|
Philanthropus Wilding's Grand Day
Out
© 1996 Steven Conoboy (UK)
The village of Maudlin was located slap-bang
in the middle of the ginormous continent of Ammonia. It was a curious
little village, not least for the fact that it was possibly the
smallest of its kind.
The curiousness of the place brought it numerous visitors, all
of whom, after seeing what their friends told them they absolutely
had to, buggered off sharpish in the general direction of the next
must-see tourist spot. Maudlin was certainly worth seeing. The miniscule
population of approximately two hundred and fifty people lived,
quite literally, in the forest.
The architecture of the place was a wonder in it's own right. Many
of it's buildings had actually been carved into the stupidly broad
trunks of the Ocean Trees. These trees, with their deep blue leaves
and similarly coloured fruit, were the fat bastards of treedom.
Of course, anyone who stopped to think about it soon realised the
name given to these trees was completely inaccurate, as the sea
is not, in fact, blue, but the people of Maudlin, having never seen
the ocean, didn't know this, so all could be forgiven.
This particular story goes back a long way, and concerns a young
man named Philanthropus Wilding. His friends just called him Phil:
you can guess why. One day, Phil was taking a brisk walk along one
of the lesser known paths into Mellowed Wood, surrounded by the
hazy blue of light filtered through the Ocean Tree canopy far above
him.
He was very upset. He had earlier been involved in a bit of an
argument with his father, the Head Geezer of the village, and Phil
had stormed off in a huff. The reason for the argument?
He'd come home extremely late after a drunken binge. Phil had lost
the debate, and so he went of for a brisk walk in the woods. He
always went for a brisk walk when he was upset.
He must have been very upset, for, unusually for him, he walked
deep, deep into the wood, leaving the path far behind him. For as
far back as can be remembered, people have been warned never to
stray too deep into the Mellowed Wood, as very strange things lurk
there, hungry things, ugly things.
Phil had been warned as well when he was very young, and so he
should have known better, but he was too steamed to think straight.
As he walked through the undergrowth, his foot snagged on a vine,
he tripped and fell. However, instead of hitting the ground, Phil
noticed something odd: he was still falling. He tumbled downward,
downward, with earthen walls racing up past him. Seeing the bottom
of this pit coming up to greet him at an extremely terrifying speed,
poor Phil believed his life was about to end.
 |
|
Download this story (and get a
fab free digital book reader if you haven't already) |
Read the rest of this short story? Well, you
can download
the complete story here for free.
And if you haven't already got it, you'll first
need to download the fantastic & free E-Rocket
Reader software (as shown in the picture above) to read
our digital story. We have all fallen in love with the free E-Rocket
Reader here at the Crownest, and strongly suggest you download it
too.
more
about E-book software
Back to the Short Story Listing
The
latest Science Fiction Books
|