Categories
Short Fiction

Lucidity

Isiah was awoken suddenly, pulled from a dream of home, and he almost fell from his burlap hammock as he came to focus in the dimly lit sleeping quarters of a whaling ship. His friend and shipmate, Cormack, was shaking Isiah with eyes wide in excitement. “It’s a whale Isiah! Our first whale!”

               With a groaning lurch the ship turned suddenly, throwing Cormack backwards into the balanced arms of a heavily tattooed Greenlander who pushed him back onto his feet and bellowed, “Find your legs greenhorn, it’s time to earn your pay!”

               The two sheepishly dodged more experienced crewmembers as they snuck topside, scanning the chaos for the first mate. They saw him holding himself above the main deck on some railing, shouting orders as the captain wrestled shirtless with the steering wheel behind him.

               The first mate was a younger man, tall and thin with closely cropped sideburns. He had a kindness to him that not all of the seamen could boast of, so the two younger boys tried to stay within his eyesight. “40 yards off starboard!” hollered the captain as harpoons were passed out and whaleboats were lowered along the side of the larger ship. Isiah could feel his stomach turning in the excitement and a sour belch of pemmican and grog breached his lips.

               The first mate pointed at Cormack and Isiah, “Greenhorns! Climb the mainmast and don’t let that whale out of your sight!”

               Cormack sprinted ahead and jumped up the rope ladder, always having been the stronger of the two. Isiah followed as quickly as his unsteady feet would allow. Clearly there only needed to be one lookout, but both of the boys knew the order was to their benefit. This would keep them out of the way until they were adept enough to be safe amidst the action.

               As Isiah neared the halfway point of the mast, his soft hands stinging against the rough salty ropes, a wild force knocked the entire ship and it lurched to the side. Isiah kept ahold of the rope, but the recoil nearly tore his arm from its socket. He could hear a commotion from below but was too afraid to look down. He regained composure and double timed his way up to meet Cormack in the crow’s nest, but his compatriot greeted him with a white face and wide eyes. Isiah turned back and looked down at the deck.

               Several men had been thrown overboard by the shock, and a cacophony of curses rang out as some men threw ropes overboard in a rescue attempt. Others lay in pain, crippled with injury. “What did we hit?” Asked Isiah breathlessly. Cormack shook his head, “No Izzy, it’s what hit us. The whale hit us!”

               The first mate was frantically sprinting about the deck, tossing men back to their stations and trying to unstuck the whaleboat that had gotten wedged to the side of the ship. He looked up at the gaping mouths of the two boys with eyes wide and fearful, “Greenhorns, where is that damned whale?!”

               Without a word the two boys took to the different sides of the ship and began scanning, trying to ignore the furious curses of the captain as he yelled at them for losing sight. The captain’s left arm hung at his side as the muscles in his right arm furiously worked against the strain of the wheel.

               Suddenly Cormack was hollering, “Whale! Port side! 40 yards! No, 30 yards-er, it’s coming for us!”

               Isiah turned to see a small dark figure speeding towards the ship, not nearly the monster of a whale he’d imagined capable of such aggression. The first mate’s voice broke as he hollered, “Brace for impact!”

               The whale actually leapt from the water, against the side of the ship, and for a moment before the impact Isiah could see a stark white form atop the whale’s head that resembled a foppish powdered wig. That was the image burned into his mind as the whale collided with the port side of the ship and the mast whipped to and fro, throwing the boys roughly against the sides of the crow’s nest. Isiah saw Cormack roll over a side, his fingers gripping the edge. Before Isiah could get his feet underneath him, the fingers disappeared and he could only watch in horror as his best friend fell quick and hard to the deck, landing with a sickening thud.

               Isiah had no time to react, even if he could. The mast began to strain and splinter below and he felt his guts lurch as gravity betrayed him. The horizon turned on him as the mast rolled to the side of the ship and he jumped for the water before impact. The cold Atlantic water hit him like a wall, shooting up his nose and shocking his brains.

               He instinctively fought for the surface and found himself surrounded by debris.  A damaged whale boat floated nearby and he made his way, the strength of terror and desperation pulling him over the side as he gasped and shivered. Within the moment he came to his senses and sat up, looking over the side of the boat at the whaling ship that was now almost completely broken in half, the sides covered painted with a dark blood.

               He had no oar and futilely splashed at the ocean with his arms trying to change course back towards some of the men struggling in the water, but he watched as one by one they were pulled down into the deep. It struck Isiah that this was still the work of the whale. It was methodically drowning each of the men, one after another. He realized that he was in as much peril as anyone, floating alone in this small whale boat and he fell back on his ass, frozen in terror.

               As the last of the men were silenced, Isiah held the edge of the whale boat with white knuckled anticipation. Suddenly on the slowly sinking ship he saw the first mate standing tall, a harpoon in hand. The man screamed defiantly into the ocean and threw whatever he could, attempting to draw the creature in close. Isiah saw the back of the beast before the first mate could, it sped towards the sinking ship from behind the first mate’s sightlines. Isiah sat up and began to point and holler out, “Whale sir! The whale!”

               The man turned towards Isiah just as the whale dipped below the surface, and saw Isiah waving his hands frantically but didn’t seem to be able to hear him.

               Out of the waves leapt the monster, and Isiah saw it clearly for an instant. A small, dark thing. Harpoons and pieces of the ship hung off of its sides and the water falling from it as it breached the ocean surface was full of blood. For a moment, he thought the whale was attempting to jump over the entire ship and the first mate held his harpoon aloft toward the soft underbelly. But the trajectory slowed, and the mass of flesh came down directly atop the mate and the middle of the ship with a sickening and final crunch.

               Isiah stared in disbelief and horror at the wreckage, the whale shuddered atop the mess and lay still. A deafening silence overtook Isiah as he sat alone in the only remaining whale boat, adrift in the ocean, watching the only ship he’d ever worked on slowly sink below the surface.

               At night the moon dominated Isiah’s world. Everything else was blacker than pitch, but the moon shone bright and reflected across the water as a sheer white path, as if it was reaching out to him. His exhaustion eventually beat out the cold and uncomfortable oak bottom of the whale boat. Laying on his back, he was overcome with the sensation of sinking. He jolted awake several times expecting the boat to be taking on water, but as he adjusted to the feeling the sink became heavier and he let it drag him into sleep.

               His mind exploded into a world of color and sensation. Isiah knew that he was dreaming, the trauma of the whale attack couldn’t have left his mind. He felt himself floating through his own mind, traveling rapidly through different memories. His father’s print shop, the smell of his mother’s hair, Cormack’s laugh. The experiences of a lifetime floated past him rapidly and he smiled in acknowledgement of them, but had no control to stop. It was as though he was being piloted through his own life, until suddenly the experience froze upon the face of Cormack. The young man smiled and spoke reassuringly. “Don’t worry Izzy, I’ll make sure you get home.”

               When Isiah woke up, the whale boat was beached upon the sandy shore of a small island next to a freshwater inlet. He paced the beach at first, not believing his own luck. After drinking greedily and washing his face, he wandered back to the whale boat and sat in the morning light trying to come to terms with the previous events. He stared into the horizon as he remembered the dream state that he’d experienced. Had Cormack really appeared to him?

               He looked down at his feet and noticed that next to the whale boat was a neat pile of shellfish and a few whitefish as well. After grabbing the bounty away from the surf he split a fish and began pulling at the insides, eating the flesh raw. He used a dull steel knife he’d found in the whaleboat and tested several rocks until he found one that reliably sparked against the metal.

               Soon he had a fire going and cooked the crab and the fish, eating until his belly was warm and full. The speed at which his survival needs had been met left him with a rising emotional tide. All of the men lost, including his best friend, and here he sat fortunate enough not only to survive but to thrive through sheer luck.

               Night brought no end to the survivor’s guilt that wracked his brain, and the constant nagging worry of what to do next weighed heavily on him. After hours of tossing around on the beach, he decided to give the hard surface of the whale boat a try, after all he had slept wonderfully there the night before. Sure enough, as soon as he’d laid down on the wood he felt the same similar pull and let himself go deep into his own mind. This time, however, he didn’t travel through his memories. Instead he found himself recounting all of the knowledge he’d learned in school and from his father at the shop. Even things that seemed simple enough to Isiah that he’d never given them a second thought. He found himself explaining the alphabet to himself and recalling the books that he’d read. Mathematics, the Bible, and whatever science he knew of came to the forefront.

               Then he drifted passively across the land around where he had grown up, stopping to focus on odd things such as certain plants, animals and flowers. He was transfixed by a deer that he’d seen up close as a young boy and some chittering squirrels climbing up and down trees. And trees! He’d never thought twice about the forests near his home but now every moment he’d spent gazing at the old growth seemed weighted as emotionally as the faces of his family.

               Isiah woke with the sun rising and once again found a curious pile of seafood piled up near the boat. Not knowing what to think, he wandered around the shallows looking for any hint of what could be causing his fortunate predicament but it wasn’t until he neared the boat that he heard a voice in his head that wasn’t his. “Isiah, do not be afraid.”

               He jumped and looked around the beach, but no one was there. The voice wasn’t a noise, he wasn’t hearing it through his ears. It seemed to echo around his mind. “Who are you?” He asked the absence.

               Suddenly his mind flashed to the first vision he had of the whale that had attacked, to the white mass on top of its head. He felt himself falling to his knees as a flood of experiences completely foreign to him rushed through his senses. The darkness of the ocean, fleeing from fish and other predators, swimming not with arms or legs but through an odd locomotion of a body he was unfamiliar with. He saw the whale in its own environment, he saw it allow him protection and he clambered upon it and entered the thoughts of it. He saw the world from the view of an aquatic mammoth. He saw the whale’s mother taking it up for breaths of air, nursing, learning how to hunt.

               Most of all, he experienced the sounds. Isiah had always thought of the ocean as a silent place, but the rich and overwhelming songs that the whales were singing to each other were rich with meaning and intricately beautiful. He felt his physical body sob with emotion as his mind was worlds away, feeling the different echoes of the behemoths as if they were strokes of a paintbrush in his brain. He saw himself as the whale meeting an albino squid that was fleeing a group of hooded seals. He felt the squid gently wrap its arms around the whales head and he comprehended two non-human creatures communicating. He, as the whale, chased the seals off. The two animals remained paired and Isiah experienced a bond he could never have imagined.

               Suddenly, as Isiah the whale surfaced for air after a morning of filter feeding the two creatures noticed a ship. Isiah instantly recognized the ship.

               He tried to pull his mind out of this experience, screaming as he felt himself locked into the whale’s perspective as it was pierced with harpoons. He felt the panic, and the squid’s fury. The squid took over control of the whale in this moment, and the whale began speeding toward the ship in single minded determination. Isiah was split between the perspectives of control and helplessness, terror and fury.

               Isiah lay exhausted on the beach, having lived through the life and death of the same animal he’d left home to hunt. Dried tears left rough patches of salt on his cheeks. When he was finally able to sit up, he noticed that the white mass of squid was peeking around the side of the whale boat. Somehow he’d already known it was there. Isiah crawled up and over the side of the boat and laid flat, offering his mind to the squid for communication. He felt forgiveness, and a communion of souls. He did his best to share the location of his home on the Atlantic coast, and the squid roughly indicated that it would be able to help him return.

               The journey took a little over a week, the squid propelled the small whale boat while Isiah used a makeshift oar that he’d crafted from the island driftwood with the dull knife. The squid would stop for a few hours a day to hunt, and it always brought food for Isiah as well. He suffered a lack of water but the squid was able to communicate that the eyeballs of the fish it was providing were a source of refreshment, and rain came mercifully on the fourth day.

               As they travelled, Isiah lay on the boat with closed eyes and communicated with the squid. It was beginning to learn to use rudimentary English and seemed to be excited by the concept of this new form of communication. Finally they reached the shore of Isiah’s small fishing village, and as they neared land a group of onlookers grew into a crowd as people recognized him. He was weak when they came out to rescue him, and his body collapsed almost as soon as he was in the hands of fellow humans.

               It took him several weeks to recover, which he spent reading, to his father’s delight. Unlike other sailors that had been rescued from sea, Isiah did not show a shyness toward the ocean. In fact, as soon as he was able to, he wandered down to the shoreline and spent hours each day laying in the bay. His family and neighbors worried that the trial of his survival must have addled his mind in some way, but the doctor assured his parents that he was sound.

               Isiah spent the rest of his days reading books and floating in the ocean, secretly allowing the squid access to all of the knowledge that he could attain as recompense for the death of the whale, and repayment to his aquatic savior. He never told a soul, for fear that the squid would be hunted and captured as a curiosity. In return the squid took Isiah’s mind places that no human could hope to experience, and the man’s life, though seemingly simple from an outside perspective, achieved a depth and richness so vast that as he grew to old age he only became happier and happier. Even as his body aged, he expressed to anyone that would listen that his life far surpassed what he could have hoped for. People listened in amusement, patient acknowledgement, and sometimes rude disbelief. It never mattered to Isiah.

               After the old man finally passed away, his family honored his wishes. They took his body from his deathbed out to a small flat raft, that they pushed out to the sea, past the breaking waves. The whole town gathered to see him float away, in pious remembrance of a rare survivor.

The crowd watched in unknowing horror as pale white tentacles reached out of the water and enveloped the body, dragging it off the raft and down into the sea that he had known better than any human alive or dead.

Categories
Short Fiction

Annabel

               Lizzie woke up slowly, rolling from side to side, waiting until she felt the warmth of a sunbeam to open her eyes. Rainbows refracted across the walls of the cottage from the crystal necklace that hung over a kitchen window.

               She heard the loud metallic ‘CLANG’ of a dropped pot and a mutter of frustration that made her giggle. “Annie!” She called out, “It’s called breakfast, not break-everything!”

               She tossed a heavy wool blanket from herself and rolled over the side of the mattress to let her bare feet land hard on the oak floor boards, polished enough not to worry about splinters. In the kitchen nook she saw a small stuffed toy panda peek around the corner of the stove and give her a mock stern look through button eyes. The panda hollered, “If I don’t break a few eggs, how am I going to make you breakfast little Miss Lizzie?”

               Lizzie giggled and slid her moccasins on, clomping over to the table in the kitchen nook that was right below the rainbow necklace so that she could make shadow puppets in the refractions. Annie, the stuffed panda, wore an apron much too large and stood on a stool in order to reach the stovetop, where a cast iron pan sizzled aromatically with mushrooms, eggs, and cheese. The panda waved a wooden spoon over her head dramatically, “You’d better have an appetite, because I’ve got some tough lessons for you to get through today.”

               Lizzie frowned. “But it’s such a nice day, Annie! Can’t I go outside and play a bit?”

               The panda groaned. “Little girl, I am going to be in such trouble with your father if we don’t do some schoolwork at some point!”

               “Stop calling me little, I’m taller than you.”

               Annie pulled the pan off the stove and scooped some of the cheesy mess onto a plate, then deftly hopped off of the stool. She took a deep breath and grunted, swelling in size until her head reached over the table and just a bit higher than Lizzie. She set the girl’s plate in front of her with a smirk. “Besides, your father said no going outside without a grownup.”

               Lizzie set in on her breakfast, trying to think of a way to outsmart her babysitter. She stared out the window through the lens of the crystal necklace and noticed a large black bird sitting on a fencepost past the garden in their front yard. The bird was looking directly at her.

               “Annie? There’s a bird outside and I think it might be hungry. Can we give it some breakfast?”

               Annie stopped clearing dishes to the sink and peaked out the window. “That’s a raven, Lizzie. Ravens are too smart for their own good. They can find their own food.”

               The raven seemed to hear her, and opened its wings to soar over to the kitchen windowsill where it kept staring at Lizzie, with an expression that looked pleading and hungry.

               Lizzie looked over to see Annie busy filling the sink with water and she reached up and undid the latch to the window, cracking it open a bit. She whispered to the raven, “Are you hungry Mr. Raven?”

               The raven lurched forward, forcing its way through the window, knocking over Lizzie’s glass, which fell to the floorboards with a shatter, and snatched the crystal of the rainbow necklace in its beak. Lizzie flinched and when she opened her eyes again the bird was gone. She shrieked, and Annie fell over, startled. Annie jumped to her plush feet in time to see Lizzie’s moccasins passing the threshold of the window, desperately trying to chase after the raven.

               “LIZZIE GIRL GET BACK HERE!” Annie bellowed as she hopped lightly from the floor to the chair to the table and out the window as well.

               Demetri, took an aching step off of the transit line from the human smell of public transit into the hazy murk of factory adjacent pollution. His feet were stiff, and every step shot through the bones of his legs up through his hips and into his lumbar spine.

His lungs protested and he coughed wet, pulling his heavy respiration mask out of his side bag and winced as he pulled the plastic straps over face and head. Long hours of wearing the PPE had worn lines across his cheekbones and through his scalp. Often, the straps would break the skin, and he’d have to be careful to keep a layer of petroleum jelly between the open sores and the putrid factory air.

The weight of the mask strained his neck, and forced him to adjust his sightlines around the bulky respirator by slouching. He fell into a crowd of his coworkers as they made the short march to the factory. His wife, Annabel, was actually one of the pioneers of the augment-tech that he now labored to mass manufacture. In the past he was lucky to stay at home with their daughter while his wife broke through what she called the ‘Cartesian barrier’ that kept virtual reality experiences awkward and nauseating. He didn’t understand the specifics, but the crux seemed to be finding a way to integrate the top down technology with the bottom up evolutionary structure of the human brain.

Now he was a different kind of lucky, he reminded himself, catching a coworker that began to slump forward under the weight of exhaustion and respirator.

He got by. The insurance didn’t pay out because at the time there wasn’t a legal precedent for the disease that now plagued Annabel’s field. The specific bio-memetic work required a range of solvents and reactants for protein synthesis that were novel in her early years. One in particular, called ‘treacle’ because of its sweet smell, collected in the lungs and crystallized. The now common condition called “Glass Lung” was extremely painful, and easily diagnosed as you could hear a grinding, crunching sound as the sufferer wheezed and coughed.

They didn’t know his wife had the disease until the autopsy. The cause of death was ruled as due to the car accident, until the shards of crystallized treacle were found lacerating her lungs. She drowned in her own blood, and the insurance man said ‘pre-existing condition’.

Demetri scanned the ID off of his lanyard as his compatriots disappeared one-by-one into the murk of their workplace. Cheerful signage lit the way, the neon light playing off of the fog of pollutant in the air. An HVAC system to mediate the air pollution was constantly promised but not delivered in the 9 months he’d worked there. At night as he waited for his mindware to boot up, he’d breathe quietly and listen for the fatalistic sound of glass on glass.

Lizzie landed soft on a pile of damp mulch and lawn clippings and rolled from the earthy mush to the hard dirt path out in front of the cottage. Squinting into the sky against the morning sunlight, she saw the silhouette of the raven disappearing towards the woods to the North. No sooner had Lizzie taken a step in that direction when she felt a familiar softness envelop her. She looked down to see Annie’s arms around her and heard the panda inhale and inflate, still holding on to Lizzie until the little girl’s feet were well off the ground.

               Annie turned Lizzie around to look her in the eyes. “What part of ‘no going outside’ rang hollow to you little girl?” The panda’s button eyes were furrowed in exasperation, but they softened as they saw the wet cheeks and desperate look in the child’s eyes.

               Lizzie spoke between exhales, trying not to sob, “The… raven… took the rainbow necklace… and… I just… wanted to help him.”

               Annie deflated with a long sigh. “Girl, haven’t you learned this by now? You can’t trust everybody. Especially not crows, and double especially not ravens. Not one of them needs your help, they’re clever enough to take care of themselves and all they want is everything you have.”

               Once the panda was back to toy size, Lizzie grabbed her paw and started to pull in the direction of the woods but Annie was deceptively strong and didn’t budge. Lizzie turned back, tears having turned to frustration, “Well c’mon! We have to get the necklace back before Dad gets home!”

               Annie mulled it over, “Losing a necklace to a tricky raven is one thing. Following a tricky raven into its trap is another.”

               “Ravens aren’t smarter than humans, Annie. I’m a human, and I even have you as a bodyguard! What good is a bodyguard that’s scared of some birds?”

               “I’m your BABYSITTER, girl, not your bodyguard,” Annie said with some amusement.

               Lizzie wiped mulch off of the back of her pajamas. “Well that necklace belonged to mama and I’m not going to lose it to some stupid crow. You can’t let others steal your stuff and walk all over you, what’s the point in that?”

               Annie nodded thoughtfully and came forward onto all fours, lifting the girl on her back. “I suppose you have a point, I’m in charge of looking after you but I’m also supposed to be tutoring you while your Dad is at work and this seems a teachable moment. Hold on tight, Lizzie.”

               Inflating to the size of a horse, Annie felt Lizzie grab a tight hold of the fur on her back and the panda bucked a little for effect and the little girl giggled and bounced softly. They bounded over the flower gardens and fence of the cottage’s front yard effortlessly in pursuit of the rainbow necklace.

The two moved quickly with the panda’s weightless leaps and bounds and soon Lizzie could look back and fit the cottage between her thumb and forefinger with a squint. They hopped a pasture fence and Annie slowed down to avoid cow pies. “Where’s Arnold?” Lizzie asked.

               Arnold was a solitary steer that kept to the pasture, he typically kept himself company humming and singing. He didn’t seem to know any songs, but his memory was so short that by the time he lost steam on one tune he was already starting another. There was no sign of him until the two adventurers neared the pasture fence closer to the tree line of the woods. They saw Arnold from behind, his little tail whipping around and his rear end wiggling in duress. As they got closer it became clear that he was in trouble, and seemed to be stuck in the fence.

               “Arnold!” Hollered Lizzie, “Are you ok?”

               Arnold bellowed in relief, “Lizzie is that you? Oh Lizzie, you have to help me! I’m stuck in the fence!”

               “How did that happen Arnold?” Annie asked with a condescending tone.

               “It’s not my fault, a raven came by and tricked me,” lamented Arnold, “I was happily chowing on some of the fantastic grass on my side of the fence when a raven came and landed near me. He started telling me how much better the grass was on the other side of the fence. At first I didn’t believe him, but he pointed out that I hadn’t tried it, and, I couldn’t argue with his brilliant raven logics.”

               At this point it was clear to Lizzie and Annie that the cow was not actually stuck in the fence. His head was just beyond one of the horizontal boards of the fence, and although he couldn’t lift his head, he could clear the fence if he’d only lower his head slightly and step back.

               Arnold continued, “But sure enough, as soon as I stuck my head through to try the grass on the other side, the raven snatched the bell off of my collar and flew away! I suppose the grass on the other side of the fence tastes alright, but I’ve forgotten what the grass on my side tastes like now and there’s no way for me to compare!”

               Lizzie and Annie both stared at Arnold, trying to think of what to say. Finally Lizzie spoke up, “That raven stole something of mine as well, Arnold, and I’m going to get it back. I’ll try to get your bell as well.”

               Arnold, forgetting his predicament, tried to lift his head only to thunk his thick neck on the board over him. “Ouch. That’d be great Lizzie, thank you! Someone’s gotta stop that ‘ol raven, sneaking around tricking people into getting stuck in fences. How’d you get out of the fence he tricked you into getting stuck in?”

               Annie had clearly had enough, and spoke sternly, “Arnold, you’re not stuck. Just lower you head and step back.”

               Arnold chuckled, “Thanks Miss Annie, but I’ve been stuck here all morning. I suppose it’s just my lot in life…”

               Annie grabbed Arnold’s head, pushed it down and back and the cow was free again.

               Arnold’s eyes were wide in astonishment and he stood wide legged and unbelieving. “Miss Annie, you’re a miracle worker!”

               Annie rolled her button eyes, “Arnold, I’m really not.”

               The cow bucked and hopped in celebration, “That raven had better watch out, Miss Annie is coming! She’s even cleverer than that nasty raven!” He happily started munching grass.

               Lizzie whispered to Annie, “I’m worried he’s going to get his head stuck again.”

               The cow suddenly stopped celebrating and his ears drooped. “Oh no…” he muttered.

               “What’s wrong now, Arnold?” Annie asked, with a discernable amount of annoyance in her voice.

               The cow looked at the two adventurers with a deep woe in his wide eyes, “I forgot to remember what the grass on the other side tastes like.”

               Demetri arrived at his work station two minutes early, and patiently waited the two minutes before clocking in. Clocking in early was a fire-able offense, even for Annabel’s widower husband. He nodded to Allie, his coworker and one of the three person shift that covered his station, as she waited to clock out as he waited to clock in at exactly 6am. Allie was new, the last third shift operator had passed away two months before. A small energetic man named Wallace with a big smile and curly black hair, he’d spilled some of the phenol reagent onto his bare skin and not told anyone, fearing repercussions from management. He eventually collapsed and was replaced with Allie within 30 minutes. The company went to great lengths to maintain production, the augment-tech became more and more popular every day as the world became less tolerable. Wallace died of kidney failure the night of his accident, and his family received mindware as payout.

               Allie motioned toward one of the roto-vaporators and said, “That one’s beginning to wobble, and it’s throwing off the crystallization rate. I only noticed at the end of my shift, so I didn’t have a chance to tell Prajeet.”

               Demetri nodded and made a mental note to put in an engineering request to the section manager as he did a quick spot inspection of the station. Allie kept things clean. She had kids at home and had been on stand-by as a wet operator for months, so Demetri trusted her.

               The station was a section of laboratory along the segmented assembly line of the augment-tech mindware. His step of the way was receiving the wire covered electrode pads from the tech station in front of him and applying several layers of synthesized protein matrices that allowed the transfer of programmable sensory to the biological brain. Several 2 liter rotovaps, a fume hood with reagents that even the respirator couldn’t handle, and a collection of protein substrates and primers.

               As he received his first batch of pads from the tech guy, his station manager stumbled through the doorway opposite. The red-eyed step-brother of the CFO always rushed into Demetri’s workplace, hurrying to limit his time in the treacle station preceding it.

               Demetri had gained a rough understanding of the production mechanisms. His wife had labored to explain the more rigorous steps and he was able to connect the pieces to understand how the assembly was performed. The company maintained a strict division of labor so that none of the line workers would be able to recreate Annabel’s process on their own, or share the proprietary information with a competitor, even though each competitor had been bought and scrapped by now.

               But the station manager seemed to really have no idea how any part of the system worked. He was instead a maestro of efficiency, replacing anyone that showed signs of slowing down the process. Even the names of the different reagents, tools and larger machines seemed to evade him and he mistakenly referred to them by the wrong names on the regular. Demetri had at first tried to correct this misunderstanding, thinking that the man would benefit from a basic overview, but soon learned that the ignorance was a strategy. The manager knew that the more he understood, the more would be asked of him, and kept his expertise limited.

               Demetri motioned toward Rotovap 3, the wobbler that Allie had mentioned and said to the manager, “We’ve got a wobble on Rotovap 3, reported by Allie. Could you schedule Prajeet to take a look at it?”

               The manager’s tired face twisted quickly into panic, fumbling for his company tablet. “What? The roto… ok I have to make a report, so this will slow down your station’s output by how much? What does that machine do exactly?”

               Demetri made sure to keep his face blank, although he sighed within. Rotovaps were running 24 hours a day, and typically began to wobble about once a month, requiring maintenance. The station manager should be tracking this type of normal wear and tear maintenance, but the man was instead preoccupied with switching himself from dayshift to nightshift at least twice a month. The managers worked 12 hour shifts and operated with no redundancy. After weeks of the same shift, he always became irritable and would talk about how much better the opposite shift was, for whatever variety of reasons, and how Prajeet had clearly tricked him into taking the unfavorable one. The other station manager, Prajeet, was a quiet and kind man that allowed for these idiosyncratic changes because he also knew the score. Prajeet was a former engineer and performed the routine maintenance for the station when it was required. He’d worked there almost as long as anybody, keeping his head down and acquiescing to the desires of the CFO’s step-brother.

               Demetri tried to keep the sarcasm out of his voice as he slowly explained, “The rotovap evaporates solvent, allowing for purification of some of the proteins. I can compensate with rotation speed and bath temperature, as long as the wobble gets fixed tonight.”

               The station manager’s eyes glazed back over as he calmed down, clearly not caring now that the problem was not an immediate threat. “Right, yes, I’ll make a note for Prajeet to fix the…”

               “Rotovap 3.”

               “Right. Number 3.”

               The tree line to the northern woods seemed unnaturally dark for the daytime, and as soon as Lizzie and Annie had passed the threshold the sunlight was filtered, contrasting starkly with the bright pastures and fields outside. Annie had to shrink down in order to make it through the densely grown trees and Lizzie hopped off of the panda’s back, trying to show a brave face amid the shadows.

               After a few minutes it was dark enough that Lizzie couldn’t see, and she stopped in her tracks, shivering. Annie looked back, noticing, and pulled on a hidden strip of Velcro on her chest. The panda’s paw rustled around her secret compartment and she pulled out a piece of polished amber, rubbing it with her paws until it started to glow a bright orange color that illuminated the thicket around them. Annie lightly tossed the amber in the air and it hung there, floating and following them as they went.

               Along with the thicket, the light uncovered a pair of yellow eyes watching them from just beyond their sight. Lizzie saw them first, and screamed. Annie jumped in front of the girl and puffed up, scanning until she spotted the eyes and hollered at them, “Who are you creeping around a little girl like that?”

               The eyes squinted in a smile and began darting around the trees, chuckles echoing off of the trees in a disorienting fashion. The chuckling stopped as quickly as it started, and Lizzie could hear her heart beat in the silence.

               A small furry figure burst from the tree top above them and grabbed the amber in the air, causing all manner of shadows to dance in contrast to the orange light. But the amber didn’t move, and instead Annie and Lizzie saw a weasel hanging from the amber with both hands, whining and squirming as he tried to dislodge it from its floating state.

               Annie snagged the weasel by its tail and puffed herself up in an intimidating fashion. “Can I help you, little thief?”

               The weasel spun into a flurry of movement. It wiggled, scratched, and bit at the panda before giving up and hanging upside down with an undignified look on its face. “Let me go you damn monstrosity,” the weasel whined, “I’m only doing my job.”

               Lizzie piped up, emboldened by how silly the weasel looked in its predicament. “Why does a weasel have a job? Shouldn’t you just be a weasel?”

               The weasel sniffed. “Shows how much you know. All of the creatures of the forest have a job, it’s the new way. We all work for King Crow.”

               Annie’s button eyes showed a gleam of understanding. “Let me guess, King Crow has you stealing shiny things for him?”

               The weasel nodded.

               Annie continued, “And what do you get in return?”

               The weasel chuckled, “Well I get to live in the forest. You gotta work for King Crow if you wanna live in the forest.”

               “Didn’t you live in the forest anyways?” Lizzie asked, an honest look of confusion on her face.

               The weasel spat in irritation. “Well yeah dummy, back then. But things have changed. Now that King Crow is in charge, the forest is rich with shinies.”

               Annie rolled her eyes, “You mean this King Crow is rich.”

               The weasel looked confused for a moment. “No, er, I mean we all work for King Crow, so we all have the shinies.”

               Lizzie giggled. The weasel turned to her and spat, “What’s so funny?”

               Lizzie thought for a second and said, “Well, do you even like shiny things? I thought only crows and ravens did.”

               Now it was the weasel’s turn to be confused. “Well, shiny things are… they’re good. They’re valuable.”

               “But if you were living in the forest before, and you’re living in the forest now, and the only difference is that now your job is to find shiny things for King Crow…”

               “Also, he’s a King! So…” The weasel protested, losing faith in its own argument.

               Annie stifled a laugh as the little girl continued to reason. “What do weasels like?”

               The weasel thought. “I like bugs and eggs and birds and mice.”

               “Does King Crow give you those things?”

               At this point, Annie dropped the defeated weasel who landed softly on his paws and sat down thoughtfully, crossing his hind legs underneath him, his tail twitching manically behind him. “No, but, I live in the forest so…”

               “But you lived in the forest before, right?”

               At last a look a realization spread over the weasel’s face. “Hey! You’re right. In fact, King Crow even said I gotta stop eating eggs. I love eggs!”

               Annie shrunk herself down a bit and sat next to the weasel. “We’re looking for a necklace that a raven stole this morning.”

               The weasel nodded, “That had to have been Allen. He’s one of King Crow’s best finders.”

               “If you can help us find King Crow, I think we can get that necklace back.”

               “And Arnold’s bell,” Lizzie inserted.

               The weasel sat thinking. “What do I get if I help you?”

               Lizzie looked at Annie and said, “If you help us find him, you won’t have to work for King Crow ever again.”

               The rotovaps whirred and Demetri sat in front of the fume hood, his hands busy doling out aliquots of the different reagents and carefully applying the combined layers to the electrode pads. It was tedious work that required a great amount of focus, but Demetri was practiced and able to keep up while allowing himself some small escape in his mind. He thought of his late wife, and his daughter Lizzie. He thought about the evenings he shared with Lizzie, and the adventures that she was able to experience thanks to Annabel. On occasion he even found himself smiling under the heavy respirator.

               At the end of his shift, as Demetri readied things for the next operator, the doors to his station slid open and a small man in a worn grey suit hustled over from the treacle station. Demetri couldn’t see his face but he knew anyone wearing a suit in the wet lab areas had to be HR. He felt his heart thump and had to remind himself to breathe. HR could mean anything, maybe the CEO finally realized the totality of his wife’s contribution and wanted to retroactively award him a bonus. It could be that Demetri had failed to prepare adequately for the next shift at some point and received a complaint from a coworker. He didn’t stop working, or even look up, but he did extend a muffled hello to the HR man.

               The HR man struggled to breathe through the respirator he wore, they weren’t required in the offices and took some getting used to. He held up a clipboard and started to recite something practiced from it. “Congratulations for all of your hard work, I’m here to thank you for maintaining productivity standards and helping the company achieve all time high stock shares. On behalf of the CEO, shareholders, and the rest of our family, I’m also happy to announce that we will be increasing production output this next quarter by 0.15%, requiring an extra three units an hour to be produced.”

               Demetri’s respirator began to slip against his forehead as he broke out in a nervous sweat. “That’s not possible with our current set-up, that would require more operators and an upgrade to much of our equipment.”

               The HR guy stood in place, seemingly confused. He looked down at the clipboard and up again at Demetri. “Sir I would like to congratulate you on your productivity, and to let you know we are increasing by 3 units per hour.”

               Demetri’s frustration began to mount as he accidentally dislodged a 200 microliter aliquot early, wasting it instead of applying it to the protein matrix he was preparing. “Yes, I heard you, but how are we supposed to increase production further without any help? What you’re asking for doesn’t make sense, we’re already operating at maximum efficiency as decided by the CEO. Now he wants us to do the impossible?”

               The HR guy stood awkwardly for a moment and said, “Our family prides itself in doing the impossible each and every day, and keeping only the most qualified staff possible.”

               Demetri shut the fume hood and pulled his mask off so that the HR guy could see his face. “Look, I’m not talking to you as HR. I’m talking to you as a human. Last time this happened, Wallace died. I can’t be the next one to slip up. I’m Annabel’s husband. My daughter is at home and she needs me. Are you sure there isn’t anything you can do? I mean we’re selling everything we make, how can that not be enough?”

               The HR guy slowly pulled his mask up so that Demetri could see his face as well. The older man’s face was well wrinkled. His eyes showed a helpless sadness. “As a human, Demetri, I will tell you it’s not about humanity. It’s true that we sell as much as we make, but in order to keep our investors we need to be growing.”

               “But there are other ways to grow.”

               The HR guy shook his head, “We’ve saturated the market with our mindware. It’s popular, but without capable R&D there is nowhere for us to go. The CEO is hoping that he can squeeze a little extra production out before the market collapses, I think he’s planning to cut and run.”

               Demetri’s gaze fell from the man’s face to the station floor as he realized what he was being told. “But, Annabel had other projects, what about the ANNIE?”

               “It’s too risky in the face of market collapse. Maybe the next CEO will look into that research and invest in the long-term. But for now?” The man shrugged. “Be careful, Demetri. Take care of yourself, follow safety protocols, and you and I will see the future together.”

 Demetri impatiently waved his acknowledgement, the HR guy nodded, slid his mask back on and clumsily made his way through the station and past the sliding doors of the next. Once the crew couldn’t keep up with the impossible demands, several workers would stumble under the strain and make mistakes. Investors saw this as weeding out the weak links, but Demetri knew from experience that there was no guarantee that the new hires would be any more capable.

               The weasel led Lizzie and Annie through the woods, passing sentinels of all species. Bears, skunks, squirrels, even an otter. The weasel simply saluted them with a paw to his chest and said, “Shiny is all.” The other creatures would mumble the same back, with varying degrees of fluency, and allow them on their way.

               After what felt like hours of walking there was finally a break in the trees and Lizzie grew excited to see sunlight finally making it through the canopy, until she saw that it illuminated an intimidating huge old growth tree with roots that dominated the land around it for hundreds of yards. The bark of the tree was dark and the branches were lined with crows, ravens, squirrels and other creatures that silently watched them. Twenty feet or so up from the ground there was a large hollowed out hole in the trunk of the tree and carved around it, in the style of woodpeckers, were the words “King Crow.”

               As soon as Annie and Lizzie began crossing the root system, the watching animals all started to make a raucous noise. A fat black bear and a thin badger hustled around to face the newcomers and stop them amongst the tangle of roots. The bear spoke up, “Uh, why are you here?”

               The badger rolled its eyes at the bear and said, “This is King Crow’s castle. Outlanders are not allowed.”

               Annie crossed her stuffed arms. “We require, uh, an audience with your King.”

               The badger and bear looked at each other and the bear muttered, “Can they do that?”

               A voice boomed from the hole in the tree. “WHO DARES ENTER THE KING’S LANDS UNINVITED?!” Lizzie unconsciously took a step back as she began to lose her nerve, but Annie reached back and grabbed her. The panda lifted the girl up to her shoulders and inflated several feet.

               Annie bellowed back, “We require an audience with this little King Crow!”

               A small fat crow hopped from inside the tree to the hole and with a much smaller voice said, “What? Who are you calling little!?”

               Lizzie giggled when the crow appeared. It was hardly the specimen that she’d been imagining. It wore an aluminum foil crown and several chains and necklaces bounced against the crow’s round body, which was poorly groomed with loose feathers sticking out in odd directions.

               The animals roared in outrage at the little girl’s giggles and King Crow held a wing aloft to silence them. He motioned at a large squirrel that hurried over and allowed him to climb onto its back. The squirrel strained under the fat crow’s weight, and tenuously climbed down and through the root system until the two were in between the bear and badger in front of Lizzie and Annie.

               The crow threw a leg over the squirrel and hopped off, immediately getting one of the chains stuck under a root. The squirrel darted away as the King Crow strained awkwardly for a moment before freeing himself. “Weasel! You’ve brought the outlanders to my Kingdom, explain yourself or face my wrath!”

               The weasel nervously wrung its paws, “Well they uh, they made a lot of good points and asked a lot of good questions and…” It sniffed the air. “Wait, King Crow, is that eggs I smell on your breath?”

               The chittering animals suddenly went silent. The King Crow laughed in mock confidence, “Surely you don’t dare to question your King, Weasel?”

               Annie used the quieted moment to launch her investigation. “Under what authority are you King, Mr. Crow?”

               The animals began chittering again, but now with an anxious, questioning tone. The bear looked at the badger for reassurance and the badger stared at the King Crow.

               “Under the authority of the forest itself of course!” Hollered the King Crow. “Before me there was no King, and the forest itself has deigned my rule absolute.”

               Lizzie looked down on the crow from Annie’s shoulders with a confused look. “But specifically, who said you were in charge?”

               The crow nervously bounced from one foot to the other, trying to aim his beak away from weasel who sniffed the air with suspicion. “I hold all of the shinies in the forest kingdom, surely that is evidence enough.”

               “But nobody else here cares about shiny things,” said Lizzie. All of the crows and ravens in the tree started cawing angrily in disagreement. “Okay, okay,” rescinded Lizzie, “Only the crows and ravens care.”

               The other animals began to look at each other, furrowed brows betraying their thoughts.

               The King Crow was quick to change the topic, “So what is it you come to ask of the King specifically?”

               Annie lowered herself to all fours and Lizzie slid off of her broad fluffy shoulders to face the crow. “You stole my mom’s necklace. It’s the crystal one right there on your chest.”

               The King puffed himself up, “I did no such thing!”

               Lizzie sighed in exasperation, “Ok, but one of your ravens did. Allen the raven?”

               The King hollered for Allen, and a large well preened raven floated down from high in the tree to land deftly to the crow, ringing the entire way from a bell it wore around its neck.

               “Allen, my most loyal raven, you brought me this necklace did you not?”

               Allen nodded.

               “And certainly you wouldn’t have stolen it from this little girl.”

               Allen looked at the King, “No, I did steal it, remember? This morning, from the cottage. And then I got this bell, and you said I could keep it because you really liked the crystal necklace and that I deserved a reward.”

               The King Crow’s eyeballs bugged out as he stared daggers at Allen. He hissed angrily, “Oh I must have forgotten that, what with all of my important Kingly duties.”

               “Well, can I have it back?” Asked Lizzie.

               The King Crow puffed his chest once more. “Or what?”

               With surprising speed, Annie reached out and pinned the crow to a large root. The King Crow cawed and shrieked, but none of the animals moved, except for the weasel who ran up and began sniffing the King’s mouth and nodding. “Yup, eggs. I knew I smelled eggs.”

               Lizzie walked over and took the rainbow necklace from the King Crow, then stopped, took a chain of linked aluminum can tabs and gestured towards Allen. “Mr. Allen, could I trade you this shiny necklace for Arnold’s bell?”

               Allen nodded and tossed the bell off of himself with a flick of his head, “Yes, please, the bell has made it much harder for me to sneak around.”

               The clearing was completely silent except for the sound the bell made as Lizzie put it into her pajama pocket and climbed back onto Annie. The panda stood back up to full height and turned away, releasing the King Crow. The King stayed stuck to the root, tangled in his mass of shiny treasures as he squawked and protested, but the shinies seemed to catch the eye of Allen, and the rest of the corvids in the tree, as they slowly began to launch from the tree and drift down, landing near the King Crow and hopping towards him.

               “Wait,” The King Crow cried, “Stop, stop them! What are you doing?”

               The rest of the animals sheepishly turned their backs and walked away, as the King Crow turned into a tornado of feathers and caws.

               Demetri had fallen asleep on the transit home, dreaming of clean air and the lakefront beach that his family would go to during the summers of his childhood. He woke up to a jostle on his shoulder and felt like he was falling for a moment before sitting up in the crowded trolley. His neighbor, Carlos, was standing over him. “Time to be home, Demetri,” he said.

               Demetri got off the transit and climbed up the four floors of narrow stairs and through the doorway of apartment number 46. He’d prepared a decontaminating area near the door, and took all of his work clothes off and put them into a neutralizing closet that buzzed as it released a chemical mist. He ran his hands over his thin naked body and stepped into the makeshift shower he had put together. The water only stayed warm for the first couple of minutes and by the time he’d finished washing himself and rubbing water into the sores and imprints along his face and head he was shivering.

               He threw on an old wool sweater and sweat pants and walked into the main room of the apartment. The room glowed and hummed to the tune of the large cylindrical piece of tech that dominated the area. He grabbed a hunk of bread and hard cheese from the ancient refrigerator in the kitchen nook and sat on the linoleum floor with his back against the warmth of the cylinder as he stared at a lonely photo of his family on the wall.

               He slugged back some water to wash down his meal and turned to the cylinder, staring through the sight glass portion of it at the mass of wires, pumps and tubes that held his daughter Lizzie together. His fingers traced the lettering on the side of the cylinder, ‘Augmented Neural Network for Interred Existence.’ Annabel’s final project.

               On the opposite side of the cylinder hung a single mindware helmet, specially modified. He laid down on his cot next to the warmth of the cylinder and pulled the helmet onto his head. His hands fumbled over a small keyboard as he booted up the days programming into a dream sequence.

He sighed and laid back, closing his eyes and smiling. “Ok. Let’s see what you’ve been up to today, Lizzie.”

Categories
Short Fiction

Tree Line

   

     A cold night in October was the first time the old man saw the eyes at the tree line. The moon was silhouetted in a glow he knew to mean that frost was coming. One hand was tucked into his canvas coat pocket, warm with fleece. The other was mostly numb, alternating between the cigarettes he was chain smoking and the wine he drank from a chipped black coffee mug.

 

     He sat on his porch bathed in the halogen light that buzzed above over the moths plinking against the opaque glass. The porch light shone as far as the ditch on the other side of his dirt driveway. Beyond the ditch was a grassy hill that ended in a dense thicket of woods that stretched for thousands of acres and only ended halfway up a nearby mountain range. The old man’s cabin was as close as he could get to the wilderness without abandoning society completely. A rusty old blue Ford pickup was his remaining link to human contact and he used it as rarely as he could.

 

     There had been plenty of wildlife around. Elk passed through in droves. Coyotes bickered nearby. The he mountain beavers would come, washed out of their burrows scared and hissing. The old man killed the first, raising a shovel over his head and bringing it down quickly. He saw the fear and confusion in the animal’s eyes, and felt the familiar surge of power in his veins. He buried it with a eulogy out of habit. But the words felt sarcastic and blasphemous. He learned to turn the other cheek and allowed the critters to weather the storm under the Plexiglas of the porch.

 

     The animals disappeared when the eyes came. It grew so quiet that the old man could hear his cigarettes burn with every inhale, and he fingered a cross necklace he kept warm in a pocket. The silence crept on for days. Every night he sat on the porch and stared back at the eyes. He met their glowing crimson gaze, not with defiance, but with a passionless resignation. He considered his continued existence a penance.   

 

     On the fourth night, the eyes grew bold and stepped out from the tree line. They were perched from a monstrous height, and swayed unsteadily. As the attached creature drew close to the ditch, the old man pulled a flashlight up and for a horrible moment illuminated the visitor.

 

     The eyes belonged to a grotesque humanoid form, gaunt and pale, with skin in tatters. It looked as though a corpse had been stretched and pulled taught over a set of bones belonging to something larger and distantly related.

 

     It froze in the light and in a delayed response, slowly threw its gangly arms up over its face and took a step back.

 

     The old man lost his nerve. He bolted for the door and slammed it shut, impotently flicking the doorknob to a locked position. He turned out all of the lights and crawled into his bed, shaking and hiding under an army surplus blanket like a child.

 

     He could hear the thing slowly investigating the cabin, dragging its feet and running its hands along the exterior. When the sounds finally stopped, the old man made the mistake of looking from beneath the blanket. He found the entire room bathed in a red glow, the eyes shining through his curtain, aimed directly at him as if the creature was using something other than sight to observe him.

 

     The night passed long and quiet.

 

     By morning, hunger and lack of sleep emboldened the old man. A hesitant check through the windows showed no signs of the creature and the old man breathed a sigh of relief and finally fell asleep for several hours.

 

     He awoke sweating from a nightmare in which the sun followed him wherever he went, burning through buildings and blistering his skin. He made coffee and slipped on rubber boots to examine the outside of the cabin.

 

     The creature seemed more a dream than the nightmare he had, but there was evidence enough to convince the old man of his unfortunate sanity. Instead of tracks there were ruts worn in the dirt that formed parallel circles around the cabin where the creature’s path must have been. The tracks got closer and closer to the cabin until they diverged from the pattern and formed a straight line to his bedroom window.

     He finished his coffee and got into the old blue pickup truck, driving 35 minutes to Amgoss, the nearest town. As he passed the local high school, he noticed the sign out front for the first time. “Home of the Windegos!”

 

     He parked a block away from the local library, a baseball cap pulled low over his face. A few people stared and whispered. One man spit as he walked by.

 

     The library was empty. The old man walked up to the front desk and waited a few moments before ringing the bell. A woman, with thick curly grey hair that seemed to explode from her scalp, came quickly out of the back.

 

     “Can I help you?”

 

     “I’m… uh. Looking for information on local legends.”

 

     “Oh. Ok? You might check our reference section for old newspapers, but honestly you won’t find much.”

 

     “Ah. Um, do you happen to know what the high school mascot is?”

 

     “The Windegos.”

     “Yeah but, what is that?”

 

     “What is a windego?”

 

     He nodded sheepishly.

 

     The librarian leaned her shoulders heavily onto the counter in front of her. “Well, a windego is a native legend. They say if a person eats another person, they become a mythological monster. They become corrupted with a craving for more human flesh.”

     “That’s kind of a strange mascot for a high school isn’t it?”

 

     “Well, legend has it that when Amgoss was first settled, there was a winter famine. One of the men in town lost it and ate his son. His wife found them and killed herself. The man was exiled into the woods and never heard from again.”

 

     The old man stared.

 

     “Of course that story turned into this local myth that he turned into a windego. Every once in a while some hiker or hunter claims to have seen him. So that’s how the high school got its name.”

 

     “Oh. What was his name?”

 

     “Isidore. The high school’s mascot’s name is Izzy, named after him.”

 

 

     The old man pulled into his driveway and walked into the cottage with a bottle of wine under each arm. He drank coffee until sundown and ceremoniously donned a wool cap and his warmest flannel. He looked at himself in the mirror, muttered “Fuck it,” and pulled open the top left drawer of his dresser. He dug past a layer of socks before pulling out his old priest’s collar.

 

     He sat on the porch, humming different songs from his past and feeling the wine soak into his bones.

 

     The eyes came at last. They did not pause at the tree line. The creature shuffled along with the same awkward gait. The old man poured more wine as he watched it rise from the ditch into the glow of the porch light once more. This time he really looked at the thing.

 

     He could tell the monster was distinctly human, now that he saw what was left of the face. The eyes sat deep in the skull, atop a sagging nose. The skin and bone had worn down around the mouth so it wore a mocking half grin through the remaining half of its cheeks. Long matted hair tangled down along its mud covered body. A rancid mulch, of what now seemed to be a long indistinct set of clothes, festered into the skin.

 

     The old man’s hand began shaking. He gulped at the wine, hoping that the windego would speed up and end things, fearing that the act would take longer than necessary.

 

     It skulked up to the porch, staring directly at his chest. He gulped hard. Its leg joints creaked and popped as it stepped up the stairs. It smelled like earth and shit. He noticed how its distended stomach wobbled as it stopped in front of him.

 

     A breeze blew between them. The windego turned to the right, and sat down next to the old man’s chair. It still stared at his chest.

 

     The moon was out again. It looked like frost.

 

     “Isidore?”

 

     The windego looked away. It stood up and walked off the porch, then a few more steps more before it stopped to look back.

 

     The old man sighed, drank the last bit of wine, and stood up. Together they walked beyond the ditch, and disappeared into the tree line.

 A cold night in October was the first time the old man saw the eyes at the tree line. The moon was silhouetted in a glow he knew to mean that frost was coming. One hand was tucked into his canvas coat pocket, warm with fleece. The other was mostly numb, alternating between the cigarettes he was chain smoking and the wine he drank from a chipped black coffee mug.

 

     He sat on his porch bathed in the halogen light that buzzed above over the moths plinking against the opaque glass. The porch light shone as far as the ditch on the other side of his dirt driveway. Beyond the ditch was a grassy hill that ended in a dense thicket of woods that stretched for thousands of acres and only ended halfway up a nearby mountain range. The old man’s cabin was as close as he could get to the wilderness without abandoning society completely. A rusty old blue Ford pickup was his remaining link to human contact and he used it as rarely as he could.

 

     There had been plenty of wildlife around. Elk passed through in droves. Coyotes bickered nearby. The he mountain beavers would come, washed out of their burrows scared and hissing. The old man killed the first, raising a shovel over his head and bringing it down quickly. He saw the fear and confusion in the animal’s eyes, and felt the familiar surge of power in his veins. He buried it with a eulogy out of habit. But the words felt sarcastic and blasphemous. He learned to turn the other cheek and allowed the critters to weather the storm under the Plexiglas of the porch.

 

     The animals disappeared when the eyes came. It grew so quiet that the old man could hear his cigarettes burn with every inhale, and he fingered a cross necklace he kept warm in a pocket. The silence crept on for days. Every night he sat on the porch and stared back at the eyes. He met their glowing crimson gaze, not with defiance, but with a passionless resignation. He considered his continued existence a penance.   

 

     On the fourth night, the eyes grew bold and stepped out from the tree line. They were perched from a monstrous height, and swayed unsteadily. As the attached creature drew close to the ditch, the old man pulled a flashlight up and for a horrible moment illuminated the visitor.

 

     The eyes belonged to a grotesque humanoid form, gaunt and pale, with skin in tatters. It looked as though a corpse had been stretched and pulled taught over a set of bones belonging to something larger and distantly related.

 

     It froze in the light and in a delayed response, slowly threw its gangly arms up over its face and took a step back.

 

     The old man lost his nerve. He bolted for the door and slammed it shut, impotently flicking the doorknob to a locked position. He turned out all of the lights and crawled into his bed, shaking and hiding under an army surplus blanket like a child.

 

     He could hear the thing slowly investigating the cabin, dragging its feet and running its hands along the exterior. When the sounds finally stopped, the old man made the mistake of looking from beneath the blanket. He found the entire room bathed in a red glow, the eyes shining through his curtain, aimed directly at him as if the creature was using something other than sight to observe him.

 

     The night passed long and quiet.

 

     By morning, hunger and lack of sleep emboldened the old man. A hesitant check through the windows showed no signs of the creature and the old man breathed a sigh of relief and finally fell asleep for several hours.

 

     He awoke sweating from a nightmare in which the sun followed him wherever he went, burning through buildings and blistering his skin. He made coffee and slipped on rubber boots to examine the outside of the cabin.

 

     The creature seemed more a dream than the nightmare he had, but there was evidence enough to convince the old man of his unfortunate sanity. Instead of tracks there were ruts worn in the dirt that formed parallel circles around the cabin where the creature’s path must have been. The tracks got closer and closer to the cabin until they diverged from the pattern and formed a straight line to his bedroom window.

     He finished his coffee and got into the old blue pickup truck, driving 35 minutes to Amgoss, the nearest town. As he passed the local high school, he noticed the sign out front for the first time. “Home of the Windegos!”

 

     He parked a block away from the local library, a baseball cap pulled low over his face. A few people stared and whispered. One man spit as he walked by.

 

     The library was empty. The old man walked up to the front desk and waited a few moments before ringing the bell. A woman, with thick curly grey hair that seemed to explode from her scalp, came quickly out of the back.

 

     “Can I help you?”

 

     “I’m… uh. Looking for information on local legends.”

 

     “Oh. Ok? You might check our reference section for old newspapers, but honestly you won’t find much.”

 

     “Ah. Um, do you happen to know what the high school mascot is?”

 

     “The Windegos.”

     “Yeah but, what is that?”

 

     “What is a Windego?”

 

     He nodded sheepishly.

 

     The librarian leaned her shoulders heavily onto the counter in front of her. “Well, a Windego is a native legend. They say if a person eats another person, they become a mythological monster. They become consumed with a craving for more human flesh.”

     “That’s kind of a strange mascot for a high school isn’t it?”

 

     “Well, legend has it that when Amgoss was first settled, there was a winter famine. One of the men in town went crazy and ate his son. His wife found them and killed herself. The man was exiled into the woods and never heard from again.”

 

     The old man stared.

 

     “Of course that story turned into this local myth that he turned into a windego. Every once in a while some hiker or hunter claims to have seen him. So that’s how the high school got its name.”

 

     “Oh. What was his name?”

 

     “Isidore. The high school’s mascot’s name is Izzy, named after him.”

 

     The old man pulled into his driveway and walked into the cottage with a bottle of wine under each arm. He drank coffee until sundown and ceremoniously donned a wool cap and his warmest flannel. He looked at himself in the mirror, muttered “Fuck it,” and pulled open the top left drawer of his dresser. He dug past a layer of socks before pulling out his old priest’s collar.

 

     He sat on the porch, humming different songs from his past and feeling the wine soak into his bones.

 

     The eyes came at last. They did not pause at the tree line. The creature shuffled along with the same awkward gait. The old man poured more wine as he watched it rise from the ditch into the glow of the porch light once more. This time he really looked at the thing.

 

     He could tell the monster was distinctly human, now that he saw what was left of the face. The eyes sat deep in the skull, atop a sagging nose. The skin and bone had worn down around the mouth so it wore a mocking half grin through the remaining half of its cheeks. Long matted hair tangled down along its mud covered body. A rancid mulch, of what now seemed to be a long indistinct set of clothes, festered into the skin.

 

     The old man’s hand began shaking. He gulped at the wine, hoping that the windego would speed up and end things, fearing that the act would take longer than necessary.

 

     It skulked up to the porch, staring directly at his chest. He gulped hard. Its leg joints creaked and popped as it stepped up the stairs. It smelled like earth and shit. He noticed how it’s distended stomach wobbled as it stopped in front of him.

 

     A breeze blew between them. The windego turned to the right, and sat down next to the old man’s chair. It still stared at his chest.

 

     The moon was out again. It looked like frost.

 

     “Isidore?”

 

     The windego looked away. It stood up and walked off the porch, then a few more steps before it stopped to look back.

 

     The old man sighed, drank the last bit of wine, and stood up. Together they walked beyond the ditch, and disappeared into the tree line.

Categories
Short Fiction

Well Fed

     Billy sat in his tiny fluorescently lit field office, playing minesweeper on a dusty desktop computer that had taken over 25 minutes to boot up that morning. His lone companion, a 10 year old beagle named Lucy, was curled on a pile of blankets underneath the desk. Billy hit a mine, lost the game, and leaned back in his creaky office chair that was clearly older than the word ‘ergonomic.’

He gazed at the two decorations on the otherwise barren paneled wall he faced. A framed engineering degree from UCLA, and a bright, sunny photo of a bunch of smiling students. They all looked determined to change the world, especially after a summer spent designing a sustainable solar energy grid that could be effectively deployed in rural villages.

     He closed his eyes and rubbed his rough forefinger and thumb against his eyelids, hard enough that his vision was out of focus when he opened them again. Wyoming made everything dry. Eyes, skin, mouth. The wind just cut through everything.

     The oil company paid him well, but Billy never felt as though the work he was doing was meaningful or valuable. He knew was being paid to be alone, cold, and bored.

     The heating in the office barely worked. He took his gloves off and split the cellophane on a new pack of hand warmers. He tugged his boots off, shaking out the last batch. The problem with the warmers was that after you shook them, they got really hot. Almost painfully so, but the pain was a welcome respite from the numbness it replaced. After a few minutes, the warmers cooled to a proper temperature that they maintained. But because of the initial blast of heat, a more moderate temperature barely registered. Even warm felt cold.

 The password to Billy’s work desktop was “SamMcGee,” after the titular character in a Robert Frost poem that froze to death trying to strike it rich in the Alaskan gold rush and, upon being cremated, comes back to life only to beg to be left in the fire a little longer.

     Billy had always prided himself on his natural ability to be alone. He remembered watching a movie as a kid, the main character a loner type, but by the end he had gathered a rag tag team of friends. “No man is an island,” the protagonist had said as the movie came to a close. Billy had always felt that the character had failed himself somehow. Billy thought that he could be an island. He prided himself in that and even thought of it as an inner strength. The ability to not need anybody, to get by just fine on your own.

You always hear stories of people going crazy from being isolated, astronauts and prisoners and shipwreck survivors. Billy liked to imagine a cruel and crooked warden opening up the door of a solitary confinement cell that Billy had been wrongfully imprisoned in, hoping to see a broken man, only to find Billy relaxed and cheerful. “Could I stay a bit longer? I’m enjoying the peace and quiet.”

Like Sam McGee, but instead of being tormented with the unrelenting cold, he suffered from the wear and tear of human interaction.

There was a photo of his parents and sisters in a drawer of the old desk he sat at. Billy had taken it off the wall after the third time he told them all that he would move back, only to get a well-timed raise from the oil company that kept him there for another year. At first, Billy’s plan had been to save enough to pay off college loans. Then, it was to save enough for a down payment on a house. Now he looked at his bank account a couple times a day, and always found himself fantasizing about having more. It gave him a relieving comfort in his chest to see he had worth, and he knew he couldn’t make half the money anywhere else. Still, after every peek at his savings, he would calculate how long he thought he could survive if he quit his job immediately. He was up to 5 years in Wyoming, maybe 8 months if he moved back to Los Angeles.

“The money is nice kid.” That’s what they said when they interviewed him for the job. Two middle aged men in ill-fitting suits with shit eating grins. “We know you’re into that environmental stuff. This job is terrible for the environment, sure, but it pays a shit load. If you don’t do it, someone else will. Do yourself a favor, just work it for a few years, bank some money, and then decide what you want to do.”

     Billy pushed his chair back, startling Lucy whose collar jangled. “C’mon girl, time to make the rounds.” He pulled on a second jacket as the beagle got up and did that cute little slow stretch walk toward the door, her nails clacking against the linoleum. Billy watched her, eyeing the grey around her muzzle. He didn’t really have to walk around the pumping station. It was all automated, and any problems would be immediately noticed by the company and radioed to him. Nothing had gone wrong the entire time he worked there, but it was nice to get out of the claustrophobic office a few times a day. Even if getting out was frigid.

     The whole operation was fenced in by a chain link, and Billy liked walking around the whole thing a few times a day to get some sun on his face. It took about 20 minutes. Lucy used to walk with him, but now she minded her own business. She usually pissed on one specific shrub, or shit near another one. But this time, she stood alert and trotted meaningfully towards a spot facing a large patch of tall grass outside the fence. She growled and her hackles raised up.

     It gave Billy goosebumps when the dog could sense something he couldn’t. He let out a low whistle, but she didn’t budge. He walked over, boots crunching over gravel.

     When he got close, Lucy started to whine. He stared hard out at the grass. Out walked a coyote. It was big, with a heavy coat that was a dark grey color like he hadn’t seen before. The coyote didn’t show any signs of fear. The ears stood straight up, not back, and its eyes were curious but relaxed. Billy’s heart beat heavy, and he felt that familiar adrenaline rush of uncertainty you get from being close to anything feral. The coyote’s eyes were a beautiful ice grey color that made it seem ancient, almost something to be revered. He and the coyote stared at each other for what felt like minutes before he noticed a smaller coyote, with a coat more auburn and patchy, behind the first. “Hey you git!” He finally yelled. The smaller coyote started, but the first didn’t even flinch. “Get out of here I said!” Lucy picked up on the cue and started barking frantically. The larger coyote finally broke eye contact with Billy to look at Lucy, and the thing seemed to grin?

     Billy shivered, picked Lucy up, and carried her back in the office, turning his back on the coyotes. They’d had wildlife get close before, usually deer, once a big bear got right up to the fence. Even the bear had fled after a gruff “You git!”

 Billy decided that he didn’t like coyotes.

     On the way home, Billy stopped at the only bar around. You wouldn’t know it was a bar if you hadn’t been in before, there was no signage. The part of the building facing the road was a rundown house, but behind that was a living room that had been haphazardly remodeled into the kind of bar where everything is made of wood, or particle board, and nothing is painted. The bartender, Ben, was grey haired with a massive torso and tiny legs. He had a goatee with a wispy mustache, yellow with nicotine. His mouth looked tiny compared to his massive cheeks and neck. His eyes disappeared when he smiled, which was always, and dimples dominated his crinkled mischievous face as he placed a fresh cigarette between his lips. “How much of my oil did you pump today, Bill?”

Billy grinned, playing along, “Almost all of it now Benny. I’ll be out of here before you know it.”

     Ben gave him a mock stern look, “Don’t leave too soon, you’re my best customer.”

“I’m pretty sure I’m your only customer.”

Ben chuckled. “Better keep an eye on your dog, man, heard there been coyote sightings around recently. Well fed coyotes too. When they’re well fed is when they’re worst. That’s when they’re killing for fun. Damn things will eat the guts out but leave the rest. Fuck.”

     Billy nodded, “I actually saw two of them today.

     Ben came and sat next to Billy, handing him a beer, and blowing smoke across the bar top. Ben never drank, which made the bar feel even more like it existed just for Billy. He’d never seen anyone else in there.  Ben took another drag, “Maybe you met Old Man Coyote, huh?”

      “You’re naming the wildlife now Benny? You’re losing it out here.”

     Ben scoffed, “No fool, Old Man Coyote. Native myth, Crow I think. Created the Earth with some ducks.”

“Ducks?”

     “Yeah, see there was all ocean, and Old Man Coyote saw two ducks. He told them to swim down and they pulled up mud. Old Man Coyote used the mud to make islands that turned into the continents. The ducks pulled up a root, and he used that to make all the plants and trees and stuff. Then he made people out of clay.”

      “Is seeing him like, good luck or something?”

     “Nah. Real bad luck. Fuck. You better watch yourself, don’t go buying any lottery tickets.” Ben turned the TV over to jeopardy, and Billy stared quietly at his beer.

     He must have drank too much, because the next thing he knew he was waking up at home. He didn’t feel Lucy curled anywhere on the bed, so he whistled and listened for her collar’s jangle. Nothing.

Lucy had gotten out of the house somehow. Billy found her body by the wind breaking tree line near his truck. All of this talk about ‘well fed’ coyotes. Billy really hadn’t thought about the “well fed” qualification until Lucy was the feed.

     He picked up the remains before work, eyes watering but keeping it together. He put her in a hefty garbage bag, and something about how light she was made it worse. It didn’t really hit him until he plopped the bag down on the passenger side floor of his truck. He felt guilty for not treating the body with more ceremony, but shit, what was he supposed to do? It wasn’t even Lucy anymore, it was a pile of viscera in a trash bag. The organs had been eaten out, but the body left just like Ben said. He left the bag in the truck while he went into his office, not wanting to look at it all day. He figured the cold would keep it from stinking too badly.

     He somehow managed to hold everything in, not taking any breaks to go outside and walk laps around the facility. He almost thought he was going to get through the whole day without crying, but as soon as the truck was parked in the driveway of his rental he lost it. A sad country song played on the radio while he broke. He pulled out a poorly rolled joint that Ben had given him the night previous and lit up, inhaling between sobs.

     After he had pulled himself together, Billy went inside, and found a box to bury her in. He had bought a new coffeemaker online and never thrown the box out. It was the perfect size, but he had to put duct tape over the upbeat faces smiling down at their cups of coffee. He fixated on the false advertising for a moment, not remembering a morning when he ever smiled at a mug.

     He quickly dug a hole as the dark set in and the wind picked up. He didn’t say anything, just leaned against the shovel and stared at the hole for a while. Then, with a heavy sigh, he picked up the Lucy bag and gently lowered it into the box and down the hole.

     Billy got 8 drinks deep at the bar, and breathed heavy. “I had that dog for 10 years man. 10 years. A person changes in 10 years. There are versions of me that I don’t even remember, but I bet that dog did. She looked like she did. Shit. I feel like years of my life were just me and that dog, and now she’s gone and I just… I feel like I’ve got nothing you know? I told myself I was fine without anyone but I never thought that Lucy was someone to me. She saw everything good about me. She knew the best parts of me. She was the proof that those parts ever existed. And now she’s gone.”

Ben stayed silent and Billy burped. Ben looked like he was being held hostage. He was rolling joints quietly. Ben never drank but he smoked weed religiously, and recently had started sharing. Billy started to feel self-conscious. “You know what Ben, it’s getting late. I’m gonna get out of here.”

     “You good to drive buddy? You’ve had a few.”

     “Yeah, I mean I’ll be the only one on the road. So I’m the only one in danger anyways right?”

     “You might want to just sleep it off in your truck. If you wreck, nobody will find you until morning.”

     “I’m fuckin’ fine Ben, thanks for the drinks I’ll see you later.”

     Ben held out a joint and Billy paused, feeling guilty for his mood. He grabbed it and put the tip in his mouth as he walked out the door.

     Billy didn’t even see the coyote before he hit it. He was fumbling with the radio, eyes stinging from the smoke, trying to find a sad song. He passed a rock formation and a furry blur sped out from his right. There was a “thunk” and he slammed on the brakes, momentum whipping him forward so fast he left his seat and slammed his face into the windshield. He pulled the truck over, cursing and shaking.

He took a deep breath and could feel his heartbeat in the lump forming on his forehead. It was pitch black. He dug a flashlight out from under his seat, flicked the rest of the joint out into the night and pulled himself out to survey the scene. He saw a furry body, back about 50 feet, laying still. The truck had no damage, but there was a pretty sizeable blood splatter that made it halfway up the hood.

     “Too many dead animals for one day,” Billy thought to himself. He wandered towards the roadkill, and as he got closer he saw that it looked like the smaller red coyote that he’d seen the day before. Now it was nearly broken in two. “Serves you right,” he sulked, “An easier death than Lucy.”

     He felt obligated to get the body out of the road. He walked around the carcass, steaming at the split, and decided to grab it by a front and back foot. Billy hoping that would keep the remains from splitting further. As soon as he began dragging, the coyote split from the other side and left a greasy, steaming trail. The steam rose to his face and he cursed and spit. It smelled primal. He imagined his ancestors celebrating over a kill, and then he imagined the coyote standing over a steaming Lucy and was sick.

     He had nearly dragged the carcass to the shoulder of the road when he realized the hairs on his neck were standing up. Billy’s back was to the trees, and he was dragging a fresh kill. He dropped the limp paws of the coyote and spun around to see another coyote. This one was much bigger than the one he had hit, with those same grey eyes, and it was standing about 15 feet away. He was sure it was the coyote from before, with its ears up and at attention. “HEY!” He yelled at it.

The coyote didn’t even flinch.

“WHAT ARE YOU DOING? GET OUT OF HERE!” He pulled his hat off and whipped it against his jeans with a flourish. “GIT!”

     The coyote took a purposeful step forward and sat down on its haunches, never blinking or breaking eye contact with Billy, whose heart beat through his chest and forehead. A cold line of sweat rolled down his cheek. “Are you waiting for me to leave? You wanna eat your friend, asshole?”

     A thin line of red formed around the corners of the coyote’s mouth, faint at first but it oozed out from the jowls. Blood dripped down the lower lip of the coyote and somehow, defying gravity, a stain of blood seeped up its face as well. The coyote still stared as the blood soaked past its eyes and matted behind its ears. It’s mouth seemed to widen in the same smile as before, but impossibly wider.

Billy heard a buzzing sound. The coyote’s jaw opened in what seemed like a casual yawn and the buzzing intensified. A rush of dark steaming blood slopped out onto the ground in front of the coyote. The blood was full of meat chunks, living flies and maggots. They buzzed and squirmed and struggled as they fought to free themselves of the sticky coagulated coating. The coyote’s jaws didn’t stop at a yawn, they opened further and further. Blood continued to gush out, and the pool it formed slowly crept onto the asphalt toward Billy.

     Billy’s hands shook uncontrollably, but couldn’t help but stare into the red fleshy maw. He had the thought that something was about to burst out of the coyote’s face, and couldn’t help but wince in anticipation. Just as the mouth started to fold back upon the coyote’s head, Billy heard a familiar whimper. A whine and then a yelp, and then a cry. It sounded like… Lucy.

     Billy whispered in disbelief, “It was… it was you. You ate Lucy. You motherfucker!”

     The coyote’s jaws snapped shut with a clap like a gunshot. Billy jumped, almost slipping in the blood, he reached back and put his hand on the hood of the truck to ground himself. The coyote still stared, eyes ice grey and surrounded by thick bloody fur. Billy felt something move in front of him and when he looked down, the split red coyote’s head had turned up towards him. It was alive somehow, and grinning through bloody teeth. He jumped back and looked up to see the grey coyote take a step toward him and Billy turned, sprinting back to the open door of his truck.

     Billy didn’t drive home. He just drove, radio turned off, eyes wide open. He pulled on his hair with a free hand. “What the hell, what the fuck.”

     He drove past Ben’s bar, slammed on the brakes, flipped a U-turn and pulled up. The lights were still on. Ben was the only person he really knew in the area, and he couldn’t imagine explaining what he had just seen to anybody else.

Billy tried not to seem panicked as he quickly walked from his truck to the bar, pulling the screen door open and throwing his shoulder into the heavy oak door with “Bar” carved into it. His momentum carried him into the room, but as soon as the door opened he could tell something had changed. The bar was silent.

     He looked around and Ben was nowhere to be seen, but a pack of cigarettes sat opened on the bar top. “Ben? You here?” There wasn’t an answer, so Billy sat on a stool and pulled out his phone.

     “Can I help you?” A gravelly voice rasped.

     Billy dropped his phone and jumped up, nearly falling over. “Shit, man…”

     A tall, thin old man stood in the doorway between the bar and Ben’s house. He was wearing an old dark grey duster that clung tightly to his frame, and a shadow obscured most of his face but a long braided light grey ponytail hung over his left shoulder. He took two measured and quiet steps towards Billy, bending over to pick up the phone that Billy had dropped. The silence was suffocating, and Billy desperately needed to say something to someone. “Where’s Ben? I’m Billy, by the way. Sorry for swearing, you started me.” He waited for a response, but the old man stood silently, turning the phone over in his hands.

     The old man finally set the phone down on the bar top without looking at Billy. “Synthetic. Pathetic. Don’t you think? Did you know that people used to make things from what the Earth gave them? Wood, bone, fur, fiber, mud and water. We were hungry then. But now,” the old man scoffed, “Now people want for little, and take everything. They bore into Mother Earth and they harvest her organs while she still breathes. Her oil, her minerals. There is no life in plastics and synthetics. Synthetic. Pathetic. There is no dignity. Do you know what oil is made of?”

     Billy nodded, unable to make eye contact.

     “It’s ancient. It’s ancestors. Of life lived, and given back. It was never meant to be taken and used up.”

     Billy gulped hard on a lump that rose in this throat and rubbed a hand down his arm, trying to quell the hairs that stood on end. “I, uh, you know I work at the oil facility here but before that I wanted to…”

     The old man shook his head, silencing Billy. “It doesn’t matter what you want, only what you do. Dignity is lost in discrepancy of intention and action. Pathetic.” He was grinning. “If you say you want one thing, and you perpetually do another, what good is your word? Why waste breath? You do what you will, why burden yourself further with denial of intention?” The old man’s voice rose sharply, “Life used to be measured in cycles, now it is measured in time, so why waste it for the both of us?”

     Billy was frozen to the stool he sat on, he hunched over and looked at the floor. He couldn’t breathe and he felt deeply and suddenly ashamed.

     The old man walked toward Billy and gently put his hand underneath Billy’s chin, slowly, almost ceremonial. He lifted Billy’s face to meet his eyes, and upon doing so, Billy breathed in a heavy sob. The man’s eyes were ice grey. “I’m sorry,” Billy whimpered.

     The old man’s face cracked with a smirk. “Do not apologize to me. I think this discrepancy eats away at your insides. I think you tell yourself that you are strong enough to live a lonely life, but in truth, you are too weak to love someone fully, and look them in the eyes. Life got away from you.”

     Billy felt a sudden anger rising in him as the terror subsided somewhat. “Why are you saying this to me?”

     The old man laughed. “I’ve done nothing to you. You walked into a place that was not your own and started a conversation that you did not want to have, and you still haven’t asked the only question on your mind. Do you want to ask it?”

     “Do I have to?”

     “You’ve chosen to do everything you’ve ever done. The only thing that you have to do is decide whether or not to live with those choices.”

     Billy grabbed his phone off of the bar and shakily stood up, wiping his face. “Fuck this, I’m out of here.” He walked to the door and as he put his hand against it he stopped, and looked back at the old man leaning on the bar. “Ok. What’s your name?”

     A flash of teeth as the grin widened. “I’m a friend of Ben’s. Here to watch the place for him.”

Billy shoved the door of the bar open and trudged quickly toward his truck. The floodlight outside the bar caught his movement and came on with a buzz, illuminating the truck. On the hood lay the broken body of the reddish coyote, its blood dripping down to mingle with the splatter-stained grill. It’s head popped up and it howled. Billy froze and spun around to see the larger, dark grey coyote sitting behind him on the porch of the bar. It stared patiently, unblinking.

“Fuck! Fuck you! I said I was sorry!”

     The coyote slowly pulled itself up on all fours, stretching as it did, never taking its eyes off of Billy. Billy started stumbling backwards as the coyote opened its mouth, blood pouring out onto the dirt as it started to stalk towards him. Its ears were down and its lip drew back over blood soaked fangs, ice grey eyes turning black.

     Billy turned and started to run for the road, knowing that he couldn’t outrun the coyote. He saw headlights and shouted desperately waving his hands as he sprinted. He stopped in the middle of the lane, but the car did not slow down or stop. He watched headlights speed toward him, and then sickeningly through him. The combination of collision, car horn, cold wind, and dizzying force that all hit him in an instant. Time froze for a moment and he felt himself being lifted away from it all. Free from gravity. Then it went dark.

     He woke up in a blur of pain. His whole body was dulled by the heavy pull of sedative. He couldn’t make out definite shapes, but it was obvious that he was in a hospital room. His throat ached and he couldn’t shut his mouth. His tongue was dry. He felt a strange barren loneliness as he realized nobody was in the room with him. No warden was coming to open the door of his solitary cell. His eyes closed again, the white noise of beeping and whirring medical equipment pulling him down into the bed.

     He opened his eyes again, as someone brushed their hand against his hair. As his vision cleared he saw a nurse, her face very close to his. She had auburn hair, and smiled a little too wide. Her lips seemed strange, he realized. And the lipstick she was wearing…

     “I’m sorry to wake you, Mr. Warren. It’s Billy right?”

     He could only stare back. A doctor stood back a ways, holding a clipboard.

     “I’m not sure if you can hear me. You’ve been through a terrible car accident, and unfortunately there has been severe nerve damage and blood loss. We’ve got you on life support and have notified your next of kin. I just wanted to come and thank you personally for being an organ donor…”

     He heard the doctor saying something to the nurse, maybe to him. Something about organic organs still outperforming synthetics.

     Billy stared at the nurse’s cherry red lips as the sedative pushed him down into the hospital bed. The nurse’s lipstick seemed to pull together at the lowest point of her lower lip and it sank down, seemingly pulled by the same gravity as his body, until a single red drop separated and fell from her lip. It landed on his cheek, felt hot. The drop rolled down his face as shadows rose around him.

Categories
Short Fiction

Bone Caterpillar

I know this doesn’t match the description in the story, but prior to writing it I was doodling different ideas for a bone caterpillar and I like this one

Jerrod frantically waved his arms about his face and hair, trying to fend off any spiders that might have associated with the cobwebs he’d just put his head through. His frantic movements kicked up a layer of dust in the attic, he caught a lungful and doubled over coughing. He sat down hard on an old box labeled ‘Scrapbooks-Attic.’

“Everything ok up there?”

“Yeah mom, just dusty is all.”

“Well take a break and get some fresh air. Lord knows your grandma wasn’t climbing the ladder to get into that attic. You’re probably the first one in there for a decade or so.”

Jerrod wasn’t close to his grandmother, but the woman had a mysterious quality about her that made his imagination go into overdrive. He waved a flashlight around the tiny crawlspace one more time before acquiescing back down into the chaos of his mother’s organizational efforts.

His mother, thumbs tucked under the straps of her work overalls, was staring despondently at the cluttered mess of hoarder nonsense stacked to the ceiling of what had been her mother’s bedroom and muttered to herself, “Jesus, mom.”

He walked up behind her and threw an arm over her shoulders. She rested her head on his shoulder. “I’m sorry we’ve got to spend spring break like this, sweetheart. I didn’t realize it would be this bad.”

Jerrod shrugged. It was a welcome distraction for him. He hadn’t made many friends since they’d moved, and he was hoping having to clean out his grandma’s hoarder house would make for a sympathetic story to tell girls when school started back up again. “Should I be looking out for anything in the attic? Or just moving the boxes down?”

His mother thought for a moment. “Well, most of the stuff around the house is garbage, but she hasn’t touched the attic since before the hoarding got bad. There might be some cool stuff up there. I’ll get started on her bedroom if you want to just peek around and explore.”

“So far it’s mostly cobwebs and scrapbooks, but I’ll keep looking.”

His mom pulled him in and gave him a kiss on the head and he playfully pulled away. He climbed back up to the attic and started shifting boxes around and carrying them down the ladder. Scrapbooks, baby clothes, Christmas ornaments, cookbooks. Then as he had worked about halfway through the odd assortment he found a shoebox that was simply labelled ‘MDME LOREAUX.’

It was light when he picked it up, and unsealed. He popped it open and turned the flashlight into it. He laughed. Inside was an old doll in a frayed dress, a matchbox, a few candles, and what looked like an old bird’s skull. He carried it down the ladder to show his mom, “Hey ma?” She didn’t answer.

He carried the box down the stairs and into a cluttered kitchen. Pushing a stack of Time magazines off the table, he sat down and dumped the box’s contents out on the table. The doll was made out of a corncob wrapped in silk with a gob of wax for the head that had been roughly carved to resemble a human head. He opened the matchbox and found it full of what looked like bird and fish bones. He picked up the bird skull and studied it closer. It had a long fishing line attached to the back with a knot at the end, maybe there was more to it somewhere.

As he played with it, rolling it around in his hand, he jerked away from a shooting pain in his hand and dropped the skull to the table. He’d accidentally cut his thumb on the beak somehow and a small bead of blood began to form, rounding with surface tension. He went to the sink, dancing around a few stacks of old newspapers, rinsed his thumb in cold water and wrapped it in a paper towel.

He walked back over to the table and picked the skull back up, seeing his bright red blood on the tip of the beak. His face scrunched in curiosity as he also felt something dangling off of the back, and when he checked he saw one of the chicken bones was now dangling from the fishing wire attached to the skull.
Jerrod shivered. He didn’t believe in ghosts or the supernatural or voodoo, but he knew that bone hadn’t been there a second earlier so he threw the contents back in the box and carried the whole thing back up to the attic. As he came down his mom was filling yet another industrial garbage bag with detritus and stopped when she saw him, “Find anything cool?”

“Nah, just a lot of old junk,” he said as he passed her. She reached out with a hand covered in a dusty work glove and grabbed his arm, holding his hand up to her face for inspection. “Honey, your thumb is bleeding. You didn’t cut yourself on a nail or anything did you?”

He was surprised to see the wound still bleeding, it had only felt like a little poke. “Uh, I don’t know.”

Her eyebrows rose. “You cut yourself on something up in that filthy attic and you don’t know what you cut yourself on?”

“Uh, yeah. I mean, no.”

She sighed . “Ok, get in the car. We’re going to urgent care to get you a tetanus shot.”

After a good deal of protesting and “Mom I’m fine, really.” Jerrod’s mother got him into the front seat of her Toyota and drove him to the nearby Urgent Care clinic. He waited, embarrassed, among all of the other patients. One guy clearly had a nail through his hand and was holding a bloody towel around it, but the blood was soaking through and had started to drip onto the tiled floor. A drunken college student sat sniffling and holding her arm in a sling. Another mom was clearly having an allergic reaction and gobbling pink antihistamines as she tried ineffectively to keep her kids within reach.

Waiting took an hour and a half, but once they were in it was a quick shot. The nurse tried to take his pulse, but was unable to find it. When she checked his eyes with a flashlight she frowned slightly.

“What is it?” His mother asked.

“I’ve never seen pupils like his,” said the nurse, motioning his mother over to look. Jerrod shifted uncomfortably, “What’s wrong with my eyes?”

The nurse squinted and turned the light on and off. “That’s so strange. When I turn the light off, your eyes look normal. But when the light is on your pupil has these little red specks in it. It looks like they’re moving around.”

His mom asked if that was associated with tetanus and the nurse shrugged and said it wasn’t associated with anything she’d ever heard of. His mom promised to make a follow-up appointment with their primary care provider and they were finally back out into the parking lot.

“We probably could have finished cleaning at least one room if you didn’t drag me here.”

His mom held the keys out to him. “Well, now that you’re safe from tetanus, let’s make the trip worth it. Time to practice driving at night.”

The raccoon seemed to have come out of nowhere, and Jerrod didn’t have time to swerve. He hit the brakes as the animal made a heavy “thunk” against the front of his mom’s blue Toyota Camry. His mom instinctively yelled along with the squeal of the tires, the pitch of both sounds matching oddly, but she recovered quickly and tried not to seem shaken.

“It’s okay, J, it’s okay. Turn on your hazards and we’ll go check it out.”
The raccoon hadn’t been big enough to leave a dent, but there was a conspicuous spray of blood across the grill. The actual raccoon seemed unusually deflated, and when Jerrod poked it with a stick the body skidded across the pavement without any resistance.

“I think it was dead before I hit it,” he said hopefully.

“Dead raccoons don’t jump out in front of cars baby.” His mom watched him push the carcass around a bit, and bent over to squint at it through the illumination of the headlights.

“It’s like it’s all dried out.”

His mother just stared, frowning.

“Maybe a chupacabra got it?” He tried for a laugh but his mother just motioned for him to get back in the car. “Sorry sweetheart, but mom’s driving the rest of the way home.”

Once Jerrod got back to his room, he sat down at his desk in the dark and opened up his laptop. The glow of the screen illuminated the rest of the desk and as his eyes adjusted he jumped as he noticed the bird skull resting at the edge like a paper weight.

He chuckled at his nerves and went to turn on the main light, picking up the skull and trying to remember when he’d left it there. He thought he’d left it at his grandmother’s house in the shoebox. He saw another bone had been attached to the fishing line, and the fishing line seemed to have changed as well. It was now slightly red colored, thicker than it had been. He put the skull on a piece of printer paper and drew a circle around it with a sharpie, then took a picture with his cell phone.

His mother’s screams jolted him awake. He dashed out into the living room to see his mother at the door with her hand over her mouth in surprise to see a dead bird on the porch. “Oh, sorry for waking you sweetie. Looks like someone’s cat left us a gift last night. Could you put on some gloves and get rid of that thing for me?”

Jerrod and his mom did their best to explain away the bodies of small neighborhood animals that kept showing up around them over the next couple of days. The skull never moved from the printer paper and Jerrod had stopped thinking about it until he noticed that the fishing line was no longer a fishing line. Picking it up, he marveled at the change, wondering if his mom was playing a joke on him. The skull had been accruing more bones, and where the fishing line had been there was now a thick veined cord that left streaks of blood across the paper he’d put it on.

He was afraid to tell his mom about it. He didn’t know what was happening but whatever it was had something to do with his grandmother and a little more to do with death, blood and bones than he was comfortable with. How would he even go about explaining what was happening, even showing her wouldn’t help. It would surely worry her just as much to find a bloody pile of bones in her son’s room.

He kept an eye on the object, and it began to look more like some kind of hideous bone caterpillar out of a Hieronymus Bosch painting. It never moved uniformly, but as it got bigger different sections of it would writhe and jerk noiselessly on the piece of printer paper. He noticed retrospectively that it was most active after another dead body showed up.

Two weeks after it had started he woke up to find the pulpy pile of bones was no longer on the paper. The paper had turned the oxidated brown color of old blood and streaks of fresh blood led from the paper, off of his desk, and across his carpet to his bedroom door.

Jerrod gulped and grabbed a National Geographic magazine, rolling it up as he crept out of his room and saw the trail somehow leading up the stairs. Adrenaline hit him in a wave, that’s where his mom’s room was.

He sprinted up the flight and froze in his mother’s bedroom doorway. She was lying in bed on her back, with a sunbeam coming in through the window above the bed’s wooden headboard and perfectly framing the monstronsity that was resting on her chest.

It was no longer a pile of bones, but a more fully formed mock-up of a caterpillar, except for the carapace of bones wrapped around the body that lit up as it pulsed down the length of its body, stretching the bones sections out and excreting a stringy whiteness that had started to coat the bones. It was making a cocoon.

The black length of body holding it all together with the glowing streaks of veins that still leaked blood onto his mother’s pajama top. Jerrod’s breath caught in his throat as he neared, afraid to check if his mother was still alive. But as he neared the bed she turned her head slightly and moaned at him. Her eyes were open, but only just barely. “Fire,” she mouthed at him.

Fire. Kill it. His adrenaline surged once more and he swung the National Geographic at the bone caterpillar once, twice, then he saw the skin beneath his mother’s shirt glowing as if a flashlight was being pressed against it from the inside. Every capillary glowed as if aflame.

He let out a yell and grabbed it, peeling the sticky mass slowly off of the flesh and fabric. The bones were slick and dug into the flesh on his hand, but everywhere he touched the black mass within and it caused his skin to buzz and his nerves twitched in response as though it was an electric shock. It was all he could do to keep his fingers wrapped around it and his whole body tensed. His mother seized up and yelled with him, but he was afraid to stop. The mass came unattached with a soft ripping noise and he threw it against the wall where it splattered wet and sank to the floor giving off a slight hissing noise.

His mom held her chest and rolled back and forth, moaning “Fire. Set it on fire.”

As Jerrod took a step towards the wall, the caterpillar’s body rumbled and popped, the different bones spinning variably until thin black legs grew out from between the bones and it began scuttling across the floor with a nasty clicking sound. Jerrod instinctively grabbed a wire waste basket and overturned it on the monster. The waste basket had been full of papers that stuck to the caterpillar’s bloody wetness as it thrashed in vain to free itself. He held the waste basket down against the floorboards, quickly shifting his hands to evade the caterpillar’s quick strikes out with the bird skull face it had originally pricked him with.

Suddenly Jerrod’s mother stood above him, blood soaked into the front of her shirt. She dumped a small bottle of liquid onto the waste basket and it quickly soaked into the paper. The smell of fingernail polish remover hit him in a wave and his mother walked over to her dresser and pulled out a pack of cigarettes and a lighter. “Don’t let it go,” she muttered to Jerrod, bending over and lighting a piece of soaked paper on fire and jerking back as the whole bin went up quickly in flames. Jerrod jerked back and started to look for ways to put the fire out but his mom put an arm around him and used the other to put a cigarette in her mouth, then lit it skillfully.

“I… didn’t know you smoked.”

“I used to. And the past has a funny way of coming back around.”

The fire burned out quickly, but it seemed to stick to the bone caterpillar in an unnatural way. The body hissed and writhed as embers made their way around the bones and into the dark parts of the body. Foul, metallic smelling steam rose from the waste basket.

Jerrod put his arm around his mother. “This wasn’t Grandma’s, was it?”

The caterpillar had stopped reacting and his mom kicked the basket over and picked up a little pile of bones attached with a fishing line. “This doesn’t belong to anyone, sweetie. This is just a bad idea somebody had.”

“But it wasn’t just an idea. It made me bleed, it attacked you.”

His mom took a long drag. “No, this was an idea. Somebody thought that if you attached bones with a fishing line it would make a bone caterpillar. And it did. But a bone caterpillar already existed somewhere.”

“Somewhere?”

“Baby, sometimes what you think is just an idea can already exist in another… space. Another dimension or something. Just waiting for someone to try to create it so that it can transgress time and space along a path we can’t understand. Someone thought of a caterpillar made of bones, and some trans-dimensional parasitic horror show used the avatar of that idea to cross over.”

A moment passed as Jerrod tried to take it all in. The bone caterpillar jerked slightly, trying to reach his mother’s hand with the bird beak, but she swung it away skillfully.

Jerrod backed up, “It’s not dead.”

“It can’t die, Jerrod. But it can form a cocoon. Let’s not find out what happens if it metamorphoses.”

Jerrod nodded, dumbly.

His mom put out her cigarette onto the bone caterpillar and it squealed slightly. She shot him a devilish grin, “Now, show me that box and I’ll show you what those candles can do.

Categories
Short Fiction

Triangles

When he was six years old, a woman with three fingers on a hand she used to hold a cigar to her mouth stopped on the sidewalk just short of his chalk drawings. She pulled the cigar out of her mouth to reveal a brown, pulpy, gnawed end and a lingering trail of smoke. She sucked her teeth and spit, grunted as she bent over and picked up a green chunk of chalk. Then she drew a triangle. “What is this?” She asked him.

    “A triangle.” He said.

    “Wrong, it’s chalk on pavement.” She laughed, then as she continued to walk past him she put one chalky finger on his forehead and paused for a moment saying, “So where does the triangle come from?”

    As he grew older, he stayed connecting pencils to paper. Friends and family members craned their necks to see what strange fantasies he was cooking up. He found a difference between imagination and creativity. Imagination had limits, whereas with enough practice the creativity he was able to tap into was unbound. He could simply put pencil to paper and let extravagantly detailed scenes spill out. Some were familiar but with meditation on this creative influence, and enough practice, they became extravagant and incomprehensible.

    His art quickly took over his life and he treated every spontaneous thought as sacred. His family found he had little notebooks stationed everywhere that life necessitated a break from work. The toilet, the kitchen table, his nightstand, all covered in scraps of paper with words and phrases that only meant something to him.

He believed that every idea was a gift, from somewhere or something, and by drawing he was honoring these gifts in some abstract way. He found that the more he drew, the more spontaneous ideas he had. He worshipped the idea of creativity, and through him creativity grew. As though he was a sort of conduit.

Through incessant drawing he perfected his craft by the age of sixteen. At eighteen he got a tattoo. It was a skeleton in a locked cage with a tree grown around it, on his right forearm. A reminder to produce rather than consume.

    He chased the spark of spontaneous creativity to the end of his sanity. Soon his work began to exhibit strange cryptic patterns, popular at first but soon too occult seeming for the general public and even his benefactors in the art community. The more creativity he gained the more he was forced to retreat from polite society. Speaking to others became a chore, as it was obvious with every spittle-laced sentence a person made that they hadn’t the insight that he had gained. They didn’t understand what was out there, or what it took to commune.

    It was almost physical, the surge of connectivity between his frontal lobe and the ether of his ideas. The longer he kept himself open to this cosmic creative influence, the stronger the urge to fall into a chaos that only he could see the order in. What he had perceived as the power of creative genesis clearly became more sinister. He wasn’t just opening himself to abstraction, he’d been learning to understand. To speak an unspoken language.

    The same genius and beauty he managed in his earlier public works mirrored the sadism and horror of his private library. He refused to let anyone else see them. That’s what they wanted, an audience, a consciousness through which to propagate.

    As he withdrew from society, he only drew for himself. His health deteriorated as he neared his 30th birthday. Towards the end, the lights of his house were permanently turned on, music played nonstop, and his recycling was full of liquor bottles. When he was seen, he was always speaking to himself. He recited episodes of television shows, stand-up comedy bits, and pop songs. It was as if he was lost in desperate distraction.

    It was when the late night screaming sessions stopped that the neighbors called for a wellness check. They found his body propped against the wall opposite his desk. The tattoo of the cage, skeleton and tree had been carved out of his right arm and the fingers on his right hand, his drawing hand, were chewed to nubs. He passed away in a pool of his own blood, his bloodshot eyes wide open and staring up at the ceiling with horror. His last notebook lay open to a drawing of a non-descript triangle with “let it stay chalk” written inside.

    Beneath the triangle he had written the date of his death, and a note. It read:

In our minds we harbor the things that we feel and the things we think. Creation is NOT a one way street. Please burn the black bound books. Do not let the idea of them spread. They need you to know of them, but I beg you not to.

Categories
Short Fiction

The Evergreen

The Evergreen

Half asleep, but full on dreaming of the boarding house girls back home, Barney Winthrop laid back against a soft old log with his hat pulled low over his face and his right leg turned left away from the fire as to keep the crotch rivet of his old denim Levi’s from heating up and inadvertently branding his testicles. A newer, crotch-rivet-less style was on the market, but he hadn’t turned in a bounty or taken an honest job in over a year, so he stayed to the left. His nose and mouth took turns breathing in the sweet cedar smoke from the little fire that he’d warmed some pemmican and beans over earlier in the evening, licking his lips brought a salty sweet combination of the preserved meat and tobacco that stained his overgrown mustache. It was pitch black outside the soft red glow of the fire, the moon unable to traverse the evergreen canopy overhead. Now and then a sap pocket would overheat on one of the younger logs he was burning, the crackles and pops keeping him from dozing off too far.

               An unusually loud “POP” caused him to jerk awake, popping out of a dream he’d rather enjoyed where he’d been playing cards with the ladies from Chicago he’d met in a lonely bar in Oklahoma months back. They were betting articles of clothing rather than money, as per the women’s cheeky suggestion. He was just wondering to himself how best to conceal his numerous Levi’s burns when he was back in his little camp, breathing quickly and squinting into the smoky darkness.

               To his shock and dismay, he was no longer alone. About twenty feet out from the fire, just within its light, there stood a disheveled soldier. Barney slowly leaned over his saddle bag, keeping an eye on the stranger and pulled out his revolver. Casually holding it against his chest he called out, “Hello there sir, please state your business.”

               The soldier awkwardly took several steps forward out of the brush, walking like a newborn calf. Barney could see from the uniform that he was Army Signal Corps, possibly providing a chance for easy money. “Are you a deserter son?”

               The soldier stopped and leaned against a tree. His eyes were wide and bloodshot, and he had a white ring of dehydration around his lips which started moving uncannily before words began to come out. “No sir, I am the last of my unit.” A slight German accent.

               “Shit,” said Barney, spitting. “Any idea what tribe it was that got y’all?”

               The soldier seemed confused for a moment and looked everywhere but directly at Barney. “It wasn’t a tribe that got us.”

               Barney sighed and relaxed. Clearly the boy was in a bad way with a story to tell. It was time to turn on the ‘ol Winthrop charm that got him elected to Sheriff before the ‘ol Barney between-the-legs got him chased out of town. “Tell you what, I’ve got some cold coffee I can heat up here. Why don’t you relax and tell me what it is I’ve gotta be looking out for ‘round here.”

               The soldier shifted his weight and slumped down against the tree, staring at the fire with his wide eyes, barely blinking despite the smoke.

               Barney set his kettle on the edge of the fire and pulled out two tin cups, dented to all hell. He paused and shot the soldier a cheeky grin, “I’ve got a bit of whiskey as well if that’s more your flavor?”

               Silence from the soldier.

               Barney sighed. “Okay then, I’ll start, how’s about that? Name’s Barney Winthrop, lawman of sorts. Grew up down near Texas somewhere, don’t rightly know where. My Pa was a preacher until that damn scarlet fever got him when I was about 10. Took care of my ma and sisters until I was old enough to work. Worked contracts with different outfits as a hired gun, even made Sheriff down in Nebraska. But I’m one for the women, son, that’s what’s got me chased out here to the northwest. Word is, this is where the big money contract outlaws have all ran to. Shoot, maybe they’re dead in a ditch somewhere, but I figured I’d give it a look. I’m headed for the coast, anyhow. Now, what’s your story?”

               The soldier had been nodding along to Barney’s voice and stopped at the question, looking Barney directly in the eyes for the first time. “My name, is Karl Weycht, I was born in Germany but I immigrated to America when I was twelve years old.”

               Barney grinned and poured them both some coffee. He walked over and handed a cup to Karl, frowning at the man’s smell as he got close, but trying to hide his disgust as he’d finally gotten the young man talking. Where’d you move to?

               Karl looked down at the cup, “Boston. There I joined the army and they trained me in telegraphy.” He looked up at Barney. “They’d had luck building telegraph lines through Texas and Chief Signal Officer Greely wanted to extend a telegraph line from the Dakotas to the West Coast.”

               Barney sucked his teeth. “And I’m guessing the tribes out this way weren’t too keen on that eh?”

               “They were not a problem. Actually, many of them were most helpful. I got lost in Montana and a brave gave me a ride to Billings, once we were there I taught him some telegraphy. He was fascinated!” Now the soldier was smiling, but his eyes didn’t change.

               “Ah Billings! I’ve been through there. They got quite a Madam’s house there ya know, got this gal from Maine they called Saltwater Taffy. Do you know why they called her Saltwater Taffy?”

               The soldier patiently shook his head no.

               “Cause she tasted sweet and spoke salty and left you stickier than hell!” Barney chortled.

               The soldier smiled politely.

               Barney sipped his coffee, “So if it wasn’t the Indians, how come you’re out here without the rest of your unit?”

               The soldier took a deep breath in and out. “It was the Evergreen.”

               “The trees?”

               “Yes, the forest, in a way. We’d almost made it to the coast when we ran out of the telegraph poles we’d been using so our commanding officer decided to start cutting down trees and preparing more. Men started to disappear. This didn’t make sense as the work wasn’t difficult or dangerous enough for them to desert, and the local tribes had been very kind to us.”

               “I’ve heard sometimes they do that to lull you into a false sense of security.”

               “No, they were peaceful. There was plenty of game and food to share. We ate like kings. But the more trees we cut down, the more men went missing. Finally we formed search parties and split up. My group was to go West, into the forest. We hiked for days, until we finally came clear of the trees and into a clearing with a village and a crystal clear river running through. They welcomed us, but had clearly not been in contact with white men before as they found our clothes and weapons fascinating. We had a reliable translator with us, but even he could not decipher their language.”

               Now Barney was interested. “You’re telling me you found a new tribe? Were your lost men with them?”

               The soldier shook his head, “They didn’t seem to know anything, but were very upset when they we explained we were cutting down the evergreen trees. They seemed to worship the evergreens, and showed us how they had built all of their homes out of stones instead of wood. A man in ceremonial dress made from pine needles seemed to threaten us, but indirectly. It was as though we were in danger from an unseen force. He wore a mask made of weathered pine, with eyeholes and a mouth. The only word our translator could understand was “Evergreen,” but he didn’t seem to be speaking about the evergreen trees. He spoke of “The Evergreen.”

               “This must be some sort of god to them. You offended them by cutting down the trees, right?”

               “There is more. We went to leave in the early morning, but as we reached the edge of the clearing one of the larger trees started to… move.”

               Barney frowned, “You’re telling me this tree up and left?”

               The soldier’s face wrinkled up in his difficulty to explain, “It was the bark of the tree. It became… loose. It started to move around, and then a man’s face, a face from one of our missing men appeared in the bark and the sap in between. It stretched out horribly towards us, his mouth open in a silent scream. His brother was in my search party and he ran to the tree with an axe to try and break the man free. But as his axe broke the bark the villagers came out screaming that word, “Evergreen.”

               The poor man started to have difficulty breathing as he told the tale and Barney tried to calm him, telling him to have a sip of coffee. To count his breaths.

               “It came from beneath us. From all around us. The earth broke and tree roots, knotted with bones and bodies and skeletons of every animal. The smell of decay was overwhelming.” The soldier looked up from the ground at Barney, “The slavs back home had a fairy tale, an old myth of a forest spirit. They called it a leshen, but those stories were nothing like this.”

               Barney was sitting completely upright now, “What are you talking about? The earth broke? What did the villagers do?”

               Now the soldier was visibly shaking, teeth chattering as he tried to explain. “They tried to scare it back with fire, but it wasn’t afraid. They seemed to curse us for that as well, as if we had taught it not to fear fire.”

               “Slow down now, so you’re saying you got attacked by the evergreen trees?”

               The soldier started sobbing and the firelight danced off of tears flowing down his cheeks, “It wasn’t the trees, it was… The Evergreen. It was, some kind of monster of the forest. I’m sorry I don’t know how to explain.” He breathed deep in and out trying to regain some composure. “It was made of roots and the bodies of animals, dead and alive. The living animals were limp, puppet-like, with eyes that were… they glowed green! It was so horrible, and the smell!”

               By now Barney had lost his composure and gripped his revolver tightly. “The smell?”

               “It was of decay! But not like anything I’d ever experienced. It was like a day-old battlefield’s smell of shit and guts and rot but it got into your mind! The bodies were still animated as well, they moved, they danced, they writhed!”

               Barney shakily stumped to his feet and pointed the revolver at the soldier, “That’s enough! Stop damn you!”

               The soldier wept and rolled back and forth against the tree. “It corrupts you! It keeps you alive to live off of your life and your mind! It only knew what the forest knew, what the animals knew, but now it has fed on men.” He stood up, supporting himself with one arm on the tree, “Mr. Winthrop, it has known so many men already, it knows us and now it fears nothing. It is wherever these evergreen trees have roots,” he took a step towards Barney,  “It is BENEATH US, ALL AROUND US!”

               Barney fired, three shots, directly into the chest of the soldier. The poor man crumpled down against the tree, his hands against the holes in his chest as he stared up at Barney. With his face illuminated in the flickering light of the dying fire, he whimpered as roots came spiraling out of his wounds. The roots pulled him back into the brush from within, and he moaned as he disappeared.

               Barney was now sweating and shaking uncontrollably, and from the darkness where the soldier had disappeared he saw two glowing green orbs appear like eyes. He emptied his revolver at the eyes, screaming as he shot, “FUCK OFF, DAMN YOU!”

               The green glowing eyes disappeared, and everything fell silent. Barney tried to take a step toward his saddle bags to grab more bullets but he found his feet stuck to the ground and looked down in horror to find dozens of small roots weaving their way up his boots. He screamed and doubled over, trying to rip the roots off of himself but as he did he heard the unmistakable sound of timber creaking and bending and as he looked up a weathered pine mask was snaking its way into the campsite, held aloft by a cord of vines, roots, branches and bones. A human body was incased within the cord, arms and legs hanging broken out to the sides, a head hanging limply with a face contorted in terror and eyes glowing bright green.

               Barney threw his gun at the mask and screamed defiantly, “What the fuck are you?!”

               And from all directions, the entire forest lit up with that same green light, and he saw himself surrounded by eyes, bodies, corpses. Of the Evergreen.

Half asleep, but full on dreaming of the boarding house girls back home, Barney Winthrop laid back against a soft old log with his hat pulled low over his face and his right leg turned left away from the fire as to keep the crotch rivet of his old denim Levi’s from heating up and inadvertently branding his testicles. A newer, crotch-rivet-less style was on the market, but he hadn’t turned in a bounty or taken an honest job in over a year, so he stayed to the left. His nose and mouth took turns breathing in the sweet cedar smoke from the little fire that he’d warmed some pemmican and beans over earlier in the evening, licking his lips brought a salty sweet combination of the preserved meat and tobacco that stained his overgrown mustache. It was pitch black outside the soft red glow of the fire, the moon unable to traverse the evergreen canopy overhead. Now and then a sap pocket would overheat on one of the younger logs he was burning, the crackles and pops keeping him from dozing off too far.

               An unusually loud “POP” caused him to jerk awake, popping out of a dream he’d rather enjoyed where he’d been playing cards with the ladies from Chicago he’d met in a lonely bar in Oklahoma months back. They were betting articles of clothing rather than money, as per the women’s cheeky suggestion. He was just wondering to himself how best to conceal his numerous Levi’s burns when he was back in his little camp, breathing quickly and squinting into the smoky darkness.

               To his shock and dismay, he was no longer alone. About twenty feet out from the fire, just within its light, there stood a disheveled soldier. Barney slowly leaned over his saddle bag, keeping an eye on the stranger and pulled out his revolver. Casually holding it against his chest he called out, “Hello there sir, please state your business.”

               The soldier awkwardly took several steps forward out of the brush, walking like a newborn calf. Barney could see from the uniform that he was Army Signal Corps, possibly providing a chance for easy money. “Are you a deserter son?”

               The soldier stopped and leaned against a tree. His eyes were wide and bloodshot, and he had a white ring of dehydration around his lips which started moving uncannily before words began to come out. “No sir, I am the last of my unit.” A slight German accent.

               “Shit,” said Barney, spitting. “Any idea what tribe it was that got y’all?”

               The soldier seemed confused for a moment and looked everywhere but directly at Barney. “It wasn’t a tribe that got us.”

               Barney sighed and relaxed. Clearly the boy was in a bad way with a story to tell. It was time to turn on the ‘ol Winthrop charm that got him elected to Sheriff before the ‘ol Barney between-the-legs got him chased out of town. “Tell you what, I’ve got some cold coffee I can heat up here. Why don’t you relax and tell me what it is I’ve gotta be looking out for ‘round here.”

               The soldier shifted his weight and slumped down against the tree, staring at the fire with his wide eyes, barely blinking despite the smoke.

               Barney set his kettle on the edge of the fire and pulled out two tin cups, dented to all hell. He paused and shot the soldier a cheeky grin, “I’ve got a bit of whiskey as well if that’s more your flavor?”

               Silence from the soldier.

               Barney sighed. “Okay then, I’ll start, how’s about that? Name’s Barney Winthrop, lawman of sorts. Grew up down near Texas somewhere, don’t rightly know where. My Pa was a preacher until that damn scarlet fever got him when I was about 10. Took care of my ma and sisters until I was old enough to work. Worked contracts with different outfits as a hired gun, even made Sheriff down in Nebraska. But I’m one for the women, son, that’s what’s got me chased out here to the northwest. Word is, this is where the big money contract outlaws have all ran to. Shoot, maybe they’re dead in a ditch somewhere, but I figured I’d give it a look. I’m headed for the coast, anyhow. Now, what’s your story?”

               The soldier had been nodding along to Barney’s voice and stopped at the question, looking Barney directly in the eyes for the first time. “My name, is Karl Weycht, I was born in Germany but I immigrated to America when I was twelve years old.”

               Barney grinned and poured them both some coffee. He walked over and handed a cup to Karl, frowning at the man’s smell as he got close, but trying to hide his disgust as he’d finally gotten the young man talking. Where’d you move to?

               Karl looked down at the cup, “Boston. There I joined the army and they trained me in telegraphy.” He looked up at Barney. “They’d had luck building telegraph lines through Texas and Chief Signal Officer Greely wanted to extend a telegraph line from the Dakotas to the West Coast.”

               Barney sucked his teeth. “And I’m guessing the tribes out this way weren’t too keen on that eh?”

               “They were not a problem. Actually, many of them were most helpful. I got lost in Montana and a brave gave me a ride to Billings, once we were there I taught him some telegraphy. He was fascinated!” Now the soldier was smiling, but his eyes didn’t change.

               “Ah Billings! I’ve been through there. They got quite a Madam’s house there ya know, got this gal from Maine they called Saltwater Taffy. Do you know why they called her Saltwater Taffy?”

               The soldier patiently shook his head no.

               “Cause she tasted sweet and spoke salty and left you stickier than hell!” Barney chortled.

               The soldier smiled politely.

               Barney sipped his coffee, “So if it wasn’t the Indians, how come you’re out here without the rest of your unit?”

               The soldier took a deep breath in and out. “It was the Evergreen.”

               “The trees?”

               “Yes, the forest, in a way. We’d almost made it to the coast when we ran out of the telegraph poles we’d been using so our commanding officer decided to start cutting down trees and preparing more. Men started to disappear. This didn’t make sense as the work wasn’t difficult or dangerous enough for them to desert, and the local tribes had been very kind to us.”

               “I’ve heard sometimes they do that to lull you into a false sense of security.”

               “No, they were peaceful. There was plenty of game and food to share. We ate like kings. But the more trees we cut down, the more men went missing. Finally we formed search parties and split up. My group was to go West, into the forest. We hiked for days, until we finally came clear of the trees and into a clearing with a village and a crystal clear river running through. They welcomed us, but had clearly not been in contact with white men before as they found our clothes and weapons fascinating. We had a reliable translator with us, but even he could not decipher their language.”

               Now Barney was interested. “You’re telling me you found a new tribe? Were your lost men with them?”

               The soldier shook his head, “They didn’t seem to know anything, but were very upset when they we explained we were cutting down the evergreen trees. They seemed to worship the evergreens, and showed us how they had built all of their homes out of stones instead of wood. A man in ceremonial dress made from pine needles seemed to threaten us, but indirectly. It was as though we were in danger from an unseen force. He wore a mask made of weathered pine, with eyeholes and a mouth. The only word our translator could understand was “Evergreen,” but he didn’t seem to be speaking about the evergreen trees. He spoke of “The Evergreen.”

               “This must be some sort of god to them. You offended them by cutting down the trees, right?”

               “There is more. We went to leave in the early morning, but as we reached the edge of the clearing one of the larger trees started to… move.”

               Barney frowned, “You’re telling me this tree up and left?”

               The soldier’s face wrinkled up in his difficulty to explain, “It was the bark of the tree. It became… loose. It started to move around, and then a man’s face, a face from one of our missing men appeared in the bark and the sap in between. It stretched out horribly towards us, his mouth open in a silent scream. His brother was in my search party and he ran to the tree with an axe to try and break the man free. But as his axe broke the bark the villagers came out screaming that word, “Evergreen.”

               The poor man started to have difficulty breathing as he told the tale and Barney tried to calm him, telling him to have a sip of coffee. To count his breaths.

               “It came from beneath us. From all around us. The earth broke and tree roots, knotted with bones and bodies and skeletons of every animal. The smell of decay was overwhelming.” The soldier looked up from the ground at Barney, “The slavs back home had a fairy tale, an old myth of a forest spirit. They called it a leshen, but those stories were nothing like this.”

               Barney was sitting completely upright now, “What are you talking about? The earth broke? What did the villagers do?”

               Now the soldier was visibly shaking, teeth chattering as he tried to explain. “They tried to scare it back with fire, but it wasn’t afraid. They seemed to curse us for that as well, as if we had taught it not to fear fire.”

               “Slow down now, so you’re saying you got attacked by the evergreen trees?”

               The soldier started sobbing and the firelight danced off of tears flowing down his cheeks, “It wasn’t the trees, it was… The Evergreen. It was, some kind of monster of the forest. I’m sorry I don’t know how to explain.” He breathed deep in and out trying to regain some composure. “It was made of roots and the bodies of animals, dead and alive. The living animals were limp, puppet-like, with eyes that were… they glowed green! It was so horrible, and the smell!”

               By now Barney had lost his composure and gripped his revolver tightly. “The smell?”

               “It was of decay! But not like anything I’d ever experienced. It was like a day-old battlefield’s smell of shit and guts and rot but it got into your mind! The bodies were still animated as well, they moved, they danced, they writhed!”

               Barney shakily stumped to his feet and pointed the revolver at the soldier, “That’s enough! Stop damn you!”

               The soldier wept and rolled back and forth against the tree. “It corrupts you! It keeps you alive to live off of your life and your mind! It only knew what the forest knew, what the animals knew, but now it has fed on men.” He stood up, supporting himself with one arm on the tree, “Mr. Winthrop, it has known so many men already, it knows us and now it fears nothing. It is wherever these evergreen trees have roots,” he took a step towards Barney,  “It is BENEATH US, ALL AROUND US!”

               Barney fired, three shots, directly into the chest of the soldier. The poor man crumpled down against the tree, his hands against the holes in his chest as he stared up at Barney. With his face illuminated in the flickering light of the dying fire, he whimpered as roots came spiraling out of his wounds. The roots pulled him back into the brush from within, and he moaned as he disappeared.

               Barney was now sweating and shaking uncontrollably, and from the darkness where the soldier had disappeared he saw two glowing green orbs appear like eyes. He emptied his revolver at the eyes, screaming as he shot, “FUCK OFF, DAMN YOU!”

               The green glowing eyes disappeared, and everything fell silent. Barney tried to take a step toward his saddle bags to grab more bullets but he found his feet stuck to the ground and looked down in horror to find dozens of small roots weaving their way up his boots. He screamed and doubled over, trying to rip the roots off of himself but as he did he heard the unmistakable sound of timber creaking and bending and as he looked up a weathered pine mask was snaking its way into the campsite, held aloft by a cord of vines, roots, branches and bones. A human body was incased within the cord, arms and legs hanging broken out to the sides, a head hanging limply with a face contorted in terror and eyes glowing bright green.

               Barney threw his gun at the mask and screamed defiantly, “What the fuck are you?!”

               And from all directions, the entire forest lit up with that same green light, and he saw himself surrounded by eyes, bodies, corpses. Of the Evergreen.

Categories
Short Fiction

Last Trophy

Bernard Wilmington III Esq. stood naked in front of his bedroom mirror, a monstrosity wrapped in an intricate gold frame that dwarfed the tiny aged man. With one hand, heavy with expensive rings, he tugged at his skin and receding hair, poked at the parts he had paid to have rejuvenated, revamped, youth-anized. The other hand held his incredibly thick glasses at different lengths in front of his face, desperately trying to find a distance that adequately separated him from his ever worsening eyesight. Unfortunately, the better he could see, the more unpleasant the view. 

     He pulled a silk robe over his body, slipped his feet into tailor made slippers and picked up a scrimshaw pipe stuffed with imported tobacco. A nearby butler leaned in to light it and Bernard puffed pensively. He wandered beyond his bed chambers, through a vaulted hallway lined on either side with huge portraits of his family members going back generations. As he neared the stairs he paused at the portrait of his younger brother, Bartlett Wilmington.

The two men were absolute opposites. Bernard used his family’s vast fortune and connections to build a ruthless empire. If there was a way to make money, Bernard was exploiting it. He had the kind of wealth that you never see on any list. It was an obscene and indecent amount, the kind of wealth that honesty does not gain. As such, any attempt to investigate his worth was quickly dealt with through the means of a vast network of people that did unpleasant things.

Bernard puffed a cloud of smoke across the younger man’s portrait. Where the rest of the family was dressed in earth-toned formal wear, Bartlett insisted on a loud tropical shirt, with the top two buttons undone, and bright orange pants. Where the rest of his family was stoic and in repose, Bartlett wore an open mouth gaping grin through his unkempt beard that reached down into the chest hair that overgrew his shirt.

Bernard was 10 years Bartlett’s senior. Bartlett never showed any interest in the family affairs, preferring instead to live modestly. He owned a nudist colony out by the mountains that he ran year round. Bernard hadn’t spoken to him in years. Even when they had been speaking, they rarely got along. Bartlett was a mountain of a man, a good foot taller than his brother and at least twice as wide. Bernard considered him an embarrassment, and as he squinted at his brother’s portrait he whistled for the nearest butler. “Take this one down, Benson. Put it in the taxidermist’s study. I needn’t subject myself to the eyesore any longer.”

“Yes sir.”

Bernard walked down the grand staircase into the main hall, where his physician waited to greet him.

“Dr. Meldon, thank you for making the house call.”

The doctor laughed nervously, “Well for what you’re paying me sir, I’d be crazy not to.”

Bernard glared at the doctor, and puffed his pipe once. He hated when people mentioned a want for money to him, it felt grotesque. “Indeed. Doctor, I wish to continue on with my hunts…”

The doctor looked around at the dozens of trophies scattered around the room in various fearsome poses. There was a lion, elephant, rhinoceros, water buffalo, tiger, polar bear, giraffe, wolverine, and even a mink whale strapped with wires from the rafters. Their mouths all hung open. Dusty, dry, and forever snarling.

“Yes, er.” The doctor cleared his throat, “You’ve got quite the collection here.”

“Nowadays I live for it, doctor.” Bernard walked over to his tiger, frozen in a prowl with fangs wide. He ran a finger thoughtfully along one of the canine teeth. “A man can find many kinds of power. I’ve sought them all. The thing I covet most is undeniable respect. Undeniable power demands respect, wouldn’t you say?”

“Well, I suppose I wouldn’t know.”

“No, you wouldn’t. Wealth holds power, doctor. I have wealth in abundance. I have power. I own everything I want. I own men, governments, corporations, real estate, you name it. But that’s a rather common form of power. Do you know what undeniable power is?”

The doctor shrugged.

“Death is the ultimate undeniable power. To take from a being the last thing it has, its dying breath, that is power. That is why I must hunt. Everything else is meaningless, it’s aspirin to a heroin addict.”

“I wouldn’t really know, I’m a vegetarian.”

Bernard grunted disdainfully. “You’ve written that I am unfit to hunt, making my eyesight out as something to be mocked.”

“You’re legally blind, sir. And you’re 65.”

     “DON’T PRESUME TO TELL ME MY OWN AGE!”

The doctor gulped but stood firm. “Sir, I’m trying to explain to you that in my medical opinion you aren’t fit to hunt the most dangerous game in the world.”

“Bah!”

“I mean, you couldn’t possibly see any of the game. What was the last thing you shot?”

“Well that would be this beastly water buffalo, just four months back.” Said Bernard with pride.

“You shot that four months ago?”

“That’s right.”

“Were you alone?”

“Of course not! I had my porters and guides with me.”

     “Were you the only one shooting?”

“No, both guides were also shooting, but it was my shot that took the beast down.”

The doctor waited and the silence acted as a retort.

“You don’t mean to say… you think my guide shot the animal and only told me it was my shot?”

The doctor looked at a nearby butler, who seemed uncomfortable. “I mean, yes. I believe you haven’t been in any condition to shoot game for years.”

Bernard’s face began turning purple. “YOU CALL ME A LIAR IN MY OWN HOME?”

The doctor took a step back, “Sir, you wouldn’t come back in to my office to hear me out. You’re too old-“

“Then make me younger! Surely there are options!”

“Sir, you can’t simply buy youth.”

     Bernard’s face burned as the doctor was ushered out of the mansion. He stormed back up to his bedchambers, looking at himself again in his mirror. Glasses on, glasses off. He threw the glasses aside. “Benson, Archie, prepare my hunting outfit. I wish to go on a hunt this very afternoon.”

     The butlers looked sideways at each other for a moment.

     “Well? What is it? The two of you can’t possibly be siding with that hack of a physician!”

     They both knew he was as blind as they come. They’d seen him fumble and bumble his way about the manor, but this was not a man to be spurned.

     “Yes sir,” said Benson.

     “I shall phone the guide.” Said Archie.

     Bernard held a wrinkled hand aloft, “No, no guide. The three of us shall go into the mountain, and I alone will take the shot. Surely three men such as we shall be able to manage a hunt in our own backyard.”

     The butlers both looked at the ground. “Yes sir,” they said in unison.

     Bernard cursed as he stumbled through the underbrush of the forested mountain hillside near his manor that his family had kept as a tax deductible wilderness refuge since wilderness refuges became tax deductible. The butlers followed closely, with movements cut short by the matching pairs of safari gear they had borrowed from Bernard. Neither man was any taller than Bernard had been in his youth, but the clothes were tailored to a shrunken man’s frame and fit them rather tightly around their groins, chests and shoulders. Their lower forearms and calves were completely exposed to the rough terrain.

     “What exactly are we hunting for, sir?” Benson asked politely.

     Bernard’s face was set deep with fierce determination. “Whatever the hell is unlucky enough to find itself in our way! Fate will decide which life we take today.”

     All three men carried rifles. Bernard marched forward, head down, like a child playing as infantry storming enemy territory. Each butler had served a time in the military and followed a distance behind, holding the weapons awkwardly and with reluctance. Archie would shoot Benson a look with eyebrows high on his forehead. Benson would return with a shrug and a wiggle of his massive mustache. The two men slowly let Bernard gain ground in front of them, his bloodlust further blinding him to his surroundings.

     As the old man lost them over a hillside by a good 20 meters, the men slowed and began to whisper.

“How long do we let the old bat wander around out here?”

Mustache wiggle. “Until he tires himself out. You know how he gets.”

Left eyebrow down, right eyebrow up. “Yes, but how much worse is it going to get? You saw how he took the doctor’s news.”

“Well you know Bernard. He’d sooner bury you than admit his own mortality.”

A shot thundered from the hillside in front of them and they both froze for a moment, before charging up. They came upon Bernard, crouched behind a decomposing log covered in moss, lichens and ferns. At the bottom of the ravine in front of him was a stream running down the mountain, and patches of wild berries. A large beast lay dead.

“How do you like that!” Bernard was practically dancing. “Can’t shoot my own trophies can I? I’ll be a joke no longer, lot of good the two of you did. Call the groundskeeper and my taxidermist. I want this bear stuffed by tomorrow. Benson, invite over all the chaps from the hunting club. I want them to see that this old man can still give as good as he gets!”

Benson and Archie stood staring at the kill, mouths open. Archie furrowed his brow and spoke first, “Uh sir, are you sure? That bear, looks quite unhealthy.”

“Nonsense! It’s as fine a specimen as any!”

Benson stammered, “Er, it’s a bit bald isn’t it?”

“THAT DOESN’T MAKE IT ANY LESS OF A TROPHY! It must have alopecia, a rare trophy indeed amongst an otherwise hirsute species.”

“Indeed,” agreed the butlers.

     As Bernard sat with his pipe in his smoking jacket cupping a glass of brandy and looking quite pleased with himself, Benson entered the study with the taxidermist in tow.

     “Ah my good man! Have you seen to the fearsome trophy?”

     The taxidermist wore a look of grave confusion on his face. “Eh, sir Wilmington, of course I would never question a man such as yourself, but are you sure? Have you taken a look at the… trophy?”

     Darkness fell over the old man’s brow. “Do you wish to accuse me of being blind as well? I know what I shot, prepare the bear for my party tomorrow or I will have you taken off the payroll.”

     The taxidermist was sweating uncomfortably and gripping a tweed paddy hat in his hands. “Well if you insist sir, I have to ask for a higher price.”

     “Of course you will, an overnight job is more than I usually ask.”

     “No, quite a bit more I’m afraid. Because of the… well the species is quite unusual if you understand.”

     Bernard looked annoyed, “Price is of no consequence, but if you insist on pathetic gouging I insist that it be done up with all of the bells and whistles at your disposal.”

     The taxidermist’s face was set in deep displeasure as he turned and began walking away, shaking his head, but stopping and turning thoughtfully before he’d walked out the door. “Sir, I have an animatronic package if you wish.”

     Bernard waved his cigar around in the air, “That’ll be fine my good man, just get to it so that it’s ready for the party tomorrow.”

     The taxidermist nodded with a wry smile, shooting Benson a sharp look as he made his exit, “Of course sir, I’ll have it ready. But this will be my final commission.”

     The gaggle of peacocking men of influence stood in Bernard’s main hall, eagerly striving to get a brag in edgewise. They were dressed in the ridiculous way rich men do, outfits expensive and tailored but hideously worn on their ungainly and broken statures. Cowboy hats on soft heads and gaudy firearms around extended wastelines.

It seemed a perversion of life itself for a collection of the most beautiful and powerful creatures in the world to be here. Forced to bear witness to the men the world with a new kind of power. What does a water buffalo know of generational wealth? What chance did an elephant have against compound interest?

     In the middle of the hall a white canvas sheet covered Bernard’s newest trophy. He made his entrance in a satin robin blue suit and matching top hat. “Gentleman!”

     The group applauded him as he made an awkward bow.

     “I’m sure by now you’re more than familiar with my collection.”

     “Ah, but it never fails to astound, my good man!” Simpered a stout man with bad hair plugs and a face sagging with layered Botox.

     “Well I regret to inform you that my doctor has decided I am no longer fit to hunt.”

     The gaggle hissed and booed at the abstract concept of being denied.

     “However, we are not the type of man to be told no.”

     The men chortled agreements.

     “So I went into the nearby woods on my own, and stumbled upon a fearsome bear.”

     Bernard grabbed a hold of the canvas and walked in front of the trophy dramatically, “Behold the impossible! A fearsome bear, albeit suffering from alopecia, which I’m sure only made him the more fearsome! Shot by a man deemed blind by medical science that very morning!”

     With a showman’s flourish, Bernard whipped the canvas away and the trophy was revealed. The audience gasped. Two men dropped the wine glasses they were holding, which shattered on the floor. Another fainted, falling heavily to the antique rug beneath.

     A silence filled the manor. Bernard looked from his audience to his trophy in confusion.

     Archie and Benson stood watching from the side. A mustache twitched and eyebrows raised.

     “What is it?” Demanded Bernard. “Damn you, what is it?”

     A gaunt man with a toupee pointed a long finger out at the trophy, his eyes wide, “Bernard, that is no bear.”

     Bernard fumbled to pull his glasses out of his pocket. He held them away from his face far and squinted through them. His gaze rose up the trophy’s fleshy bare body, past its chest and into the gaping mouth open grin visible through a poorly kempt beard.

     The gaunt man still pointed, his hand shaking, “MY GOD, IT’S BARTLETT WILMINGTON!”

     Bernard’s face was unbelieving, his mouth was working but no words were coming out. His eyes made their way back down his brother’s body until he made it to the waxy, preserved genitals that hung between the man’s legs, and up to the stomach. Within the belly button there was a small black electronic device. The motion sensor.

     At that moment, the animatronic feature was triggered. The trophy began to jerk and dance, hips moving from side to side, testicles slapping against thighs, as a tinny voice sang, “Here’s a little song I wrote, might want to sing it note for note…

     Bernard fell to his knees.

     “Don’t worry, bear happy… Don’t worry bear happy now-“

Categories
Short Fiction

Shin Bone

A mallard duck paced cautiously a few meters away from a park bench, keeping its distance despite the wealth of bread crumbs scattered in the grass just beyond the compressed patch of dirt worn through the green by active feet. The grass still held the morning’s rain and the crumbs melded into the wet.

“Samurai swords?”

     The mallard quacked.

     “Yeah, it was weird. We were in this scary old mansion full of cobwebs and old paintings, but whenever I looked at the paintings they turned into people I knew.”

     A man and woman sat on the park bench, close but not touching, a muddy puddle on in front of the bench caused them to sit with their feet pointing away from each other. It was overcast and a little cold, they were both bundled. He had an old wool knit cap, she had a scarf wrapped around her neck and occasionally flapped against her face in the wind.

     “You two were alone?”

     His left leg fidgeted incessantly, bouncing his knee up and down from the ball of his foot.

     “Uh, yeah I guess. I mean, maybe not alone. Maybe you were there? It’s tough to say, you know how dreams are. You can’t always remember the whole thing.”

     “Mmm. I’d remember if you were there.”

     He cleared his throat. “Anyways, we kind of fought with them.”

     “With what?”

     “The samurai swords.”

     “Like, actual fight?”

     “Like, play fight, I think. But we were really swinging hard, and I was wearing shorts. By the end I was covered in cuts.”

     Her toned changed to sarcastic. “Wait, in your dream you lost the fight?

He laughed defensively. “I don’t know who won, I just remember looking down at my shin and the bone was just sticking out.”

“Sounds like you lost.”

     His brow furrowed before he could catch himself. “I mean, I guess so. But the weird thing is that it didn’t hurt.”

     “So you were, what? In shock?”

     “That’s what I said in the dream! I said I must be in shock. Or maybe samurai swords are just so sharp that you can’t feel when they cut you, like a razor blade you know?”

“I think I would know if someone cut my leg off.”

“Well, I did. But nobody was even paying attention!”

She looked out over the lake.

     “Nobody? I thought you two were alone.”

     “Well at some point Mike showed up too.”

     “You remember Mike was there, but can’t remember if I was there.”

     The duck pushed a pebble around the shoreline with his beak, picking it up and waddling a few steps before absentmindedly spitting it back out. It quacked.

     “C’mon, it was a dream. Do you want me to stop talking about it?”

     “Of course not, it’s fascinating. You should write a screenplay.”

     He studied his hands.

     She slapped weakly against his shoulder. “I’m kidding. What happened then?”

     “Well then I kept asking them for help, a ride to the hospital or something but they just started walking.”

     “You could still walk?”

     “Not well, I could barely keep up. Mike helped a little, but we just kept going further and further.”

     “Where were you walking to?”

     “I didn’t even know, I was just following them. We went under an overpass, through some woods…”

     “All the way to grandmother’s house?”

     “Ha. No. It was a yoga studio we wound up at. But nobody was doing yoga, everyone was dancing.”

     “Dance yoga? That might be a million dollar idea.”

     “I couldn’t dance though, because of my leg.”

“Uh huh.”

“I finally freaked out. I yelled at her in front of everyone. I told her I needed to go to the hospital and I couldn’t believe she would hurt me like that and not care enough to help me.”

A second mallard swam up to the shoreline and took a couple steps out of the water, eyed the soggy crumbs, quacked at the first mallard, turned around and paddled away.

     “And your bone is just hanging out the whole time.”

     “My shin bone, yeah.”

     “And then?”

     “They all laughed. They laughed like it was the most ridiculous thing. She said, “You followed me all the way here, why don’t you take yourself to a hospital?”

     “Damn. She had a point. So what’d you do?”

     “I… took myself to the hospital.”

     “Aw. Well that’s what you get.”

     “For what?”

     “For dreaming about her instead of me.”

     He laughed without smiling for a moment, both of them staring out across the water.

     The mallard turned its back on the bench and waded into the lake, paddling away and leaving a wake in the duckweed behind it.

Categories
Short Fiction

Call it a Day

     Marisa occupied her favorite hangout, corner booth at the local 24/7 diner, scrolling through her social media apps and drinking coffee with whiskey in it.

“You mean an Irish coffee?” the waitress had asked. She was a tall thin woman that Marisa found familiar but was sure she hadn’t seen before. 

“Well, that depends on what you call an Irish coffee. Some people put Baileys in coffee and call it an Irish coffee. Some people mix Irish whiskey, heavy cream, and brown sugar into their coffee, and they call that an Irish coffee. Personally? I just put whiskey in my coffee and call it a day.”

     The waitress laughed and Marisa winked and handed her a twenty dollar bill saying, “I’ll be needing refills, more whiskey each time please.”

     The waitress blushed and turned quickly to walk away, smiling. Marisa smiled down at her phone screen. She didn’t hear the jingle of the door opening, but when she glanced up hoping to catch a glimpse of her waitress she saw a new face walking toward her. New eyes. On Marisa. Dark skin, flawless fade, doe eyes, a denim jacket that fit just right. She looked like she came right out of one of those fashion magazines that Marisa would cut her favorites out off and stick on her wall as a teenager. In fact… Marisa frowned, was  that the same woman from one of those pin-ups?

     ‘New eyes’ sat down across the booth from Marisa, maintaining eye contact until Marisa looked down to see tattooed knuckles that read “Don’t Stop”

“Ok, what is this?”

     ‘New eyes’ shrugged. “What does it look like to you?”

     “It looks like someone found a checklist of things that I’m a sucker for and put them all together into one person.”

     ‘New eyes’ laughed. “Well that’s good news.”

     Marisa leaned forward, trying her best at being seductive in her old college hoodie with the sleeves shorn off. “Good how, exactly?”

     ‘New eyes’ leaned back, throwing an arm over the top of the booth. “Good because it means everything is working correctly.”

     The waitress came up and put a coffee in front of Marisa. ‘New eyes’ laughed, “Jesus I can smell the alcohol from here. I’ll have double bourbon, Buffalo Trace if you’ve got it.”

     As soon as the waitress left, Marisa’s eyes hardened and she took a wincingly hot sip of coffee, the irish whiskey evaporating into her nose. “Everything is working correctly?”

     ‘New eyes’ bit her lip. “Marisa…”

     “How do you know my name?”

     “Marisa. What time is it?”

     Marisa’s face scrunched in confusion and she thought for a moment. “Uh, I’m not sure.” She looked down at her phone but the screen was blank. She tried to turn it on but nothing happened.

     “Is it morning or night, do you think?”

     “Are you fucking with me?” She couldn’t really tell what time it was by looking outside. Somehow, time seemed distant. “Who put you up to this?”

     “I’m trying to help you. We work together. Used to, anyways. I’m Frank Garner.”

     The name didn’t mean anything to Marisa. She shifted on the red laminate upholstery, which groaned. “You don’t look like a Frank.”

     The waitress returned with a double bourbon for Frank. “Would you two like to order any food?”

     “Denver omelette, with a New York Strip,” said Frank.

     “I’m fine with coffee,” said Marisa.

     The waitress left and as soon as she was out of earshot, Marisa, no longer smiling, asked “So what the fuck is going on?”

     ‘Frank’ pulled a box of cigarettes out of a denim pocket and lit one with a cheap purple BIC lighter. “Look, I don’t know how to tell you this. Nobody has ever had to tell anyone this before. In fact, you’re the person I would call to explain what to do in this situation. But I can’t, because you’re the one in the situation.”

     Marisa gulped coffee and felt the whiskey dance through her chest. “What?”

     Frank’s eyes were closed. “I’m a 57 year old man. I’m white, I have a mustache. I actually pull the mustache off pretty well, if I do say so myself. We’re research partners. We were.” Frank took the double shot of bourbon in one gulp.

     “Geez, slow down.”

     Frank waved a hand, chasing the shot with a long drag. “Doesn’t matter, none of this is real. I don’t drink or smoke anymore, can’t eat steak either.”

     “If you’re a 57 year old man, why do you look hot?”

     “Well apparently the connected consciousness software was designed to make me appealing for you to interact with. It’s actually using your brain to create the illusion of me though, so that’s on you for being a horn dog. Thanks for the tits, way to make it weird Mar.”

     “Did you say illusion?”

     “Marisa, none of this is real. You’re not here. You’re not a slick 28 year old intellectual hanging out at an all night diner trying to pull some ass. You’re 63. Look at your hands.”

     Marisa looked down and gasped at the weathered hands that held her coffee. She looked into her reflection in the window, but there was none.

     “You’re a mycologist. You study mushrooms, you’re the best in the field. They found organic matter in an asteroid, it had a DNA signature most similar to fungi. Marisa, we found proof of life on another planet.”

     Marisa’s face remained frozen. “What are you saying?”

     “We cultivated a living sample. We had it under a fume hood but somehow… it… spored.”

     “Oh my god.”

     “Marisa, this is a diner you used to know. The alien sample made you its host body. It took over your mind. Somehow it’s able to use electrochemical signaling to rewire…”

     Marisa’s gaze slowly turned toward the kitchen and she held her mug up towards the waitress for a refill. “Ok, I’m an old lady and my body is controlled by an alien mushroom?”

     The waitress brought out Frank’s Denver omelet and New York Strip on a tray, with a fresh coffee and whiskey for Marisa.

     “Yeah that’s pretty much it.” Frank dug into the food with such passion that the waitress paused a moment, surprised. Chewing on a hunk of overcooked steak in one cheek, as drippings stained his avatar’s shirt, Frank continued, “To be honest, I’m mostly here for the food.”

     “You’re that desperate for some cheap diner steak?”

     “You don’t understand. I can’t eat steak anymore.”

     “Because your doctor won’t let you?”

     “Because IT won’t let me. The alien mushroom.”

     “It got you too?”

     “Marisa you don’t understand. It got us. We are her. It needs us alive. I have genetic markers for heart disease, therefore I cannot eat steak because that would be bad for me. Bad for it. Bad for Us. But I can eat steak if I do it inside of your brain.

     “It… is controlling you?”

     “What?” Frank rolled his eyes, sarcastically, “No, yeah that makes sense Marisa, I built a machine that could combine our conscious minds all by myself. Are you listening to yourself? I’m a mycologist! You’re a mycologist! We study terrestrial mushrooms. It did ALL of this!”

     “But, then, what happened to me?”

     Frank began cutting another hunk of steak but froze after catching Marisa’s glare. “Oh all right.” He dropped his fork and knife on his plate with a clatter. “She needed your body at first. Had to break it down, learn what it all was. That way she could properly care for all of us.”

     “Properly control all of you.”

     Frank shrugged. “In any case, you got the best deal. She saved your consciousness, created this world for you to live in. It’s like a ‘thank you,’ kind of sweet, really. The rest of us follow her rules every day, as a collective. In my opinion, you’re the last one that’s actually free.”

     Frank’s last word punctuated the silence that lasted a moment, only to be broken by a shattering glass in the kitchen and a “Whoop!” from the waitress. Marisa watched the beautiful woman across the table from her (that she was trying to imagine a mustache on) wolf down a steak and most of an omelet, plus cocktails. She looked down at her hand. It was old. She wanted it to look young again. It looked young.

     Frank belched. “You finally did it! That’s why she sent me to talk to you. You’ve had the ability to do anything you want, go anywhere. You’ve been in this world for days, but, you’ve kind of just hung out at this diner. What the hell?”

     Marisa looked out the window to a scenic mountaintop. She blinked. A metropolitan skyline. She blinked. A tropical beach. She sighed.

     Marisa looked back at Frank. “What do we do now?”

     Frank sat up, “What do you want to happen?”

     Marisa said, “I want you to go, but I want this body you’re in, this girl, to stay. I want her to be cool and nice.”

     Frank stood up, “Ok, tell you what. I’m going to go to that bathroom. I’m going to take a big shit. Then, before I have to smell the shit, I will go back to my sad little mushroom man body.”

     “And after that?”

     “Marisa, everything after that… is you.”

     “Ok.” Marisa leaned back into the booth and stared at the table in front of her.

Frank disappeared into the little hallway where the restrooms where. The sound of the other patrons in the diner picked up and the whole room buzzed with the sounds of other people.

Marisa sighed, and motioned toward the waitress for a refill.