'You have to be open to the possibility that for some reason…you've been…'
'What…the 'Chosen One'? That sounds like a cliche from a movie.' I sniggered. 'Something Kung Fu or Buddha.'
Sela looked hurt. Damn, I did it again. Quickly, I said, 'Oops…there I go again. Just punch me,' I said offering my arm.
'Just put down your defenses and sarcasm, so we can talk calmly as well as intelligently.'
'Okay,' I replied, taking her hand and walking toward the stream. Jerky and the horses drank from the clean, fresh water. We stood under a tree that sported the fall look with colorful orange leaves with an occasional one cascading to the ground.
The slightly salty scent of Sela smelled wonderful. I wanted to pull her down into the tall grass and make love to her so I could avoid talking about the whole topic of my being some superhero destined to save humanity and the world from the forces of evil. Softly under my breath using my best Darth Vader voice, I muttered, 'Luke, it is your destiny.'
'I heard that,' Sela said, laughing as she spun around and hugged me. 'Yes, maybe it is your destiny.'
Suddenly, a cold breeze slammed into me and made me shiver. Either it was destiny validating what Sela just said, or there was a cold front coming.
'Fine. Let's, for a moment, just say that I am some sort of superhero or religious icon poised to confront Madeline and her army of evil. What's the game plan? I mean look around…there's you, me, our two horses and my incredible knows-when-evil-approaches super sidekick, Jerky! It's not exactly an awesome menacing militia.'
Sela nodded her head slowly to confirm my sarcasm-tinged statement. 'Yes, but we have to put our trust in-'
'God?'
She looked me straight in the eyes, nodded her head a few times and I knew she was dead serious.
'That brings up an interesting question. Why did God let things get so out of hand in the first place? I mean, for Chrissake, so many people died and died horribly. For what?'
'Don't know, but I do know there has always been a battle between good and evil. Guess evil got an upper hand over the last decade or two.'
'Do ya think?' I said with my best Steve Martin voice. The minute I said it, I realized my sarcasm went a little over the edge.
Sela socked me in the arm. Both horses looked up for a second and then went back to drinking.
'Ouch,' I said. 'Okay, I deserved that one.'
The horses walked away from the stream and started to munch on the nearby grass.
'We can continue to discuss this more tonight at dinner. We should get in a few more miles before calling it quits for the night.'
'You da boss,' I said jokingly.
'And you just remember that,' she said poking me in the arm and snickering.
Jerky decided this time she wanted to ride with me. The warm cat perched on my shoulder acted like a soft fleece scarf. The wind occasionally contained hints of something colder in the forecast. Our luck with warm weather was most likely going to change.
'I don't suppose you have a tent in that magic bag of yours?' I asked as we slowed the pace for a while.
'No, I've been looking for something like that every time we find a town.'
'I think we are going to need one pretty soon. There's a change in the weather coming around the bend.'
'Yeah, it's inevitable. There are a couple of towns that we are going to go through tomorrow. Hopefully, we can find a small backpacking tent or at least a tarp.'
That night around the campfire, we talked about the events that had happened leading to what we called the collapse.
'Where were you the day that the president and his whole cabinet were murdered?' Sela asked as she threw another log on the fire.
'I nearly forgot about that tragedy. By then it was beginning to get hard to hear any reliable news broadcasting. Most of the television and radio stations weren't even broadcasting.'
'That made things so difficult. The just not knowing what was happening. So, where were you?'
I poked a stick in the fire, trying to remember where I was. After a few minutes of stammering and umming, I said, 'I think I was in Virginia, still trying to teach. As time went by during the fall after the horrible events in that spring and summer, fewer and fewer kids were showing up at school. Word of the president's death and all his cabinet got to the school. Several parents came and got their kids. People felt it was the final straw. That was the last day I went to teach.'
'Seems to me that was when Madeline seized power.'
'Yeah, she had been head of Homeland Security and declared martial law with her calling all the shots. No one objected and if they did, well, that was the last we heard of them.'
Sela put several large logs on the fire, which cast a warm orange glow. Jerky was curled up in a tight ball on my backpack. 'Speaking of shots, isn't that when the National Guard flipped out?'
Nodding my head vigorously, I recounted how the army was given orders to shoot during any rioting or looting. More of the American population dwindled. 'That's when I hit the road and got out of the city and walked way around any towns that I passed.'
We continued to describe how anarchy prevailed, and from that late fall when the collapse began, day-to-day living became a matter of survival.
Sela put her head on my lap and we changed the subject. We talked about loved ones…some that we lost and others that we wondered where they were.
As the night wore on, the fire began to burn down to coals. Sela was drifting in and out of sleep. 'Are you ready to call it a night?' I asked softly.
'Yeah, I'm bushed. Put a couple of big logs on the fire and it will keep us warm for a while,' she managed to say between yawns.
As I got up to reach for a log, I noticed a blue swirling light off in the distance in the middle of the road we had been following. The light was on the horizon and I could tell it was creeping slowly toward us.
'Sela, quick…get the horses packed.'
'Why?' she asked, sitting up.
'We have a problem. Quickly, we've got to get going…now,' I said nervously, pointing in the direction of the blue light. 'That doesn't look like the northern lights.'
She stood up, stared at the approaching preternatural light show and gasped. 'Oh, shit.'
We both scrambled to pack up our meager belongings. Sela readied the horses. I kicked dirt on the fire. Now the ominous lights picked up speed and were nearly upon us.
'Are you ready?' Sela yelled.
'Just about.'
But it was too late. The encroaching blue lights began to circle us and I could see that the swirling luminescence was, in fact, flames. They reminded me of the flame one would see on a gas burner. We began to feel the heat. The horses skittered nervously. I held onto Hope's reins. Sela was already mounted on Tempest.
'Come on. We can make a run for it,' she cried.
'No. Madeline and I are going to have it out right here and now,' I yelled. The searing circle tightened. A thought suddenly edged its way into my thinking.
Sela shouted again that we should make a run through the flames. As she spun around, trying to keep Tempest from bolting, both she and the horse stared at me.
Softly, she said, 'Heckel, what's wrong?'
I went up to Tempest, took hold of his bridal, and whispered to Sela, 'Don't worry.' She looked down at me with eyes laden with concern, but with a confident loving smile. With my head held high and a huge assertive grin, I marched us straight toward the Madeline-infused inferno.
The flames heightened and swirled faster as if someone were turning up the knob on a gas oven. The heat