Chapter One By Lee Barnett A courier employed by East End Deliveries, John Ellis had given up wondering about what it was that he delivered. In the ten years of doing a job that was more calculated than any other to destroy a love of driving, his favourite account, or least horrendous anyway, was that of Dance-Oliver Medical Research; he’d delivered false limbs, real limbs, medical equipment and on at least two occasions to his certain knowledge, carefully packed and preserved brains. He always found it amusing that these brains were meant to be something special. Well, they weren’t able to do anything, were they, he reckoned, whereas he was still alive and his brain was still working. So shouldn’t they have been ferrying him around? The precise error in logic of this argument didn’t occur to him, though that wasn’t unusual, since not much occurred to Ellis unless it directly impinged upon his personal vicissitudes. He glanced at the parcel by his side. They’d not said what it was, but it was obvious to him that it was important, if only from the packaging and the labels carefully stencilled upon it. He didn’t recognise the symbol on its side, but even if he had, he wouldn’t have cared. He would have admitted though, if he was put under oath, that he was more than curious about the sticky label placed on top. It had a strip of light blue on it and the legend: “If this strip turns black, immediately return it to Rad Lab #7”. What was all that about? A horn blasted close by and he jerked his head away from the package. He looked up and ahead and his mouth ran dry, the sharp bitter taste in his mouth the adrenaline flooding his system as just in time he saw that he had drifted onto the other side of the road and that a large lorry was bearing down on him, far too close. He barely registered the urgent horn blow by the other vehicle before he reacted, his hands already turning the wheel. “Jesus!” he shouted and turned the steering wheel hard to the left. He could see out of his peripheral vision the half angry, half shocked look of the other driver, high up in the lorry’s cab. The car started to lose traction and Ellis stamped on the accelerator, getting the car out of the path of the lorry and then he shifted and stamped equally hard on the brake pedal. The lorry slid past the car, barely clipping the wing of the car. Ellis was thrown hard against the seat belt and he felt a vast pressure on his chest. He also saw the package react to the sudden deceleration by leaving the seat and crashing hard against the hard moulded plastic of the passenger side shelf, before tumbling to the ground, finally coming to rest in front of the passenger seat. There might have been a small tinkling of glass, but if there was, Ellis was unaware of it. He picked up the package from the well in front and put it back on the seat, not realising as he did so that he’d placed it upside down, the blue strip, or rather the previously blue strip, down against the seat, for the strip was no longer blue. It was the darkest ebony possible. And John Ellis was already dead. He just didn’t know it yet. The day was continuing just as well as before for Ian Davies and the local tube station was shut down because of an ant on the line, or at least that’s what the tannoy message had sounded like. He hadn’t been able to get on the first three busses and although he’d managed to get onto the fourth, he’d been standing now for half an hour, while the bus had been similarly immobile for twenty minutes. Davies was at that stage where he was balancing up the certain knowledge that it would be quicker to walk and the equally certain belief that were he to disembark, the traffic jam in which the bus was currently stuck would miraculous vanish. It was the body odour of the woman standing next to him that finally decided Davies. It was a pity, since she was a real looker, despite the painted make-up that didn’t do much to enhance what Davies was sure was an already attractive face. He extricated himself from the strange position in which he’d found himself, his head bent over and stuck under her armpit, and moved slowly along the bus, until he smelled that blessed fresh air. The bus moved slightly and he took the opportunity to suddenly reach for the pole at the rear of the bus. He pulled himself through and then off of the bus. Miraculously, the expected clearing of traffic didn’t happen and it was with an almost jaunty stroll that Davies walked past the bus, turned a corner and walked towards work, some twenty minutes away. Behind him, of course, the traffic melted away and the bus stopped at a request stop, where fully half the passengers alighted, leaving the rest of the journey more than pleasant for those remaining on the bus. But Ian Davies didn’t know any of this, and there was no reason he should ever have found out. Several streets away, he walked another half a mile and then turned into the High Road. In the middle distance, he could see the logos of the various stores and businesses, including that of the National Provident Bank. John Ellis was beginning to feel unwell. He wasn’t sure what the reason was, but the nausea that had commenced about ten minutes earlier had grown to the point where he was struggling not to throw up inside his car. It didn’t occur to him that the package on the seat next to him was responsible, and he assumed that it was something he’d eaten the previous night. Worse than the feeling that there were a couple of hundred beetles in his stomach doing the Macarena, was the cloudiness that had stolen over his vision. It seemed to him what a slipping contact lens must be like, since one moment his vision was clear, the next it would cloud over and become distorted. Moreover, the headache that had commenced five minutes earlier was about the only thing countering the dizziness that had started at about the same time. He kept rubbing his eyes, but didn’t worry until he went to scratch his head and found some hair attaching itself to his hand when he did so. That worried him, but it was only when after a particularly bad itch, he scratched his head and felt a clump of hair and skin come away that he freaked out. When he saw that, he panicked and lifted his hands from the wheel, in almost complete contravention of section 3 of the Road Traffic Act 1988. The car, naturally enough, continued on its way and it was only through a trick of chance that there was no one in its way before it crossed into the High Road at speed, heading towards three men, who were exiting an anonymous dark blue van. They weren’t having a very good day either. And it was about to get worse. It was Mount Everest who saw the car heading towards them. He barely had a chance to make a classic fight or flight decision, and then that moment was past as Charlie Jones panicked and lifted his shotgun, not really aiming, but firing point blank at the car. The blast finally put Ellis out of any misery he was going through, although the slumping of his body on the wheel fractionally amended the direction of the car. Withers spun around at the noise and saw the car change direction and plough into the van towards the rear. He thought he saw a package fly out of the window, but he wasn’t sure for a second. There was a moment of complete calm, and it seemed as if the world had stopped. That moment of perfect silence ended violently when the petrol tank of the van breached and a moment later, the petrol vapour ignited. The package fell at Withers’ feet and again he wasn’t sure as to what it was. Then Withers wasn’t sure of anything at all as a massive explosion rocked the street. It blew the package up off of the street and vaporised it, sending the material through Withers’ remains, continuing as a cloud of densely coloured thick vapour heading away from the crash. ![]() With each metre, more and more of the mist dissipated, but it was still enough to cover, soak and otherwise drench the poor bastard who happened to walk into the area of contamination just before it completely disappeared. Ian Davies’s day had just gotten a whole lot worse. You'll Never Believe A Man Can Fly continues this Thursday! Be sure to check back here for the second chapter then. Mark Layne is 32 and lives in Florida, U.S.A. He's been drawing comics for 6 years now and has done work for Imperium Comics on their TRAILER PARK OF TERROR line. He's also currently working on a mini series for them Mark can be contacted on mlayne@yahoo.com. You'll Never Believe A Man Can Fly © 2004, Lee Barnett |