Date: Sun, 4 Jun 2000 17:58:57 EDT From: Savage8818@aol.com Subject: Edge of Town - Chapter 2 This novel is a work of fiction and within the story, involves relationships between an adult and teenage boys. If you are a minor and should not be reading this, please leave the site now. If you are an adult that is repulsed by this type of relationship, there are other stories that may better suit your tastes and you should leave now. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead is entirely coincidental. THE EDGE OF TOWN CHAPTER 2 Time passed quickly around the fire. The marshmallows were gone and the fire had diminished to nothing more than a few red-hot coals. An occasional flame appeared, coaxed to life by a gentle breeze, as it lazily waltzed through the clearing. "Jared, you wanna take the corn out of the fire?" Kyle asked as he pointed to the aluminum objects sitting the coals. Jared took a large, oak, poking stick that he had retrieved earlier from the woods. "No problem, dude," he said as he expertly rolled the hot objects toward his size ten feet. Touching them gently to sample their temperature, he quickly grabbed one and threw it to PJ. "Hot potato comin' your way." PJ caught and then dropped the corn on the ground. "Yo, that baby's hot." "Toss one this way," Kyle pleaded. Kyle caught the sailing aluminum projectile and bounced it from hand to hand until it had cooled. Gingerly, he pecked at the foil, tearing small pieces away from the object. As it cooled to a more manageable temperature, he extracted larger pieces until finally, he could take the brownish green object from its aluminum wrapping. He peeled back the leafy covering to reveal the golden yellow and white kernels of the snack. Jared removed a pocketknife and took two small sticks from his pocketed pouch on the front of his blue gray sweatshirt. He firmly grasped one stick in his right hand and with his left, he moved the sharp blade into the semi-hard wood until he had worked the end of into a point. When he had finished with one stick, he replaced it in his pocket and then whittled the end of the other stick until it also had a sharp point on it. He retrieved the first stick and then tapped Matt on the shoulder. "Here, try these," he suggested as he handed them to him. "Just stick one in each end of your corn and you'll be able to handle it without burning your hands." Matt followed Jared's instructions. "Cool. Thanks, dude. You're a pretty fart smeller, I mean smart fella." "You'll be the fart smeller tonight when the beans I ate kick in," he cautioned as he noticed Matt grimace from his remarks. Kyle and PJ searched the nearby trees to find the same type of sticks and they took turns with the knife, fashioning the same holders for their corn. Corn cooked in a campfire tasted so good. Kyle chomped on the buttered and salted food, grinding the tender kernels from the cob with each move of his gnashing jaws. The music filling the air muffled the crunching sounds, created by the gnashing jaws of his friend as they ripped the kernels from the cobs. Jared placed his half-eaten snack on top of the foil, wiped his hands on his jeans and rose. He threw his arms back over his head and stretched. "Gotta drain the lizard," he said as he turned and moved toward a tree a few feet from his friends. "Jeez, thanks for sharing that," PJ blurted out. "We'll be sure to notify the papers about this earth shattering event." He returned his attention to his snack and didn't even notice that Jared had returned, until he heard the rattling of a few pieces of oak. Jared returned from the shadows and tossed the wood into the coals. Before returning to his seat, he walked over to Matt, grabbed his head, and quickly rubbed his knuckles into Matt's skull. "Noogies!" he shouted. Matt squirmed from Jared's grip and pushed him, causing Jared's long, shoulder-length, and dirty-blond hair to flail in the night air. When he was free from his assailant's grip, Matt stood up and tossed the spent corncob a Jared. Jared moved back with the grace of a fencer moving away from a forwardly thrust lance and avoided the brunt of the corncob's force. The cob sailed past him and landed somewhere behind him, making a thump-thump noise as it bounced on the previously raked forest floor. "You wanna go a round or two or do you wanna hear the story?" Matt asked, his voice a little stern. "Let's hear the story," PJ said, his mouth full of corn. "You can beat the snot out of him later if you want to." Jared, having had his fun, returned to his seat and picked up his corn. "Yeah right, you and what army," he teased. Matt flexed his right arm to show a skinny muscle and slapped it authoritatively with his left hand. "I won't need an army. Just me and my awesome pythons." Kyle chuckled. "Careful there, Matty. You don't want to tear another shirt tonight." Matt turned his glare away from Jared and smiled as he looked at Kyle. "You're right," he chuckled, the light dancing on his round-rimmed glasses. "Besides, how would I explain his death to his folks?" Kyle reached over to pick up the blue CD carrying case and placed it on his lap. As he did so, Jared's watched chirped two high pitch beeps. "What time is it?" he asked as he unzipped the case. "You got a watch. Check it yourself," he barked. "Mine don't glow in the dark like yours," Kyle conceded. Jared balanced the corncob with a couple of fingers and reached over to his left wrist. With a greasy finger, he pressed a button on the watch to illuminate it. "Ten o'clock," he answered, spitting a few corn pieces towards Kyle as he spoke. Kyle looked to the sky and was glad that the oak pieces had caught on fire and it had come to life again. The evening air grew colder and he kept his eyes on the fog, ominously moving lower to the ground, dissolving everything in its path and obliterating the evening. Everything it touched just melted into it. It wound its way through the trees, like an Amazon snake on a food finding hunt, but it didn't seem to dampen the festive, party-like atmosphere that his friends were enjoying around the cozy yellow-white flames. He replaced the last CD in the case. "Now that the fog has set in, maybe we should have Matt tell us his story." He placed the case on the ground and looked at his friends. Kyle knew that when Matt Giblin told a good story, he was used to being the center of attention. His deliberate, well chosen words, body language, and facial expressions were his trademark and, he had to admit, some of Matt's stories were actually very good. Kyle didn't know why Matt's tales kept everyone hanging on the edge of their seats but he liked the way his friend could play with emotions and get his audience to react to each fable he wove. Like a spider, he would lure his unsuspecting victims into an unseen trap of deceit and dismay. Matt was an honor-roll student at Crystalview High School and, because of that, he sometimes made more enemies than friends. He was often called egghead, brainy and nerd. The names, coupled with a body that was much smaller than other kids his age, made him feel awkward and uncomfortable. His good friends, the few that he had, called him Gibby, Matty or Arnold and that always seemed to make up for the other names he was called. Matt's round-rimmed glasses were much larger than his skinny, plain face and they often rested on the tip of his pug nose. A perpetual smile danced on his rose pink lips and complemented his light brown, hair, always cut short. Any hair that he did have was slicked back with some type of gel, giving it the appearance of spikes, much like the quills found on a porcupine. Kyle's offered suggestions out of friendship, about changing his appearance so that he would fit in and look like the other kids. He had suggested one day that maybe it was time for Matt to pump some iron, just like his movie screen and add some muscles to his small body. In addition, since PJ had started wearing contacts and adapted well to them, he told Matt that maybe he should look into some so he would not look like a small, shrunken accountant. Matt said that he would weigh all of the constructive criticisms his friends had offered him and someday, he might just try some of their ideas. None of that was important to him right now. His group of friends accepted him just the way he was and he could always be himself when they were around. Kyle waited around the fire as Matt paced back and forth, his imaginative mind preparing to tell his story, a story that would touch and involve them in more ways then they all could know. The music from the CD player disturbed him now and Kyle reached over to the machine and clicked it off. The fog had engulfed the country campsite and choked them off from the outside world. It took a seat by the cozy fire and watched the glowing, fuzzy image of Matt, as he settled in his chair, took a deep breath and dressed his face with a serious expression. The Cyclops eye of the tent peered into the night as Matt began. "About twenty years ago, a terrible tragedy took place in Crystalview. The small, hick town was always peaceful and nothing exciting ever happened.... nothing until three-fingered Willie came to town." "Willie was a loner and always kept to himself. That was not common for people in this friendly town. It seemed that everyone knew everything.... everybody. The secret life of this unknown stranger was kind of unsettling to the people who lived there." "Willie lived on the edge of town, just about a mile from Kingsford. His run down shack on Route thirty-two was nothing more than a three-room fire trap and his lawn was never kept up, becoming nothing more than a yellowish-brown hayfield. A well worn, skinny path led from the roadside to the crumbling porch, a porch that surrounded the house. It was like a moat waiting to swallow up a castle's enemies." "One day, a boy rode his bike to Kingsford Falls, a favorite swimming spot with the locals. It was a hot, summer day and a swim was on Billy's mind. He was a good-looking, fourteen- year-old boy and everyone knew him as hard- working Billy Taylor." "He would do any odd job for a buck and, if the work did not come to him, he would go out and seek odd jobs. He approached many of the people in town and begged them to cut their lawns or paint their houses." "Billy decided that, since he rode by Willie's place many times during the course of the summer, maybe he could talk to him and ask him if there was anything he could do around the place. At the same time, he could earn a few bucks." "Pausing at the roadside for a few moments, Billy tried to get up the courage to approach the shack and knock on the door. He had heard the stories around town that Willie was crazy. Supposedly, he had chewed two fingers off in a fit of rage one day, just to prove to another guy that he was out of his mind and shouldn't be messed with." "Finally, after what seemed like and hour, Billy got off of his bike, placed it in the tall grass and made his way up the path. His heart raced as he walked toward the eerie shack. Its windows stared sadly at him as he approached and Billy felt the sadness overtake him. It was too bad that Willie had to live like this." "Billy finally approached the door and rapped on it softly. On the third rap, the door opened by itself. It creaked on its rusty hinges and revealed the dust covered, wooden floor." "Hello? Is there any one home?" he asked as he stuck his head into the small doorway." Matt paused briefly as he kept his audience waiting. A crackling noise came from somewhere out in the forest. It drew the attention of the boys, their gazes peering into the fog. When nothing appeared out of the fog, they returned their attention to Matt. "There was no answer. Billy was tempted to push the door open a little more and look inside. A voice, from somewhere deep inside of him, told him that he should just forget the idea, get on his bike and ride away." A gust of wind wrestled its way through the treetops and rattled the leafless branches, causing the group to shudder as the cool evening breeze caressed them. Matt went on. "Even though the day was hot, Billy felt a chill run up his spine, causing goose bumps to cover his tanned, shirtless body. He turned slowly from the door and decided to take a walk around the back of the house." "Stupid kid," PJ interrupted. " I would've hightailed it outta there." "Shhhhh." Kyle hissed. "Don't interrupt!" Matt paused to regain his train of thought and then continued. "Leaving the porch, he followed the crumbling rail around the side of the house. The tall grass rubbed against his legs and, as a sort of protection against its chafing blades, he took the beach towel from around his neck and wrapped it around his waist, covering his frayed, blue-jean, cut-off shorts. It wrapped itself around his thin waist and hung to cover the top portion of his legs to just below his knees." "That was the last time anyone ever saw Billy. His bike was discovered in front of Willie's house and a massive search for the boy turned up nothing." "The police questioned Willie and he swore that he never saw that boy; no one visited him that day. He told them that he had ridden into town on his old three-speed bike and was going to pick up a few things. When he returned, he found the bike outside of his house and the door open. Since nothing was stolen, he figured the wind must have blown the door open and he never bothered to report the incident." "Without evidence, the police couldn't do anything. They continued their search and never found Billy, alive or dead." "Then one day. A group of kids decided to camp in the woods on the far edge of Willie's property. The four guys didn't think about Billy or Willie and since Willie was never charged with anything or linked to Billy's disappearance, there was nothing to be scared of." "After they set up their tent, one of the guys headed into the woods to collect some sticks. Another of the boys followed slightly behind him. A gruesome scream soon filled the air and the two boys, who had stayed by the tent, went running toward the direction of the scream." "They found one friend lying on the ground, stabbed through the heart. He was bleeding from where his right arm should have been and the arm lay about two feet away from his body." "The other boy, who had accompanied his friend, stood dazed at the edge of the scene." "In a shaky voice, the dazed youth yelled to the others that he would go get help. As he scampered from the bloody scene, he could hear the screams of his other friends shatter the still evening air. He ran to the nearest house to get help." The crackling noise arose again from somewhere in the distance. It drew a stare from the group and then they huddled closer to the fire. "The police arrived in a few minutes and the scared boy told them that as he ran for help, he saw Willie jump out of the bushes and kill his other friends. He took them to where he had left his friends and, when they arrived at the spot, they found body parts all over the woods. There were so many pieces that it was hard to sort through them in the darkness." "The boy was taken to the station and questioned. After hours of going over the story, they determined that Willie was a suspect. The chief quickly dispatched several cars to his house to pick him up." "Willie was at home and was surprised to see all of the police at the door when he opened it. All of their guns were drawn and pointed at him. He was not sure why." "He gave himself up quietly and went down to the station. The town was angry about this rash of violence and, sensing that someone would hurt Willie, the police chief decided to move him to Greenview, where he was later tried and convicted on four counts of murder." "Four counts?" Jared asked, his voice sounding a little puzzled. Matt clarified his story. "While searching the area, they found the body of Billy as well. There wasn't a lot of evidence, but one witness and a large kitchen knife with Willie's fingerprints on it, was all they needed to put him away." He paused briefly and looked at each face of his frightened friends. "It was said that when Willie was sentenced and he was being led away, he glared at the boy and moved his lips to silently say, you're dead. The boy turned white, wet his pants and fainted on the spot." "Now, Willie is out of prison and people are afraid that he is roaming the woods, looking for revenge and he'll kill again. No one is safe. And when Willie finds that grown up boy, he is gonna make him, and anyone who gets in his way, pay for what he went through." Just as Matt finished his story, Jared jumped up and screamed, sending a shutter through Kyle's shivering body. An owl screeched from the treetops and took flight. The shiver raced through the other boys as well. Once Kyle got a grip on his emotions and hid his frightened feelings, he laughed nervously. His mood around the campfire had changed from one of being happy to one of being afraid. If what Matt said was true, he and his friends could all be in danger. The wind, swishing through the trees, broke the silence of the evening. "I think I'm gonna turn in," he said softly. The story really scared him and he didn't want to show his friends that he was afraid. "Yeah, that sounds like a good idea," Jared agreed. "Let's piss on the fire to put it out." "No!" PJ said in disgust. "We're not gonna piss on the fire. We'll kick some dirt on it like normal people would do." "You're so obsessed with that thing between your legs," Matt added. "We really don't want to see it or know what you do with it." "Your just jealous cause yours isn't that huge," Jared bragged. "Damn it, Jared! We really don't care!" PJ announced. "Let's just drop it and kick some dirt on the fire." Kyle stood up; PJ and Matt joined him at the open end of the campfire ring as Jared raced off to the tent. They dug their sneakers into the soft earth and took turns kicking dirt onto the white, ashen coals. He watched as the light of the once comforting fire slowly faded away and a flashlight beam, which appeared from Jared's hand, replaced it. It cut through the fog as Jared approached the group and he handed another flashlight to Kyle. Kyle clicked on the light and, satisfied that the fire was out, he led his friends toward the tent, looking around discreetly to see if there was anything lurking about to get them. He was relieved that the fog had not penetrated the walls of the tent and, once inside, he zipped the tent shut to keep the unwanted visitor outside of their safe dwelling. Jared clicked off his light and left Kyle holding the only light. He held the flashlight and illuminated the tent as his friends peeled off their layers of clothes down to their underwear. He waited as he allowed them to hurriedly slip inside their sleeping bags. The childish frolicking that had taken place inside the tent earlier that evening was absent and it only confirmed to Kyle that his friends were probably as upset by the disquieting details of the story as he was. Like him, they didn't want to let that fear breakdown the macho images that they all so desperately worked at maintaining. After his friends were snuggled into their sleeping bags, he placed the light into a pocket on the side of the tent and then undressed himself. After slipping into the cold sleeping bag, he reached over and nervously clicked off the light. As the darkness overtook him, he closed his eyes and buried himself deep inside the sleeping bag. His body heat was now warming the cold, flannel material and he was starting to get comfortable. He wanted this evening to pass and hoped that daylight would bring back some sense of safety. He took in the quiet sounds of the evening, as his body warmed and the chills subsided. His friends settled down and he could hear their long, deep breaths from somewhere deep inside of their sleeping bags. His heart was starting to slow its pounding rhythm and was settling into a slower thump- thump, thump-thump. Sleep was overtaking him and his mind began to wander as he listened and waited for Willie to make his visit. Soon, everything got quiet and faded away. The deafening silence overtook him and he fell into a restless, dream-filled sleep. Stay tuned for more...Any comments or suggestions can be emailed to Savage8818@aol.com. Please put "Edge of Town" as the header, as all other unsolicited mail is deleted.