Ascension by Bailey Bradford (best e books to read txt) š
- Author: Bailey Bradford
Book online Ā«Ascension by Bailey Bradford (best e books to read txt) šĀ». Author Bailey Bradford
āB-back,ā he stuttered, and when his breath hit the scorpionsāor maybe just the sound of his voice did itāthey sure seemed to wave entirely too many legs at him.
Gideon took that to mean the nasty shits were signaling a charge. His screech of utter horror made his own ears ring and his head throb. It also broke him out of his frozen trance. He shrieked nonstop as he first scrambled to his feet then ran.
Whether it was his imagination or not, he saw things moving all over the ground. Gideon couldnāt shut up, couldnāt force his panic and fear to stay down past his throat.
He ran, but glanced back. Another lightning bolt of horror hit him when he saw the huge fire behind him. Apparently, the car had set a field on fire. Now heād be in deep shit for arson or something like that.
āShit!ā And no man of his heightāsix-four, thank you very muchāand weightātwo-twenty, almost all muscleāshould sound like a terrified five-year-old girl trying to say bad words.
Gideon turned back around and resumed running, hoping and fearing that he was stomping on scorpions every time his feet hit the ground. He didnāt know where he was running to, only that he didnāt want to get in trouble for the fire, and he didnāt want the creepy critters to get him.
He considered shifting, but there was the duffle bag that held all his earthly belongings. If he had someone there to strap the bag onto him, heād have been fine, but he wasnāt leaving his few possessions behind.
So he stuck to human form. It was probably for the best. He was in Texas, after all. Everyone had guns, arsenals, and if anyone spotted a brown bear running past, theyād turn him into one of those stupid rugs in no time at all.
Plus, thereād be a lot of questions about why there was a grizzly bear in Texas. Not that heād have to answer any such questions. Heād just be dead and keeping the dust off some bastardās floor.
A bear, running from scorpionsā¦ Mutant scorpions. Fucking mutant scorpions. Unless they were supposed to have that many parts andāāOh, whatever!ā
If he survived the night and if he ever had kids and grandkids and so on, this was not the kind of story heād be sharing with any of them.
Gideonās night vision wasnāt all that great, not better than a regular olā humanās would be. He was a special shifter like that, his senses all but parallel with any regular personās. It was part of why he was on his own.
He wasnāt going to think about the other reasons heād been driving across Texas, heading from North Carolina to he didnāt even know where. Not Texas. That hadnāt been his end destination. It was too hot there, and already he was soaked in sweat. It had to be at least eighty degrees, and that was just wrong for three in the morning.
The moonlight was a boon once he was farther away from the fire. Gideon was quickly getting winded, not having been in the best shape to begin with. Maybe he was a tad softer in the belly than heād thought. Heād put on a little winter reserve weight, and it was showing in how easily he was physically exerted.
After what had to be close to half an hour, he slowed down to walk. He really was in the middle of nowhere. There wasnāt a house or electrical light to be seen in the distance, no matter which way he turned.
There were, however, so many stars in the sky that he could spend eternity trying to count them. Off to the east, he could see the red and orange flares of the fire still licking up and up, as if theyād scorch the stars themselves.
The fire was just as terrifying as the scorpions had been. Gideon found himself jogging along instead of walking, no longer interested in staring at the stars and the beautiful sky.
Despite the distance heād come, he could smell smoke. That inner core of him roared, fearful of being surrounded by those hellish flames. There wasnāt a creature on the planet other than man himself, that didnāt have a powerful, natural fear of fire.
And even a shifter in its human form still felt the terror his or her beast did.
Gideonās heart pounded so hard he thought he could hear it. His pulse was racing, his lungs burning, chest heaving, legs cramping by the time he slowed down again.
After he had calmed somewhat, he continued walking. There was nothing around, not homes or businesses. He felt like heād landed in the middle of a deserted planet and was utterly alone.
The feeling stayed with him as he kept plodding on, losing track of time. Eventually he became aware of the sky lightening.
The sun was just beginning to rise, washing the area in blooming colors of orange, pinks, yellows and purples. Mountains remained dark shapes in the foreground.
Finally, he dared to peek toward the east. Gideon saw no trace of smoke or anything else to clue him in on what had happened after heād left the car. Judging by the landscape around him, he assumed heād wound up in the desert-part of Texas. There were no trees nearby, no grass or gently rolling hills. He racked his brain and remembered seeing a sign for Sonora. That had been on I-10 and heād taken an off-road from there.
Unfortunately, his map had been in the car. What he did know now was heād run west, though he couldnāt be sure. Another reason he was on his own. He had a shitty sense of direction, which wasnāt conducive to surviving in his shifted form. All in all, he made a bad bear and a not so great human.
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