Copyright
Β©
2018 - This is an original work by Zeb Carter and is protected under copyright by U.S. copyright law. It is only submitted at Literotica.Com and any submission to any other site has not been authorized by the Author.
Author's Note
: This is another short one with no sex. It's not really complete, it's more of a vignette, somewhere in the middle of the bigger picture. This short story inspired one much longer but without the high tech stuff. Enjoy.
When Darkness Falls
I sat in the corner of the room hoping not to draw attention to myself as the flickering embers in the fireplace warmed the hearth. I was tired, so tired I could hardly keep my eyes open as I watched the others in the room around me. I did not want to deal with anyone just now and I did not want to be alone. I just wanted to sleep, sweet, peaceful sleep. Rudy, my dog, lay next to me, his heavy head on my thigh.
I closed my eyes as the crowd settled down. Susan sat at the table closest to me as she ate and drank. From experience, I knew the food was cold and the ale warm, a poor combination, but when you are hungry almost anything is palatable. Susan was now my guardian, as I had been hers earlier in the day. She would stay awake and make sure nobody bothered me while I slept.
These thoughts crowded my mind as the blackness of sleep floated me away from the harsh and tumulus times in which we now lived.
* * * *
"Cap, Cappy wake the fuck up." I heard Susan say. It sounded like she was across the room, but when I opened my eyes her beautiful face floated before me. I don't know how long I had been asleep but it hadn't been long enough.
"Are you awake Cap?"
"Yeah, yeah, I'm awake. How long was I asleep?" Rudy was nuzzling my neck as Susan helped me to my feet.
"Not long enough, twenty minutes."
"What's the problem?"
"We have to go! Ellison and his men are on the outskirts of town."
"Right." I gathered my things as Susan watched out the window.
Ellison had been on our tail for the past week and seemed to be able to find us no matter where we went. It was almost magical, except neither Sue nor I believed in magic. It was time to end this but this was not the place. Feeling myself at different points on my person helped me determine if I was missing anything. It felt like I had everything.
Turning I looked out the front window and not two hundred meters down the street was Ellison with his men. Sue shook her head and turned to the back door of the building we were in, a makeshift eatery. Pushing open the back door Sue led the way down the alley. Neither of us talked as we concentrated on making our way out of the alley, out into the wilderness where Ellison seemed to have a harder time catching up to us. Rudy sprinted past Sue to lead the way.
Ten minutes after leaving New Carbondale, we were deep into the Shawnee National Forest. Three miles from our current position was a cabin that not many people knew about. However, before we got there I had to find out how Ellison was tracking us.
"Sue, hold up a minute," I shouted. Sue turned looking at me quizzically. I caught up with her and put my arm around her shoulders. It was not very cold out but we were both glad for our fur parkas and parka pants. Rudy came sprinting back to check on us.
"Guard," I told him. He turned and disappeared into the woods.
I knelt down in the snow as I shrugged my pack off. Flipping the flap open, I rummaged around inside pulling out a sweeper. Extending the antenna, I pressed the button on the front panel. I waved the antenna in front of Sue. She raised her arms and started to turn slowly in front of me. She completed a turn without a telltale squeak from the sweeper.
I handed it to Sue who did the same to me, also no squeak. I took the thing from Sue and waved it over my pack. A squeal from the sweeper shocked both of us. Turning the dial on the sweeper, I swung the antenna in small arcs around my pack. Kicking it over, I swept the bottom. There on the bottom right corner was a circular tab of some foreign material that looked like some sort of a flattened mud ball. I pulled it free with little effort stood looking around the woods.
Not fifty feet from where we stood there was an opening in the ground. It probably led into some caverns, which ran under this area of what used to be Illinois. Walking over to the opening, I threw the tab down the hole. I went back and swept my pack again. Clean. Collapsing the antenna, I put the sweeper away. How Ellison had tagged me was now the question on my mind.
I picked up my pack and shouldered it nodding to Susan to go. She started in the direction of the cabin at a slow pace. I pulled a branch from a nearby tree and swept our tracks out of existence as I backed down the path Susan was following. After about a hundred yards, I threw the branch into the woods, turned and followed Sue.
I whistled once and Rudy came bounding out of the woods, past Susan, to take up the lead. For the next twenty minutes, I kept watch over my shoulder, wondering if Ellison would finally catch up with us. After thirty minutes and no Ellison, I relaxed and plodded ahead through the snow.
Several times on our trek, Rudy came trotting back to check on Sue and me. Then he was off into the woods. After an hour and a half, Susan and I stood in the woods that surrounded the cabin. Rudy had circled around through the woods and was swiftly running up to the cabin on the blind side, where the chimney was.
There was no smoke from the chimney and no light from within the cabin, which was not remarkable in itself. The snow around the cabin marred only by animal tracks. Looking through my binoculars I checked the tell tails I had left last time we were here. All were in place. Susan and I watched as Rudy circled the cabin finishing on the porch by the front door. He sat patiently waiting for us to come in from the cold.
As Rudy was satisfied with the safety of the cabin, I had no choice but to accept his decision. I led Sue to the porch and disarming the security devices, opened the door. Rudy flashed past me into the cabin. A sudden growl from him and I was on my belly. I had pushed Susan back off the porch where she lay belly up in the snow.
I heard a squeal of surprise and pain, not from a human throat, but that of another animal. As I got to my feet and entered the cabin, I saw Rudy had a small wild boar by the throat, under the table. As I watched the life went out of the eyes of the boar.
"Outside Rudy," I commanded.
Rudy dragged the dead boar out the door stopping on the porch where he dropped the animal. Susan gasped from her sitting position in the snow.
"Dinner, provide to you by Rudy," I told her laughing.
I stepped off the porch and helped her to her feet. She threw her arms around me and hugged me. I kissed her cheek as she let go.
"Why don't you go in and start a fire while I butcher the hog."
"Okay."
"Good boy," I said to Rudy as I stepped back onto the porch. "Protect."
Rudy bounded off the porch and into the woods to watch for anyone who might get nosy. Pulling my knife, I started in on the hog.