Chapter 2
“Did you hear about this?”
The guy who brought me to his place, who told me his name was Brett, gestured to
his muted TV where a newscaster spoke in front of a clip playing over and over
again at different speeds. Sometimes zoomed in and sometimes zoomed out of
what seemed to be a meteor flying through the night sky, blazing white with a
golden tail and then disappearing behind a cluster of trees.
At first I wanted to give
him a look to remind him I didn’t remember who I was let alone an event
that made it to the news. But as I turned to give him a stare, my eye caught
something else on the repeated video. The building I ran from less than a
dozen hours ago sat in front the trees where the meteor vanished.
I dropped the cup of tea I
was holding, the mug shattered on the tiled floor of Brett’s kitchen and warm milky tea
sloshed on my newly cleaned feet and splashed on my bandaged calf. The shorts
of his sister and large t-shirt of his own he gave me to wear were safe from the tea. I stepped
forward, closer to the screen to get a better look, to make sure. It was definitely the building. I just ran across that parking lot, had been tied to a
chair inside that building.
When I looked to the meteor flying through the night sky a
strange feeling washed over me. A flush of hot filled me at the center of my
stomach and my extremities began to tingle as if numb with cold. I stumbled
back in shock and hit the island of Brett’s kitchen. Everything happened in seconds,
from dropping the mug to stumbling back. Brett rushed over and held me
steady by the elbow.
Before asking what was
wrong he grabbed the remote from the counter behind him and unmuted the TV.
He gave me a questioning look then turned the volume up. While the woman on
television spoke, Brett grabbed a dish towel and picked up the tea and mug mess
I made.
“Police officials urge anyone who saw or heard anything in the area to
call 911. Again, the impact measured at 1.2 megatonnes but there is no
sign or evidence of a crater. We ask the public to remain calm as there is no
reason to panic or jump to conclusions.” The image changed to a live video of a small
group of people gathered in the parking lot of the building. They held signs
with pictures of aliens and gathered around small campers with food and tents, some even wore tinfoil hats.
Brett muted the TV again. He
gently set the remote down then turned to face me. Leaning on the counter, arms
taught, he waited patiently. Closing my eyes I felt it again, the intense heat
at my center. The sensation of weightlessness suddenly took my breath away. I
snapped my eyes open and steadyied myself in Brett’s cool green gaze.
“Danika” I whispered. I didn’t
know what it meant or where it came from. It popped into my head and felt right;
the meteor, the heat in my gut. Danika.
“What?”
“I don’t know. I don’t
remember it exactly. The name sort of slipped into my mind. At least I think it’s my name
but I have no context around it, no faces or voices saying it, nothing visual.
Just a feeling.”
“Danika.” Brett repeated. He
pulled out his phone and tapped for a few seconds, “It’s polish for morning
star.” He looked at me then back to the television screen where the footage of
the meteor played again. I shrugged. “You reacted pretty strongly to the video
footage.” He said.
“I wasn’t lying to you about
what happened to me last night. I woke up tied to a chair in that building,” I
pointed to the screen.
“You’re telling me the
truth.”
I nodded, “The men thought I
was an alien.” I can barely get the words out. My hands began to tremble as I
watched the video loop over again and the weightlessness returned. Familiarity,
loneliness and grief.
“What are you trying to say?
You think you’re an alien?”
“No. Of course not. I don’t know.
Jesus I don’t know anything. I woke up tied to a chair with men preparing to
torture me because they thought I was an alien. They said they watched me fall
from the sky! They called the police.” Sweat prickled up at the back of my
neck.
“Ok. Ok. We need to calm
down. I feel like we’re freaking out over nothing. We don’t know who you are
and for some reason we want to jump to outrageous coincidental conclusions.” Brett
turned the TV off and went to his couch. He plopped himself down and stared
ahead of him - out the window of his high-rise apartment.
“I’m sorry. I’m freaked out
about it. I want to know who I am and after last night... and now this on the
news…”
“Come here,” Brett patted
the cushion beside him, “Let’s sit and chill for a minute, enjoy the view.
Maybe once you relax you’ll remember something. Any tiny detail will help us
help you.”
I agreed and sat beside him.
The warmth of his body, his arm barely touching mine as I sat down and the
smell of soap wafting from the bathroom didn’t feel like a scenario I knew, but
it seemed like one I should. I tried to relax, sitting back and feeling the soft blue material of the couch cushion.
“Did you say the guys called
the police?” Brett said.
“Yes but they weren’t
interested.”
"The men or the cops?"
"The cops."
“I think the police are interested now.”
They probably were
interested in the girl in tatters that two drunken men said fell from the sky.
With multiple videos showing the same image of a meteor falling from the sky, the
shake of the earth in the area and lack of evidence to show for it. Now if
they went to the building and saw the remains… I took a big breath, I was in
serious trouble.
“Why did you decide
to help me? Kind of strange to take a dirty, barefoot girl to your apartment, I might be a crazy.” I needed to change the subject away from what happened to the men, I wasn't tell Brett that much.
Brett turned his head and opened
his eyes to look at me “You are a little crazy." He smiled, "I couldn’t not sit next to you. A pretty girl who
looked in desperate need of someone or something. I couldn’t walk on by only to
spend months wondering what had happened to you. Regret comes from not doing
something, so I did it.”
“I think I killed the men in
the building.” I blurted out. So much for keeping it to myself that last for all of five seconds. I needed him to know, I needed to know if he
would continue to help and trust me with all this craziness surrounding me.
Brett coughed, “Excuse me?”
“Oh god, I was tied to the
chair and they were about to slice my neck and I was so scared. I closed my
eyes and there was light and a weird sound and then they were gone and
my ropes were burned away. I think I did it. I wanted it done and it
happened.”
“I’m sure they’re not dead--“
“I saw their body pieces
strewn across the floor.” I interrupted him before he could try and convince himself otherwise.
“Shit.” Brett brushed a hand
through his hair.
“oh god oh god oh god.” The
reality of what happened started to sink in. My stomach clenched and I thought
I was going to be ill. Brett placed a hand on mine.
“It’s ok, they were trying
to hurt you. Even if you did…kill them, it was in self
defense.”
There was a knock on the
door. “Brett Anderson, this is the police, we have reason to believe you have a
dangerous person in your home, open the door.”
My head whipped around to
stare at the door, then to Brett. My eyes wide brimming with tears and my mouth
agape in shock. Did Brett call the police?
© Ash Huntley
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