to think about turning back around the path straightened out. She paused to take a drink from her bottle and enjoy the scenery. It was shady, and forest flowers covered the ground around the path. The setting sun cast long shadows and an orange glow on the forest. Tatiana did a double take, surely the sun wasn't setting already? She checked her phone for reception -- still nothing and the battery was getting dangerously low. She turned around to return to her car, but she couldn't see the path. When had she strayed off the path? Tatiana frowned.
The sun was setting quickly now, how had it gotten so late so quickly? Panic began to set in, and she felt her chest grow tight with anxiety. She swallowed nervously and looked around. Trees surrounded her, and she could hear creatures skittering and scurrying. She could hear the babbling of water, if she found the creek again, she could follow it out of the forest. Tatiana did her best to follow the noise, stumbling over the gnarled roots of the trees. Her boots slipped over a rock, and she felt herself falling and tumbling down a small slope.
Twigs and rocks scraped her arms and bare legs, grazing and bruising her, and she cursed herself for choosing to wear shorts instead of something longer that might have protected her skin better. She pulled herself into a sitting position. It was getting harder and harder to see, and she pulled out her phone. It buzzed in her hand, signalling it turning off due to the critically low battery.