Showing posts with label mandy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mandy. Show all posts

Monday, December 9, 2024

What Killed Mandy? #014

The morning air carried a heavy tension as the group prepared for the day’s search. The campsite, a once serene clearing surrounded by lush jungle foliage, was now charged with nervous energy. Equipment rattled as Wade, Joseph, Ben, Dave, and Isabel finalized their gear. The low hum of hushed conversations intermingled with the chirping of unseen jungle birds.

Joon stood firm despite his injury, leaning heavily on a makeshift walking stick carved from a fallen branch. His face was pale, and his stitched wound throbbed visibly under the morning sunlight, but his resolve was unyielding.

“I’m going,” Joon announced. His voice was firm.

Wade hesitated, glancing at Joseph as if looking for backup. “Look, man, you can barely move. Stay back. We’ll cover more ground without worrying about you.”

Joon’s jaw tightened. “I am capable of making my own decisions. I owe it to Mandy.” His eyes flicked toward Mei, who stood a few feet away, her expression unreadable.

Mei stepped closer, her arms crossed tightly over her chest. “And what if you fall, Joon? Or worse, what if you injure yourself again? You’re not helping anyone by pretending to be a hero.”

Joon’s glare was fiery, a rare defiance in his usually reserved demeanor. “If I do nothing, what does that make me?”

Mei’s lips parted, but no words came. Instead, Max, who had been watching silently from the edge of the group, burst into the middle of the argument.

“Why don’t you both stay behind?” he snapped, his voice sharp with frustration. “I’ll go. Maybe it’ll be quieter without the bickering.”

Before anyone could respond, Max stormed off toward the jungle path. His rapid footsteps crunched on the underbrush, and Penelope darted after him, calling his name. Joseph was already in motion, his survival instincts kicking in.

“Wait,” he called out. “Max! Stay close.”

The scene devolved into a brief chaos. Mei moved to follow, but Joseph caught her arm gently, halting her with a calming tone.

“Mei, let him cool off. He’s old enough to handle himself for a moment.” He glanced at Joon. “And you—no arguments. Stay here and recover. We need you alive and able, not dragging us down.”

Joon’s shoulders sagged, his face a mixture of anger and defeat. He leaned back against a tree, conceding silently. Mei, still tense, nodded reluctantly and stepped back toward the tents.

Isabel watched the exchange with a grandmotherly concern, then raised her hand. “I’ll stay here with them. This group needs someone with a cooler head, and something tells me things might get messy.”

Joseph gave her an appreciative nod, his gaze lingering briefly on Joon and Mei before turning toward the jungle where Max had vanished. “Let’s move. The sooner we get out there, the better chance we have of finding her.”


Into the Jungle

The team moved swiftly, the oppressive heat of the jungle weighing heavily on their bodies. Thick vines and tangled underbrush seemed to conspire against them, each step a battle against the wild. The sunlight filtered through the dense canopy, casting strange, fragmented shadows across the path.

Joseph stayed alert, his eyes scanning the ground for signs. The blood-splattered sand at the waterfall basin from the night before still gnawed at his mind. The tracks he had found—deep, clawed impressions—were unlike anything he’d seen before. And now, with every step deeper into the jungle, an ominous silence seemed to settle, as if the forest itself held its breath.

Dave trailed behind Wade, muttering anxiously under his breath. “What if she’s hurt? What if... what if we’re too late?”

Wade shot him a glare. “We’re doing everything we can. Panicking doesn’t help.”

Alice, walking beside Joseph, cast him a sideways glance. “Do you believe this thing, whatever it is, took her?”

Joseph didn’t answer immediately. His grip tightened on his hunting knife as he carefully stepped over a thick root. “I believe something did,” he said finally. “And I believe it’s still out there.”

Her face hardened. “Then we’d better be ready.”


A Grim Discovery

As they approached a small clearing, a faint metallic scent hung in the air. Joseph’s hand shot up, signaling the group to stop. They froze, the sudden silence magnifying every rustle of leaves, every distant birdcall.

“What is it?” Alice whispered, stepping closer.

Joseph crouched, his fingers brushing the ground. There, half-hidden beneath a cluster of ferns, was a shredded piece of fabric. He picked it up carefully, holding it up for the others to see. It was bloodied, torn—Mandy’s shirt.

Dave let out a strangled cry, pushing past the others to reach Joseph. “No... no, no, no. That’s hers! That’s hers!”

Wade grabbed him by the shoulders, trying to steady him. “Calm down. It doesn’t mean—”

Joseph cut him off sharply. “It means we’re not alone out here.”

The words hung heavy in the air as the group exchanged uneasy glances. Wade’s usual bravado seemed to falter, replaced by a growing dread. Alice knelt beside Joseph, studying the surrounding area. “There’s more blood,” she said grimly, pointing to a trail of dark, dried stains leading deeper into the jungle.

“Something dragged her,” Joseph said, his voice low. He stood, his knife gleaming faintly in the dappled light. “And it’s big.”

For a moment, no one moved. Then Wade took a shaky breath and squared his shoulders. “We keep moving. We don’t stop until we find her.”

Joseph nodded but felt a chill crawl up his spine. Whatever had taken Mandy was still out there. Watching. Waiting. And now, it knew they were coming.


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