28
Vicky sat alone in the dark, shivering in her
torn, wet nighty. It was cold in here. The floor was slimy against
her bare feet and the air stank so bad it made her want to throw
up. She was utterly miserable. She had never liked to be alone in
the dark, but this time alone was better than with one of those
monsters.
She had just about cried herself out since
her arrival on the ship. There weren’t any more tears left. Hope
had grown within her when the monster had climbed up the ship’s
anchor chain, carrying her with it. It hadn’t hurt her yet—maybe it
just wanted to show her the boat.
Once on the deck, the monster did something
strange: It took her to the back of the boat and held her up in the
air in front of a bunch of windows high above her there. She had a
feeling somebody was looking down at her from behind the windows
but she couldn’t see anyone. The monster held her up for a long
time, then tucked her under its arm and carried her through a door
and down flights of metal steps.
As they moved deeper and deeper into the
ship, the hope that had sprouted began to wither and die, replaced
by despair that slowly turned to horror as the rotten smell of the
monster filled the air. But it wasn’t coming from this monster. It
was coming from beyond the open metal door they were heading for.
Vicky began to kick and scream and fight to get free as they moved
closer to it, for there were rustling and scraping and grunting
sounds coming from the darkness beyond that door. The monster
didn’t seem to notice her struggles. It stepped through the opening
and the stench enveloped her.
The door clanged behind them and locked.
There must have been someone or something standing in the shadows
behind it as they had passed. And then the monsters were all around
her, huge dark forms pressing toward her, reaching for her, baring
their teeth, hissing. Vicky’s screams faded away, dying in her
throat as an explosion of terror stole her voice. They were going
to eat her—she could tell!
But the one who carried her wouldn’t let the
others touch her. It snapped and clawed at them until they finally
backed away, but not before her nighty had been torn and her skin
scratched in a couple of places. She was carried a ways down a
short corridor and then dropped in a small room without any
furniture. The door was closed and she had been left alone in the
dark, huddling and shivering in the farthest corner.
“I want to go home!” she moaned to no
one.
There was movement outside the door, and the
things out there seemed to go away. At least she couldn’t hear them
fighting and hissing and scraping against the door anymore. After a
while she heard another sound, like a chant, but she couldn’t make
out the words. And then there was more movement out in the
corridor.
The door opened. Whimpering with helpless
terror, Vicky tried to press herself farther into the unyielding
angles of the corner. There was a click and light suddenly filled
the room, blazing from the ceiling, blinding her. She hadn’t even
looked for a light switch. As her eyes adjusted to the glare, she
made out a form standing in the doorway. Not a monster—smaller and
lighter than a monster. Then her vision cleared.
It was a man! He had a beard and was dressed
funny—and she noticed that he only had one arm—but he was a man,
not a monster! And he was smiling!
Crying with joy, Vicky jumped up and ran to
him.
She was saved!