Author's note: This is my entry for the Halloween contest.
Many thanks to Rustyoznail for editing this for me. It was an enjoyable collaboration.
Two brief notes: 1) I've taken some liberties with the uniform of the police officer character, so please just roll with it. 2) According to Wikipedia, Vlad Tepes is the real name of the person who inspired Bram Stoker's "Dracula", and Wikipedia's never wrong, right?
Anyway, I do hope you all enjoy it. Please vote however you think is appropriate, and I'd love to see whatever comments you have.
Thanks for reading,
Belle
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It was a dark and stormy night. Really, it was; one minute rain fell so heavily that the windshield wipers couldn't keep up. The next minute the deluge dissipated, but the fog was so thick it was like my car was just a suspended bubble wrapped in a cloud. Sound dampened, air dense and oppressive.
I was driving up to my friend's cabin for a weekend Halloween bash. One of those excuses to drink too much, sleep too late, and bed down with near strangers. Come in costume. Then cum in your costume. That kind of thing. I intended to escape from my dreary life and celebrate some good news.
An accident on the interstate blocked both northbound lanes, traffic backed up nine miles by the time I saw the first notice about it. I shunted myself off onto the highway that had been the main road through these mountains before the interstate was built. Apparently, everybody and their brother was going north that evening, and everybody's cousin had the same idea to avoid the interstate.
I thought, hey, I live here; I know these roads and I can figure out how to get there from here. I got off the highway onto the secondary road that would lead to the tertiary road that would eventually wend itself in the direction I needed. I wasn't in a hurry. Plus, I've got GPS on my phone; it's just a lot harder to get lost in this day and age than it used to be.
Still, I managed to somehow.
I turned off the highway. My little sedan climbed in the mountains, and the road got more and more narrow. The two lane track stuck precariously to the ridge like cat hair on a t-shirt. I felt the enormity of the rocks looming over my left shoulder and the enormity of the empty space on my right. The drop off was so steep that the tree tops didn't shield anything. For a while I was glad that I couldn't see over the edge.
There was a solidity to the blackness that pressed in on all sides. And what with the rain, or the fog, and occasionally both, my headlights barely penetrated the murk. I turned off the music that I'd been blaring, and my tires on the worn pavement groaned in a fatigued complaint.
I hunched over the steering wheel, my skirt bunching up under my thighs. My hands so tight that my knuckles had gone white. My feet in the cowboy boots slipping, unsure, hesitating between accelerator and brake. My chest ached; I realized I'd been holding my breath.
'Get a grip, Stevens,' I thought to myself. "It's just a damn country road in the dark. You've driven on these before." That I said out loud.
I rolled my shoulders, trying to resettle the little halter top and littler bra I wore as the top half of my costume. Sexy cowgirl; or sexy hillbilly, that's what I'd been going for. Short denim skirt, red and white gingham halter. Hair in pig tails. I'd borrowed the cowboy boots and a worn out Stetson from my roommate and her boyfriend.
The road kept going up, getting more narrow, and the fog just got worse. The rain had mostly stopped, but the water vapor in the air hung so thick I still had to use the wipers. A wall of white rolled away in front of the vehicle. The only saving grace was that I was certain mine was the only car on the road.
Still and all, there was plenty to worry about. The road was twisty, with s-shaped turns, blind curves, and bad markings. If there had been white lines at the edges, they were long since faded away. The yellow line, doubly solid the whole way, was at least consistently visible. So, I took my half down the middle, as they say. I used the center line as my guide, and crept along at a pace just fast enough that momentum overcame gravity.
I realized I had started muttering a mantra about avoiding bears and deer, asking the universe to save the abrupt rock fall for some other day when a person would have a fighting chance of seeing it coming. I crested the ridge and had to shake out my hands, as my grip on the steering wheel had caused a spasm.
Just then I glanced down at the phone to check my position and get some sense of where I was. The phone was black. Not switched into night mode. Not searching for a signal or endlessly recalculating a route. No, it was black; like dead. And I had to keep going. There wasn't a hint of a safe place to pull over, and I didn't risk stopping in the middle of the road. My options were to keep driving the way I was, or try to turn around. It was pitch dark; I hadn't seen a street lamp in at least ten miles; and I had no visibility around me. I had a mostly full tank of gas. So, realistically, the only option was forward. I forced myself to press the accelerator, knowing that prolonging the descent would just make me more nervous.
The fog got worse. It didn't seem possible. It didn't seem physically or atmospherically possible for the visibility to decrease. But somehow it did; the hood of my car disappeared and the light from my headlamps just bounced around aimlessly. I started panting, half convinced that the darkness was swallowing me and my car. Half believing that the night was alive, intent on eating me whole, or that I was already halfway down the gullet of some monstrous creature.
I drove on, counting my heartbeats, feeling sure that at some point the road was going to abruptly end and my car would just free fall off the side of the mountain.
Then, the quality of the gray light reflecting back from my headlights changed. Subtly at first, then a little more noticeably. I realized there was a streetlamp or something just ahead, off to my right. I crept closer, and noticed that the light was more than one color. I pieced together that it must be a sign. And I thought a lighted sign meant a business, which meant a parking lot. Which meant I could stop, try to figure out what was wrong with my phone, and maybe get my bearings.
As I got to the sign, I saw that it read "Devil's Backbone Mercantile and Diner." I stared at it, unsure I was seeing it correctly. There is a tourist attraction I know called The Devil's Backbone; it's a rock formation along a mountain ridge popular with hikers. And the name of a brewery. But I shouldn't have been anywhere near it. I should have been miles to the south.
A large metal awning sheltered a couple of gas pumps that were obviously out of service. I drove under it, between the pumps. For the life of me, I could not see a building. The sign illuminated the area just enough for me to park safely. The fog enveloped my car, the sign and the awning, isolating me in what might have been an endless night. I put the car in park, shaking, and just sat there. I debated whether to turn the map light on, trying to decide if it would blind me or be useful. But mostly I just sat there, willing the tension to dissipate. I reached for the phone, and my hand trembled too badly to pick it up.
I had a couple of bottles of liquor in my suitcase. I thought about breaking one of them open. I thought of the rough warmth of decent whisky, and the probable calm I'd feel. Then I thought about attempting to keep driving this road even one iota less clear thinking than I had been. The crystal clear image of my car careening off the mountain, crashing through tree tops and plunging into a creek, never to be seen again, convinced me to leave the liquor where it was.
Suddenly I was freezing, even though the car's heater worked fine and just a few minutes ago I'd been sweating. I shook uncontrollably, and let the spasm roll through me. Just when I'd calmed down again, the fog lit up in red and blue.