I See It by Caleb Hunter

Caleb Hunter lives in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains and has been writing off-and-on since he was 12. Although he has allowed the struggles of adulthood to keep him from the keyboard more often than he should’ve, nothing soothes his soul more than taking a blank screen and filling it with characters. A disciple of Ray Bradbury, Neil Gaiman and Stephen King (just to name a few), you will usually find him reading/writing speculative sci-fi, fantasy or horror. Recently, while sitting in the summer sun, Caleb typed out this piece of flash fiction.


I See It

Barefoot, I step out onto the warm porch and look up.

The sky is a deep, unending blue.

Green trees wave and sway as I sit, still gazing upward.

I’ve never seen a sky this clear. Especially not in the middle of August.

The humidity usually masks the atmosphere in a pale hue. Sometimes, I can’t even tell where the clouds begin or end.

But not today.

Today the clouds are stark white. Like puffy icebergs floating in the south pacific.

The weather app on my phone says its 85, but it feels more like the low 70s.

As if the sun’s rays are cooling as they pass through the deep-sea blue.

I breath in and am reminded of hiking in Colorado many years ago.

It was summer then as well, yet the Rocky Mountain air was cool and clean. So clean that it hurt to breath.

Like my lungs were working overtime, desperate for something to purify.

My lungs feel that way now. Confused, they heave so hard that I have to focus on slow inhales. Steady exhales.

After a few seconds they calm down, and I begin to relax.

Bringing my eyes down, I see our outside cat casually twisting on his back. Letting the grass and dirt take care of a stubborn itch. 

He suddenly spins over onto all fours and freezes. Staring intently at something across the street.

Neighbors begin to appear on the street. Scrambling out of yards and houses towards something at the end of the cul-de-sac.

All of them murmuring and pointing up.

I stand to see what’s going on, but my view is blocked by the swaying trees that border our lot.

So, I jog down the driveway. My feet slapping against the pavement.

And then, rounding the mailbox…I see it.

Way up in the massive oak towering from Lorena Milford’s backyard, stands Lorena herself.

Her bare feet somehow gripping the small branches jutting from the treetop.

She looks like one of the stark white clouds as she stands against the vivid blue sky.

Her nightgown stirring in the breeze.

No one calls up to her.

Murmuring and gaping, they all just stand there. Mesmerized by this impossible balancing act.

Any second now, she’ll lose her grip and come splattering down on the hot asphalt.

This realization turns my stomach, so I sprint through the small crowd to the base of the tree.

“Lori…now don’t move, ok? I’m coming up”

“Do you see it?” she asks, in a dreamy tone that floats down like a feather.

“See what Lori?”

She weaves back and forth as the wind kicks up.

“Shit.” I whisper hoarsely.

Rolling up my jeans, I back up and take a running leap to the lowest branch.

Bark shifts and crumbles as I tighten my grip and pull myself up into the green leaves.

“Do you see it?” She asks again, still in that dreamy tone.

“I see the ground leaving is what I see.” I pant out the words. My chest tightening with fear.

I reach up to the next limb, then the next. 

My feet tingle as I try not to look down. I never liked climbing trees.

Not as a boy, and certainly not as a 30-year-old man.

Strangely enough, the higher I go, the easier the climb seems to be.

As if I were getting lighter.

I feel the tree trunk narrowing and bending slightly as I finally reach her feet.

“Alright now…nice and easy.”

“Do you see it?”

“Lori, that limb is barely thick enough for a squirrel, let alone two grown-ass people. Come on…take my hand.”

Without looking down, she grabs my trembling arm and pulls me up onto the dangerously small limb. As if I weighed nothing at all.

The limb bounces only for a moment, then steadies as if held up by some strange force.

Holding my hand, she raises it and points ahead. 

“Do you see it?” She asks. Her voice now distant and faint.

I squint into the darkening blue void.

“My God Lori…I see it.”

I recently read about Vantablack.

Scientists made it in a lab and claim that it absorbs 99.96% of light.

They claim it’s the deepest black known to humankind.

They claim it’s the closest human eyes will ever get to gazing into a black hole.

They were wrong.

God help us…they were wrong.