Corporal Daniel Reeves wiped the sweat from his brow, his uniform clung to him like a second skin. The Guadalcanal jungle was alive with the buzz of insects, the distant call of birds and the ever present whisper of the enemy. Somewhere out there, the Japanese lay in wait. Just as exhausted. Just as desperate.
Reeves and his squad had been ordered to patrol a section of the island near the Matanikau River. He looked over the documents. Intelligence suggested that the enemy may be moving in that area, but something about this mission just didn’t feel quite right. The feeling gnawed at him. The reports mentioned missing patrols, men vanishing without a trace, their radios sputtering nothing but static before going dead. A shiver ran down his back as he lowered the paperwork and looked out into the jungle.
“Keep your eyes open, “Sergeant Wilkes muttered. “The Japs ain’t the only thing lurking around in them trees. This place gives me the willies.”
Reeves frowned. “What the hell does that mean?”
Wilkes shook his head, scanning the jungle. “The locals say there’s somethin’ a lot worse than the Japs in those woods. They think it’s some kind of demon. I ain’t superstitious but two patrols have already vanished in the last month.”
They moved deeper into the jungle, the air was thick with decay and something else, something coppery, something wrong. Then they found the first body.
Private Sanders knelt beside it, gagging. “Jeus Christ! … His face!”
Reeves forced himself to look. The Marine’s skin was shriveled, stretched tight over bone, as if something sucked him dry. His mouth hung open in a silent scream and his empty eye sockets stared at nothing. Tiny writhing maggots squirmed inside the hollowed out holes. His fingers were gnarled, like he had died clawing at something unseen. His stomach had been torn open, the ribs protruded like jagged knives and the jungle floor beneath him was black with congealed blood.
“What the hell…what could have done this?” Reeves whispered.
“Not a Jap.” Wilkes said. “They shoot, stab, fight. Hell, even light you on fire if they have to. But this?”
They pressed on, unease growing with every step. The jungle felt alive, breathing. The trees swayed but there was no wind. Shadows moved when they shouldn’t. Then, as dusk fell, the jungle became alive with an eerie, inhuman wail.
A cry rang out. Reeves spun, rifle up. Private Jenkins was gone.
“Jenkins!” Wilkes bellowed.
The jungle swallowed his voice. Then a sickening squelch. A gurgling moan. And silence.
The squad tightened their formation, eyes darting into the jungle. Something was hunting them. Something that was not human.
Then Reeves saw it. A shape, almost human, but wrong. It clung to a tree, long limbs wrapped around the bark like a grotesque insect. Its black skin was almost fluid, smoke-like but slimy. It pulsed and shimmered with an unnatural sheen. It was mottled, dark, blending into the jungle like some kind of chameleon. Sunken eyes gleamed with malice and a long, gaping, tooth-filled maw dripped with black goo. It hissed at the soldiers.
“Open fire!”
Gunfire tore through the jungle, but the thing moved too fast. It darted from one tree to another. Then it was among them.
It ripped into Private Sanders, claws rending flesh. Blood sprayed in hot arcs, painting the jungle in crimson. Sanders’ screams turned wet as his throat was torn open, his vocal cords snapping like taut strings. His body convulsed, his guts spilled onto the ground with a sickening slopping sound. Reeves fired, but the bullets didn’t even slow the thing down. It let out an ear piercing shriek before vanishing into the underbrush. Moments later they could hear it chirping, almost mocking them. The sound slithered through the jungle, bouncing off of the trees, making it impossible to pinpoint exactly where it was coming from. It felt as if the creature was everywhere at once, surrounding them. It was hunting them from the shadows.
The remaining Marines ran, crashing through the jungle, fear overriding training. One by one they fell. Wilkes went down next, yanked into the darkness with a strangled cry. Then another. And another.
Reeves barely had time to register Wilkes’ absence when another scream erupted to his left. Private Hale’s body jerked violently as something unseen slammed into him. His rifle fired wildly into the air before his head snapped back with a revolting crunch. The thing was on him, its clawed fingers burrowed into his chest, peeling flesh away like bark off a tree. The creature’s barbed tongue shot forward latching onto his face. With a grotesque slurp, the skin collapsed inward. His skull caved in as his essence was drained. The creature let out a satisfied chitter before tossing the husk aside like garbage. Reeves sprinted into the dense jungle.
Reeves kept running until he burst into a clearing. The moon cast pale light onto the scene before him, a pit filled with bodies. American, Japanese, British, withered and hollowed out like husks. The corpses were tangled together, their limbs bent and twisted. Some of the faces were still locked in expressions of unspeakable agony. Bones jutted through rotting flesh, their marrow sucked dry.
A rustling behind Reeves made him spin around. Rifle up and at the ready. But it was too late.
The creature lunged, slamming into him with inhuman force. His ribs cracked as he was hurled to the ground, his rifle flying from his grip. A vice-like claw pinned him down, the thing’s face inches from his own. Its breath was rancid, a mixture of decay and something metallic, like rusted iron. Reeves struggled, punching and kicking but the creature only chittered. Its skin shifted like liquid shadow. Then, slowly, almost playfully, one claw traced down his chest before sinking deep into his stomach. Fire erupted through his body as it twisted inside of him, tearing muscle and organ apart with ease.
He saw those sunken, gleaming eyes and the jaw was open wide. A long, barbed tongue shot forward, wrapping around his neck like a serpent. Then came the violent yank that sent him tumbling into the pit of corpses. The creature was on him again, tossing him around like a dog with a toy. His vision blurred. He felt it. His blood draining. His body withering. The last thing he heard was the wet sound of something feeding.
∼ Kathleen McCluskey
© Copyright Kathleen McCluskey. All Rights Reserved.

