All the joys and anticipation of the end of the week was replaced with anxiety and dread for Davis. His brain still racked over his split-second decision to let the shapeshifting monster run away free. The more intimidating matter was how Louise would treat him after that act.
He lay still in bed for several moments. His stomach felt like it was tied into a giant knot. He couldnât close his eyes or sleep, his brain was far too amok to even think about sleep.
He clenched his teeth and forced himself out, slowly getting ready for the school day.
----------------------------------------
Louise woke up as energized as ever, but below the surface she was still fuming. As she got ready for school, she was running all the ways that she would scold Davis when she saw him in-person again. After several minutes of imagining the scenarios, she sighed to herself.
Perhaps it was better if she just kept to herself for the day.
----------------------------------------
When lunchtime arrived, she sat down at the usual spot, but Davis was nowhere to be seen.
He had picked the lock to an empty classroom, munching on a candy bar. This time, at least, he made sure to properly dispose of his garbage.
A day of studying and classwork passed on by, normally for Louise, but agonizingly slow for Davis. It felt like his stomach was going to cave in on itself every moment, especially the few classes he shared with his partner. He tried to focus as much as he could, avoiding trying to even look at the girl. Every now and then, heâd jerk his eyes towards her desk.
She seemed bored, looking everywhere but the front of the class.
After the final bell rang, Davis wasted no time in blending in with the school crowd, hoping his fashion wouldnât give himself away to the girl.
Iâm just gonna sleep this day off.
----------------------------------------
Davisâs avoidance for the day was annoying, but to her, not too serious of an issue. It was at least an issue she could confront him about if he continued.
With the library open, she thought that was a good place as any to continue searching for leads.
Plus, the government wouldnât know it was her on that public computer. Maybe the school would get in trouble, and get closed for a day or two.
Just hop on some sketchy conspiracy sights, try to find anything local, and hope sheâd come across some sort of lead.
Though her plans were a bit disrupted as she saw three familiar figures standing outside the doors.
It was Kirino, and the red and blue haired students that were with her last time.
She stood there, hands on her hips, talking to them. She spoke with a strong, and somewhat authoritative voice. She was also fairly loud too.
Loud enough to almost make out what she was saying from Louiseâs distance.
Louise dove behind a nearby hedge, glaring at the trio.
It was a perfect storm of luck; The library was already quiet, most of the students had cleared out, so she was able to catch bits of her conversation.
âThis is importantâ¦â
âWhispering Minesâ¦â
âTomorrowâ¦â
âAloneâ¦â
âDo notâ¦â
âAcquire...â
The Whispering Mines. They were an old settlement deep in the woods of Tomahawk Hills, and she vaguely remembered some ghost stories connected to them. Perhaps they had some merit to it.
She snickered to herself. She should have thought of this sooner. Kirino was rich; She probably already paid somebody to give her all sorts of secret info.
She thought about looking up thieving or spy techniques, and just spy on Kirino whenever she has free time. Or perhaps Davis could stalk her? Sheâll have to ask him about it.
Helping save their town was one thing, but foiling Kirinoâs plans on top of it? It was perfect.
The three split up, Kirino walking one and the two students the other direction. With the coast clear, Louise bolted into the library, keeping her mind on the strong lead.
----------------------------------------
Davis had been lying in his bed for the past few hours. He hadnât eaten since lunch, and the anxiety was still overpowering his mind and stomach.
He thought to himself how he had to at least do something, maybe some research of his own to make up for his mistake to Louise.
But where to even start? I donât want to go to some site and get noticed by PAIN. Or a trojan virus, or something else.
His phone buzzed, lurching him out of his unresponsive state.
It was Louise.
His stomach churned as he opened it.
âI found a huge lead, but we gotta act on it soon. Iâll be at your place first thing in the morning. Be dressed to head out into the woods too!â
The knot in his stomach undid itself, feeling the release of relief rise through his chest. He smiled, thinking that things were going to go back to usual.
The pangs came right back as somebody knocked on his door.
Could that be Louise? But she sent me a text message⦠or maybe it was delayed⦠Or maybeâ¦
He sucked in his breath and hurried over to the door. He cracked it open, peeping at who it was.
It was himself, standing at the door at first glance. He was almost shocked, but then he remembered:
The shapeshifter.
At second glance, he realized it didnât look all too like him. Sure, it still had his outfit, hood, pale face, but there were significant differences.
His face was looking more childlike and innocent, with bigger eyes and somewhat poutier lips. Not to mention, the body was certainly not the same as his.
The clothes beneath the jacket hugged tighter, and the body shape was looking curvier.
âHeyâ¦â He spoke to his admittedly cuter doppelganger. âIs everything all right? Youâre not here to kill me or anything, right?â
It shook its head.
âMoney. I need money.â
He scrunched his brow in confusion, before realizing what she meant.
âYou ran out already?â
âI wanted lots of food, but they got mad. I gave them the money, but they said it wasnât enough.â
He stared for a few moments. âHow much did you order?â
âI pointed at all the pictures.â
Davis sighed, giggling a bit. âAll right, well hold on a second.â
He pulled out his wallet, taking out a $100, along with two $20âs.
He held up the $100. âSee this? This should give you enough to feast on to make up for yesterday. And with these two, try to not order everything at once. Pick one food a day, and these will last you four days.â
It nodded, scanning the faces, numbers, and details of the cash.
âI can trade one for more food, and this one, I trade for less?â
âYup. I uh, donât think you know how to count.â
It shook its head. âDoes it involve these?â
It pointed at the numbers at the bill.
âYeah. Then thereâs change. Oh uh, just, also when you give them the money, tell them to keep the change. At least until you figure out how it works.â
âThank you. I will do my best.â
âIf you ever need more money, just stop back here, okay? I can help out.â
âI will try. My master is still looking. I donât want to endanger you. I should leave.â
It glanced around, before sprinting away. Davis reached towards the creature.
âWait, what about yourâ¦â
He sighed. Still, most of the anxiety had washed away. His previous decision didnât backfire horribly, and more importantly, he was still friends with Louise.
----------------------------------------
Saturday morning, Davis was rudely woken up by a pounding on the door.
Still dressed in his big jacket and baggy pants from the previous day, he leapt out of bed and shuffled over to the door.
There in the doorway stood Louise, with a dumb smile on her face, all dressed up in her cargo shorts and alien t-shirt. This time, the alien was purple.
âYou know, I was gonna comment about how youâd need to prove your dependability to me.â She said, âBut you actually got up when I asked, all dressed!â
He yawned. âI⦠Didnât just get up. I swearâ¦â
She rolled her eyes. âYeah yeah. Now, before we get to business, I do need to address something.â
The pit in his stomach began forming again.
âJust, when Iâm about to kill a cryptid, let me, all right? We canât really afford to have any sorta debate in the heat of battle. Honestly, weâre really lucky the thing didnât ambush us on our way home alone. Unless itâs still planning one...â
Davis opened his mouth for a brief moment, thinking back to yesterday afternoon. He closed, holding his tongue.
He didnât want to cause any issue.
âFine. Just before we get too deep into fights, Iâll just, try to let you know if something feels off.â
âThereâs nothing wrong with that. There is something wrong with freeing a creature thatâs trying to kill me.â
He nodded. The stomach pangs dissipated.
âSoâ¦â He paused. âWhatâs the lead you found?â
âEver hear of the Whispering Hills?â
From her backpack she pulled a few scans of news articles. Each one had constant mentions of ghosts, mass hysteria, riches in the mine, and so on.
âThis stuff is like, prime paranormal material.â
Davis raised an eyebrow at her research. âYou actually found a good source that wasnât just a random forum poster?â
Louise nodded enthusiastically. âOh, my guarantee that something HAS to be going on here is that I found out Kirino is interested in this place too!â
Davis squinted. âYou donât think weâre gonna bump into each other again, are you?â
âWell why do you think I wanted us to leave so early?â
She cleared her throat, picking up one of the articles.
âSo basically, some people claimed to hear ghostly whispering calling them to some hills, located deep in our local woods a few centuries ago. They followed it, and all of the sudden they come across some hills that are chock-full of gold! A bunch of miners then holed up there to try and get really rich.â
âSo rumors about a ghost voice is all there is?â
She picked up another one of the papers. âWhispering Hills settlement disaster, Whispering Hills colony established, Law Enforcement bars visitors from Whispering Hills Settlement. Thereâs like, so much misfortune around this place. Did you know there were four attempts to keep this settlement running, and all failed? All due to mysterious accidents and mass hysteria.â
Davis nodded.
âSurvivors, and yeah I do mean SURVIVORS, who fled the settlement kept complaining about a constant whispering, trying to call them back into the mines cuz of all the riches down there.â
âSo weâre gonna find out whatâs causing the whispering, beat it and go home?â
âYup, thatâs the plan!â
âAnd what if you canât just punch it? What if itâs like an actual ghost?â
âThatâs no biggie. Thereâs always some way to kill a ghost.â
âBut arenât ghosts already dead?â
Louise shook her head. âThen banishing it? Exorcizing? We can figure something out, like we always do.â
Davis huffed. âI do know a few things about putting spirits to rest, maybe we can try it out if it comes to that. But if weâre threatened, and we have no clear way to deal with them, weâll run. Got it?â
Louise shrugged. âI mean I guessâ¦â
Davis picked up one of the papers, with the headline mentioning the police.
âAlso, are you sure we wonât get in trouble for trespassing there?â
âPsh.â Louise almost laughed. âIf they actually bothered to assign police to watch the middle of nowhere, Iâd willingly ask them for help on our mission!â
After preparation, the two were all set to head out.
The hills wouldnât be too hard to find; They were even visible off in the distance. They simply needed to head off in one direction, hit the hills, and follow along the side until they reached the settlement. A simple journey.
That was, until their trek through was interrupted.
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Decently deep in, they saw a lone figure standing, staring into the sky.
His outfit was too unique to be forgotten:
It was Von Chad.
[https://fishstoriesblog.files.wordpress.com/2023/05/ch10-p1-min.jpg]
The two didnât waste any time to dive behind a pine tree, barely peeking out to stare at the mysterious man.
He held up a hand towards them, motioning for them to stand still.
The two froze in place. Davis grasped Louiseâs wrist tight.
Moments later, he sighed, rubbing the bridge of his nose.
âNot today⦠You two can come on out. I think my target has eluded me.â
Louise walked on up to the man, towing Davis along with her. She stared up to the sky, before looking back at him.
âWhat exactly were you looking for?â
âIâm sure somebody as educated on the supernatural as you is aware of the Thunderbird, correct?â
âYeah, Iâve heard of the myths. Thatâs real too?â
The man laughed. âOh, yes! And thereâs so much more I would love to tell you about, thatâs if I could however.â
Louise narrowed her eyes. âOh, so you come around, make demands to me, but telling us about all the cryptids around here is too far?â
âYes, unfortunately. Iâve been around for well over a millenia, and the stories I could tell!â
âHold on,â Davis interjected. âYou donât mean an ACTUAL millennia, youâre just exaggerating, right?â
He broke into laughter again. âDo I seem like the type to lie?â
[https://fishstoriesblog.files.wordpress.com/2023/05/ch10-p2-min.jpg]
Louise and Davis instinctively took a step back.
âDonât tell meâ¦â Louise took a deep breath. âYouâre one of those secret shadow government elites that happens to eat babies to live forever?â
Davis coughed out a laugh, eyes bugging out of his head.
âLouise, WHAT?â
She turned frustrated at his friend.
âItâs a thing! Like look at him! Heâs fancy, well spoken, ultra powerful, immortal? Like isnât that all the criteria for being a secret evil ruler of the world?â
He shook his head. âNo, no. Ruling the world is too easy. Such a weak ambition. I prefer collecting birds.â
Louise had to hold back a snort. âYou gotta be kidding me⦠Too easy?â
âWell, if you donât lie,â Davis pitched in, âWhy DONâT you rule the world. Youâre implying you could if you wanted to. Not to mention, bird collecting would be easier with the worldâs resources under your control.â
âAsk yourself this: Whatâs the difference between a caged human and a caged bird? A caged bird will love you for providing everything it needs to live. A caged human with everything they need will always be left wanting more. Donât you already understand this Louise?â
She stared at the immortal in utter disbelief.
âWhat do you mean, Iâm not caged!â
âNow then, thank you two for respecting the avians. I must continue my search!â
In the blink of an eye, he became a blur, dashing into the thicket of the forest. A gust of wind followed him, causing the two to stumble.
Davis sighed in relief, and Louise huffed. She turned to her partner.
âNo way in heck heâs that oldâ¦â
Davis jabbed her in the side. âI told you it was a good idea we shouldnât have messed with that guy. Immortality, super strength, super speed, what else do you think heâs hiding?â
âHe could still be lying!â
Davis scoffed. âDoes his age really matter? You saw how fast he was!â
âWell, we can figure out some plan of attack later. You donât think silver or garlic would work?â
âWhat do youâ¦â The gears in his head clicked. âOh. I mean, you can try? But if it DOES work but doesnât kill him, you might be in a lot of trouble.â
She put her hand on her chin. âTrue⦠If he doesnât lie, maybe we can ask what his weakness is?â
----------------------------------------
As the explorers continued a light fog descended upon the woods. The moist, chilly air was thankfully repelled well by their warm clothing, but Davis wasnât a big fan of the atmosphere it was creating. After reaching the hills and following along the edge of it, they came upon a clearing.
A massive expanse of dirt, mud, roots, dead leaves, stretching to the size of a small neighborhood block. In the center of the clearing was what they were looking for.
[https://fishstoriesblog.files.wordpress.com/2023/05/ch10-p32.jpg]
The Whispering Settlement.
It was a bizarre mix of structures;
There were some made of stone, others wood. They ranged from well-kept to rotting away. Some looked like they were picked straight from a wild west set, and others built like medieval stone huts. Off against the hills were some old structures, most likely for processing and refining ores.
On the outskirts of the settlement were frames and foundations, set up for homes that would never be built.
Louise smiled at the sight.
âSee, told you thereâd be no cops. Come on, letâs hurry up and-â
Davis tugged her on the shoulder.
âJust, before we run in, letâs avoid the buildings. Some of these buildings could be centuries old. Thereâs no telling how their condition could be, or what could be nesting inside.â
Louise nodded, slipping on her gauntlets.
âI donât think itâll be that bad. If asbestos is what gets me at the end of all of this, Iâll leave you a million dollars in my will!â
Davis gave her a disapproving glare. âFirst, I donât think you can get asbestos from buildings this old. Iâm thinking some like, poisonous mushrooms, or maybe hallucinogens. Just before we do ANYTHING involving those buildings, letâs both agree on it. No rushing in like a buffoon.â
âAhhh, fine fine. But I have a feeling youâll be wanting to crack open some of those houses soon enough!â
For the next few hours, the two thoroughly scanned the town, hunting for any supernatural clues.
Slowly but surely, plant life was starting to crawl back in, the outermost paths having a tangle of leaves and weeds. The frames of buildings were victim to the creep as well. One of the saloon buildings had several holes either pecked or smashed through its walls. Others which looked like shops were most likely looted. Most of them seemed fine at first glance, but each one had a not so subtle hole smashed into them somewhere.
The only buildings that were still standing strong were made of stone or brick, but even then vines were growing up the walls and overtaking them.
Other than rubble, dirt, and uninteresting plant life, the town had nothing to offer.
Amidst the ruins, there was one more stable looking building built of bricks. It was a single story, single room building. It had a chimney, but no windows.
Its door was made of solid wood, and hadnât begun yielding to nature.
âThis one at least looks safe enough to pop open.â Louise mentioned, sizing it up. Iâm gonna see if I can open the front door, all right?â
Davis nodded.
She walked up to the door, pushing.
It budged forward only slightly. Something was stopping it from the other side.
She gave the door a powerful kick, and it snapped off the hinges, but still stood upward. Davis winced, hoping she didnât wake up any sort of wild animals living inside.
She pulled at the heavy door, removing it from the frame.
Stacked up against the doorway was a bedframe, heavy dresser, a chest, and thoroughly rusted mining tools.
She carefully pushed away the barricade, getting a better view of the buildingâs interior.
[https://fishstoriesblog.files.wordpress.com/2023/05/ch10-p4-min.jpg]
It was a very small house, soaked in dust. Whatever furniture wasnât put up against the door was overturned or smashed into splinters.
The fireplace was totally charred black, and in front of it was a skeleton, sitting on top of some chest.
Louise crept over, heart racing in fear and excitement. Davis stared in disgust.
âDonât tell me youâre going toâ¦â
She shoved the skeleton off, bones clattering against the floor.
âOnly way to figure out why this guy literally died, you know? Come on Davis!â
She opened the chest, which was unlocked, to findâ¦
Nothing.
She scratched her head, peering around the dusty container.
âThereâs nothing in hereâ¦â
âI just hope you didnât disturb his spirit for nothing thenâ¦â
As she shut the chest, she noticed a leather booklet to the side of it. She picked it up.
Every single page was torn out, except for one. Shaky writing was scrawled on it.
âEveryone has gone mad outside. I have enough food and kindling, and my door will hold. If they all starve, I can return home with my earnings safely.â
Louise opened the chest a second time, hoping for some kinda secret contraption to reveal some hidden treasure. Still, it was empty.
She turned back to Davis, holding up the booklet.
âSo the newspapers werenât lying. This guy mentions everyone outside going mad, and how he tried to wait them out.â
She walked out of the home, showing her partner the journal. He scanned the single page.
âI mean, how do you know heâs not lying? What if he went mad, barricaded himself inside, and starved to death?â
She shrugged. âI mean his âearningsâ was an empty chest. Unless some rats stole what he wanted and slipped out?â
She glanced back inside the building. There were no holes or any way any person could have gone in or out, other than the chimney. Even then, it was too thin for an adult to fit through.
âI doubt they were digging cheese up here. Letâs keep hunting around.â
All the paths that ran throughout the settlement connected and routed their way to one point: The mines themselves. It was an old-timey looking mineshaft entrance that still looked pretty well kept up. The wooden beams were still solid and standing, the exterior had fresh minecarts lined up, ready to carry more slag or valuables out. The tracks were rust-free as well, suspiciously leading into a charred wooden building that Davis assumed was some kinda depot.
Not too far from the mine entrance was a serious outlier to the rotting structures: Pickup trucks and trailers attached to them.
They were rusted, but compared to their surroundings, their wear seemed quaint.
âYou donât think thereâs police in there, do you?â
âOh yeahâ Louise scoffed. âLetâs just send some police officers to sleep in some rusted trailers.â
âOh yeah, good pointâ¦â
âIâm gonna go check em out. I mean⦠We should go check them out. You agree?â
âI mean, unless theyâre booby trapped? But theyâll still be much safer than checking out the buildings.â
Louise hopped on over to the trailer, Davis tagging behind. She tried the door.
Locked.
Without hesitating, she grabbed it with both hands, yanking.
The handle popped off.
Grabbing the indent from where the handle was, she yanked again. She huffed and pushed one of her legs against the wall. The entire door popped off, and she staggered back a few steps, still holding onto it.
âYou know, I coulda just like⦠lockpicked it?â
âYeah, but this is a bit more fun.â
The inside of the trailer was coated in dust. There were empty cans of soup scattered on the floor, and shredded remains of ramen cups strewn about.
There was a map of the US tacked against the wall, a red mark over Tomahawk Hills, and a red line connecting to highways across the entire country.
Louise didnât hesitate to begin rummaging as Davis stared nervously.
âYou uh⦠Realize this is vandalism right? Or thievery? Interfering at a crime scene?â
Louise turned around, giving him a dumbfounded stare.
âSince when did you start caring about the law so much?â
âI mean, if somebody did still live here, they could trace the crime back to us⦠It just feels wrong rummaging through somebodyâs stuff like this.â
âWell, you saw that dust. Nobodyâs been here for a while, and I donât think that fact is gonna change. We also gotta find some sort of clue!â
She turned back and continued to pull open drawers and cabinets, finding nothing but more food, utensils, tupperware, or random tools. She did manage to find some supplies of note:
Flares, a long length of rope, some pickaxes and sledgehammers, along with cables for power tools. She also found a set of car keys.
She hopped out, pushing the unlock button.
The truck towing the trailer honked in response.
She popped open the driverâs door and quickly surveyed the front seats..
The dashboard was smashed up. The display screen in the center looked like somebody drove a pickaxe through the center of it. Several frayed wires were left loose underneath the steering wheel, and the steering wheel itself was smashed apart.
There were also stains of dried blood on the seat.
Louise felt her heart race. Her imagination raced at what could have caused the scene.
She left the seat, turning to her partner.
âNow I know for a fact weâre not gonna see the police. There HAS to be some sort of cover-up going on.â
Davisâs eyes bugged out. âWait, did you find a body in there or something?â
âNo, just dried blood, and quite a bit of it. With the car all smashed up like that too, I donât think it was an accident. You think if the police were actually watching this place, theyâd find these trucks, the dried blood, and make a report about it, right? Itâd be in some sort of newspaper!â
âOr maybe you missed something during your research?â
She shook her head. âIf thereâs a few things I can be sure of, itâs that aliens are real, and my ability to research into this stuff. I checked every lead online I could, and there was nothing from the past few decades related to it.â
Louise turned towards the hills, where the mine entrance was located.
âItâs a safe bet that whatever is driving everyone who comes here insane, HAS to be in the mines.â
Before entering, Louise took some time to gather a pickaxe, some flares, and a bundle of rope from the trailer.
They were going into a mineshaft, so some of these supplies were bound to be helpful, she thought.
âJust before we take a step inâ Davis spoke up, staring at the mine entrance. âLetâs just have some ground rules before going in there, all right?â
Louise silently nodded.
âAt any sight of structural instability, like a cracked beam of wood, we should turn around instantly. A cave-in is no joke, probably more dangerous than monsters. Besides, didnât you say something about wanting to die to a monster rather than something lame, like asbestos, or a cave-in?â
âOh yeah, Iâm with you there. Not the uh, dying to a cryptid part, but the landslide. I donât think these gauntlets were meant for power mining out of caverns.â She chuckled to herself.
âAlso, letâs say the worst case scenario happens and a landslide does happen. Youâll be stuck, but I can still escape. Iâll ghost through the rubble and call the authorities for some help. Youâll just have to sit tight, but I promise Iâll do whatever I can to get you out.â
Louise frowned. âBut that means the police will catch us⦠There should be some alternate exit, right?â
âI donât think mines work like that. Plus, if you went exploring after a cave-in, youâll end up getting more lost. If you stay put, itâll be easier for a rescue team to find you.â
Her expression changed to a smile. âThen, I trust you on that front! Just at least come down and visit if itâs gonna be a few days before they can get me out, all right?â
Davis grinned in turn. âI think authorities will be all over the place, and wonât let me back near. But Iâll definitely try.â
In his mind, the small fight they had a few days ago no longer mattered.
Davis had Louiseâs back, and he had hers. This exploration would go solidly.