Ley Lines
By marandina
- 2575 reads
The truth is out there
Ley Lines
“Alfred Watkins was right, you know.”
In hindsight, that’s how it started; my neighbour Joshua Smith and his crazy theories. There we were drinking beer from tinnies in his basement, staring at a map of the UK on a cork board. Lines of string attached by pins linked reference points like some kind of murder enquiry. It turned out that Watkins was an English antiquarian who, in the 1920s, put forward ideas about ley lines linking ancient monuments.
“Can you see it, see the pattern? And the epicentre?” Along with this declaration of discovery, his sweeping hands would give their own explanation, darting from one place on the map to the next. On a plastered wall was the poster of a flying saucer; the one from the X-Files series. The one Fox Mulder was fond of. “I Want to Believe”. Of course, I do. Next to it was a filing cabinet with drawers full of strange paraphernalia and a desk with a leather-backed chair slid underneath. That was, in all probability, the sliding doors moment. I could choose to either let myself get sucked in further or simply dismiss this latest theory as the ramblings of a madman. The third can of Stella had bundled me onto the edge of a rabbit hole; the Queen of Hearts was waiting for me somewhere.
Joshua had long been into conspiracy theories. He thought that the moon landing in 1969 was dubious. In this he wasn’t alone with reams of conjecture available online. He had analysed the assassination of JFK numerous times to try and work out who was behind it, the reasons why and what the aftermath was all about. He expounded the well-worn ideology of a faceless CIA running footloose in a government that had no control over its shady inner-machinery. Lee Harvey-Oswald was the ideal patsy as a communist sympathiser and when he had followed instructions, Jack Ruby had been there to make sure that the truth died with the unstable shooter. Russian dolls. There were plenty of other tenuous theories that Joshua wallowed in.
Those visits to my neighbour’s man cave had increased over time. It had started innocuously enough on one summer’s afternoon when we were talking over the fence that bordered our respective back gardens. I hadn’t been in my house long having moved from Slough. Joshua had lived in Northampton all his life. It wasn’t until I had shared his taste for the strange and curious a few times that, one night, he confided about his brother Tobias. When he was aged just eleven and out on a family picnic at Delapre Abbey, his younger sibling had run off towards the lake in play. Dusk was falling and mist rolled in off the water. As Joshua had broken through reeds looking for the seven-year-old boy, he recounted fearing that his brother had fallen in when he saw a beam of light from above. Inside it was the silhouette of a child being pulled up into the sky. That was the last anyone saw of Tobias.
Of course, nobody believed the story about a UFO. The search for the missing boy had gone on for several days before it was finally called off by the authorities. Speculation was rife as to the fate of young Tobias. Many people suspected he had been abducted by paedophiles; others thought it was some kind of in-house thing with the parents complicit. Without a body, it was all just rumour but that incident changed Joshua forever. He never stopped looking for his brother and became susceptible to any crackpot conspiracy theory doing the rounds. He was known as “Spooky Smith” at school, the other students branding him a weirdo. I am a sceptic myself but you sometimes wonder if there is some smoke coming from the metaphorical gun.
Today was about congruence. The lines in question appeared to link historical structures and prominent landmarks. In turn, these ley lines demarcate Earth energies whilst also forming visual guides for alien spacecraft. Yes, all part of a gravitational/centroid system. This was hardly a new theory but Joshua had taken it one step further by calculating that the whole thing culminated at the central point of England.
“We have to go. I know where it is.”
That was five days ago.
We are now both sitting in my Audi parked up at the side of a field in Leicestershire; dust being blown up into the air from the earth. To our right are fields of corn, tall from cultivation. A dirt path leads into the crops, access replicated on all four sides. Joshua looks at me, his green eyes twinkling with excitement, his face pale from lack of sunlight, his chin stubbly from an absence of shaving. His mobile phone is clutched in his hand, ready to photograph anything of interest. He is wearing a black tee-shirt with Evil Dead written in blood red whilst his khaki shorts highlight his thin, scrawny and pallid legs.
I am not sure what I am doing here other than humouring a mixed-up forty-something. There’s been no suggestion as to what we will find or what the significance is of this confluence of ley lines in the middle of nowhere. Perhaps we will be imbued with magical powers or a secret hole in the ground will open up leading to an undiscovered Narnia. On the drive up here, Joshua had reminisced about his brother. He had told me the story about how they used to watch movies together sat on a rug in the lounge. Tobias loved E.T. in particular; his eyes would light up at the scene with the bikes flying across the sky with the moon as a backdrop. I know my neighbour believes that he will be re-united with him one day; maybe today.
It is a Saturday which usually means a trip to the football and/or a meal out at the pub with my wife. Maybe there will still be time for the latter. Sandra had laughed when I told her what I had planned for the day. She tolerates Joshua without really getting to know him. She thinks he is a bit strange but then most people do. Kooky Josh next door.
I crane my head to see through the top of the car windscreen. Where sun shone before, a sheet of rolling clouds is filtering across the skies like an advancing army built of moisture. Shades of black and grey threaten rain. The wind is picking up, corn stalks beginning to wave in the breeze. We scurry out of car doors and scuttle in the direction of the makeshift trail. It’s a wordless pursuit punctured by the grunt and groan from the effort of walking on a warm day.
With each step taken, the weather closes in. Squalls of dust puff up and blow away on the breeze. I lean forward, bending into the gale. Joshua is right behind me, his words stolen away on the wind. I can hear him muttering but the sounds are muffled. We venture onwards, heading towards the very centre of the field where pathways intersect. I look up and note that the roiling clouds have threatening patches of black that look full of rain and possibly thunder and lightning. We press on. Twigs and plant debris rush passed our heads. The centre isn’t far now. I glance behind and Joshua is still there, his face straining with effort.
And we are there. It’s an anti-climax. At the heart of England is precisely nothing; no monument, no statue, no commemorative marker of any kind. I know there is in Meriden, Coventry which also claims to be the centre of the country. Maybe we chose the wrong option. The wind is blowing a hooley now. I can hardly stand. The canvas of clouds look like an endless stream of lumpy cotton covering the sky. The light is gloomy bordering on darkness. There’s a loud sound; a sort of horn noise from above. My eyes are screwed trying to pierce the gloom. I think I can see a blurred shape breaching the cloud cover in the gloaming. It looks like a ship overhead; a spaceship. There’s a large expanse of grey metal with tiny lights flashing from it. I am on my knees, hands covering my ears. The hailing sounds are deafening if that’s what they are. I feel overawed, terrified.
It feels like I am scrunched in a ball shape for what seems like hours. Only minutes pass. And then it’s over. The sky clears as quickly as it filled with storm clouds. The stalks of corn are protruding into the air as they should. I stand and spin, looking for Joshua. He’s nowhere to be seen. And then I remember; I remember seeing him rising into the dark skies.
Image free to use at: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mulder%C2%B4s_office.jpg
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Comments
Oooh, Russian dolls in the
Oooh, Russian dolls in the CIA! Might there be American dolls in the KGB? And what about the Chinese dolls?
An enthralling piece of writing Paul. Well written.
Turlough
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Hi Paul,
Hi Paul,
I'm not afraid to say I believe in UFOs, which is why I would get on with Joshua. For years I've been saying that people have been abducted and taken to another dimension, I believe it's all to do with a person's DNA, which is why not everyone gets to experience this phenomenon.
I'm glad you had the courage to write a story on this subject, because so many are afraid to come forward and admit what they've seen...although it's becoming more popular to talk about it now, especially since the goverment have now admitted Aliens do exsist.
Good on you for touching on this delicate subject.
Great piece of writing, very much enjoyed reading.
Jenny.
P.S. Oh! I almost forgot to mention, those laylines are such an important part to the connection of our ancestors who understood about the planetary stars and spirits that are able to connect with this world. There are places in Wiltshire like Avebury and of course Stone Henge that are so haunted it's so fascinating to imagine. Every time I go to Avebury I can feel the energy flowing, especially when I touch the stones. Very magical.
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Strange goings on in
Strange goings on in Leicestershire! Nicely done, thank you Marandina
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It's amazing how any ideas
It's amazing how any ideas that seem mysterious even when shown clearly wrong can be tantalizing , and distract away from thinking about simple clear truth, duties, and the solid good things of life!
Well-written, of course. Rhiannon
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This made me think of your
This made me think of your story Tommyknocker. Though the circumstances of the takings are different, it sort of seems a completion, now you have two brothers reunited. Also the thought that someone who seems strange to other humans finds where they belong with aliens. I particularly liked your descriptions of the strange weather at the site
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Ah, I can tell you tales of
Ah, I can tell you tales of fertility stones in secret chambers beneath the floorboads of derelict churches!
Enjoyable tale. Nicely told. Quick one, can you say: Madeline McCann thing with the parents complicit. That sounds libellous to me. At the very least slanderous. They've never been prosecuted for wrongdoing.
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A very good spot Mark. They
A very good spot Mark. They are extremely litigious about things like that. thanks for editing Marandina
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Cheers, Marandina. Better to
Cheers, Marandina. Better to be on the safe side with stuff like this.
Really enjoyable story. Got my imagination whirring. I love conspiracy theories and books on them.
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You'd need to go with the
You'd need to go with the other ones that were proscuted. The working class bunch. I spotted the baby dolls the other night. But that's another story. I'm kinda hooked on this stuff, it's like sugar.
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Very enjoyable. I was a real
Very enjoyable. I was a real UFO fanatic in my teens, read pretty much everything there was, completely convinced. I'm glad there was no internet then because I would have been down that rabbit hole in no time! Now I'm a born again disbeliever, but I still love any story that combines UFOs and ley lines.
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Entertaining story ....
.... and a good reason to avoid Leicestershire.
There's a typo close to the end - "passed" that I believe was meant to be "past".
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