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Loch, The Page 6
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Page 6
Look around. Search for land, but the fog is everywhere, and the sun has set. Which direction is home?
Stay calm, Zachary, don’t panic ... just tread water and wait ... wait until the fog fills.
Help! Can anybody hear me?
Muscles growing heavier, I’m so tired, so numb.
A powerful current swirls around me ... is something down there? I’m scared.
Help! Help! Ahh...
Gulp! Underwater! I’m underwater! Something has me, has my ankle! Sharp pain ... what is it? What has me? Is it my rowboat? Am I entangled in the bow line?
Panic ... struggle ... twist ... fight to get air ...
“Ahh! Ahhh!”
Catapulting out of bed, still half asleep, I bellowed a bloodcurdling howl and ran blindly from the bedroom—the wrong way! Past the billowing curtains, I sprinted straight out onto the balcony, my momentum flipping me head over heels over the aluminum rail!
Hands that once plucked footballs from the air lunged one last desperate time, my left smashing uselessly against the balcony’s concrete lip, the right managing to grasp the aluminum rail’s divider that separated the two plastic balcony panels.
“Owwff!”
For a surreal moment I simply held on, suspended 128 feet above the pavement. The fingers of my right hand held on for dear life while my mind, soothed by the ocean’s dull roar, fought to convince my nightmare-laden brain that I was indeed awake and a butterfly’s flutter from dying, only this time, there’d be nothing left of me to resuscitate.
Do something, Wallace, move!
Carefully, I raised my legs, my bare toes embracing the rough concrete along the underside of the balcony. My right ankle found a perch near the outside of the rail so that I could grab hold with my left hand, and I hauled myself up and over the cracked partition. My body trembled as my feet touched down upon the warm tile, my bruised chest heaving as I looked down ten stories, staring in disbelief at what might have been.
“Hey, son, you all right?”
“Isn’t that Andrea Mason’s boy?”
“The guy in the newspaper? Didn’t know he was meshuga.”
The neighbors were out on their balconies, dressed in shorts and robes and nightgowns, talking about me like I was some kind of suicidal freak.
Waving them off, I retreated inside the apartment and double locked the glass door.
I was wide-awake and pumped full of adrenaline, but the dark bedroom seemed filled with demons. Feeling myself beginning to freak out, I bolted from the chamber, flipping on light after light until I reached Charlie’s liquor cabinet. Tearing it open, I grabbed the first unsealed bottle I could find and swallowed two long gulps, then heaved the cursed container of cooking sherry across the Saturnia marble floor and retched.
Chapter 4 Quotes
« ^ »
The life of wild animals is a struggle for existence. The full exertion of all their faculties and all their energies is required to preserve their own existence and provide for that of their infant offspring. The possibility of procuring food during the least favorable seasons, and of escaping the attacks of their most dangerous enemies, are the primary conditions which determine the existence both of individuals and of entire species. These conditions will also determine the population of a species; and by a careful consideration of all the circumstances we may be enabled to comprehend, and in some degree to explain, what at first sight appears so inexplicable—the excessive abundance of some species, while others closely allied to them are very rare.
—ALFRED RUSSEL WALLACE, “ON THE TENDENCY OF VARIETIES TO DEPART INDEFINITELY FROM THE ORIGINAL TYPE”, 1858
There are at least 10,000 known reported sightings at Loch Ness, but less than a third of these are recorded.
—DR. ROY MACKALL, CRYPTO-ZOOLOGIST
Chapter 4
« ^ »
South Beach
I WOKE UP THE NEXT MORNING on the den sofa, the horrors of the previous night a fading memory. Staggering to the drapes, I drew them back, revealing blue skies, a shimmering white stretch of beach, and an azure ocean.
Nirvana.
I showered and shaved, ate a quick breakfast, then headed down to the beach in my shorts and sunglasses, ready for some much needed rest and sun.
The condominium had reserved chairs on the beach. Helping myself to a chaise lounge and a handful of towels, I scanned the coastline.
Lying on her stomach close by the water’s edge was a woman in her early twenties. My eyes targeted shoulder-length brown hair and a white thong that was wedged so deep into the crack of her yoga- firmed buttocks that it was nearly invisible. The bikini top that barely contained her dark, baby-oiled breasts was unhinged, preventing tan lines.
God, I love South Beach ...
I set my chair within ten feet, spying on her from behind my tinted sunglasses. I waited until she rotated her head, then offered, “Beautiful day.”
No response.
Goofball, you’re coming off like Sir Alfred.
Playing it cool, I moved closer, flexing my muscles with every movement. “I’m Zack,” I said, kneeling close to her basting body. “And you are?”
“Not interested.”
“Right. Sorry. I just, I dated a lot of athletes back when I played football in college, so I have a thing for physically fit women.”
She looked up. “Leesa Gehman.”
“Hi, Lisa.”
“Not Lisa, Leesa.”
“You’re uh ... not a student, are you?”
“Not anymore. Why?”
“Just curious. My former fiancée was an undergrad.”
“So now you’re on the rebound. Good luck.”
She laid her head back down, then looked up again. “Wait, did you say your name was Zack, as in Zachary Wallace?”
“Guilty as charged.”
“I read about you in the paper. You drowned while saving some guy, right?”
And Wallace catches the ball in the end zone for a touchdown!
In South Beach, fame is the key that unlocks all chastity belts. In the next twenty minutes I learned Leesa was from Allentown, Pennsylvania, had worked in an architect’s office in Miami, and taught aerobics part-time. She told me what schools she’d attended, her brother’s name, her favorite books, the meaning of the Chinese symbols tattooed on her left ankle, and where she wanted to go to dinner that evening.
At any moment, I expected to be discussing her favorite baby names.
“Zack, do you like it in the water?”
“I’m a marine biologist. I’m always working in oceans and—”
“No, Zack, I meant sex.” She rehooked her top and stood, taking my hand. “I’ve never done it with a dead guy. Come on.”
God, I love South Beach ...
Hand in hand, we walked into the water, the thought of what lay ahead pumping blood to my already alerted groin.
We hurried through the shallows, our feet splashing one another, my heart pounding—
—my chest suddenly hurting, my vision impaired by purple spots. The blood rushed from my face as we waded into hip-deep water.
Not now ...
My flesh tingled then burned, as if stung by a thousand jellyfish. I let go of Leesa’s hand and stumbled blindly back to shore, the world spinning in my head. Collapsing to my knees in the wet sand, I fought to gasp a breath.
Leesa looked at me, perplexed. “Come on, the water’s perfect!”
I tried to answer, but couldn’t speak, unable to stop hyperventilating. A cold sweat broke out all over my body, my vision still impaired.
This wasn’t a migraine, it was something else ...
I was afraid.
Leesa moved closer, undoing the clasp on her top. “Zachary. Zach-ar-y!” The vixen smiled as she lifted her bikini, flashing the twins at me.
Torture ... God’s torturing me—
“Come on, hero, I’m horny.”
The blind spots faded, the pain and cold sweat mercifully subsid
ing. Feeling embarrassed, I stood, wiping perspiration from my face. “Sorry.”
“What happened?”
“Low blood sugar, I guess.” I sucked in a few more breaths, my limbs still trembling. “Okay, I’m coming.”
“Not yet, I hope.” She grabbed my hand, leading me back out.
I took two strides, and was suddenly blinded by subliminal images, flashing across my mind’s eye.
Dark water. Heavy fog. Salmon everywhere. Jumping. Panicking. A presence ... circling below! Left ankle, seized with pain. Dragged underwater ... can’t breathe!
“Can’t ... breathe.”
“Zack?”
“Can’t breathe!” Freaking out, I turned and fled, still clutching Leesa’s hand as I dragged my once sure-thing face-first through the shallows and halfway up the beach before releasing her to vomit.
Office of Dr. Douglas G. Baydo
Coral Springs, Florida
“I never felt anything like this before. You gotta help me, Doc. I’m a marine biologist, I can’t be afraid of the water!”
The psychiatrist was a big man, probably a former football player, an offensive guard, I guessed. A plaque on one wall indicated he’d been in the air force.
“And you’ve only experienced this hydrophobia since the Sargasso Sea incident?”
“Yes.”
“Zachary, phobias are created in the subconscious mind. It may eventually pass, or you might have to learn to live with it.”
“Live with it? To hell with that! I can’t live with not being able to go near the sea. How do you expect me to work?”
“You may have to find yourself a new line of work.”
I paced his office like a madman. “You don’t know what you’re saying. I’ve spent my whole life busting my hump to get where I am, no way I’m gonna just walk away from my career.”
“Stay calm and sit down. Now tell me more about these dreams.”
“They’re nightmares, only far more intense, and always a version of the same dream. I’m underwater when I hear these sounds, the same growling sounds I heard in the Sargasso. It’s like they’re whispering into my brain, and somehow I just know I’m going to die.”
“And then you wake up screaming?”
“I wake up, and my eyes are wide open, only I can’t speak or move. It’s like part of me is still stuck in the nightmare. But the worst thing, Doc, the very worst thing is that I feel this terrible presence in the room with me. I can feel it. I can hear the echo of its whispers still growling in my head. My skin tingles from it, and my fear ... it’s so intense that I just have to get out of there.”
Dr. Baydo made a few notes, then continued. “Have you ever experienced episodes like these before?”
“No. At least none I can remember.”
“But you’re not sure?”
“Well, when I was younger, there was a time when I was sleepwalking a lot. It got so bad, my grandmother had to add a dead bolt to her front door.”
“Your grandmother?”
“My mom’s mother. We moved in with her right after my parents’ divorced.”
“I see. Out of curiosity, what do you do for fun?”
“Fun? I don’t know. Why?”
“You seem wound pretty tight.”
“I almost leaped to my death last night, then tossed my cookies in front of a girl that I’d have given my right arm for. Wouldn’t that stress you out?”
“I’m sensing something deeper. Let’s talk more about your childhood. You said you never got along with your father?”
“I said he enjoyed pushing my buttons. Look, I know it’s a Freudian thing with you guys, but do we have to talk about my childhood? What happened in the Sargasso has nothing to do with my father. That was seventeen years ago. I’m a totally different person.”
“Maybe. But everyone handles trauma in different ways. Some people repress or block out painful childhood memories that affect us subconsciously on a daily basis throughout our adult years. The near- death experience you suffered in the Sargasso Sea could have forced these childhood memories back to the surface.”
“So what do I do now?”
“Discussing your past can often help resolve these conflicts. Do you still feel hatred toward your father?”
“Hatred? Not hatred. More like disappointment. Angus wasn’t much of a father. He never let up on me ... never. Always badgering, teasing. Scared the shit out of me when he was drunk. And always playing his stupid mind games. I remember one time, when I was six, my mother bought me one of those Rubik’s Cubes. I must have worked that damn puzzle all day and night until I was able to master it. I remember running to my father, you know, looking for his approval. You’d think he’d be slightly impressed, maybe offer me a pat on the head. Not ball-buster Angus. First he accused me of cheating, then he challenged me to a Rubik’s Cube duel. Now I knew I had him. Well, I worked that puzzle like a demon, rearranging the colored panels in their proper order in only seventeen minutes, a personal record. To my amazement, it took Angus only four minutes to finish, it just blew me away. For the next several weeks he’d berate me about it, making me feel inferior, until finally I figured out how the drunken bastard did it.”
“How did he do it?”
“He cheated, of course. Never moved a block, he merely peeled away the stickers and restuck them in order.”
Dr. Baydo grinned.
“You think that’s funny?”
“You have to admit, he’s resourceful.”
“Try having him as your father.”
“There’s no excuse for his behavior, but let’s try looking at things from Angus’s perspective. Here’s a man who never finished high school, trying to keep pace with his precocious six-year-old son, a boy genius in the making.”
“He never saw me that way. I was nothing more than his runt. And being clever doesn’t justify his constant drunkenness, or his cheating on my mother.”
“He committed adultery?”
“Only every chance he got. Live for the moment, deal with the consequences later, that was my father.”
“You caught him doing this?”
“Several times, including ...” I paused, realizing I’d stepped in it again.
“Go on.”
“Forget it.”
He sat and waited for me to continue.
“It was on my ninth birthday. Angus bought me a new fishing rod, only later I found out he’d actually won it in a dart game. Anyway, he told me to meet him at the Loch, promising me he’d take me out in our rowboat after he grabbed a cup of coffee. So I waited. An hour went by and it was getting dark, so I left the boat and went looking for him.
“There was a campsite nearby. I heard noises coming from a tent. As I came closer, I could hear someone moaning inside. So I peeked through the tent flaps.”
“He was with another woman?”
“A girl, the brunette from the coffee shop, and she wasn’t a day over sixteen. She was on top of him, totally naked, pumping up and down like one of those bobblehead dolls. Her back was to me, but I could see Angus lying there on the ground, a stupid grin on his face, drunk as a lord.”
“What did you do?”
“I was mad. Bad enough he blew off my birthday, but to be cheating again on my mother? I pulled up the stakes and collapsed the tent, but the two of them just giggled and continued humping one another. So I left. I marched straight back down to the Loch and went fishing by myself.”
“And that’s the night you nearly drowned?”
“Did drown.”
“What happened? What caused your boat to flip?”
“It was a tree. Bottom of the Loch’s covered with them. Compressed gases build up inside the trunks. When the pressure exceeds the depths, they come shooting to the surface like missiles. I can’t remember much, only that the bow suddenly flipped over and barn, I was in the water. When the tree re-sank, it took me with it.”
“I don’t understand.”
“The tre
e trunk was wrapped in barbed wire. The wire snagged my left ankle, nearly tore my foot off. God knows how deep it dragged me before I managed to kick myself free.”
“That must have been petrifying. It’s amazing your friend’s father managed to get to you.”
“I got lucky, old man MacDonald must’ve been nearby. Scariest guy you’d ever want to meet. Kids around Drumnadrochit used to call him the Crabbit. Even his son, my best friend, True, was afraid of him. Still, I was under for a long time and blacked out. What probably saved me was the Loch’s water temperature. It’s only about forty-two degrees, close to freezing. In water that cold, your muscles turn to lead, and all your vitals slow to a crawl.”
“Zachary, people don’t just walk away from traumatic experiences like yours. Sure, you may block it out for a time, but the memories still linger in the subconscious ... and so can the effects. Obviously, Angus was at fault, but all this anger you’re still holding inside toward your father, it isn’t healthy either. And keep in mind, he’s not the one suffering, you are.”
“So I’ve been told. But it doesn’t matter. He’ll never apologize, and I’ll never forgive him.”
“And what if—”
“Fuck what if? I didn’t come here so you could reconcile me and Angus, I came because of these damn nightmares.”
He closed his notepad. “For the record, they’re not nightmares. What you’re experiencing are classified as night terrors, a sleep disorder common among individuals suffering post-traumatic stress. It’s your mind’s way of dealing with what happened. I once treated a group of patients who just made it out of the Twin Towers before they collapsed. Many of them experienced these same intense dreams of death. While nightmares can occur anytime during REM sleep, night terrors take place only during stage four of sleep, which is the deepest, most difficult stage to awaken from. Patients bolt upright in bed, screaming, paralyzed in fear, their hearts beating at upwards of 170 beats per minute. Even after awakening, many patients remain in a state of confusion for twenty minutes or more.”
“Yeah, I’ve experienced all that.”
“Hopefully, our sessions will help, but I have to warn you, it could take years.”
“Years? And until then?”