《Under Wicked Sky》2. The Car Crash
Advertisement
Clarissa
By the time I stomped on the brakes, it was already too late. The back of the old-style, wood-paneled station wagon in front of me was too close, and I was going too fast.
My sedan's brakes locked, the tires screeched, and the steering wheel became unmovable under my hands.
It’s not fair, I thought nonsensically. I just got my license—
My sedan rear-ended the station wagon with a crunch of metal and plastic. I jolted against the seatbelt and my right knee smacked the underside of the dashboard hard enough to bruise.
I barely had time to process it, my first car crash, before more tires squealed behind me. I caught a glimpse of an oncoming pickup truck looming large in the rear-view mirror. It struck. My car lurched forward with another snap-crunch of metal.
My little brother, Ben, screamed from the back seat. Above his voice came more screeching tires and smashing glass. Vehicles all around us struck each other in a chain reaction. Our poor sedan shook from the force of collisions up and down the line.
After what felt like an eternity, the jolts stopped. I unclenched my white-knuckled fingers from the steering wheel and took a quick self-assessment. Believe it or not, I didn’t think I was injured. At least, I didn’t see any blood and nothing hurt too badly. That was a good thing, right? The airbag hadn’t even gone off, although the hood of my sedan was buckled like crumpled paper.
I turned to the back seat. “You okay?”
Ben’s blue eyes were wide. “Wow, Clarissa. I think you killed the car.”
Yeah, he was fine. My little brother was a wannabe skateboarder, and made of fifty percent rubber. I’ve seen him trip off his board and roll down a flight of cement stairs just to bounce back up once he reached the bottom.
“That’s not funny,” I told him. Mom was going to be so angry with me. This was our family’s only car.
Then I started to get angry. Why had someone stopped right in front of me in the middle of the freaking highway, anyway?
I unbuckled my seatbelt and looked around. Thick steam poured from the engine and obscured what the scrunched hood didn’t hide. None of this had been covered in my drivers ed class. Was I supposed to call 911?
Then another thought hit me: Logging trucks traveled this road all the time. What if one came around the corner, couldn’t stop, and plowed into us?
Advertisement
“Grab your backpack,” I told Ben. “I don’t think we should stay in the car.”
The driver’s side door hadn’t been damaged. I got out, helped Ben climb free, and stood to look around.
Highway 50 was a two-lane mountain road. Normally, there wasn’t much traffic. Now it had turned into a field of stopped cars in both directions. Gray smoke from multiple engines created a thick haze that drifted through the forest lining either side of the road.
A few people, mostly teenagers around my age, had gotten out of their cars, too. I wasn’t the only one who looked confused.
High, shrill cries filtered in through somewhere in the smoky haze. People were probably hurt. A lot of people. Turning to Ben, I was about to tell him to stay in the car after all—he didn’t need to see this—when a scared voice cut through the air.
“Mommy! Mommy!”
A girl a couple years younger than Ben, about seven or so, tumbled out of a wrecked black SUV which had spun partially onto the gravel shoulder. Scrambling to the driver’s side door, the girl tugged at the handle. “Help! Somebody help her!”
From behind the tinted windows, I saw a dark figure move.
I didn’t know what I could do. I didn’t have CPR training, or whatever. But I couldn’t just stand there if someone needed help.
I glanced at my brother. Ben was busy retrieving his skateboard from the car and attaching it to special straps on his backpack.
“Stay here, okay?” I told him. "Don't go anywhere."
A dark shadow passed over us both. Instinctively, I looked around. Were medical helicopters landing already?
A large, brown shape swooped down from the smoky sky. For a second, I didn’t know what I was staring at. The thing was feathered and looked a little like an eagle, if eagles were built the size of small ponies and had twelve-foot wingspans. But the body was all animal. Heavily built, with a thick barrel chest, four legs, and a whippy leonine tail.
What—?
The animal landed between the cars and snatched up the little girl with scaly front talons the length of my fingers. It leapt from the ground with strong, furred, back haunches. Laboring for air, it beat its wings as the girl twisted and screamed. Then the monster reached down with a curved beak and—
I unfroze enough to look away. The girl’s scream cut short.
It was as if my body took over on behalf of my stunned mind. There wasn’t any room for thought, or amazement, or a plan. Grabbing Ben by the wrist, I yanked him out of the car and into a run in the opposite direction.
Advertisement
Ben, busy putting on his backpack, hadn’t seen the monster. He tried to tug away, then pulled me to a stop. “Clarissa! Look! What’s that?” He pointed back to our sedan. The truck that had rear-ended us was rocking. Something large and dark moved around in the cabin. And it wasn’t human.
“Oh my God.” I started to change direction, but the van next to us was jolting, too, as something inside threw its weight around. The tip of a curved, orange-yellow beak smashed through the sunroof.
The more I looked, the more I saw unnatural shapes inside most of the cars. Large, feathered things that struggled to break out.
Glass shattered outward from a blue car not twenty feet away. Jumping back, I pushed my little brother behind me. People screamed in shock as they took notice. A girl my age pointed to the sky, where more flying shadows drifted through the haze. Other kids flashed by, running in all directions. No one knew where to go, myself included.
“Oh my God. Oh my God. Oh my God,” I heard myself say over and over, like my brain was stuck in a loop. Clarissa’s not here right now, but if you leave a message, she’ll get right back to you…
A shadow crossed the hazy sun. I didn’t have time to react before a heavy weight struck my shoulder, slamming me and Ben to the asphalt. I scrambled up to all fours, bits of safety glass and gravel digging into my palms. A second eagle monster—a griffin?—dirty white in color, had swooped down on us and latched its talons onto Ben’s backpack. The edges of its huge wings beat at me like a hurricane as it flapped to gain air.
Ben didn’t move, didn’t scream. He hung in its grip like a dead thing.
“No!” I leapt and grabbed for a loop of Ben’s backpack. Our combined weight dragged the griffin back down before it could fully lift off. In sheer panic, I struck it with my open hands and grabbed its dull white feathers. I’d been in a couple girl-girl fights back in middle school, and learned the hard way that yanking and scratching was more effective than punching. “Let him go! Let go!”
The griffin screeched in a high eagle’s cry and snapped its razor-sharp beak. I hunched forward to put myself between it and Ben. Hot pain drew a line behind my shoulder and I screamed.
“Duck!” yelled a voice.
I flattened down, Ben under me, and heard a dull, wet thwack. The eagle monster jerked.
I twisted to look. A tall boy stood just behind the griffin, a tire iron in hand. Side-stepping a taloned paw, the boy swung like he was going for a home run. The tire iron hit the side of the eagle monster’s head with a sickening crack.
The griffin thrashed one more time before it slumped and went limp, halfway on top of Ben and me.
I tried to shove the feathery body aside. It was shockingly heavy.
“Ben!” I yelled, throwing my whole weight behind my shove. The monster’s body shifted only slightly, and Ben didn't stir at all. “Ben?”
The tall boy stepped in to help. Working together, we rolled the body away. Ben lay between its two front legs, the skateboard attached to his backpack snapped in two. That could have been his spine. Ben's eyes were open and he breathed in shallow, rapid pants. He didn’t react at all when I grabbed him into a fierce hug. But he was alive, and that was all that mattered.
“There are more of them, coming fast,” the tall boy said.
Tearing my gaze from Ben, I was able to take him in for the first time. He was a little older than me, with dark hair and eyes, dusky skin, and high cheekbones. Mexican or latino, maybe. Handsome, definitely.
Not the time, Clarissa.
Ben still hadn’t moved to get to his feet. “I don’t think my brother can run.” And there was no way I would leave him behind.
“I’ll carry him. Here.” He shoved the tire iron in my hands. The end of it dripped crimson with blood. “If you see another one coming, swing as hard as you can.”
I looked at it, then at him. “Do you know what’s happening?”
He gazed back at me with dark, haunted eyes. “I saw someone turning into one of those… those things.” He shook his head like he couldn’t believe what he was saying. “I think they used to be people.”
Advertisement
- In Serial1176 Chapters
The Daily Life Of The Immortal King
As a cultivation genius who has achieved a new realm every two years since he was a year old, Wang Ling is a near-invincible existence with prowess far beyond his control. But now that he’s sixteen, he faces his greatest battle yet – Senior High School. With one challenge after another popping up, his plans for a low-key high school life seem further and further away…
8 1072 - In Serial110 Chapters
A Herald for Spirits
While on Earth, the Church secretly battles over the planet's destiny with multiple other factions; Gabriel was just delivering pizzas when he ended up in a battle among creatures that defied logic. Sure, he thought, who doesn't love pizza? But do angels, demons, and big ass wolves eat pizza as well? Gabriel was paid for his delivery, but the payment he got wasn't exactly what he hoped for, because for all his efforts, the man was rewarded with a lizard... and a world expecting a little too much from him than he was comfortable with. Gabe will find himself in a different world, a world from which all Earth's current problems stem and a world to which he has more ties than he was ever told. Will Gabriel and his lizard survive in a world so hell-bent on getting them to follow its rules, or will they die defying them? Follow their adventures on Alter, where elves, dwarves, orcs, and many more races share their existence with those of Spirits. Whether they like it or not. Release days: once a week.
8 122 - In Serial34 Chapters
The thought of peace
Major general Ray Brut was the best military strategist from his country. He had an elder brother who was brutally murdered. After being in shock for some time he went to uncover the mystery about his brother but then he found out the dark secret which lurks deep down the world. This story is about how Ray along with his men overcome the obstacles to change this world’s governing order and take down those who disrupts the universal peace.
8 285 - In Serial7 Chapters
Blood Island
So far, life had done Nuriel Cunningham no favors. The orphaned daughter of a petty thief, she's had to grow up on the streets, with nothing but her wits, her late father's advice, and whatever luck she can scrounge up to keep her alive. However, now that luck seems to have ran out. After being discovered passing as a boy on a ship sailing the Caribbean, Nuriel is blamed for the ship's troubles and thrown overboard, seemingly to her demise. But rather than die, she awakes on the shores of a strange and terrifying island, one inhabited by monsters from a bygone age. Now she has to use every bit of cunning and skill just to stay alive, as one false step could cause her to be torn apart for some ancient creature's dinner. But as she works to stay alive and uncover the island's secrets, she becomes aware of something very troubling. There is someone else on the island, someone not quite human, a creature with glowing red eyes watching her from the shadows. And though the creature seems benevolent, perhaps even friendly, Nuriel is not about to let her guard down. After all, every stranger is an enemy, and there is nothing more dangerous than the attention of another person.
8 161 - In Serial12 Chapters
Heretic: Unbound
The Fifth World is a testament to the mercurial nature of the gods. Four worlds before have been created, then destroyed, eradicated in the petty wars of their creators. The Fifth would be different, they assured themselves. Every god and goddess would limit themselves, to ensure that none of them was powerful enough to destroy what they worked so hard to create. But there are some who are not so easily controlled.Isaand Laeson is a follower of the Unbound god Szet, a Lector who wields his gods miracles to heal the sick and injured. He travels the world, hoping to do enough good in the name of his god to win some hearts and minds. But everywhere he goes, he is an outcast, slandered, insulted, hunted. A heretic, in a world ruled by the faithful. And there are none so dangerous as those who fear change.There are more chapters available on my website: https://hereticunbound.wordpress.com/
8 186 - In Serial9 Chapters
The Day Sunshine Fell
A fictional story of the Romanovs in a world where the Russian Revolution never took place. This is a short novel of the death of the beloved Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich, a hemophiliac, as told from the perspective of his elder sister, Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna, including insight on the marriages of Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana and Maria, and the trials of the unmarried Anastasia. TW: Death, suicide themes
8 123

