Showing posts with label Fantasy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fantasy. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Through the Mirror


I glanced back behind me even as I slowed my pace.  I'd lost them - for now.  I could hear their footsteps, however, not stopping.

They'd keep on searching for me until they found me.  I needed to disappear.

The inside of the clothing shop felt strange with the lights turned off.  Mannequins loomed suddenly out of the darkness, their hands stretched out as though reaching for me.  I dodged around them, forcing my mouth shut and trying not to let any sound escape my lips.

There, in the back!  I hurried towards the doorway leading into the rear of the shop, below the sign that read CHANGING ROOMS.

As I ran past the counter, however, a corner of my jacket caught at a hook, extending out from the edge.  I felt the tug, turned to try and catch the falling item - but my fingers were too slow.

Friday, December 25, 2015

Layover

Slumped back into the sagging bench seat at the airport, I gazed around at the rush of humanity around me as music blared into my ears through my headphones.  I did my best to keep my eyes moving, trying not to linger too much on any one face in case they caught my covert attention.

It certainly was a busy time at the airport, I noted, adding sourly a moment later that this was probably why my flight ended up being delayed as well.  Stuck in this place for another couple of hours, waiting for them to finally call over the half-incomprehensible intercom that the plane had finally arrived and was ready for boarding.

Friday, November 27, 2015

Lost.



The ship drifted, the deck softly rocking back and forth beneath me.  I could feel the shifting of the rough boards against my back, in gentle constant motion.

Gazing up into the sky, I watched sleepily as the mast rocked back and forth, its motion amplified by the boat beneath me.  Back and forth it swung, tracing a line back and forth across the innumerable points of light on the night sky's backdrop.

Adrift.  Lost.  The words flitted through my head, but they meant nothing to me.

Almost out of time.

Friday, November 6, 2015

He's starting to suspect he's being poisoned.

The table pinwheeled across the floor of the tavern, not stopping until it collided with a thump against the opposite wall.  All around the room, patrons cringed, hastily trying to gulp down the rest of their drinks.  They could sense the oncoming storm.

When a troll gets angry, smart adventurers make sure that they're on the other side of a door, preferably in an entirely different building altogether.

Still, Mr. Loaf, the barkeep, came bustling out, his stained apron flapping about his stubby legs.  "Ah, Mr. Slate," he greeted the angry patron, his voice making a terminal attempt at cheerfulness.  "Does something seem to be the problem?"

The troll, still crouching as though the table was in front of him instead of flipped against the far wall, nodded.  "Yus, something wrong!" he rumbled, shaking so violently that small flakes peeled off of him and tumbled to the dirty straw covering the floor.  "You poisoning me!"

At that accusation, a couple other heads lifted up cautiously from below their hastily erected shelters.  Poisoning was a serious accusation.

"Poison?" Loaf repeated blankly, rubbing his hands on his apron and succeeding in dirtying them terribly.  "What in the world makes you say that?"

In response, Slate thrust out his mug.  The barkeep instinctively leaned back, although the gesture was more of a survival mechanism than due to anything untoward in the drink.

A moment later, however, he paused.  Something wasn't right.

Trolls, of course, enjoyed a molten concoction of blended lava and calcium, sometimes with floating pumice chunks and occasionally, if they were feeling especially fancy, with crushed silicon around the rim of the mug.  These drinks came in a heavily reinforced steel-plated mug, and tended to leave smoldering rings on the tables if left to sit for too long.

The mug in Slate's hand appeared to be full of a watery, amber colored liquid.

After recovering from leaning back, Mr. Loaf reached out and very cautiously dipped a finger in Slate's drink.  He lifted the wet finger to his nose, sniffed, and then assayed a taste.

"It's beer," he said after a moment.

"Yuh!  Poison!" Slate reiterated.  "You trying to corrode me!"

Perhaps because it was a simple mistake, Mr. Loaf relaxed prematurely.  He chuckled, patted the angry troll on his rocky shoulder, and then made his big mistake.

He attempted to use logic and reason.

"Listen, Mr. Slate, obviously there's just been a little mix-up," he said reasonably.  "Clearly, you've just gotten someone else's drink.  There's no need to be upset-"

His words trailed off as the troll lifted up the heavy, reinforced mug to his mouth and, without changing expression, took a large bite out of the vessel.  Metal crunched and shrieked in his mouth as his diamond teeth tore through the steel-covered hardwood.

Around the tavern, the other patrons hastily checked their weapons, either displayed or hidden.  A fight was about to break out.  Their keenly tuned senses of danger, trained from many years of adventuring, were quivering like taut bowstrings.  A party of archers in the corner checked their taut bowstrings.

Mr. Loaf could sense the approaching fight, as well.  He'd been a barkeeper for many years, and he knew when a little willful destruction of property (which he tolerated, considering how he overcharged for ale) was about to erupt into a full-fledged brawl (which he frowned upon, because no one ordered more drinks halfway through a brawl).  Now, with no other options left, he resorted to the last arrow in his verbal quiver.

"Perhaps a credit is in order," he suggested quickly.

Before he spoke, Slate had been rumbling, the deep grumble that a volcano emits just before violently erupting.  At these words, however, the rumble stopped, and the troll frowned in puzzlement.

"Credit?" he repeated.

"Yes, exactly," Loaf continued, following up quickly before the troll remembered where he'd parked his original train of thought.  "How about I give you a credit for this and... let's say, two... other drinks on tonight's bill?"

Trolls were generally dense, but even creatures of anthropomorphic rock could sense when they had leverage in a deal.  "Three," Slade countered.  "An' one of them's gonna be a River Rock Eruption.  With real agates, I can taste bad ones."

Mr. Loaf quickly weighed the costs of a brawl versus the cost of a drink with real agates.

"Done, but no more than three agates," he compromised.  "And you pick up my table."

For a long time, the troll remained silent - although Loaf knew that he might just be still working through the problem.  Finally, he shrugged his mountainous shoulders.

"Kay," he announced, standing up and heading over to retrieve the table.

Mr. Loaf bustled off to the back to prepare the troll's drink before allowing himself to let out a small sigh of relief.

Once back in the kitchen, out of sight of the drinkers in the front room, the barkeep rounded on the unfortunate server who'd brought out the troll's most recent drink.  "I told you that he has to be falling-down drunk before you try and slip him the beer!" he cursed her.  "He's stupid, but he's not stupid enough to drink straight beer before we've put at least a couple loads of lava into him!"

The woman tried to defend herself, but Loaf just turned away, shaking his head.  He never should have let that Assassin convince him to take this job, he grumbled to himself.  This whole thing was turning into more of a hassle than he'd ever wanted.

Next time, the damn nob could just try and get his mark with a sledgehammer when Slate passed out in the alley.

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

"Recommended by 4 out of 5 doctors!"

"Hello, gentlemen.  Today, we've called you all in because all of you have previously prescribed Trexaphil, and we want to offer you a chance to spread the word.  Now, for the record, can we get your names, and your specialties?"

"Dr. Newman, trauma medicine."

"Dr. Cooper, gastrointestinal disorders."

"Dr. Arthur, pediatrics."

DR. HAARLAX GARJHALLARAXX, PLAGUE, PESTILENCE, AND LAMENTATION.

"Dr. Daniels, orthodontics."

The presenter paused for a moment, his brow furrowing.  Something didn't sound quite right, but he couldn't put his finger on what felt off.  He decided to press on.

"Great, thank you.  And according to our records, each of you prescribed Trexaphil within the last year.  Going down the line, can each of you explain what you prescribed this medicine for?  We'll start with you, Dr. Newman."

"Thank you.  Yes, as mentioned, I prescribed Trexaphil after a trauma patient reported headaches and chills that made it difficult for him to focus on his physical therapy after an accident.  The Trexaphil did a great job of helping increase his mental focus, and I'm happy to report that he made a full recovery."

"Thanks, Dr. Newman.  And now, let's hear from Dr... Cooper, why don't you speak next."

"Yes, of course.  A patient of mine was receiving treatment for a secondary bowel infection, and he needed an anti-inflammatory that wouldn't also further compromise his damaged gut microbiome.  Trexaphil was suggested to me as a solution, and I was pleased to note that it caused no shift in his microbe populations."

"Wonderful.  And now, how about Dr... er, I'm not quite sure how to pronounce-"

ME?

"Er, yes."

IT'S GARJHALLARAXX.

"Uh, yes, of course.  And you prescribed Trexaphil, did you?"

I DO NOT RECALL - AH, YES, THE SMALL PURPLE PILLS.  WE BELIEVED THAT THEY CONTAINED SIGNIFICANT LEVELS OF ARSENIC, AND INSERTED THEM VIOLENTLY INTO THE WATER SUPPLY OF A VILLAGE TO USHER IN A NEW DARK AGE OF DISEASE.

"I, uh, I don't think they actually contain any arsenic."

THEN THAT IS WHY OUR DARK VISION DID NOT COME TO PASS!  BLOOD AND DEATH UPON YOU FOR MISLEADING US WITH YOUR FALSE ADVERTISING!  WE SHALL FEAST UPON YOUR FLESH-RENT CARCASS!

"Right."  The advertising executive felt very uncertain about how to proceed.  He'd never had a focus group member threaten to feast upon him, although one angry senior citizen had once thrown a half-full can of Pepsi at his head.  "Well, um, perhaps we should just jump ahead."

Yes, that seemed like a good idea.  Something about the fourth doctor kept making him want to scratch at his skin.  "So, I will take a simple yes-no vote.  Would you recommend Trexaphil to patients who may currently be unsatisfied with their drug regimen?"

"Yes, I would."

"I agree.  It did wonders for my patients."

"I'm a bit cautious, but I see no reason why it shouldn't be used in the right situations."

Feeling strangely fearful, the advertising executive turned to Dr. Garj-whatever his name was.  "And you?"

SNIFF.  THE SMALL PURPLE PILL DID NOT CAUSE ANY PESTILENCE OR AGONY.  IT EVEN SEEMED TO MAKE SOME OF THE PUNY MORTALS HAPPIER AND MORE COMFORTABLE.  IT SHOULD BE DESTROYED BY RED-HOT SCOURING IRONS.

After he forced his leg to stop quivering, the executive paused.  That might not have been a perfect endorsement, but he'd take it!  "And finally you, Dr. Daniels," he finished, feeling his heart start to rise.

"I actually feel that Trexaphil didn't perform significantly differently from other options on the market, and it isn't worth its elevated price.  I don't recommend it."

The marketing executive sighed.  Still, four out of five was good enough to progress to the next stage of the advertising campaign.

"Well, thank you very much for your time, gentlemen.  Please, feel free to help yourselves to snacks and complimentary coffee before you leave."

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Eat You Alive

The two men headed straight for my table, tucked back into a corner at the back of the bar.

I felt my unease growing as I sized the pair up.  I'd assumed that my watchdogs would be normal men.  Mercenaries, maybe, or ex-military.  A couple muscle-bound toughs, easy to dispose of when I no longer wanted them watching me.

But when these two men entered, their eyes immediately found mine, not even bothering with the rest of the bar's patrons.  The bigger of the pair showed no change of expression, but the little one flashed a brief, smirking little grin at me.

I'd picked the table at the back so that I wouldn't be interrupted.  Now, I found myself casting longing glances towards the bar's rear exit.  Maybe I should have sat closer to the door.

Friday, July 17, 2015

Climbing the Tower, Part III

Continued from Part II.
Start reading at Part I.

For a moment, he just looked up at the young woman standing above him, offering her hand.  He couldn't hold back from asking.

"Are you real?"

She just shrugged.  "Are you?" she replied.

There was no way of her knowing, he realized.  Even if she was a projection of his mind, she would act this way.  He was too suspicious to get any answers, even from himself.

He took the proffered hand, and she hauled him up to his feet.

Friday, July 10, 2015

Climbing the Tower, Part II

Link to Part I.

He sprinted across the room, his eyes dodging down to his feet to watch for obstacles, and then back up to make sure he didn't collide with any of the gauzy hangings that broke up the room.

Those wall hangings separated the large room into many smaller booths.  From the other side of the curtains, he could catch little flashes of movement, the gestures soft and alluring and feminine.  Faint voices called out to him, beckoning and tempting.  He couldn't make out any specific words, but the meaning behind those calls was clear.

He knew that if he stopped, he couldn't resume.  This would be as far as he made it inside the Tower.

It wasn't enough.

Friday, June 19, 2015

"Grandpa, tell us a story!"

"Urp.  Johnny, stop hitting Miranda with that!  What even is that thing, anyway?  Some sort of foam cross?"

"No, Grandpa, it's a Minecraft sword!"

"Minecraft?  You kids and your TV games.  Whatever it is, stop hitting Miranda with it.  Give it here.  Let's see.  Ugh, this is the sort of toys they give you?  No wonder everyone's declaiming your generation as lazy."

"Wot's declamming?"

"Nothing, angel.  Okay, get into bed, and I'll tell you a story.  Come on, tuck in the covers.  There you go.  Now, what do you want to hear about in a story?"

Friday, June 5, 2015

God and Lucifer switch places for a day....

Sometimes, Mephistopheles (Mephisto for short) reflected, souls arrived down at the Gates of Hell claiming that they could talk their way out of things, that this was all just one big misunderstanding.  These people were known to have "silver tongues."

But if these mere mortals had silver tongues, Mephisto's boss, Lucifer, possessed the singular golden tongue.

Mephisto had seen his boss charm them all.  He could talk a priest into becoming a killer, could convince the most selfless saint to turn his back on his fellow man.  Once, Mephisto swore, he'd seen his boss charm the very wings off of a butterfly.

And yet, right now, Lucifer was speechless...

Friday, April 24, 2015

"Any last words?"

The rifle held firm, but the man behind the gun grinned briefly at me.  A gold tooth glinted in the light.  Not dim enough for him to miss, I guessed.

"Any last words, asshole?" he growled, cocking the rifle.

I looked back at him, not letting any expression show on my face.  In my head, of course, I was frantically running through scenarios, but everything was coming up blank.  I couldn't see any way out.

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

The 'Doubt' Theory of God

The devil sitting across the table from me leaned back, one hand lazily twirling a finger about an inch above the brim of his coffee cup.  Even though there was nothing physically extending down into the cup itself, the liquid beneath his finger seemed to be moving along with his motions.

In front of me, both of my hands were wrapped around my own coffee cup.  Even after years of working here, of pouring coffee every day for the angels, both holy and fallen, that wandered in here, I still got nervous when talking to them.  Call it mortal nerves, maybe.  I waited for the devil in front of me to respond.

"See, here's my theory," the devil across from me finally started.  His voice was cultured, with only the very faintest little hint of a sneer giving any sort of allusion to his true nature.  "We all know that God exists, somewhere, in some form.  Right?  We," and he waved one hand around in a little circle to encompass the two of us, the coffee shop, the world in general, "wouldn't be here if He didn't exist."

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

What would you change?

The waitress glanced over at the bearded man in the corner.  He had been sitting here for several hours, now, and she was starting to feel a little concerned.

This wasn't the first time that a senior citizen had wandered into the coffee shop and refused to leave.  The waitress could still remember that incident a couple of months ago, when a man with Alzheimer's insisted that his daughter "would be along to pick me up any minute."

That hadn't been so bad - until the man stayed for another four hours, staring blankly out the window and shedding all over the floor.

Friday, January 23, 2015

A Werewolf in Time

This time, I'm not going to be unprepared.

In between glances up at the sky, I take another look at all of my equipment, laid out neatly on a tarp.  I've been over the list of equipment ten, a hundred, a thousand times already, but I'm still checking it once again.  I can feel nervousness curling up in my belly, a stirring, restless viper.

It's hot outside, the air almost oppressively still.  August fifteenth, two thousand and eleven.  Even the bugs that normally buzz through the dusk seem to be exhausted by the heat; I can only barely hear them chirping in the tall grass outside my barn.

I glance down at my watch.  Moonrise is different from sunrise, and the full moon is going to hit its apex in under an hour.

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Welcome to Hell, here's your chain.

When I finally reached the front of the long line, I stepped up to the absurdly tall podium, tilting my head back to gaze up at the shadowy figure standing behind it and staring down at me.

The creature leaned forward, its head sliding down on a long neck to stare down at me.  I felt like a guilty schoolboy, pinned in place by a forbidding mistress.

Most schoolmarms, however, don't have eyes filled with flames, giant venom-dripping spikes sticking out in a ruff around their heads, or scaly grasping fingers that end in terrifyingly long and sticky claws...

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

The Priest in the Coffee Shop, Part II

Continued from here.

It took a good, strongly brewed fresh cup of coffee being waved under his nose, but eventually the priest came around, his eyelids flickering as he regained consciousness.  I had the pretense to keep my hand ready to clamp over his mouth if he started screaming.

The man didn't scream, but his eyes shot wide open as his memory booted back up, and he shot upright in the booth and twisted his head around.  I watched, feeling a little guilty, as he stared at the various angels, devils, and other celestial beings in the shop, his eyes looking as though they were about to explode out of his head.

After all, I had been the one who shattered his veil of self-imposed ignorance.

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

A Man Walks Into a Coffee Shop...

When I glanced up from the iPad mounted in front of my counter as an ersatz cash register, I was surprised to notice two things about the man standing in front of me, in the following order:

First, he was not wearing a flowing white robe.  There was nothing hovering in the air above his head - especially nothing producing any sort of a glow or luminescence.  He wore a belt around his hips, but there were no bladed weapons slid into it, and he wore very practical black shoes instead of golden sandals.  Instead of a gold coin, he was holding a credit card loosely between two fingers.

Second, the man wore the clerical collar of a priest around his neck...

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Do Computers Speak to Angels?

As soon as I saw the angel stagger into the shop, his wide grin almost totally hidden behind the huge, bulky computer monitor in his arms, I had to hold in a sigh.  This wasn't going to be fun...

Monday, November 24, 2014

The Angels: D'oops'day

When he stepped inside the coffee shop, his companion was already there, standing by the bulletin board and pretending to peruse the postings.  Of course he'd be early.

Lucifer forced himself to not grind his teeth.  Sure, he could regrow them with a moment's thought, but one of his under-devils had told him that it made quite the awkward squeaking sound when he did so.  "Doesn't exactly inspire fear of the 'Prince of Darkness'," the fallen angel had commented, snickering a little.

Of course, Lucifer promptly tossed the angel through a portal to the opposite end of the universe, inside quite the large star, but he still didn't feel great about the whole thing.

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Hell's IT, Part II

Continued from here.

I stared at the most recent note in the file, my heart sinking.  The tech, apparently not satisfied with writing in the largest available font, had added both bold, underline, and italics to his final sentence.  "Insists on using summoning portals from 3 iterations ago," it read.  "Totally tech illiterate, and heavy on the smiting."

Not good...