Category Archives: Short Story

Decoy

Title: Decoy

Genre: Suspense?  Horror

Rating: PG-13

Thoughts: I’m reading a zombie book right now and I came up with this character while running reports at work and this is the product of my daydreaming.  I have no desire to write anything of any substantial length in this genre, but my short exercise is fun!

——-

Sometimes staying painfully still will save you.  Sometimes it’s better to just suck it up and run.  The most terrifying moment after the one where you realize you’re surrounded by putrid zombies – is when you make the choice: hole up and be quiet, or make a break for it?

“Remember when you asked me why I carry machetes?”  The suit and his entourage, as well as their detail of professional security guards looked ready pee their pants.  The suit’s son who had sat next to me because he’d never seen anything bigger than a steak knife looked at me with eyes as wide as teacups and nodded.  “Well, I carry them for times like this.”

I looked around the small group of survivors from our convoy.  Lot of good former-military security did us; they were good at anticipating human opposition.  When the enemy stops thinking and just attacks, well, that doesn’t fit with the way a military man thinks.  The head of security was dead; one of the first ones to be honest, and there wasn’t anyone left now who seemed to want to take command.  Well I had bad news for them; neither did I.

“The herd is gathering, the smaller ones,” I knelt and enlarged the image on my pocket display and then sat it on the ground so it could project a holographic image.  “They’re all coming together on the north side of this building.  Meat heads,” my fond term for the security detail, “you take everyone out the other side and run.”

“They’re just going to follow us,” a nameless, faceless female said.  The job was so last minute I didn’t even know who it was I was supposed to be protecting; just someone in a suit that paid.

“No, they’re going to follow me.”

“What are you going to do?”  One of the meat heads who had ogled me earlier gazed at me with obvious skepticism.

“My job.”  I bit back and glared.  “Any questions?”

Silence.

“Good.  Collect yourselves and start moving.”

There were a few complaints, but no one was about to question the one person in the group who wasn’t crying or shaking in fear.  There are some perks at being too young to remember a time before zombies.  If it weren’t for the zombies, I might still be in music school.  My parents died after I finished high school in the same way everyone does; they were eaten.  End of their story.  I took what money I could and went to school, studying ballet and music.  Thanks to bad toes my ballet days were over quickly, and I took on low level security details to pay for music school.

Eventually the money ran out and the jobs got better because I got a reputation for staying alive.  That makes you popular in my line of business.

Moments like these, sitting alone in an abandoned, boarded up building, I wonder what it would have been like to finish school and have a safe, secure life dancing.  I was decent but never good, but I’d always wanted to be a dancer.

In some ways I still do dance; just not in a way anyone’s going to pay to watch.

Straightening, I unsnapped the strap over the machetes.  They were back ups.  I double checked the guns, looking to count the rounds I had left.  You always wanted to save your last bullet for yourself when it came down to it.  Lastly, I took my old, sturdy MP3 player and plugged it into the mic feed.  I wear tiny, pin sized cameras and two-way-mics for pop news reporters who want the up close and personal affect without going anywhere near something that might eat them.  They weren’t going to get any audio from me today.

The sound of the main body of the herd was probably thirty, forty feet away from my position.  I’d found a good spot on the second floor where someone had rigged a drawbridge system on one of the windows for quick access in and out.  Fine by me since I want out and in case the suits and meat heads freeze up they won’t get caught in a death trap.

Zombie’s haven’t figured out to look up for us.  While they retain most normal functions, the ability to look up and down has either become a forgotten motor skill, or rendered impossible.  I’m sure some enterprising young scientist knows; I just know that if you can manage to get far enough off of the ground they’ll eventually lose your position and leave you alone.  Usually.  There are exceptions but right now they’re unimportant.

If I were trying to be quiet this would have been a terrible moment for me.  But since I wanted to be as loud as possible, jumping down onto an old, metal dumpster that boomed like thunder worked really well.  The whole herd collectively stopped moaning and turned.

“Hey, hungry?”  I yelled and pressed play on the MP3 player, the sounds of Carry On Wayward Son blasting the midrange out of the tiny speakers.

That was all it took.  The decaying bodies lurched towards me, arms swinging slackly at their sides, mouths agape with bodily fluids caked or congealed on them.  I jogged, letting the herd get their forward momentum going and zigzagging down the mostly cleared street.  If this wasn’t Dallas, Texas I wouldn’t dream of using this plan, but territorial, castle-law supporting Texans mean that the streets were cleared early on.

Jumping up on a brick flower bed I turned around and shot the leaders of the herd, taking out the liveliest early on.  This was like marathon training on steroids.  To date, this was the fourth time I’d played decoy while my suits got out the back way and each time I’d ran and picked off zombies until I had to find shelter or get to a safe zone.  I could only hope that this time worked out as well as the others.

Comments Off

Filed under Short Story

Fairy Men

Title: Fairy Men

Genre: Fantasy

Rating: PG

Thoughts: This is the result of an idea I had on my way home.  There’s potential there for a larger story, but I’m not sure I’m ready for that right now.

——-

Jaid looked at the wax sealed, archaic envelope with her cramped, messy writing and then back up at the bird-like figure of Sr. Steward Geoff Edimon.  “You mean to tell me,” she said slowly, her head feeling like a helium balloon someone let go, “that we’re supposed to cross into the Fae World, go back in time, and meet up with our boyfriends – four – hundred – years in the past?”

Geoff calmly nodded, peering between Jaid and Ami, gauging their reactions.  “Yes.”  As was expected, Jaid lead the attack while Ami looked shocked at first but after a moment of spinning her tires, she’d be backing Jaid up.  It’s what gave them so much potential to work together as a team.

The two girls looked at each other, the pain and worry they’d experienced over the last few days had taken its toll.  Jaid’s pale, freckle flecked skin was normally a perfect alabaster; now she sported dark circles around her eyes, scratch marks on her arms from absently scratching and her long red hair stuck out in a curling halo of chaos.  Similarly, Ami’s usually glowing, tanned body looked pale and gaunt, her eyes swollen and read with her lower lip swollen from nervous biting.  Her blonde hair was pulled back in a messy ponytail and she wore one of Iain’s discarded t-shirts.

“How do we – how are we supposed to know this isn’t a trick too?  They took Cayden and Iain!  Geoff, they’re Dark Fae!  They’re pure-bloods!”  Ami gestured wildly with her hands, “Jaid and I – we’re just humans.”

“But you have potential,” Geoff’s calmness persisted.

“Then why didn’t someone start training us years ago?  Why just two years ago?”  Jaid looked at the envelope with a growing sense of unease.  The words on the paper sounded like her, but the Dark Fae were capable of too many things.

“I don’t know.  Cayden and Iain made that decision as your leannán.”

“Geoff,” Jaid hissed, her cheeks crimson, “we’ve never – uh – Geoff!”

The man drew in a deep sigh, and fidgeted with the cuff of his sleeve.  “I don’t know all of the details, but I have served Cayden and Iain for many years and I hear them talk sometimes.  I might not believe these words if I didn’t know the Master’s, but I’ve heard them talk about four hundred years ago, when the two of you appeared like visions of angels, wearing their First Swords and telling them it was time for your Hundred Year Training.  Doesn’t it seem odd that they have not initiated you?  That you have not already begun?  That they’re doing little more than teaching you tricks?”

The two girls shared uncomfortable looks.

“Jaid,” Ami gripped the other girls arm, “I can’t live without Iain, and there isn’t anyone to rescue him.”

“We could fully cross into the Fae World and get the help of the ancients,” Jaid said without conviction.  “And then risk coming back here decades too late to do anything useful.”

The two girls locked eyes and groped for each other’s hands.

“But, Geoff, we have to cross into Fae to go back through time,” Ami’s face scrunched up as she tried to think through the details.

“I wrote instructions,” Jaid laughed and unfolded the envelope.  “God, I even wrote things I should bring.  Look, a straightner.”

“So what’s – what’s our first move?”

Jaid squeezed Ami’s hand.  “According to my list, get their First Swords.”

“I have those.”  Geoff went to a trunk that had sat against a wall, unopened for as long as they had lived here, and picked up two, long wooden boxes.  “The First Swords,” Geoff said reverently, placing a box in front of each girl.

In silent agreement the two girls didn’t touch them – yet.

“Okay, so we need to pack and then what?”  Ami was almost visibly pulling herself together.

“We leave.”  Jaid and Ami shared a scared look and got up.

~ ~ ~

The two girls, loaded with the gear they had instructed themselves to pack, stood in the shadow of an old castle in front of what looked like nothing more than a ruin, a tumble of stones.

“Any idea what we’re supposed to say?”  Ami asked grimly.

“Not a clue,” Jaid shook her head and squinted up at the setting sun.  That moment of neither day or night was the easiest time for a human to slip into the Fae world.

“We’re doing this for them,” Ami fidgeted with the sword at her hip, the weight alien to her.  Her powers were for healing and magic; swords and fighting were foreign to her.

Jaid felt the weight of the twin blades on her back with more of an ease, as if she’d always been missing that weight.  She’d scoffed when Cayden told her she would be a battle mage like he was, but now she had to believe him.  “For them,” she echoed.

The Hundred Year Training was what they’d anticipated beginning at the turn of the new year; they’d secretly decided Iain and Cayden wanted time to just be with them before they had to push them every waking moment.  Now they found out that Iain and Cayden had known them, known them as their wives for a hundred years before.  All so that now, in the future, they could single handedly attack the Dark Fae.  Jaid thought it had the stench of prophecy about it, but she wasn’t about to give it the time of day; she had a Fairy Man to rescue.

Comments Off

Filed under Short Story

Ab-solutely II

Title: Ab-solutely II

Genre: Paranormal Action/Romance

Rating: PG-13

Thoughts: This is a follow-up tot he last bit I posted on Friday. I’m still not done with this piece and it’s inching over 20K right now. I’m estimating to be finished between 30 & 40K with a nice novella.

——-

Cai went back to his room feeling no better for the run he’d gone on.  Tomorrow was the full moon and then he had a month.  One last month during which he had to make The Big Decision.  He’d known it was coming, he’d just hoped ignoring it might mean his choices were made for him, but no, he still had all his options open and that was as bad as having no choice at all.

He paced up and down his living room, all of the twelve steps there and twelve steps back.  Every time he even tried to think about this choice he got fidgety and nervous; his skin was crawling.  He wanted to shift and howl his frustrations.  Dallas would probably bang on his wall and then he might just not control himself.

Opening the freezer he stuck his face into the ice bin and gasped.  Ideas like that were reckless and stupid.  He was obviously in no state to stay here tonight.  Cai wasn’t really wanting to spend time around the homestead than he had to, especially with his Big Decision so near, but he couldn’t really stay around so many innocents.  Grabbing his already packed over night bag Cai flipped off the lights and locked the door.

Dallas’ scent still lingered in the hallway, or was it on his arm?  He didn’t really know but he didn’t allow himself to think about it.  Some might feel okay about recreational liaisons with humans, but it never sat well with Cai.  They were human.  It was fated to end before it began.  That was the real reason he’d never asked Dallas out.  He’d been very careful, in fact, to not let her know just how damn attractive her flipflops and ponytails were.  She was the kind of girl a guy wanted to roll out of bed and find curled up on your couch wearing your shirt and reading some chick magazine; so unlike the pampered princesses.

Pushing thoughts of Dallas out of his mind, Cai loaded up his car and headed out of town.

Comments Off

Filed under Short Story

Ab-solutely

Title: Ab-solutely

Genre: Paranormal Action/Romance

Rating: PG-13

Thoughts: This is the beginning of something that might turn into a novella.  I’m still writing it but there’s no way the whole thing is getting put up here.  I’m not even done writing it!

——-

Dallas pushed her hair out of her face and sighed, those six steps up to the door of her building loomed like something ultra menacing after a little too much sake.  Her too-heavy pumps scraped on the sidewalk as she put a hand heavily on the rail and pulled herself up one slow step at a time.

Someone whistled behind her, “Gee Dallas, what are we so dressed up for tonight?”

Relief and a wave of self-conscious nerves swept through her.  Just Cai.  Just Cai?  Pft, he was dreamy-eyed-hottness-Cai that lived next door.  Dallas chuckled and took another step as Cai, in all his sleepy good looks, took those six steps in two bounds.  “Blind date,” she grimaced.

“That good?”  Cai pulled the frosted glass door open for her and waited for Dallas to get her act through it.

“Oh yeah,” she rolled her eyes, “It was terrific, right up to the point he threw a spring roll at me.  And have I ever mentioned I don’t like fish?  It was like a head-on-collision from the beginning.”

Cai smiled and watched Dallas in all of her carefulness; if she needed a hand he was there to give a hand, but it also gave him one of those rare moments to just watch her.  She had indeed dressed up for the date; he was fairly certain from the smell of department-store-new Dallas had even spent the afternoon shopping.  That was unlike her.  She didn’t like shopping.  But Cai was glad for the indulgence if all it gave him was this moment of watching her slink up the stairs in a little black dress.

Dallas waivered at the top of the stairs on her heels, something else Cai noticed that was an additional surprise.  Dallas was a flipflops kind of girl.  Cai decided to pretend his minute observations of his neighbor were nothing more than good awareness skills, but did he know half as much about Mrs. Shoester across the hallway?  Nope.  Not one bit.

“Let me give you a hand,” Cai smiled and took her elbow.

She kept her eyes firmly on the ground for two reasons; one, she needed to know where her feet were going and two, not looking at him made her not blush.  Oh, she could go on any number of blind dates her married co-workers set her up on, but the dreamy neighbor was off limits according to her personal rules.  He knew where she lived.  He probably knew a lot of her habits.  And he knew her real hair color.  He might have forgotten the blonde who moved in, but it wasn’t a far stretch to the raven tresses that stretched down her back now.

“I’m good, I’m just tired.”  Her heels made slow staccato sounds on the floor as they walked the short way to her first floor apartment.

“Oh, I know that,” Cai grinned, “I just wanted an excuse to escort a pretty girl.”

Insert one of those awkward moments Cai loved to create where Dallas’ stomach did somersaults and she had no idea how to reply.  Instead Dallas fished for her keys in her purse.

“So the guy really threw a spring roll at you?”  Cai released her arm and leaned up against the doorframe.

Dallas had never been able to quite decide how old Cai was, but she’d settled for something around her own age.  He was just a little bit taller than her, so wearing the heels she was just a smidge taller than him.  Cai looked like a posterboy for what Dallas thought a skateborder should look like; she didn’t know if Cai skateboarded, but he looked like he should.  Dark, almost black-brown hair was in a perpetual state of shag, he often sported stubble or a few days worth of beard.  Caramel colored eyes that sometimes looked amber depending on the light.  Dallas had never seen him without his shirt on, but under the slightly loose, well fitted clothing he seemed capable of finding anywhere, she imagined him with a lean, flexible body.

“Huh?”  Dallas looked up from her purse, dragging her mind back from contemplating Cai’s abs to realize she’d missed a crucial part of their conversation.

“The spring roll?”  He prompted.

Wincing, Dallas nodded.  “He didn’t exactly throw it at me.  We started talking about immigration laws and he was gesturing with his chopsticks and,” she made a sailing motion and splayed her hand on the flat of her chest, and made a gurgling noise as if attack-by-spring-roll were deadly combat.

Cai laughed and crossed his arms over his chest.  He also had the obnoxious decency to appear to be a genuinely good guy.  “Where do you come up with these guys?”

She bought herself a moment by slipping the first lock into place and twisting it.  Four more to go.  Overkill?  Maybe, but a girls home was her castle and Dallas believed in a good bit of security.  “My co-workers,” she sighed.  “They think I need to date more.  They’re all in possession of wonderfully, perfect marital bliss and want to share the kool-aide.”  She pushed her door open and flipped on the lights, instinctively looking around to see if anything was out of place first.  Even in her slightly inebriated state there were just some things she did no matter what.

Groaning, Cai pushed off of the door and stretched.  “Do I know the type!”

Turning, Dallas grabbed the door and leaned against it, entertaining a five second fantasy about those abs again.  “Tell me about it.  At least tomorrow is Saturday.  Are you going to be here for Aaron’s party?”

Cai grimaced.  Aaron was in mid mid-twentys and just starting college on a trust fund.  He liked to have loud parties on the weekend.  Dallas and Cai sometimes went together early and left early; inevitably at ungodly hours of the morning the cops would show up and bust the underage drinkers and shut the party down.  “No, I have a family trip this weekend,” he sighed and shook his head, dark hair falling over his brow.

“Good grief, didn’t you just go on one of these?”

“What can I say?  We’re a close family,” he shrugged and plunged his hands into his pockets.

“Well you’re going to miss one heckofa party!”

“You’ll have to tell me all about it Sunday.”

“Deal.”

“Have a good night, Dallas.”

“Night.”

And that was the highlight of her evening.  A five minute conversation about her inadequacies with her neighbor.  Her feet knew the drill by rote.  She came into the apartment and checked everything; every room, closet and space she had identified as being big enough to hide a person.  She finished her inspection without finding anything out of place.  Satisfied she went to the bedroom and changed into pajamas.  It wasn’t until she was brushing her teeth that she realized what day it was.  She hadn’t spoken to her handler in over six weeks.  She’d meant to call today, follow good-girl-protocol, and figure out what the hell was going on but the blind date had sort of thrown her off, not that her life had ever really settled back onto the tracks in the last eight years.

Suddenly Dallas didn’t feel quite so sleepy or tipsy.

Comments Off

Filed under Short Story

The Stranger

Title: The Stranger

Genre: Western, Fantasy

Rating: PG

Thoughts: For some reason I know several people who have been discussing westerns recently.  I don’t really like to write this genre though I know with my experience I could do it well, but I thought I would try something a little different.  Hope you other western-writers don’t mind.

——-

It’s said that when the Santa Anna winds blow, all bets are off.

The wind blew down on the town, blowing up column of dust and shaking the trees.  Horses stomped their feet and closed their eyes into narrow slits.  Men pulled bandannas up on their faces, making it look like a town of bandits.  A few out of season tumble weeds rolled across the main thorough faire and then the wind died.  As if a god of wind were taking a breath, for a moment everything was almost still.  The blue sky stretched over head and a few men blinked up, looking for some strange sign.  A woman hurried from one building to the next; who knew how long until the winds kicked up again?

One horse pricked it’s ears up, and looked off into the distance.

A horse neighed and a dot appeared in the distance, growing quickly larger.

Two men stood near a water trough, and squinted at the figure.

“Is that Robert?”

“Nope. Can’t be.  He’s gone up to the city to try to find him a wife.”

“Oh.  Right.”

The two men waited, watching the lone rider getting closer.  He had buldging saddle bags and a rifle strapped under his leg.  Despite the heat he wore a long, leather duster and his hat was pulled down low over his face.

“Good afternoon, gentleman.”

The two ranch hands jumped.  They’d been watching the rider getting closer but hadn’t realized he was so near.

“Howdy.”  One said.  The other spit on the ground and then looked back up at the stranger.  “You pass’en through or gonna sit a spell?”

“I’d like to find a meal and a place to stay.”  He had a cultured voice and two bright, smiling eyes.  Despite his dusty appearance, he was clean shaven and neat under layers of travel grime.

“Saloon has some rooms,” the talkative ranch hand jerked his head back to a brightly painted building.

“Wonderful.”

“Wanna leave your horse here?”  The ranch hand jerked his head towards the livery barn where people from the outlying farms and ranches left their horses and wagons while in town.  It was also where the stagecoach stopped.

“Yes, please.”  The stranger dismounted and pulled off two large, bulging bags and slung them over his shoulder.  He pulled the reins over the horses head and looked the animal in the eye, “He’s a little spirited, but will mind his manners.”  Smiling at the ranch hand, he handed over his reins.  “Better get inside.  There’s a storm coming.”

The two ranch hands looked up at the sky, brows furrowed.  There wasn’t a cloud in the sky.

The stranger took his things and entered the Saloon.  A random assortment of locals were gathered around the bar, to which the cheerful stranger smiled and nodded his head.  “Hello.”

“Howdy stranger, what can I get for you?”  The bartender leaned over the old, worn wood and grinned at his new patron.

“Food first, I believe.”  He said thoughtfully and set his bags down on the floor next to an empty stool.
“Some beer second, and then a bath and a room if you have them.”  He left the leather duster on and sat down on the stool, folding his hands one over the other and fixing the grinning bartender with a more subdued smile.

“Right – vittles out in a jiffy!”  The bartender grabbed a glass and poured the parched stranger his whisky and then disappeared.

“You ain’t from ‘round here.”  A young man with a swagger in his step leaned against the bar on the farthest side.

“No sir, I am not,” the stranger replied, still looking cheerful.  Outside the wind began to rage twice as hard as before.

“Where ya headed?”  The young man asked.

“I haven’t quite decided,” the stranger shrugged and his smile deepened.

“Are you chas’en some’thin?”

The stranger didn’t reply immediately.  He tilted his head to the side and studied the ceiling as if thinking for a moment before his eyes drifted back to the hard stare of the younger man.  “You could say that.”

“Here’s your vittles,” the barkeep announced, reappearing through a swinging door.

“Thank you.”  The stranger picked up his bag, his plate and his cup and retreated to a small table near a window that was mostly blotted out with dust.  He sat there, alone and unmolested, staring out of the window, his face hidden by the brim of his hat.

The young man with the swagger watched him but didn’t say another word.

When the stranger was finished with his meal he brought his dishes back to the bar.  “I’d like to see about that room, please.”

“Sure thing!”  The barkeeper produced a round of keys and motioned for the Stranger to follow him through another door that his a hallway.  “Rooms back here,” he explained.  Passing by a window he paused, “Sky sure is getting dark.”

The stranger gazed out past the man, his eyes caressing the clouds that rolled in on the horizon as if he were looking at a lover.  “Yes, there’s a storm coming.”

“Well good thing you got here in time.”  The barkeep said and continued down the hall.

He put the stranger in a room on the very end and told him where the bathroom was.  No one saw the stranger for quite some time.  The storm blew in quick and hard, sending people running for cover and before long the saloon was packed to capacity.  Everyone was watching the storm rage outside; a few had started a game of cards, but most held drinks and peered out of the windows.

The stranger slipped in unnoticed and perched on an empty stool.

“There you are,” the bartender grinned.  “You were right about this here storm.  It’s raining buckets!”

The stranger merely quirked his lips and nodded.  He’d showered and though he still wore the duster and hat, they looked to have been brushed off, the grime of travel removed.  “Whiskey, please.”

“Att’a way!”  The bartender laughed and poured his patron his drink.

“Howdy pard’ner,” the young man sidled up to the bar.  “Fancy some cards?”

“I’m afraid I don’t have money to lose,” the stranger spread his hands apologetically and smiled.

“Well I’m sure you have other things you can wager.”  The young man eyed the strangers jacket, but couldn’t see anything else.  “You got a horse, don’t you?”

“Oh, but I need my horse.  I can’t part with him.”

The young man pursed his lips.  “You got a gun, don’t you?”

“Yes.”

“You don’t need that, do you?  Not with the law men around.”

The stranger looked thoughtful, “No, I suppose I don’t need the gun, but it is awful nice to have around.”

“Well let’s play for guns, then.  My boys can put up theirs and you can put up yours.”

Outside the Santa Anna’s blew.  The stranger looked up at the roof and then sighed.  He leveled his smiling eyes at the young man and nodded.  “Alright, you have a deal.”

Six men crowded around a table, a deck of cards sitting in the middle.  They all held their hands close.  One man held his near his chest, glancing left and right suspiciously.  Another held his cards loosely and seemed not to care.  The stranger’s cards were face down on the table, his hands folded over them.  His gaze had drifted off to the window where lightning danced in the distance.  The young challenger glared at the smiling stranger.

“I fold.”

“Me too,” another sighed.

“Show’em.”   The young man barked.

“Two pair,” the suspicious man said.

The other yawned and laid his cards down.  “Straight.”

“Damn!”  The suspicious one wailed.

“What do you have, stranger?”

The stranger flipped over his cards, “Nothing.”  Indeed, he would have done better had he folded.

“Well I win,” the young man grinned and slapped his cards on the table.

“I hope you get better use out of my gun than I did,” the stranger chuckled.  His chair slid noisily out from under him as he stood, shaking out his duster.

The young man was about to say something when several drenched souls tumbled through the door.  There was a general commotion made and people began muttering about crops and bridges.  The stranger slipped up to the doors and gazed out at the storm as if seeing a long, lost friend.

“I’ll be taking that gun, mister,” the young man drawled.

“Yes, it’s in the barn with my tack,” the stranger said quietly, only paying half attention to the young man.

“I’ll take it now, before you run off with my rightful property.”  The young man folded his arms over his chest, glaring at the stranger.

“You don’t have much in the way of hospitality, do you?”  The stranger shrugged and before the young man could sputter a response, he continued.  “I’ll go get it now, if you must have it.”  He flipped the collar of his duster up and ducked out onto the porch where a lonely old dog lay alone, unbothered by the storm.  The stranger picked his way through the muddy street, water slicking his duster to his body and beating down the brim of his hat, but he made it to the livery no worse.

A few of the older patrons gave the young man disapproving glares but not anything else.

On the way back the stranger fought against the wind and the rain, his duster blown out behind him like wings.  Suddenly, lightning lit up the sky, throwing the strangers shadow out behind him like some gruesome creature of the night.  He lept onto the porch and stamped his feet, shaking off water and mud before pushing the doors open.  He had not lost his cheerful twinkle, but he looked put out.

“Here, I believe this was what you wanted.”  He pushed the wet mess of holster and rifle into the young mans arms and wiped more water from his face.

“Oh no!”  Someone shouted.  Outside the lightning struck close to town.  Once, twice, and coming closer.

The third strike hit the steeple of the church; the blast knocked it off of the building, leaving a gaping hole where once the obelisk stood.  It crashed to the street, rolling once, twice in the mud before stopping.  Lightning did not strike again.  It was hard to make out the lump of the steeple in the street but it let off steam.

“Was anyone out there?”  A small voice said.

“I’ll go and check.”  The stranger smiled, and strode back into the rain as if someone had invited him to go on a stroll rather than into a raging storm.

It was hard to make out his form from the saloon, but the stranger could see perfectly well in the near darkness.  He held his breath and neared the fallen steeple.  It was no longer an obelisk pointing at the heavens; in fact it was no longer straight or pointy.  It curled into a small form and lay in the middle of the road.  Gently the stranger knelt and put a hand on the lump.

It moved.

The stranger grinned and pulled out of his duster.  With one hand he helped the dazed woman sit up and with the other he slung his duster over her shoulders, hiding her.

“It’s you,” she looked up at him with eyes like the stars, rain washing away the dirt and mud.

“I told you it would work,” the stranger said and gently wiped her pale hair away from her face.

“But – how?”

“When the Santa Anna blows, all bets are off.”

She stood with his help, wobbly as a new born animal.  “Are you real?  Is this another – “

“I am real.  Just as real as you are.  We don’t have to live in dreams anymore.”

The woman sobbed and leaned forward into the man’s chest, the rain falling around them.

Behind the man someone called out, “Everything okay?”

The stranger turned a little and waved, “Just fine, thank you.”

“We – we have to get out of here.”  She gripped the front of his shirt, her face lined with fear.

“We will.”  The stranger put his arms on her shoulders and gazed down into her face.

“But how?  They’ll come looking!”

The stranger chuckled and glanced at the barn where a horse neighed.  “I borrowed the West Wind.”

1 Comment

Filed under Short Story

Lady of the Lorries

Title: Lady of the Lorries

Genre: Fantasy, Chick-Lit

Rating: G

Thoughts: I was thinking about my novel and contemplating the trend in paranormal subjects.  We have a lot of stuff out there about people being turned into a vampire or something – but what if someone was turned into a human?

——-

“I have to pee in a cup? I – the Lady of – “

“Yes, you have to pee in a cup.”

“But I am – “

“Please!”  I squeezed my eyes shut and stood in the doorway holding the cup to Her Lady Whatever.  “The last time you said your name – my car got incinerated into tiny bits.  I’d really like to not be submerged in toilet water.”

The sullen, dark haired girl, who had the worst superiority complex I’d ever seen, took the cup and slammed the door shut.  With a heavy sigh I slumped against the wall and waited.  Her Goddesship would probably have to figure out how to pee in the cup; peeing in and of its self was an adventure I don’t want to remember.  A week and at least now things had stopped being destroyed whenever Lorrie, as I’d named her, started referring to herself in the third person with all sorts of strange titles.  I swear one of them was that she was the Lady of the Lorries – which on this side of the ocean are MacTrucks.

“Done yet?”

There was angry words I didn’t understand and the sound of water.  A few minutes later we were out of there.

“This is undignified!”  She wailed, throwing her arms up in the air.

“What are you talking about?”  I only ever understood half of what she said.

“Urinating in a goblet!”

I just looked at her, hands shoved in my pockets.  We were walking since I no longer had a car.  “Look, do you want to get this whole mess over with?”

“I want to fulfill my challenge!  I want to show that miserable – “

“No names please, I like having the sidewalk under me – not on me.”  Yes, again speaking from experience.

“I want to show – him – that I can live as a mortal!  A human!”  She continued to talk and make a lot of noise and so forth.  Two weeks ago I’d listened intently to every word she’d said.  Heck, after you see a car incinerated from thin air you sort of start believing things you wouldn’t otherwise, but even awe wears off after a while.  Whatever she was, or wasn’t at the moment, I just wanted her little quest done with so she’d leave me alone.

“Okay, so ,” I just interrupted her.  I had no idea what she was jabbering on about but at this point I didn’t care anymore.  “lets run down the list of what you need to do.  You need to get a home.”

“Renting from you.”  She pointed a finger at the sky triumphantly.  She was paying me in some odd coin I couldn’t use, but it meant she was paying me and therefore she’d completed one thing.

“You need a job.”  That had been the hardest thing possible.  Finding someone who would hire a loony lady like her was, well, beyond difficult.

“Bah! Working! It’s the most degrading thing,” she wailed, actually producing tears.  Her tears had a nasty habit of turning into butterflies or dragonflies or something.

“Well your pee test is done, you can start work in a few days.”

“And when I do, I will be victorious!”  She held her arms up like someone had just scored a touchdown.  Two black guys in a doorway looked at her like she was crazy, which she was.

“Yup.  Total victory dance.”

One week.  One week of the Goddess of Gab laying on my couch, eating puffy junk food, and watching soap operas.  I thought I would go crazy.  If I had to hear about how one more soap stars abs were not as good as – his – who was the guy we couldn’t name because then my apartment would burst into flames, and I was rather attached to my apartment, thank you very much.  I came home from my lovely time spent in a cubicle to tend to her needs.

“Lorrie Lady,” I pushed open the door to the apartment, shouting over the evening news.  “You start work tomorrow!”

“Victory is in my grasp!”

“Um, keep in mind you have to get a paycheck.”  I sat down between her and the tv, earning me a very angry look.  “Pay attention.  You have to keep the job for two weeks so you can get a paycheck, and then this is all over.  But you have to keep your job – for two weeks.  You have to listen to someone tell you to do things and you have to do it and pretend you’re like me.”

She didn’t like hearing this, but a lot of things were going on that she just didn’t love.  Like cooking.  I made her learn how to cook when she demanded I become a better cook.

The next morning it was like I’d suddenly gained a child.  I had to get her up, get her dressed, feed her and get everything ready.  As a mail room clerk, I was hoping she wouldn’t have to be around too many people.

“Come on, lets get going.”  Again, we had to walk to the building.  At least she was in my building, if something really bad happened I could hustle her out.  If only I knew that day was the first of 365 days of Lorrie.

2 Comments

Filed under Short Story

Small Magic

Title: Small Magic

Genre: Fantasy

Rating: G

Thoughts: I started with a rough idea, which formed into something cool, and then I went and did something – and forgot where I was going.  This is what I finished.

——-

Have you ever heard the phrase, ‘mind over matter’?  I learned what that really meant when I turned eleven.  I’d always been accused of having an ‘active’ imagination, but when I turned eleven it took on a whole new meaning.

My birthday happened like it always did; with cake and presents and singing, but it was when I was blowing out the candles that I first had the inkling something was – different.  Most of the time I made outrageous wishes for my birthday, but this year I settled for wishing that my two friends, Molly and Candice, would stop fighting.  They were sitting at opposite ends of the table, refusing to speak to each other.  Molly would start talking anytime Candice did so you had to pick which one to listen to.  The day had not been going well.

As I blew out the candle something funny happened.  I made my wish and – I burped.  Everyone giggled and I did too.

“Too much orange soda!”  My mom laughed.

While we handed out cake, Molly looked at Candice, Candice looked at Molly, and they both said, “I’m sorry,” in stereo!  It was the best birthday present.

We ate the cake sitting on the back porch of my house, all of us girls, just enjoying the beautiful spring day.  I had a sleepover and we made a tent in the den and I didn’t think about my birthday wish.  I didn’t think about it until several days later.  I was riding my bike down the lane in front of my house.  It’s a little country road and no one drives down it except us so I was doing as fast as I could down the middle.  For no reason at all I fell!  I wasn’t wearing my helmet and I knew the fall would hurt a lot.  I thought about not falling, wouldn’t it be better if I were just flopping down in bed?

I hit the pavement and bounced.  Not like when you throw a rock at the ground and it bounces up and settles; I bounced like when you bellyflop on a bed!  The ground under me was soft and springy.  I didn’t hurt at all.  I rolled around on the ground for a little while before getting up out of the circle of squishy road.  It looked just like it had before.  I touched the road with my shoe.  It was still soft.  I concentrated on it being hard again.  I touched the road with my shoe again.  It was hard.

Grabbing my bike, I went back to the house and ran up to my room.  I sat in front of my mirror and looked at my face to see if there were any warts or scratches.  No warts on my face.  I hadn’t become a witch.  No scratches.  I hadn’t hit my head.  That was it.  I could do magic.

Now I know older people find it hard to believe, so I don’t tell them.  It’s like Peter Pan; sometimes you’re just too old to believe anymore.  Like Susan and Narnia.  Because I’d seen all the important cartoons, I set out and made a list for myself.

  1. I got one extravagant wish.  Any time anyone wishes for everything they want, it’s never good so I decided I would use my magic for one thing.
  2. I couldn’t tell anyone about it.  You see it in movies! The hero tells one person their secret and eventually someone spills the beans! Or gets you in trouble.
  3. I had to help other.  That’s what you do when you can do stuff other people can’t, right?  And it made me feel like I was a Hero.  Like Wonder Woman or Batman or something.

Those were my three rules.

They were even easy to follow.  Sure there were times I really just wanted a cookie, or to make the kid that makes fun of the way I write that I have to trade papers with in English stop making fun of me, but those would break my very important rules.

I did help people though.  The kid whose locker was always stuck.  The girl that gets picked on in the lunch room.  I even helped someone whose meter was going to run out as a cop was getting ready to write them a ticket.  Small things, but you have to start out somewhere right?

When I turned fifteen things changed again.  We moved into the city and my whole life felt like it was falling apart.  I had no friends.  If I thought one person making fun of my handwriting was bad, I now had a running commentary on just how awful everything about me was.  In short, I went from happy to miserable.

We lived in a nice town house, but it didn’t have a back porch with a view of the countryside.  After school I would walk down a few blocks where kids painted the sides of buildings and people gave you crazy looks if you were clean.  It was where I went to help people.  I couldn’t do anything extravagant.  I’d added that rule.

  1. One wish for yourself.
  2. Don’t tell anyone.
  3. Be a hero.
  4. Nothing extravagant.

If suddenly all the homeless people had homes and food and jobs someone would notice.  But no one noticed if pizza boxes with hot, steaming pizza were left in an alley, or if the kid playing basketball found a new basketball.

In four years I’d learned a lot about my magic.  It wasn’t so much magic as I – invented things.  I sometimes changed them, like I did with the road that first day, but I did much better when I needed to create things.  Pizza.  A basketball.  Shoes.  A jacket.  I kept things small; you never know how a small act of charity will affect the bigger picture.

I’m never going to be a masked hero, someone who swings in and saves the day, but I’m happy working small magic and making small changes.  Most of all, I like the smiles.

Comments Off

Filed under Short Story

Going Home

Title: Going Home

Genre: Fantasy

Rating: PG

——-

Food.  He always thought of food.

Te’llana laughed into the wind and slapped the dragon’s neck with the palm of her hand.  The dragon’s eyes whirled in its face as it looked at her and below, above and ahead all at once.  She leaned forward, the wind whipping her face and making her eyes water; she loved flying.  No matter how bad things got, no matter how much her husband yelled at her, Te’llana could always fly.  The dragon peaked its ascent and then sharply dove, low hanging clouds making her clothes damp as they plummeted as one being towards earth, her stomach rising into her throat.  She never felt so alive as when she was on the back of a dragon, and with the frequency that they sought her out, Te’llana thought they knew it too.

The winter settlement spread out below them like a children’s toy, and a little away from it was the clearing where Te’llana lived with her husband, the other Dragon Speaker.  The ruddy brown dragon Te’llana had taken to calling Toph rumbled deep in his throat and circled above the clearing.

::It’s okay, you can set me down.:: Te’llana’s voice sounded cheerful in the dragon’s mind; while most dragons were not talkative, they were social and liked company.  They were also sensitive about relationships, be them dragon, or earth or human.  It hurt that even the dragons knew Te’llana was not happy; it was probably why they came so frequently to her and not her husband.

Toph snorted, hot air rushing back and over Te’llana and then the dragon began a slow, spiraling descent.

Te’llana bounded off of the dragon, sliding down its scaley hide until she landed on the ground with a grunt.  Toph’s horned head swung around and nudged her.  Te’llana always loved the cooing, purring noises the dragons made in their throats, it reminded her of babies, which only made the dragons snort and look at her with their heads cocked to the side when she tried to explain.  In the language of dragons, she understood this to be a reprimand.

She peeled off her riding leathers and rubbed Toph’s face with loose sand.  The way he flopped over and presented his belly made him seem like a large dog the Animal Talkers were fond of.

“Te’llana,” a harsh voice called from the safety of the trees.

Te’llana’s heart fell.  She’d hoped for one more night alone; the moments of freedom she was allotted were too few.  “Yes Husband’s Mother?”  She didn’t leave off scrubbing the dragon’s belly; she could not be faulted for doing her duty.  There were too few Dragon Speakers and too many dragons.

“Come with me, now.”

She started at the direct command.  It was within her right to refuse; she was doing her duty, but her husband would hear about it and then he would be angry at her.  Sighing, Te’llana dusted off Toph and slid off of his belly.  ::Go now.  Come again when you like.::

Toph rolled his eyes and snorted, burrowing into the sands and making no move to leave.

::Fine.  I’ll be back later.  They cannot keep me all day and night.::

She followed Husband’s Mother in silence, as the woman preferred Te’llana to be at all times, and went back to the village.  Te’llana was not a native of the tribe and kept to herself mostly, happy to remain aloof in her home with only her dragons to talk to and her husband to care for.  Even after four years, the women did not accept her and the men looked at her with jealousy; their wives were not slim, with hair the color of the sun and eyes like the sky.

They went to the hut that served as the village meeting grounds; Te’llana was wary of this place.  Since the village had never accepted her she rarely joined in anything, preferring her lonely dragon hut instead.  All of the village adults were there, which only made Te’llana nervous.  Being summoned did not bode well.  What had she done?  Her husband had complained about leaving the laundry out too long but that did not warrant a rebuke from the entire village.  Panic created a tight knot in her throat.  For a moment she thought about bolting, but that would only make her husband angry.

Te’llana took her place in the line of her Husband’s Family as least important, next to her Husband’s Brother.  The village chief stood in the center next to a low fire, a roll of papyrus in his hands.  He looked at her with those same unfeeling eyes he’d turned on her when she’d begged him to not marry her; she’d never forgiven the man for making her marry her Teacher.

“We have a message from the Seshaw Tribe.”

Confusion was on everyone’s faces.  Te’llana didn’t know why this involved her.  Husband had gone with some other men to help the Seshaw raise new huts because his own Father could not go.

“The tribe was raising huts and were attacked.  Os’acca was killed, the others are injured.”

Te’llana’s flesh went cold; she should be crying and sad.  That’s what a good wife would do.  That’s what she should be doing, but instead she was so happy!  No more nights spent fearing what else he would want her to do, what else he might do to her.  No more days spent in drudgery, flinching at shadows and mistakes.  Her husband was dead.  Around her others wailed loudly for her loss and there was talk of a war party, but Te’llana heard none of it.  She was a widower; at eighteen summers she was finally free.  Eventually she mustered tears, ducking her head from the disapproving looks; she probably wasn’t crying enough and her wails were not loud.  But her tears were tears of joy.  She could go home, to her own people and see her mother again.  There were so many possibilities now, her heart swelled with joy!

“Te’llana.”

Flinching, she turned to face Husband’s Mother.  Os’anna.  She was Os’anna, not Husband’s Mother.  “Yes, Os’anna?”

The woman scowled at her and gestured to the family hut.  “Come and eat with us.”  It was a command and not a request.

Biting her lip, Te’llana followed the woman into her domain where already people were leaving offerings for the dead.  She tried to make herself small and out of the way but there were so many people pressing into the hut and smearing their tears on her face and patting her cheeks.  Several women commented about her lack of a child, there was no one left to take on Os’acca’s name.

Os’anna sniffed loudly and waved one woman away.  “It’s okay, Te’llanna will marry my youngest son, Os’ubba, and their firstborn will be named Os’acca in his honor.

Te’llanna went cold and then hot.  Her large eyes were stung by the smoke from the incense.  She felt eyes on her.  Turning she saw Os’ubba standing near the entrance to the hut, looking at her.  She had always been wary of her husband, but she was afraid of Os’ubba.  He got loud and violent, and several times Os’acca had been called into the village to handle his little brother.  Te’llanna felt like the hare caught in a trap.  She had to get out of here.  She had to leave.

It was the dead of night; she’d been forced to sit up for a long time with Os’anna and then she lay awake listening to the three bodies breathing heavily until she was sure they were asleep.  She had to go now.  Os’anna would not let her go.  As much as the woman didn’t like her, having her in their family made others jealous.  Te’llanna would never understand the woman.  She ran up the path to her hut, hoping and praying Toph was still there.  The meadow with it’s sandy shallow was empty.  Te’llanna wanted to cry, but she knew it was worthless; dragons didn’t often just wait around.

She forced herself to take several deep breaths and climb into the hut.  She would have to go on foot until a dragon came looking for her, so she would need to carry her saddle and riding leathers.  That meant she couldn’t carry much else.  She made a bundle of two spare sets of clothes, a water bottle and what dried foods there were.  Os’anna would be upset if she took anything else, and to be honest, Te’llanna didn’t want to keep any reminders of these four years.

Looping the straps around the saddle she made a pack out of it, and carried the rest in her arms.  Home was back towards the village, but she wanted as much distance between her and it before the villiage woke.  The forest was quiet; it welcomed her like a friend, folding over her, covering her.  These parts she knew so well.  The hollow where roots grew, the dark places where mushrooms sprouted, and the clear pool that rose up from the ground.  These were what she would miss, and these she could not take with her.

A dark shape blotted out the moon and then another and another.  Te’llanna froze and looked up, but they were gone.  She changed direction and ran for the meadow.  Three dragons crowded each other, their heads swinging around.  She whistled and loped towards them, the saddle banging awkwardly on her back.  She greeted each of the dragons quickly and imparted her need to them.  The way the three dragons trilled and looked at each other, Te’llanna had the suspicion they were not telling her something.  Had they known?  Were they here to protect her?

She lost no time in saddling the golden female, Jasmine, and pulled on her riding leathers.  Crawling up into the saddle she held on, feeling a thrill of new beginning, of chance, of hope.

She was going home.

1 Comment

Filed under Short Story

Attack of the Roaches (picture book!)

Title: Attack of the Roaches

Genre: Picture Book

Rating: G

Thoughts: First, I have a severe hatred of roaches.  Yes, this is sort of based on that.  Second, omg this took forever and the pictures aren’t that detailed! I don’t know how Hyperbole and a Half does it.

——-

Once upon a time there was a girl who lived happily in a pretty home.


On day, this home was invaided by giant cockroaches. They were terrible! They ate things. They crawled everywhere. They drank her Dr Pepper!

The girl lived in fear of the roaches.

And then one day a nice salesperson came to her rescue.  He told her about this magical mist that makes roaches go away.

The girl bought the magic mist and took it home and that night she waited for the roaches to go on their nightly raid.

They crawled into her kitchen, waving forks and knives.  One ate her breakfast, another went for a birthday-cake, and then one went after her last Dr Pepper.

The girl lept out of the pantry and began spraying the magic mist.

The roaches realized too late that the magic mist had real power.

The girl’s home was liberated!  She was happy and free to drink her Dr Pepper in peace.

The end.

6 Comments

Filed under Short Story

The material of nightmares.

Title: The material of nightmares

Genre: Fiction

Rating: PG

Thoughts: I have really vivid dreams.  This is the product of one that woke me up at 1am and kept me up for hours.  The dream featured people I knew, all of them, and in a place I know. I changed characters, setting and the voice, but the general idea is there.

——-

You know how you sometimes have nightmares about someone trying to kill you?  It’s a pretty good indication you’re watching too many crime tv shows.  But what about when it really happens?  What do you tell people afterwards?  It’s not like there’s a support group for people like me; most of them are dead because their serial killer did their job.

I wasn’t thrilled about the idea of a class reunion.  In fact, if it weren’t for the fact that I never left town then I probably wouldn’t have gone.  Instead, not only was I going, I had to help plan it too.  Why I was putting together a social mixer for people I never talked to in high school just to get together and not talk to again was beyond me.  But there I was, taking off work early to get the latest plans to Kelly, who had left long enough to go to school and now taught science.

Why I took the swing by the history hall even though the new coach was clearly not at school, I’m not sure.  Wistful thinking perhaps.  Muscular and good looking, he wasn’t the kind of guy I dated.  Those kind were a little overweight, quiet, and ‘safe’.  I was daydreaming, sad as it maybe while walking towards Kelly’s classroom.  That’s probably why I didn’t hear it.  I simply wasn’t listening.  I had to pass the history hall; it’s just sad to me that we still have halls for each subject.

It was late enough most of the lights were off except for a few evenly spaced down each hallway.  It looked like a few of the teachers were still there, Mr. Amis who had been teaching so long he’d taught my younger brother and me, and a second year teacher that creeped me out.  The guy was nice and all, but he gave me the heebie-jeebies.  A person just can’t be that nice.  Every time he saw someone he might know he said hello in a falsetto voice.  He always smiled.  He only ever said nice things.  There’s only so much niceness you can take before you get a cavity or something, so I avoided the history hall.

Kelly’s light was on, but she wasn’t in the classroom.  Annoyed, I told myself she was probably getting something to eat or going to the bathroom.  Of course she could also be off gossiping with the Spanish teacher and leave me sitting for hours.  I pulled out my phone, just in case an imaginary friend decided to text me, but mostly because it gave me something to do with my hands.  Kelly’s classroom is actually two in one; the first one was set up with desks, the second was the lab room and they connected through a wide door.

I heard something in the lab room.  It would be like Kelly to be in there and me in here, both of us waiting on each other.  The door was ajar so I just slid between it, relishing one of the moments I could remind myself of all the weight I’d been losing in preparation for the reunion.  I stopped in the doorway.  One of those 24-hour lights, the only one in the lab that would never turn off, illuminated Kelly.  It looked like a scene out of Dexter or CSI.  One leg was out straight and the other bent unnaturally under her, the plum colored pencil skirt hiked up to her thighs.  Her jacket was tossed on one of the tables and she just wore a silk tanktop.  It had little patterns of pink, purple and white interlocking rectangles; why I picked up that detail I will never know, but I’ll never forget that shirt.

It was stained in the abdomen, and a redline across her throat.  It looked almost fake, except who would shoot a tv show here?  That’s why I knew the pool of blood around her was real.

Watching all those crime shows I thought seeing a dead body wouldn’t be a big deal.  I mean, it’s just like they’re sleeping, right?  What’s so bad about that?  Well it’s different.  I’m not sure how to describe it.  Maybe like you saw that container of yogurt in the fridge and you’re all ready to dip apple slices in it, you aren’t even going to bother with a bowl.  Open it up, and the fragrance of rancid dairy and curdled yogurt slams you in the face.  A dead body is worse than that.

I froze in the door.  The sickly sweet history teacher stood with his back to me and a knife in his hand like the ones hunters use in movies like The Hunted and Rambo.  He was covered with blood.  He ran his free hand through his hair and got all fidgety.  You know how people talk about fear clenching their hearts?  That’s not even near the truth.  It was like fear was a bodybag come to take me home.  I couldn’t move, I couldn’t breathe, I couldn’t even edge out of the door; I was stuck with my ball and chain holding me in place.  I could see me dying, joining Kelly on the floor.  Then the reunion plans would really be screwed.

I wondered if they would do a benefit for us at the reunion.  Maybe they’d even cancel school tomorrow.  Heck, they might do an episode of CSI based on us!  That wasn’t exactly comforting, but it took my thoughts off of my impending death.

But death had not come for me.  Death came for Kelly and promptly left.

After a few moments, like a cat who can’t keep away I edged into the room.  That’s when it hit me, that vacant look on her face, the way her throat sort of poked out around the gash that pushed it home.  Kelly was dead.  Panic took over then and my cell phone which before had been superfluous was now actually useful.  I retreated to a corner and covered my mouth – and got the police station’s answering machine.

I would be the one person in the world that would get an answering machine on a 911 call.  The second attempt went better.

“Hello 911. What’s your emergency?”

“I want to report a murder. I’m at the Marcus High School on Cherry Street.  The science teacher, Kelly, oh god – “ this would of course be when I start crying, verbalizing something gives it some strange, otherworldly power and sends you into an uncontrollable mess.  It’s a universal law.  “The new history teacher killed her.  I saw him standing over her holding a Rambo knife!  Oh my god.”

“Calm down ma’am.  Is he still there?”

“I don’t know.”  Why this told me to cross to the door and stick my head out into the hallway, practically announcing – hey, I’ve seen the dead body! – I don’t know.  “I don’t see anyone,” I mutter on the phone – as I hear a door swing open.  Wheeling around, coming out of the boys bathroom, is the history teacher, Mr. Potas.  I’m pretty sure I squeaked, or yelled because he jumped and looked at me like I was going to attack him.

And then I did what any sane woman would do.  I turned around and ran.  I might have yelled.  And I probably screamed.  I ran back to my car and got in – without being followed.  Panting in my car I cried and talked to the 911 operator until the police arrived.  And of course it was a day when I wasn’t even dressed nice; I was wearing an old sweater with coffee stains and black slacks.  Whenever someone has to call the cops in the movies they’re always hot.

The cops asked me questions and had me sitting around for a long time.  One of them ate onion rings while he talked to me; onion rings!  The whole time I just wanted to gag and tell him to finish eating and then talk to me, but I didn’t want to be left alone.  Eventually they told me to go home and lock my door and don’t think about it.  I’ve never heard such crap advice in my life.

I spent the whole night on my parents couch, eating ice cream.  The next day was a repeat, and the next night I moved onto fried chicken.  Why?  Because Mr. Potas – Raul I think his name is – disappeared.  The cops couldn’t find him.  No one has seen him.  The address on file for his house is a PO box – and no one knows where he lives.  It’s not like there are that many options in a small town; most people have lived in their homes since their grandpappy built it during the great depression.  You either live in the new rented houses, the ghetto apartments, or in the country.  With the first two ruled out, there are now hundreds of thousands of acres of country property to go over.

After five days living on my parents couch, I smell and they’re annoyed and I go home.  At first I have all the lights on and I double check both of the doors.  Heck, I even make sure the windows are locked.  I go over everything twice.  I haven’t mentioned the nightmares because they’re terrible and talking about them makes them worse.

My mom gave me sleeping pills, the kind that knock out an elephant, but I can’t take them.  I have this nightmare that Raul would come after me when I’m asleep.  Then I wouldn’t even get the dignity of a sprawling floor pose, I’d be flopped in bed, no struggle.

Day three in my apartment and I’m popping the pills.  I haven’t been to work in a week and I haven’t slept in four days.  I’m delirious and talking to my picture frames.  They don’t talk back, which is a good sign I think.  If they did – then I’d have something else to think about.

On the brink of actual sleep, where you’re sort of awake and sort of dreaming, I’m laying on my back and staring up at the patterns of light that the nightlight casts on the ceiling.  Its calming for some drugged up reason.  I trace them with my eyes and think about rainbows and kittens.  But the shadow on the ceiling doesn’t look like a rainbow or a kitten.  Blinking, I glance towards the door; the light from the hall is blotted out by the shape of a person.  A very large person.

I’ve been practicing my screaming in my mind.  Even drugged into repose I manage an impressive near-death scream that shatters the night.  I don’t know if I’ve screamed, like really screamed in years; the sound tears at my throat, it hurts!

Raul stumbles backwards.  He’s blocking the only way out in the bedroom and all I can think about it putting something between us.  Snatching the cell phone, in the moment of confusion created by my screaming, I jump into the closet.  It doesn’t lock from the inside, but it’s something solid between me and something sharp, pointy and potentially dangerous that’s in his hand.

911 is on speed dial.  I’m screaming into the phone before I realize it.

Someone on the other side snatches at the door and I drop the phone to keep hold of the door.  It’s Raul.  In the dim light I can see his face twisted into a grotesque mask.   He’s pulling it open a few inches and then losing his grip.  The face I glimpse on the other side isn’t saying hello.  He’s not the person I remember chatting with in the grocery store.  I don’t think I even recognize that face.

Somehow it was over with in an instant.

There was yelling and he wasn’t pulling on the door anymore.  There was a crash and something hit the door, but I wasn’t about to open it.  The yelling got louder and then stopped as people started talking.  Straining to hear what was going on, when someone knocked on the door it made me jump, and let go of the doorknob.  The door disappeared and a police officer shone a light in my face.

Comments Off

Filed under Short Story