<h3><SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>Chapter 2: Predestined Deja Vu</h3>
<p>It was in the last stages of sleep that I began to feel the
warm morning sun strike my face, and hear the pleasant chirping
of birds and crickets. I rolled slowly over, stretched my legs
and my back, and stood up, with the last remnants of a dream
playing quietly in my mind. But as I came to my feet and got a
clear view of where I was, I realized it was not a dream that I
had had at all, but something far more sobering. I found myself
somewhere in the center of a very large prairie which covered the
land for many miles around. From the sun’s lowly position
on the eastern horizon, it was evident to me that the new day was
just dawning, casting a golden hue on the grasses that covered
the prairie’s surface.</p>
<p>Around the distant outskirts of the plain I could make out a
ring of trees circumventing the whole, waving almost
imperceptibly to and fro in the light breeze that was blowing. A
few miles to the southwest there was a group of odd looking trees
stretching up over the horizon to a considerable height. They
were closer than the outer ring, which kept a uniform girth
around the prairie, but somehow they looked very peculiar and
foreboding, and I got one of those sobering feelings which I like
to call predestined deja vu. What I mean is that I got a sense of
deja vu, but instead of the past converging with the present into
one thought, the present seemed to converge with the future, and
the result was a mysterious foreboding of something, though I
couldn’t tell what. That is the sensation that I had when I
saw what I assumed to be a small grouping of trees somewhere in
the southwestern portion of the savanna, though that was merely a
guess, for in the distance I could only make out several dark
forms rising out of the grassland like trees, or possibly
buildings, one of them being a great deal taller than the others,
with a spherical shape on top that only faintly resembled a
tree’s crown. If it was indeed a tree, it was the largest
that I have ever seen, for it looked to be upwards of 800 feet
tall.</p>
<p>My mental warning bells were ringing quite loudly, and I
endeavored to silence them by extreme exertions of the will, but
they would not be subdued. I assumed that they were not at all
correct, much like the fearful expectancy some have while
swimming in the ocean, out of sight of all land, of being
attacked by an enormous leviathan of the deep. As unfounded as
the fear is, it places one into a frenzy of dubious thoughts that
inspire equally frantic and anarchist actions. Because of this, I
thought that my ideas were naught but superstitious fancies, yet
try as I might, I could not rid myself of them.</p>
<p>Instead, I made up my mind to set off in the opposite
direction, north, and to advance at a double march until I should
reach the woody border, which looked to present shelter not only
from the southern apparitions, but also from the shielded
underworld of the grasses, in which also dwelt the mysterious
sense of fear and predestined deja vu. It was slightly chilly,
but beyond that nothing defaced the temperate beauty of the day,
and even that promised to soon dissipate with the continual
strengthening of the sun’s warmth. As I walked, or rather,
trotted along, it did just that, and in the growing warmth of the
day the sweet fragrances of the many various grasses rose to the
surface, delighting my odor perceiving sensors with their earthy
simplicity.</p>
<p>The day marched on, and with it I, and the distant wall of
trees began to slowly grow closer. At length, I found myself at
their edge, at around the noon hour, and as I came upon the first
of them, I leaned against the trunk of a large, thickset tree for
a moment of repose and reflection in its shade. It was by all
appearances an ancient wood, for the line between it and the
prairie was distinct, appearing as if the shrubs and lesser flora
had acquiesced to fate and retreated beyond the forest’s
claimed boundaries, rather than continue for countless ages to
charge and then be pushed back, to gain a foothold only to be
thrown out a year or two later. The trees themselves were mighty
pinions of strength, tall and of great girth, and spread far
apart from one another, leaving wide open spaces between their
towering trunks. A short, soft grass clothed the land that
stretched on in their midst, joined in its solitude by a hearty
looking moss that stretched itself out on the trunks of the trees
and on the rocks and boulders that lay scattered here and there
among the open spaces. Far above, the trees’ great branches
spread out a thick canopy, covering the whole of the forest area
in a relaxing and invigorating twilight, rendering itself homely
and quaint. After a few moments of enjoying that most pleasing
scene, I roused and extricated myself unwillingly from its
enchanted depths and set off once more into the heart of the
woods, having no where else to go.</p>
<p>After a time, I cannot say how long, I came upon a small,
trickling stream which flowed deeper into the woods, that
direction being northward. A short walk along its path, after
refreshing myself to content with its pure waters, brought me to
its destination: a large lake into which the forest opened. Its
banks were very gradual and the grass of the woodland led right
up to the water’s edge. The surface of the water itself was
smooth and delicate.</p>
<p>Amidst the pleasantness of the scene, there was something
missing from the feel of the area: inhabitants. There was an
abundance of wild life of all kinds, and much organic life as
well, but something greater than flora or fauna was missing:
people. I had traveled so far, and without any sighting of a
person. It was a lonely and desolate feeling which prevailed,
despite the abundances of life. Novelties soon grow worthless
with no one to share them with, ideas become meaningless if not
communicated timely, emotions grow boisterous and uncontrollable
with no end to receive them.</p>
<p>I was quite alone, unfortunately, and it dampened my spirits
considerably. Feeling despondent, I turned and walked sullenly
from the lake’s edge into the woodland once more, with no
definite purpose in mind, only a meandering thought of my dismal
situation. My thoughts morphed, in succession, from anxiety to
despair, to anger, to frustration, and in my frustration I knelt
down and picked up a fallen branch from the ground, walked to the
nearest tree, and eyed a strange, protruding knob that stuck out
from the trunk. I held the branch at shoulder’s length and
swung it at the knob with all the force of my built up emotions.
It hit with a crash and a hollow thud, leaving the branch broken
and my arm sore, but the knob undamaged.</p>
<p>But then something unexpected happened: with a grating noise,
a small hole appeared part way up the trunk, coming from what
looked to be solid wood, for no sign was seen before of its
having an opening. From the newly opened hole was then thrust out
a head, hairy and with a short snout-like edifice for a nose and
mouth. Its eyes and the furry hair which covered its face were
brown, and a few wily whiskers protruded from its snout. With a
look of utter surprise, as if it had not expected me as much as I
had not expected it, it eyed me closely for a moment and then
looked anxiously from side to side and told me to come in.</p>
<p>When those words passed its lips, or whatever artifice it
spoke from, a great weight fell from my shoulders. After a short
moment, quickened by my relief, a door appeared in the trunk of
the tree, its edges previously hidden behind the thick mosses.
Swinging inwards, it opened and revealed the creature standing
there, beckoning me to enter. I did, and the door shut behind me,
leaving me in the darkness of the hollow tree.</p>
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