Archive for the ‘Story Bits’ Category

Happy Birthday, Lolly

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Another year has passed and four birthday reminders from LiveJournal hit my mailbox.  One will never due for her.  There’s something fascinating about that.

Anyway, since I am notoriously bad about making it to the post office on time, I have written my good friend a little something in honor of her birthday.  Lolly, please feel free to edit it.  That’s your present.  *g*

 

By Any Other Name
for Lolly

At night, she crawls through the barbwire fence.  Its rusty spikes claw at her skin.  Thick, dark mud covers her and her wounds so the guards can’t see.  She pulls along as slowly as she is able, past their long grey coats and black boots. Their wooden stock guns and proud eagle emblems don’t frighten her.  She knows their bullets cannot hurt.

It’s the smell.  As she crawls across the open ground, she can smell it.  It’s faint, buried beneath the urine, feces, and decay.  She passes the open, mass graves filled with lifeless bodies to stay out of the search lights. She stops when a guard dog lifts its head.

The little, squat huts never have lights or locks.  Only after she opens the door can she smell it.  Stronger.  It calls to her.  On her hands and feet, she edges along the center aisle, flanked by rows of rotting, cheap platforms, until she finds the warmth.  On to his bed she climbs.  Her dirt-matted dress covers his skeletal body.

He opens his eyes. With his dry, pointy fingers, he scratches at the star sewn into his stripped shirt.  His lips crack when he smiles.  “Pi?kne. Tak. Prosz?.”

He shivers when she sinks her fangs into his neck.  His blood tastes as weak as his body is, but she doesn’t mind.  She drains him and leaves him to move on to the next.  He thanks her for her mercy in soft whispers with his last breath.  After she drinks her fill, she crawls back to her hole in the forest far from the sunlight and soldiers.

Before she sleeps, she thinks of their words.  How their names for her sound wrong.  They shouldn’t thank her.  She knows what mercy and beauty are.  She isn’t those things.  She closes her eyes and mutters the word that is her true name.  Monster.

Daddy’s Little Boy, Part 7

Friday, December 4th, 2009

“Are you certain he said his name was Flauros?” Mr. Johnston pushed his glasses up his nose in that annoying, bookish manner. He looked older up close as we sat center stage in the high school auditorium. It had seen better days since the arts rarely received funding anymore. A few spotlights lit up the circle of books. Upstage, Nikki punched and kicked away at one of those training dummies you see in all the martial arts movies. It was made of some dark wood with pegs and posts jutting out, just to keep things interesting. She smacked it hard enough to crack it.

“Yeah, that’s what he said.” I shrugged and tossed some moldy, boring book over my shoulder. My jacket layed in a heap. Teach me to wear black to “do research.”

“What’s the big deal, Nigel?” In between huffs and punches, super blonde girl circled the dummy with a spinning kick and punch combo. Sitting on my ass, I had to admit, she was impressive. I expended energy at trying not to imagine my body in the dummy’s place. She smiled. “We find him. I kick his ass. Chalk one up for the good guys.”

“You know, it’s not that simple.” He whipped his wire-framed glasses off his face with seasoned practice. His disapproving scowl had no effect. Nikki kept right on Kung Fu fighting.

“You don’t know anything about him?”

“Sorry. I’ve only known about Dad for a year.” I sighed. I flipped pages in the book without really looking at the fading print. I wanted to say something about wasting a lot of time researching when we needed to be out there stopping the demon’s dark reign to take over the world, or something like that. I suppose he could’ve come to Earth just to try the newest flavor of Ben & Jerry’s. It’s not like Dad and I talked long-term plans ever. Did he even have any, beyond taking over the world when I turned twenty-one?

“Here we go.” With a straightened spine and lifted chin, Mr. Johnston held up a small, paper-back sized book bound in some green linen. He read from the yellowed page. “Flauros, a strong duke, is seen in the form of a terrible strong leopard; in human shape, he shows a terrible countenance, and fiery eyes, he answers truly and fully of things present, past, and to come; if he be in a triangle, he lie in all things and deceive in other things, and beguile in other business, he gladly talks of the divinity, and of the creation of the world, and of the fall; he is constrained by divine virtue, and so are all devils or spirits, to burn and destroy all the conjurors adversaries. And if he be commanded, he suffers the conjuror not to be tempted, and he hath twenty legions under him.”

“Why does that sound incredibly stupid?” With her hands on her hips and her ample boobage heaving, Nikki left her workout to read over her mentor’s shoulder. “Grand-general, great duke, mighty, terrible, strong, and he enjoys offerings of rum, spicy foods, lamb, and resin incenses. Wow, take him out for a lamb curry and I win.”

The lump in my throat reminded me that I was in deep, deep trouble after Flauros got his fuzzy head handed to him. I was next on the hit list.

“S. L. MacGregor Mathers’ edition of the Goetia doesn’t give much else, but if we choose to read between the lines -”

“Spit it out, Nigel.”

“Nikki, please, if you mind. A triangle. While it says here that he lie in all things, Flauros is in a triangle. I believe that is a clue on how to trap him, three feet by three feet, pointing east.”

“Way to be specific.” I scratched my head as I tried to do the math on the grand conclusion, but gave up. I was new to this demon business. Heck, before Mr. Kitty Face showed up, I thought Dad was it. I should’ve known better.

“Well,” Nikki smiled and dropped a hand on Mr. Johnston’s shoulder. “It looks like a three person job to me.”

* * *

“So, what’s up with you and that stiff?” It was hard to make my lunch tray bumping hers seem innocent. Maybe it was because I was tired from searching through “traditional tomes” all night, but I sat down a little too hard next to Nikki on her solo lunchtime bench. She’d dressed in a pretty, pretty cardigan and perky capris. She smelled like roses and her hair fell down her back in waves of gold. It made me want to punch her all the more.

“Excuse me?”

“Mr. Johnston. I always thought he was gay.”

Her reaction was well-practiced, though I doubt she’d had this conversation before. She snorted and rolled her eyes. “Please. He’s British. He only sounds gay.”

“So, what’s the deal? Are you guys, um -”

“Um, what?” Nikki smiled around her straw at me. She enjoyed my blush a little too much. Thank God for tater tots. I chewed a few to buy me time.

“You know, are you guys, um, you know. Pumping uglies?”

“Really? ‘Pumping uglies’? Do people still say that?” It was annoying how smug she sounded. I couldn’t decide if I hated her because she was a visual representation of ever girl who ever rejected me from the age of three, she was going to kill me at some point, or because she thought she was too good to talk to anyone that made me so mad.

“That isn’t a denial.”

“What makes you ask?” With a snap of her jaws, Nikki bit a baby carrot in half. I swallowed. The noise in the cafeteria rumbled quietly in the background like a burbling brook of hormones, of girlish giggles and boyish grunts.

“Well, you’re not dating a football player or baseball player. Hell, you don’t give any of the guys in this school two seconds. I figured maybe you were into older men.”

Her laugh attracted attention for only a minute. It was that loud. I ate a few more tater tots, the perfect remedy for pink cheeks. Fellow students returned to their own cliquish communications. With her napkin from her lap, she covered her face as she fought back the remaining giggles.

“Maybe I haven’t found the right guy,” Nikki dropped her napkin on her tray. She rose to her feet and stepped free from the bench seat. As she lifted her tray, she turned to me and smiled. “Or maybe I have and he just doesn’t know it.”

I watched her walk off and ate the rest of my tater tots in silence.

* * *

Tack. Tack. Tack. I woke to the sound of tack, tack, tack. My room was dark. My clock on my nightstand was the only light: 2:00 am. Tack. As I lifted my head from my large, fluffy pillow that conveniently covered my ears, I heard the sound of something bounce off my window. Tack.

My hands pushed against the dirty glass. Damn it, I needed to clean my room. Of course, I’d forget my sudden decision to dig out all the junk from under my bed and wipe down surfaces by morning. But as I wiped my hands on my tank top, I pressed my face to the dust-encased screen.

She stood down on the back lawn of my apartment building. And by “lawn,” I meant patch of weeds the landlord mowed once a year. She wore make-up that was thick enough to make Martha Stewart look like Lindsey Lohan’s mug shot. Her hair was pulled up in a wild tangle on her head. She wore club clothes that were sparkly and tight enough to leave nothing to the imagination. For the record, I did not imagine. I would swear to that in court.

She smiled. “Hey, Bozo. Get dressed.”

“Nikki?” I couldn’t believe my eyes. Maggie knew she could knock. Mom wouldn’t mind if she crashed to sober up. She’d done it before, but it’d been a while. As I squinted through the screen to try to get a better view, I wondered if my friend had had that talk with the slayer and what transgressed between the two.

“Nothing gets past you.” With her hand on her hip, silver bracelets glinting in the moonlight, Nikki twisted back and forth like a schoolgirl waiting for a bus. She knew she looked good. I saw that much on her face. “Come on. Hurry up.”

“Where’re we going?”

“We found your demon buddy.”

* * *

I hit the brick wall thirty feet off the ground. That didn’t hurt nearly as much as the fall. I expected to see the red glow around me crack, but it didn’t. For the first time, I felt pain in Dad’s presence. Either he blocked it from me before or it was bad enough to get through. My muscles hurt. I would bruise.

Nikki yelled her warrior yell, which was remarkably un-Princess-Warrior-like, and planted her two inch, square heeled boot in the middle of Flauros’ spine. He roared like a wounded lion and went down after flying twenty feet. Though my body argued otherwise, I got to my feet and ran towards him. Before he could finish pushing himself up, my Dad’s fist caught him square under his jaw. He went flying.

The disco lights beamed through the night sky in time to the tech-trance beat. According to Mr. Kitty Face, raves were the best place to dine. Young souls high on drugs and music taste just like KFC’s Famous Bowls. Leave it to a demon to know all about those gross piles of swill.

Fortunately, Mr. Johnston ushered out the remaining party-goers before Flauros could have more than a light snack. Three bodies lay crumpled in the grass under the full moon and swinging lights. I couldn’t tell if they were still breathing or not. I didn’t have the time to check. Judging by their loose-fitting yet stylish clothes, I didn’t I know them. I didn’t want to know them.

Flauros landed off the mark, flat on his back, ten feet to the right of the silver sand triangle Mr. Johnston was pouring on the turf dance floor. Flauros clawed his way to his feet. “What are you doing, Eligos? Don’t you know, we could rule this plane together?”

“Not interested.”

Tread lightly, my childe.

I didn’t tread. At full run, I leapt high into the air using my father’s strength and smashed the demon back into the dirt. I rolled to keep from hurting myself further; something about distributing energy I’d learned in fifth grade science class. My shoulder popped and I winced with the sharp pang. When I looked up, Nikki had stepped in.

Her small fist tangled in the scruff of his neck. Clods of dirt fell from his head and shoulders as she lifted him up. Nikki dragged him five feet and threw him the last five. The demon’s furry form didn’t even bounce. Once it hit the sand, he stuck like it was fly paper.

“Well done, children.” Though I didn’t find his tone condescending, my father snorted in my head at Mr. Johnston. He smiled as I walked over to join Nikki. She stayed back as he poured more silver sand in a circle around the triangle. From his old, leather knapsack, he pulled four white, pillar candles. We helped him set them at the four corners outside the circle.

Mr. Johnston began to pray. When he did, my father’s form dissipated and I sunk down to the earth. I watched as the demon in the center screeched and writhed as if being stuck with a thousand blades all at once. It was the most horrifying sound I had ever heard. Nikki took my hand. I couldn’t turn away as Flauros’ fur burned black before his skin melted away. In a flash of white light, he was gone.

“Thank you,” Nikki whispered as she stepped into my line of vision.

“No, thank you. You helped me and my -” I paused. I wasn’t sure I wanted her to know anything about Nerissa and gang, and vise a versa. It physically hurt to smile, “family. My mom, especially.”

“I’d like to meet her.”

And before I knew it, her lips were on mine. Soft, warm, her mouth was smaller and felt odd. She opened her mouth for more, but I pushed her away: two-handed on-the-shoulders shove. I wiped my mouth with the back of my hand. “What the hell do you think you’re doing?”

“I thought we – ”

“We what?” I scowled as I spotted Mr. Johnston trying not to pry. He hurried about to blow out the candles and rub away the sand. My cheeks turned red. “We nothing. You’re going to kill me, remember? That’s why you’re here.”

Nikki stammered. One of her hands grabbed my sleeve. “Nathaniel, please, it doesn’t have to be like this.”

“No, it doesn’t.” I pulled my arm away. I started to walk away, but turned at the last minute. Mr. Johnston had wrapped an arm around her shoulder. She pressed her face into his tweed chest. I was angry that I could still feel her lips on mine. “Maybe instead of killing me, you can find a way to help me. I know you can.”

As if ordained by a greater power, the music ended. The lights stopped swirling and blinking. I could hear my Converse shuffle through the grass as I left. I didn’t look back.

* * *

The next day, I told her everything. She couldn’t peel her eyes away from my shiner or the other bruises I had covering my body. It felt funny to feel such pain, but it reminded me that I was still alive. For now.

I offered to show her, but she said to wait until I was done. I told her about Nerissa and fighting vampires, about goblins and all the creepy creatures that we’d fought. I told her about Mel the forest elf that lived near the city park. I told her about Evie the witch. I even told her where our offices were located.

I talked for what seemed like forever. By the time I was done, I had two dented Coke cans at my feet. I flopped back into the old couch cushions with a sigh. She curled her legs under her where she sat next to me. She was quiet for a long time.

“Are you shitting me?” Maggie smiled. Her black hair hung straight around her make-up-less face. She was still in her jammies with a coat thrown over. I had called her as soon as I got home and she came. Mom wasn’t even up yet.

“No, Maggie. I wish I was making this stuff up, but I’m not.” I frowned. My hands turned into fists against the side of my legs. “It was Nikki that set the limo on fire for prom.”

“Remind me to thank her.”

“She could’ve killed you, Maggie, and it’s my fault.”

Her hand rubbed my fist until she could lace her fingers with mine. I could feel the tears welling in my eyes, though I didn’t want them. Crying like a girl in front of a girl was the worst crime in the guy code of conduct book.

“Look at me.”

“No.”

“Nate.” Maggie used the voice. I don’t know what it was about that tone, but it was like I was powerless to resist. Without lifting my chin firmly planted on my chest, I looked at her.

“It’s not your fault. Besides, I told you,” she chuckled, “best prom ever.”

I didn’t know how to tell her that I wouldn’t be able to live with myself if anything bad happened to her on account of me. I bit my lip as I remembered the fire, the ambulance, and the scared look on my mother’s face. How was I going to explain my black eye to my mom?

And before I knew it, her lips were on mine. Soft, warm, her mouth felt like it matched mine. My skin tingled and blood pounded in my ears. When she opened her mouth for more, I obliged without question. My hand cupped her neck and she moaned.

“Wow.”

“Yeah, wow.”

Maggie rested her head against my shoulder. I caught hint of a blush on her cheeks and chest before she settled in. “Why didn’t we do that sooner?”

“I don’t know,” I brushed the hair way from her face. It felt weird and nice to touch her. I wanted to tell her that I was too scared to kiss her before this because I was afraid she would be hurt – not by the kiss, but by my father in my life, only I didn’t have the words.

“Well,” she smiled. I could hear her smile in her voice. “You’ve met my folks tons of times and I’ve hung out with your mom. When do I get to meet your dad?”

I stroked her hair. “Never, if I can help it.”

“You’re such a daddy’s boy.”

Fin.

Daddy’s Little Boy, Part 6

Sunday, October 18th, 2009

Hide in the alleyway on the backside of a glass building downtown; a precaution, Nerissa said. Fine by me. I was looking for an excuse to ignore my Algebra homework by flipping channels. Mom went out on a date with Mr. McGee, court stenographer. Yeah, he looked as exciting as his name sounded. He made her smile, so I kept my big mouth shut.

It was a standard scenario: monster du jour in the basement of some high-rise, being conjured up by a bunch of occult super wizard wannabes. Nerissa and Evie applied their feminine wiles to break up the little teeny-bopper, occultfest and stopped said nasty from busting up our city and/or our plane of existence. It was the first time right downtown though. Most evil overlords pop-up in the suburbs, don’t ask me why. Someone should do a study on that.

I heard her heels running down the sidewalk. Boss lady was the only one of us who bothered with designer shoes. Sure, they made her ass look great, but I couldn’t figure how something so small could cost so much.

“I guess you took care of everything. You didn’t even need to call -” I caught my boss as she slammed into my shoulder. She was heavy. Nerissa yakked blood as I struggled to hold her up. She didn’t make another sound. She went dead weight and we both slid down to the sidewalk.

* * *

“Mom? What do you do if someone doesn’t like you?” I sat on the kitchen counter while she cooked breakfast for dinner. Her spatula dropped into the skillet of scrambled eggs while she looked at me with an expression that asked if I was a little too old to be asking the question. I pointed at the bacon to remind her not to let it cook too long. She pursed her lips and tended to the limp pork.

“Who doesn’t like you, kiddo?”

“It’s not like that.” I held the paper towel-covered plate for the bacon. Mom dropped it in. She looked good – happy, even, in her ratty, Van Halen tee shirt and Goodwill sweats. I wondered what was up for a second. “There’s this girl who has an opinion of me that’s wrong and I want to change it. How do you do that?”

“Well, Uncle Steve does it all the time.” She picked up the skillet and flicked cooked eggs on to plates next to cooling hash browns.

“Mom. He’s not my Uncle. He’s your boss.”

“Well, in court, he tends to use certain tactics. He appeals to the jury or judge based on his client’s character, motivation, and humanity. When he’s trying show a client’s worth, he tends to play up the best in one of those three areas.” She clipped the sizzling, stiff bacon with wooden tongs. Once the grease dripped, she put it on the plate. My stomach rumbled. It smelled good.

“So, if I want this girl to change her mind, I have to tell her – ”

“Well, yeah.”

” – about my character, motivation, and humanity?”

“Yes.”

I picked up one of my pieces of bacon. The fat and grease should have burned my fingers. “No offense, Mom, but that’s a load of shit.”

* * *

I managed to race out the door at the end of second period to the chemistry lab. She walked out by herself with her clean, blonde hair waving around her shoulders. The girl walked with a perpetual skip, like she was fooling anyone.

“Hey, Nikki.”

Her smile turned vicious like a cat in heat. “Why, hello, Nathaniel.”

“Hey, if you don’t mind me asking, how did you – you know.” I looked around. It felt weird walking down the school hall talking about, well, you know.

“Sure you want to talk about this now?” Nikki chirped. She flashed her pearly whites. Man, she could really turn my stomach.

“Okay, look, what do you know about me?” With a skip of my own, I turned around to walk backwards so I could face her. I wanted to look her in the eye. “Seriously, I’m cool. I’m a good kid. Ask anyone.”

“Doesn’t matter.”

“Doesn’t matter?”

“Yeah.” Her baby blues dropped. She wouldn’t look at me. “When you turn twenty-one, it isn’t going to matter a bit what you’ve done. You could be Jesus Christ, walking on the water, curing the blind, and it wouldn’t matter.”

“How do you know?” I stepped in front of her and stopped. She skidded to a stop against me. Her soft sweater brushed against my Wal-Mart tee shirt. I stared down my nose. She turned her eyes up.

“I know everything about you, Nathaniel. How do you think I found you?”

* * *

He floated down the fire escape like he weighed nothing. Mellathion landed as quiet as a cat. He pulled Nerissa off me with one hand. His bow was in the other. “Nerissa? Nerissa, what happened?”

“Where’s Evie?” I looked down the street. Nothing. It was weird to see a city block without pedestrians or cars.

“Nerissa?” Mel dropped his bow to try to rouse the boss lady. Her sunglasses fell from her face and clattered on the cement. I couldn’t stop staring at the blood on her mouth and chin. I had never seen so much blood. She lolled like a marionette with her strings cut.

“Where’s Evie?”

“Stay here.” Like she weighed nothing, Mel placed Nerissa in my arms. I had never been so scared. Not crying scared, but that kind of scared that comes when something major’s going down. It reminded me of when I was younger: I watched my buddy fight on the playground. The air was thick with something – like I knew something big was going to happen. I could taste it in the air, like now.

He ran down the street in the same direction that Nerissa had come. He was fast and silent. I couldn’t stay to watch. With boss lady’s arm wrapped around my shoulder, I hobbled in the other direction. I dug my phone out of my jacket pocket and dialed nine-one-one.

* * *

“How do you know I’ll change?” My lunch tray bumped into hers as I sat down. The cafeteria bustled with beat-your-meatloaf day. It was the best thing the place ever served. I dropped my backpack on the floor under the crappy, folding table.

Nikki snorted as she munched on a crinkle-cut carrot stick. With a little OCD, she moved her tray back to its original position. “What?”

“What if all my good deeds buy me more time? Or stops what’s going to happen?” I picked up my fork and stabbed a dab of instant mash potatoes from the worn-out, plastic tray. I jabbed it in her direction. “You don’t know.”

“Neither do you.” With her disgustingly dainty fingers, she wiped the corners of her mouth with her paper napkin. Nikki smiled. I bet she never had anything stuck in her perfect teeth.

“But I don’t want this to happen anymore than you do.” I gobbled the mushy spuds. “I am trying to make sure it doesn’t happen. I swear.”

“Careful, Nathaniel.” As she stood, Nikki straightened her skirt. She picked up her purse and slung it over her shoulder. She looked disapprovingly as she picked up her tray. “Daddy might be listening.”

* * *

“And you swear you don’t know her?” Mr. Square-jaw cop held his pen to his pad. Over his shoulder, I watched as the paramedics loaded Nerissa into the ambulance. Bags with fluids lay on her chest. She looked paler than usual, but somehow better. I scratched the itch on the back of my head.

“No, man,” I shoved my hands in my pockets. “She just came up to me on the street. Coughed up a lot of blood. I didn’t know what to do. I mean, I walked with her until she passed out. I called you guys.”

With his pen wiggling, the cop took careful notes. He flipped his pad closed after grabbing my name and cell. “Head home, kid. We’ll call you if we need you.”

“Yes, sir.” He didn’t have to tell me twice. I watched the ambulance pull away with its sirens blaring over my shoulder as I hustled down the street. After I headed back towards where I was when all this fun started, I dashed down the alley. Behind a rusty, green garbage bin on wheels, Mel sat with his back against the wall. He was holding his guts in with his hands.

“Come on,” I reached down to pull him up, but he shook his head.

“No, no, you have to find Evie.” He panted. The tips of his loose hair were black with dried blood. His mouth was stretched tight. “She could be stuck or hurt.”

“What was it?” I took his blood soaked hand. Mel used me to pull himself to his feet. It had to hurt, but he didn’t yell or nothing.

“Don’t’ know. Didn’t see it.” He panted. With a shuffle of his feet, he turned away. “Too fast.”

“Mel?”

“I’ll be all right, once I reach my forest.”

* * *

My ass was cold as I leaned against the hood of her car. I’d told Maggie I had a ride. She’d given me a look. I would be questioned later like an ex-con on the stand, but I had to do it. With my arms folded to balance the pack on my back, I waited and watched the school door.

Nikki walked out talking to Mr. Johnston. The drama teacher was gay as every stereo-type imaginable, but that didn’t slow little miss sunshine from flirting her little heart out – or at least, it looked that way. They were all chummy. He laughed and pushed his glasses back up his face with one finger. He actually wore a tweed coat with suede patches on the elbows. What a dork.

“Hey,” she said as she put her key in the driver’s side door. After she opened the door, she leaned in and dumped her books on the passenger seat.

“Hey, listen,” I didn’t even wait for her to come back out of the car. “I have a Mom. I’m the only person in her life. She needs me.”

“Well, maybe, if she – ”

“Don’t.” I wagged an angry finger in her face. I bit my tongue. “She didn’t know – she had no way to know. She’s a different person now. She’s been a good mother. She doesn’t deserve this.”

For the first time, I saw Nikki soften. Her face dropped its perfect smile. She folded her arms and sat down on the driver’s seat with her too-white sneakers flat on the pavement. She sighed. “Nathaniel, it’s not my fault. I don’t want to be this any more than you want to be that. But we don’t have a choice.”

“We always have a choice.” Before I could say something that could get me in trouble, I turned and walked away.

* * *

“Hello, Eligos.”

“Excuse me?” I couldn’t tell if it was the whiskers on his cat face or the forked tongue that hissed between his fangs, but it sounded like he sneezed. I could have been in shock. I was staring at a refugee from the Island of Doctor Moreau. He had leopard spots on his fur from his face, over his shoulders and down his arms. His eyes burned fire – literally. Flames out of the eye sockets. He wore black sweat pants and black fingerless gloves. Apparently, it was 80s Night in Hell.

“No, you are not Eligos. Not yet. What does he call you, boy?” His golden fur rippled in the torch light. It was dark in the basement of this rundown high-rise. Water coated the walls and pooled on the bare cement floor. I tried to concentrate on feline face instead of the five, black-robed humans dead at his feet. Blood covered the floor. I could tell by the smell.

“Childe.” Not a half bad imitation of Dad, if I do say so myself. But the longer the silence stretched, I realized Mr. Kitty Head wasn’t going to do anything else until I answered him for real. “Nathaniel.”

“Pleased to meet you, Nathaniel.” He cracked his paw knuckles against the palm of his paw. I couldn’t tell if he was smiling with the whole cat face thing. He sounded like he was smiling. “I don’t suppose your father told you the way of things.”

“You mean, other than the fact that he’s going to walk the Earth on my twenty-first birthday. No.”

Snake-tongue kitty laugh was creepy. My skin crawled. He stepped silently out of the body heap. I walked opposite to keep the same amount of distance between us.

“Ah. So you know nothing of Hell.”

“Other than it sucks? No. Where’s Evie?”

Flames rose up out of his eyes when he laughed. He turned one way, then another, and pointed around the cylinder block corner. In a small room, a floating dot of white, sparkling light floated. A hand twisted and turned in the center. It looked to be trapped, like in a jar. I recognized the rings.

“Dad?”

Aye, childe?

“I need your help.” As I walked, my feet rose from the floor. Everything around me turned red. I reached for the light with big, red hands. Total goatsee: Dad pull from the inside out until the hole grew in size. I heard Evie yelp in gratitude before she pulled her hand free. When we let go, the light disappeared with a pop.

“Hello, Eligos.”

Salutations, Flauros. Well met.

“Who is he, Dad?”

Behold a Great Duke of Hell, my son. None greater than perhaps myself. To what reason do we owe you this honor?

“Oh, wouldn’t you like to know?” Flauros licked his paw and then ran it over his head. “Let’s just say I beat you to the punch, old man.”

How so?

I rolled my eyes. The other demon snickered. Thanks, dude.

“I walk among the mortals, Eligos. I am here. You are not.”

“Oh, he’s here all right.” I ran towards him. If I thought about what I was doing, I didn’t know it. I swung and hit Kitty Face in the jaw with an upper cut. He went sailing until he smashed into the wall. The blocks cracked and crumbed. Part of the wall fell on top of him where he fell. And then he laughed.

“Oh, here I thought this was going to be boring and easy. Thank you, Eligos. You’ve made my day.”

* * *

I have no idea how I made it to the gym at the school. Black spots danced in my vision. I could feel my eye swell with a lovely, painful throb. As I pushed my way through the door, my arm caught in the stainless steel bar of the latch. I spun and hit the high-wax floor of the gym. It sounded like one hundred pounds of dead flesh hitting water.

“Oh my God.” A dozen sneakered feet squeaked across the floor. I could feel them gather around me. I opened my eye to see bare legs and short, pleated skirts circled around me. For a second, I thought I might have died and gone to heaven.

“Nat!” She pushed her way through the rest. Her small hand felt cool against the back of my sweating neck. Nikki lifted my head and shoulders off the floor so I could only see her. “Are you all right?”

I coughed. No blood. Yay, me. “I need your help.”

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All Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Daddy’s Little Boy, Part 5

Monday, September 28th, 2009

I played sick the next day. When mom came to wake me, I performed an understated “my tummy hurts.” By the end of my underrated performance, she was sure she felt a fever. Two Tylenols later, she was on the way to work and I wrapped up in a blankie bed on the couch. Part of me wanted to stay under the covers and watch bad daytime television. It would be the easy thing to do. A year ago, I would’ve done it.

I dressed and caught the cross-town bus. The non-descript industrial park was full of cars like it should’ve been during the week. I rarely see it like this, since my job tends to be after-hours. For a change, I stood out in my black hoodie and big pants. I shuffled down the sidewalk. With a few punches of the keypad, the door popped open and I slipped in before some suit or coverall noticed me.

* * *

“Nathaniel! Now!” Her voice pierced the darkness. From the alleyway, I lifted into the air. My dad’s form held me a few feet off the ground. I swung his arm towards the four ghouls running down the city sidewalk. My red glow flashed when their dead, grey skin impacted with my dad’s limb. I didn’t feel a thing, but the one we caught square went squish on the brickwall of a nearby brownstone. Leave it to yuppieville to attract a bunch of undead that eat the dead but prefer kid flesh.

One ghoul managed to hang on. It tried biting through my dad. We coiled one finger and flicked it across the street. The other two, we played whack-a-mole with our feet. By the time Mellathion and Evie caught up, all that was left were four puddles of gray. Even Nerissa smiled at me, which was the scariest thing I’d seen in a while.

* * *

Other than Nerissa’s office, I had never used another room in our office building. I don’t need to work out. We never met, so the conference room gathered dust. But I wasn’t interested in bulking up or chatting with my co-workers; I wanted information. Though it wasn’t large, the room behind the door tagged “Research Library” held very unique books. Old books with leather covers filled with old knowledge I couldn’t find anywhere else.

I had no idea where to start. Nerissa sectioned and labeled the books, but I had no idea where she’d stick the tome about demon slayers. Would it be under 18th Century Occult History? Or Alzetca’s Human Cookbook? I pulled a couple of thick, promising books from the shelves and sat down for a browse. The wooden desk chair was surprisingly comfortable. I lost track of time.

* * *

“Dad?”

Yes, my childe.

“I’m going to need help in a minute.” The alley smelled. For such a nice section of town, rich people sure have smelly trash. If Nerissa hadn’t told me to stand here and wait while Elfboy and Witchie chased whatever out of the funeral home from around the block, I wouldn’t be here. Hell, I was surprised some cop hadn’t questioned me for loitering.

Harm is not in your path. Why do you summon me?

“Because in a minute, I will be in harm’s way.”

Childe, why endanger my vessel? Why persist in this peril?

“I don’t have time to go into it.” Lie. He couldn’t see until he was around me, so he had no way to know. Sure, I might have a headache later from all the ranting. It was a risk I was willing to take.

If I say to thee nay, shalt thou expound upon thy flawed logic?

“Fine. Look, it’s a job, all right? I get paid.” I peeked around the corner. Another shiny SUV puttered down the street. I don’t know where they parked those things around here. Cars lined the streets. There wasn’t a spare spot. I noted the color and license plate number.

A trade. T’is not a service thou execute. Fool me not, childe.

“Or what? I’ll rue the day?”

Hast thou ever savored pain? Veritable agony? I am willing to risk my vessel for my childe to learn a lesson.

“Dad? What? What do you want me to say?” From around the end of the block, I could hear a car horn honk and screeching tires in the distance. Whatever was coming was coming. “For the first time in my life, I have money. I might be able to go to college or move out or buy a nice place for my mother.”

The future t’is not for thee. The vessel, upon two score and one year, shall inherit his paternal form.

“I’ve heard it all before, Dad.” I heard glass break and metal crunch. Something roared. “Listen, can we talk about this later?”

Nay. I demand the true reason for thy reckless behavior.

“Fine.” I stepped back into the shadow of the brownstone. The street light reflected off of windshield and ground glass on the sidewalk. Hopefully, these “ghouls” wouldn’t see me until it was too late. “I like it. Okay? I feel like I’m doing good. I’m helping. I’m making a difference.”

Fruitless pursuits.

“Right, because you’re coming.” He couldn’t read my thoughts, but I vowed to see if there was something I could do about that.

* * *

“Nathaniel?” Nerissa poked her head in around the door. I rubbed my eyes and stretched. From my jacket pocket, I dug out my phone to check the time. I had been reading for three hours. “What are you doing here?”

“Research.” I doubted she’d buy my fake smile, but I tried anyway.

“Uh-huh. Demon slayer, huh?”

Mellathion’s got a big mouth. “Yeah, something like that. I was just trying to see if there was any lore or something.”

She pushed open the door. She sat down opposite me across the table. Her hand grabbed a book or two, but ended up drumming on the dull finish. She stared at me with her dark eyes. “You didn’t see this coming, did you, kid?”

“How could I see this coming? I mean, Dad opened me up to a bunch of questions, but I didn’t know about vampires, ghouls, gnomes, werewolves, or whatever until I met you.” I closed the book I was reading and added it to the read pile. I pulled the next book down from the unread pile. “Why does she want to kill me?”

“Don’t take it personally. It’s not you she wants to kill.” Nerissa sighed as she crossed her legs. “She’s stopping your father before he can get a hoof-hold on our plane. It’s a preemptive strike.”

“But I haven’t done anything yet. Why me?”

“Birthright, kid. Sucks to be you.” Without a second glance, she stood and walked towards the door. Her hair stood in all directions. I don’t know how she managed to make it look sexy.

“Hey, Nerissa.” I watched her turn. “What would you do in her shoes but knowing me? Could I talk you out of it? Or would you kill me?

She slipped on her sunglasses. From the doorframe, she picked up her suitcase. She looked at me for a long minute. “I would kill you, Nathaniel.”

All the air went out of the room. She left. I looked at my short stack of books.

* * *

“Now, Evie, Mal, I need you to circle around back. I’ll take the front.” Nerissa was amazing. She could do anything with a cigarette in the corner of her mouth: talk, drink, run, sit, stand, even in a stiff wind, she managed to keep ash off her coat. Her hair was especially wild which told me that the mission was serious. I sat in the back of her piece of shit car and looked out Mel’s driver side window.

“What about me?” She’d called me after my last class to meet. I’d climbed into the car after walking a block from the nearest bus stop. I was embarrassed. I was about to fight evil. I had to take public transportation to do it.

“See that street, Nathaniel?” Her finger poked the glass of her side window. She twisted in her seat to look at me over the fat frames of her sunglasses. “There’s an alley about two blocks down. You wait there. That’s where they’ll head if they get out.”

“Who?”

“Nat,” Evie opened her door. “You may be the muscle, but we don’t always need you.”

“I’m the muscle?”

Mellathion patted my arm. “Well, you and your Father.”

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All Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Daddy’s Little Boy, Part 4

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

I never had been so glad to have Maggie drive me home. After gym, I visited the nurse who gave me an ice pack. Useless. Keri gave me two Tylenol before Algebra, so my head wasn’t pounding by the time we reached my apartment. She came in to help me with the math homework and gave me half of one of her Carisoprodol knock-offs. Forty-five minutes later, I didn’t give a shit about anything. My book was open and Mr. Richard’s hand-outs were spread all over my living room floor. Maggie and I leaned against the couch as we sat on the floor and watched Sponge Bob.

“What was up with that bitch anyway?” She snorted at the television. Her head rested on a couch cushion with her long hair spread out like a fan. She could be so pretty, but I could never figure out how to broach that whole “she’s my friend” thing. I wanted to kiss her, but I was too afraid she’d punch me in the mouth.

“Who?”

“In gym. Seriously. What was her problem?”

“Fuck if I know.” I laughed at Squidworth. I picked up the work sheet, stared at it for a minute and tossed it back on the floor.

“Ever see her before?” Maggie slumped off the couch onto the floor like a cat in slow-mo, pouncing on a mouse. She worked out the first problem and wrote in the answer.

“Not that I know.”

“You sure this isn’t some elementary school girl who had a crush on you or something?”

“Nope. Not unless she dyes her hair or something.”

After working through a couple of problems, she pushed her hair back to look up at me. “I’m gonna ask.”

“Ask what?”

“Tomorrow. I’m gonna ask her what her deal is.”

After I dug out the last Funyon from the bag, I crumpled it up. I climbed to my feet in search of another lunch-sized bag in the kitchen. I yelled back over my shoulder. “I don’t need you to fight my fights.”

“I ain’t gonna fight her.” She shouted. “I’m just gonna ask.”

* * *

Next day at school, I went through the day without a stare, glare or concussion. Homework this and quiz that; nothing out of the ordinary. The pretty, pretty people looked down their noses and everyone else did their clique-thing. I stuck to myself, except for lunch with Maggie and skipping half of fourth period to hang out with Joe in the computer room. He had the latest Final Fantasy game for the PSP. He wanted me to check out the graphics and I ended up on a thirty minute potty break.

The great thing about dressing down and being quiet is no one tends to pay attention to you. When I beat the bell back, I mumbled something about being sick to the teacher, put the pass on her desk and grabbed my books. I don’t even think she noticed. She cleaned the chalkboard and muttered under her breath something about us damn kids and our damn attitudes. It made me feel like I was doing something right.

I stopped at the drinking fountain outside my sixth period: Mrs. Bedford for Algebra. It was the best fountain in the school as the water was cool. I hiked my backpack on my shoulder as I stood. I used my jacket coat to wipe my mouth. I turned – bam! She stood right in my face.

“Hey.” Nikki smiled with her Crest-white-strip teeth. Her perky-and-pastel sweater and skirt raised the hairs on the back of my neck. “Nathaniel, is it?”

I stared. Not that, “wow, pretty girl talk to me” stare that I saw on many of my poor classmates’ faces when a pretty girl talked. My usual “can I go home now” face stayed in hers. I learned long ago that if I didn’t open my mouth, I couldn’t sound like an idiot.

“Nat, listen,” she leaned against the wall. Her finger twisted her long, blond hair in that too-too casual way. “I just wanted to let you know I know.”

“Congratulations.” I stepped to walk around.

She stepped in my way while still twirling her hair. Her head tilted to the side. “I know. I know who you are.”

“Yeah? Who’s that?”

“You’re Daddy’s little boy.”

My jaw cracked when it hit the ground. My black and red backpack dragged my arm down to my side. The hallway twisted in on itself and my hip slammed into the water fountain before I caught myself.

Her smile upped in wattage. Her whirly fingers ran down her chest in a suggestive manner. Nikki lifted her chin. “See you later, Nat.”

She side-stepped me and walk-skipped down the hall. If it hadn’t been for the bell, I would still be standing there.

* * *

“You really think she knows?” He sat on the back of the wooden slate park bench. His mud-covered boots smeared dirt all over the seat. I watched the mud rather than look at him. It was dark enough for no one to notice his ears with his hair pulled back into a ponytail, but he still made me nervous. I don’t know why. It isn’t like I hadn’t seen some nerdy kids wear pointy-ears. I guess the difference was his were real.

“Uh, yeah.” It was close to midnight. I’d had to sneak-out after Mom popped a Xanax and curled in bed with Project Runway. Fall had come. My double jersey jacket kept me warm enough. I hadn’t recognized Mellathion at first until he explained that his hair changed with the season. Streaks of red and brown ran down his back instead of the blonde. I kicked a pebble on the sidewalk. It skittered out of the sphere of light and into the grass of the city park. “What am I going to do?”

“Outside our merry band of compatriots, does anyone else know?” With a small pocket knife, he peeled the skin of a large apple. His fingers looked like mother of pearl. “I mean, besides your father.”

“Well, kind of, but not really.” Way to be Captain Vague. “Showed Mom once, but I think she’s blocking it out.”

Mellathion nodded his head. He sliced a piece of apple and extended it to me on the edge of his knife. I made sure to touch only apple. Knowing him, his blade was so sharp, it could slice an atom. He popped a slice of apple into his mouth and chewed. I couldn’t figure out of he was thinking or scanning the park for potential rapists. He turned his head long before I heard the shoes on the cement.

It was way too late for any sane person to be jogging through park without an AK-47. Yet, the unmistaken footfalls filled the silence. Small, white running shoes appeared first, followed by pretty-in-pink jogging pants. A coat to match entered the light. And I nearly fell off the bench when Nikki’s head appeared on top of the jogger. She paid me no mind as she ran on buy. As quickly as she appeared, she disappeared into the darkness.

“Wow.” Mellathion munched on a new piece of apple. He snorted. “You’re in trouble.”

“What? Why? ”

His hand clamped on my shoulder. He shook me gently in that big-brotherly way I have come to rely on. “She’s a demon slayer.”

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All Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Daddy’s Little Boy, Part 3

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

“Class, I would like you to meet our new student.”

Miss Berry was my homeroom teacher, which was pretty awesome. She looked like a 1950’s grandma, with silver, horn-rimmed glasses on a silver chain around her neck. She always wore a dress with a belt. Do dresses need belts? She was awesome as a homeroom teacher because I only had to look at her for fifteen minutes in the morning. If I had had her for a regular class, I would have had to slit my wrists.

Next to her stood the perky, blonde cheerleader type. She smiled with a row of perfectly white, straight teeth. Though I couldn’t see it from my spot in the back row, I would’ve bet she had blue eyes to go with that perfect tan. Nice, round breasts had every guy drooling. I bet the girls were burning holes in her Gap sweater.

“This is Nikki Winters. She’s a transfer, so be sure to help her find her way around. Nikki, dear, you can take your seat.”

She practically skipped to her desk in the front row. No one paid attention to my gagging noises, thank God. The last thing I needed was detention. Miss Berry started role. She warbled out a close pronouncement of our names and we would respond, “Here!” I always said, “Beer!” Don’t ask me how I got away with it since almost every day enough people laughed, but Miss Berry never said anything.

Nikki turned to stare at me after my name was called. I looked up at her for a minute, just to be sure. Girls who shopped in the mall never acknowledged that I existed. Fine by me, but yeah, she stared. Whatever.

* * *

“And you know what she said to me?” Maggie waved her arms as she talked. Mom said it was an Italian thing, but Maggie did it like she was adding proper punctuation. The French fry she held between two fingers had been twirled so much that I waited for it snap-off and go flying. It hung on by whatever little spuds it had left. If Maggie noticed, she gave no indication. “She said my poetry was too dark. Too dark! Hello! Can’t she see how I’m dressed? What the fuck am I supposed to write? About puppies and love sonnets?”

“And what’s wrong with dark poetry anyway?” I shoved a forkful of tots in my gob. Maggie’s poetry was funny because it was dark. She wrote about things no one would ever talk about, just to see the reactions. If people didn’t react, she probably would give up and do something else.

“That’s what I say! But do you think anyone gets that?”

“No.”

“No!”

As usual, she picked at her food. I don’t think she ate more than a few bites. Me, I cleaned my plate: sloppy joe day. It was about as good as I was ever going to get out of a high school cafeteria. Plus, I’d missed breakfast because I’d slept in. Mom said it was due to the shock of the limo fire. She didn’t know that I’d “borrowed” one of the school’s laptops and spent my nights chatting online. She would’ve totally freaked. Everyone online was a pedophile, according to her.

“Hey, who’s that?” Maggie pointed with her fork over my shoulder. She sat up straight to peek around me.

I glanced over my shoulder. Four tables down on the other side of the aisle, she sat with the other mindless bimbos, staring at me. Her fork rested in her perfectly arranged salad in a container she’d brought from home.

“That’s some new girl. She’s in my home room.” I tilted my head back to drain the last of my chocolate milk from the crappy container. Maggie had drawn a monocle and pirate beard on the picture of the missing kid.

“Why is she staring at you?”

“Hell if I know.” What was I supposed to say? The bitch was starting to freak me out.

“Huh.” Maggie had no problem staring back. Me, I hunkered down over my tray and did my best to ignore them both.

* * *

Gym class: torture for students. No one liked gym class, so I didn’t know why it was mandatory. Yet, for fifth period, I stood in stupid shorts and a tee shirt that I was forced to buy and tried not to sweat too much so I didn’t have to take a shower afterwards. The last thing I needed was a “fag attack” from the jocks and end up taped naked to a bench. It happened to Ted last semester and he cried when the tape pulled out his leg hair.

I was at the volleyball net, minding my own business. The ball flew past. I was doing my team a favor by not playing, even if they didn’t know it. The next thing I knew, I was face down on the stinky, wooden floor with the back of my head throbbing. The teacher blew his whistle and whatever was going on stopped.

“All right, who threw that?” The teacher barked like a marine drill sergeant. I picked myself up. My cheek hurt. I rubbed my head.

“Anyone? Anyone see anything?”

The gym was silent as I looked around. No one looked guilty, but kids learn at an early age how to look innocent. Most never lose that talent. The gym teacher blew his whistle twice to indicate that the games were back on.

Again, I was on the floor. I caught the blur of a red rubber ball before it bounced off my head at a high velocity – harder and faster than any teenager should be able to throw. I yelled out from the pain. Next thing I knew, Maggie was at my side. “It was her.”

After the whistle blow, the teacher followed my friend’s finger to confront the new girl. She gazed up at him with her big baby blues. She batted her long lashes. “I’m so sorry, sir. I must not be good at this.”

“Sit this session out, Miss Winters.” The teacher tweeted twice on the silver whistle. “You too, Nathaniel.”

Maggie helped me to my feet. Before she could spin me off towards the bleachers, I caught sight of Nikki. She was looking at me, but that goody-two-shoes face was gone. She smirked like a pro, as if she knew exactly what she was doing. Worse still, she liked that she’d beaned me.

Crazy bitch.

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All Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Daddy’s Little Boy, Part 2

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

I sat on the curb with a small blanket wrapped around my shoulders. I watched as Maggie, strapped down to the gurney, was bumped into the back of an ambulance. She had an oxygen mask on and her sparkly pink dress was singed. The flashing lights made everything seem surreal. A few feet away, firemen inspected the limo for any other signs of flame. Radios crackled with voices. I couldn’t understand the special cop codes or fireman protocols that were coming over the wire, not that I wanted to in the first place.

“You didn’t see anyone.” The cop towering over me had his pen poised over the paper in his notebook. He looked like all the grizzly cops I ever saw around our neighborhood patrolling for someone to pick-up to validate their existence: miserable and put-out. I shook my head.

“Sorry, no. The windows were tinted and I was with my date.”

“And you don’t know how you got out of the car?”

I looked at where the rear driver side door had been. The door hinges were twisted and torn. The door laid smoking on the lawn behind me. I shook my head again. “I don’t know how I got out.”

I kept the same face and same tone of voice as before. Sure, I sounded like an idiot, but I wasn’t about to tell him how Maggie and me escaped. He wouldn’t believe me if I did.

* * *

Memory’s a funny thing. I can’t remember what caused the first time. I just remember how it felt. I was hurt, but not crying. I was scared. That voice in my head that called itself my father came and went, but I remember asking that voice to help me.

Everything turned red, like I’d put on some cheap-ass, hippy glasses. My body was lifted and I floated off the ground. I didn’t feel any less scared, but I knew I was safe – like when you’re five and you know you’re safe from the closet monster underneath your bed blankets. Nothing could touch me. And the voice in my head was now outside my head as well when it spoke.

None shall ever harm ye, nor will ye ever know harm. I will protect ye.

And I felt power. I wanted to leap a tall building in a single bound or bench press a train car. I lifted my arm. It had a red, glowing light around it with a three fingered claw at the end. I looked at my shoes and four feet below them were cloven hooves standing in the dirt. When I looked up, I could see his face like a mask hovering before me. Huge horns curled off his forehead.

Whatever hurt me was gone. And once the danger left, he melted away. I sank down to the earth and fell to my knees. I couldn’t stop shaking.

* * *

After the fifth round of questioning from Mr. Police Officer, Mom arrived. She was all tears and hugs. Thankfully, she hadn’t hit the phlegm stage yet or I wouldn’t get back the security deposit on my tux. Once she arrived, the cop figured he couldn’t bully me anymore. He gave her the basic details of what happened while she hugged me. I didn’t say another word.

She signed papers for my release that said I was okay. Her cell phone rang. It was Maggie’s folks with an update. She was going to be released with only a minor burn to her arm where the corsage had been, I guess. I didn’t ask. Mom led me to her car down the block with her arm around me like I was five again. I didn’t know what to say.

The whole car ride home I listened to Mom go on and on about “getting a lawyer at her firm” to “check out that limo company” and “how unsafe that car must have been.” I put my head back on the rest and closed my eyes. Maybe she was right. Maybe it was something funky with the car. Wouldn’t that be nice?

But I knew my life couldn’t be that simple.

* * *

The following Monday, I walked to school. I waited by the door that was closest to the student parking lot for Maggie. Normally, she’d pick me up, but I wasn’t sure she’d come for me after what happened. She walked up with her army surplus backpack over one shoulder and her hand-me-down purse on the other. A white gauze bandage covered her arm. Her hair was black with a pink streak down the side and her make-up was heavy around the eyes. She smiled at me. I let loose the breath I’d been holding.

“My savior.”

I took her hand. Maggie was a senior, two years older than me. I will never know why she picked me out of all the freshmen to take care of, but she sidled up to me on my first day with that same smile. It wasn’t love, at least, not what I thought love should be. We didn’t kiss or make-out, but she would hold my hand through the school. We’d hang out afterwards and talk shit. To me, she was the coolest girl in school.

“You all right?”

“Best prom ever.” She laughed. “Ma’s still freaking that I missed my big senior prom.”

Her Mom was forever heartbroken. Maggie wasn’t a cheerleader or didn’t sing in the school choir. She didn’t date jocks. She didn’t stay after-school to help with the dance decorations. Her Mom lamented the fact that Maggie wasn’t her and Maggie loved driving her Mom nuts.

“I don’t know what happened. I’m so sorry.”

“Chill, all right? You didn’t cause it. Dad says he thinks it was faulty wiring in the car. It was pretty old looking.” She slipped her hand into mine as we walked into school. “Becky said everyone talked about us all night at the prom. By the end, she heard that we killed ourselves in ritual suicide. I can’t wait to see faces.”

* * *

Truth: the limo was new. The flowers were the most expensive in the shop. My tux was from a real store in the mall, not some cut-rate discount place. I lied to my mother about it all, saying I helped Angelo with his lawn mowing jobs for the extra money for prom. I haven’t told her about my job. I haven’t told anyone about my job, just like I haven’t told anyone about my Dad.

Except Mom. Mom knows about Dad. She pretends not to.

* * *

“Mom. I want to show you something.” It was late. We were in “Aunt” Martha’s backyard. I say “aunt” because she was just a friend of my Mom’s from work, but insisted I call her that. Big-boned Martha was on vacation and asked us to house-sit her two yappy, fucking dogs that peed everywhere. Instead of slugging on the couch to cable television on the big screen, we spent Saturday cleaning carpets because the stupid little things went everywhere. It didn’t matter that I took them out two seconds before and they pissed all over the patio, the grass, the fence, or whatever. They’d trot back into the house and whiz in the middle of the carpet.

“What’s that, honey?” She gave up the A/C and comfy furniture to sit on the brick steps of the patio. I think she planned on staying outside with the dogs as long as possible just so she didn’t have to scrub the rugs again. She looked tired, but liked the night air. We could see the stars in the night sky.

“You know, the voice I told you about in my head?” Her face dropped. So much for her one moment of Zen. I wished I didn’t have to do that to her, but I had to tell someone, right? “Dad? Dad, can you come out?”

He did. All seven foot, glowing red with flaming horns of Hell of him formed around me. I watched as she screamed so loud I thought she’d break the windows. She scrambled back, legs over arms until she could get to her feet. She ran into the sliding glass window and fell down. Luckily, nothing broke – the window or her.

Ah, the Vessel. Ye spoke to her.

“Sort of. I don’t think she believed me.”

Mom screamed again.

“Mom, Mom! Stop! I’m all right. See? I’m not hurt.”

The pitiful humans will not comprehend, my childe. My vestige serves only as a reminder of what they fear.

“But you said you wouldn’t hurt her.”

I shant. The Vessel is blessed and will be protected upon my rise to power.

Mom stopped screaming. She stopped running or clawing at the sliding glass door handle. She went catatonic.

“Mom, I wanted to tell you – show you I wasn’t crazy. I’m not crazy.”

Go to the Vessel, my childe. Display comfort and pity. Hence forth, never present me to the Vessel.

* * *

After school, Maggie dropped me off at my apartment complex. She couldn’t come in because she had to go to work: Hot Topic at the Mall. Her Mom hated it. She hated it too, working retail, but she’d never admit it. Plus, I think she dug the employee discount.

I grabbed the bus to my job – my real job. I guess it’s a job. I get a paycheck. But somehow, it seems silly that all I do is show up at designated spots, call on Dad and beat the crap out of something. First time, it was vampires. Vampires! I should’ve known. I’m the walking poster child of a demon’s uprising. Of course, vampires exist.

The bus stopped at the corner. I walked the rest of the way into the industrial park. By the way, never trust anything in an industrial park. The sign on the door two units down was “Silverlake Company.” Women with breast implants and spray-on tans walked in and out of that place all day. I shouldn’t say anything. The sign on the door where I work reads, “Service Industry Corporation Network.”

Inside, there was a gym and locker room. I walked through the meeting room and research center to the office at the end of the hall. The door was closed, but I could see a figure sitting at the desk through the frosted glass. She was in, no one else. Good. I knocked on the glass.

“Come in.” Her voice always scared me a little. I had heard Mom’s “professional voice” before, but Nerissa’s was chilling. It was like she was dead inside or something. Sometimes, I wondered if she was human at all.

“Nerissa? You have a minute?”

“Sure, Nathaniel. Sit.”

She typed away on her laptop. Her wild hair and dark make-up made me think of Maggie, but that was the only thing. Where Maggie liked to laugh and enjoyed music, I couldn’t imagine Nerissa doing anything other than killing puppies for fun – and she wouldn’t smile or laugh while doing it. When she was done, she closed the lid and folded her hands neatly over the it.

“How can I help you?”

I told her about prom and the limo. I made sure to tell her that I told the cops nothing and played stupid. She almost smiled. Also, I made sure to state more than once that I did not see anything. I had no idea how the car caught fire.

“Well,” Nerissa folded her fingers together and rested her cheek against them. “It sounds like someone’s out to kill you.”

“Really?”

“Considering whose child you are, I’m surprised it didn’t happen sooner.” She pushed papers around on her desk until she could tap their edges into a neat stack. She wouldn’t look at me. “You have to find who it is.”

“Me? What about the team?”

“Whoever tried to kill you didn’t succeed. They will try again. You just have to keep your eyes open. Call if you see anything or anyone suspicious.”

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All Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Daddy’s Little Boy, Part 1

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

So much for prom. I don’t know why these things happen to me. I didn’t ask for a limo flambéed, yet here I sit in the back seat. The driver dances as he tries to put his skin out. Human fat sizzling smells worse than the fake, vinyl upholstery burning. Still, I should do something to save my date from frying to death, I suppose.

“Dad?”

Yes, son?

“I need a little help.”

* * *

I used to have such a normal life. No Norman Rockwell, white picket fences, riding the Radio Flyer down the street type of normal; more like watching Saturday Morning cartoons on a fourth-hand couch while eating my sixth bowl of Fruit Loops with extra sugar because Mom had to work a double shift type of normal. My friends and I had worn-out skateboards from the local pawn shops because our parents couldn’t afford the bike prices. Well, when I say “parents,” I mean my Mom. She was going to school and working at a diner when I was growing up. Then, she put on a white dress shirt, navy slacks and went to work as a paralegal so we could afford a better, less-shitty place to live.

But what did I know? All my friends in the barely above the projects apartment complex had the same life. We all went to the same school. We all wore the same crappy clothes from Goodwill or second-hand shops. During the summer, one of the parents would act as day care, usually someone’s Dad who was laid-off from the factory, and we would run the streets looking for stuff to do. When it got too hot, we’d hit Josh’s place. He had an old PS we found in the trash. He hid it from his folks in case they’d try to hock it when one of them fell off the wagon.

It was good, right? We didn’t get hurt beyond the scraped knees or occasional bruises. We were never bullied, probably because the type of guy that would was too afraid to come into our neighborhood. The crackheads never bothered us, nor the homeless. We didn’t bother them. There are worse ways to grow-up.

Hell, I didn’t even think about my dad. Plenty of my friends never saw their dead-beat fathers. I figured mine was the same. Mom must have been waiting on pins and needles for me to ask, but I didn’t. I learned at an early age that parents aren’t gods. They’re just human.

What did I know?

* * *

“Dad, the car’s on fire.”

Verily, childe, how did this come to pass?

“Dad! I’m in a rented tux and my date’s corsage is about to go up in flames. Would you please do something?”

* * *

On my thirteenth birthday, my mom took me to the local ice cream shop. A single scoop of Superman ice cream didn’t make up for all the years without cake or presents, but it was good enough for that day. Mom laughed as I raced to keep the ice cream from running onto my hand. The sun was out. The summer was hot. I remember hearing someone mention “Friday the 13th” by the screened, ordering window.

“Nathaniel? You know, I love you, right?” Mom said. She smiled. It wasn’t something that Mom did often. I think that’s why I remember it. She smiled. “No matter what, I love you.”

“Okay, Mom, geez.”

Later, I hung out in the vacant lot waiting for Joey to get out of summer school. We planned to build a fort, but we were still in the planning stages. It wasn’t like I could gather supplies or something while I was waiting. I kicked around a few rocks before I heard his voice.

My childe. Oh, my childe, the day has come. I bid you a hail and hearty day of your birth.

I ran all the way home. Don’t ask me why, but I wanted home and Mom and to hide under my bed. I covered my ears. It didn’t help.

I am your father. Fear not! I shall not harm ye.

Mom tried to coax me out. She promised cookies and TV dinners and whatever I wanted to watch, but the voice wouldn’t stop. It was deep. It rattled my skull like a gong. I started crying and didn’t stop until the voice noticed.

‘Tis far too much for ye wee mind, childe. Rest. Your mother will explain. Interrogate the woman that bore ye.

* * *

“I don’t know, Dad. I have no idea who set the car on fire.”

Were you not in the motorized vehicle?

“Yes, I was, but I was talking to Maggie.”

The wench was the distraction. We should smite the conspirator!

“She was nearly burned to death. I don’t think so.”

The automobile’s operator?

“According to the EMT, fried right up.”

Many a soul wishes to keep me in Hell. You have many enemies, my son.

“What else is new?”

* * *

Six weeks. Six weeks of my Dad yapping on like he does, about our destiny and how we would do great things together. We would conquer the world and set it right, blah, blah, blah. My mom thought I had hit my emo phase because I did nothing but blare her Smiths’ albums as loud as I could. Don’t ask me why The Smiths drowned him out, but Metallica, Manilow, and Mozart didn’t work. Weird, but whatever.

After six weeks, I asked Mom about my Dad. She made this face that I will never forget. It was like she smelled dog shit on top of baby puke wrapped in moldy newspaper. I don’t know if it was the memory of him or something else. Whether she knew about me or not was impossible to tell. She turned off the TV. She sat next to me on the couch and told me about my father.

He picked her up when she was in Reno, dealing black jack. She was eighteen, but lied about her age across the board to get work. She said he looked normal: nice eyes, regular hair, not too skinny, and not too stout. She remembered he was funny. While he kept losing, he made the funniest comments. She said she just laughed and laughed – until the pit boss told her to go on break.

He asked her out for a drink. The next night was dinner. She said, “One thing led to another, and he spent the night. I don’t know why he didn’t try anything before that night, because he was so nice that I would’ve done him after drinks.”

These are things a son should never know about his mother. Anyway, after that night, she never saw him again. About a month later, she started to worry. Sure enough, pregnant with no way to reach him. So, she had me and moved back with her Mom and Dad for a while. That didn’t last long. Grandpa the alcoholic never let her live it down – his slut of a daughter. She figured it would be better on the streets with me than in that environment. It didn’t happen. She worked whatever she could get to keep a roof over our heads.

I asked her if Dad was weird, if he showed signs of hearing voices or anything. She said, “No. He was funny and nice, not the sort of thing she ran across every day.”

“So, there was nothing wrong with him. Did he ask you anything weird or wear anything weird?”

“No,” she scowled until a thought crossed her mind. Her face lit up. “Yeah. On the second round of betting, he asked what denomination I was – what my faith was.”

“What did you tell him?”

“I’m an atheist.”

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All Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Project 365

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Three days passed before she slipped her key into the lock. The bolt slid into the door with ease. She smiled at the thought of the cleaning crew keeping the place warm for her. She pushed open the heavy metal door secured with an electronic alarm and keypad. She stared down a long hallway painted white. The frames for doors marred the antiseptic walls. Nerissa let the door close behind her before she walked down the hall.

The first door to her left opened on the work-out room. The weights, benches and machines waited for a work-out. Nerissa saw herself in the mirrors along the back wall; brown overcoat flapped around her legs as a black, soft suitcase dangled from her hand. Behind her, the door to the locker room was closed. It was quiet. She noticed how very quiet it was.
The next door was to the training room. Thick mats covered the walls and floor. The one-way mirror allowed Nerissa to see more of the room as she walked past the closed door. She could see her shadowy reflection in the smoky glass. She stopped to pull her sunglasses down her nose. She sighed.

She passed the meeting room with the long, oval, oak table and accompanying chairs, the research library filled with bookshelves, books, and two computers, and a small janitorial closest that held the emergency kit she’d pulled out at least once a week in another life. Nerissa reached out with her finger tips to brush the door before she stopped at the end of the hallway.
The door was closed. The brass holder for the name plaque was empty; it was bolted to the center of the door at eye level. She took off her sunglasses to stare at it for a good long while.

She slipped her glasses into her coat pocket before she grabbed the door handle.

She inhaled. The office was clean. Wood polish shined the desktop. It was littered with stacks of paper. Mail from the past month was stacked in the inbox. She circled the desk. Her coat tails brushed against the filing cabinet. The antique, wooden chair slid on its old granite wheels until its back bumped against the floor-to-ceiling bookcase. Nerissa set her briefcase on an empty spot on the desk.

Her coat slipped from her shoulders. She stepped to hang it on a standing rack. As she cleared her throat, she stepped between the desk and the chair. He cleared his throat from the doorway.

“Oh,” Nerissa stopped herself from sitting down. “Mel. Hi. I see the carrier pigeons worked.”

With his arms folded over his chest, he winced. “Stop sending them. Honestly, they are making a mess of my living room.”

“You wouldn’t answer your phone.”

“There was a reason for that.”

“I wanted to apologize.” Nerissa pushed the chair under the desk. She watched her pointy boots peek out from beneath her wrinkle-free dress slacks as she walked around the desk.
“For what, exactly?” He lifted his chin.

“For – for everything.” She laced her fingers. “I should’ve told you I still loved Tom. That my heart wasn’t available. That I only slept with you because I was afraid I’d kill myself if I stayed alone.”

Mel stiffened. His fair brow drew down onto the bridge of his slender nose. He frowned.

“You’re a good man, Mel, too good for the likes of me.”

“How about I decide what’s good for me?” He took her hands after he crossed to her. Nerissa looked up into his crystal, blue eyes. He smiled.

“Excuse me.” While wrapping his knuckles on the door frame, Nathaniel stuck his head in the door. “Is this the too-honest hour or are we meeting?”

Nerissa withdrew her hands. Mel shot an angry scowl over his shoulder before he stepped away. With his hands stuffed in his jacket pockets, Nathaniel slumped and hung his head.

“Come in,” Nerissa extended her hand before she walked back around the desk. She sat this time to open her soft satchel. “Yes, I wanted to meet.”

The young man hung in the door way like some sad, lonely shadow until the half-elf clamped a hand upon his shoulder and dragged him in. He staggered and fell into one of the two, over-stuffed chairs in front of the desk. He slouched even lower, as if he was sure he did something wrong. Mel patted him lightly before moving to the other side of the room to look over the books on the dark, wooden shelves.

While she busied herself pulling folders and ledgers from her bag, Nerissa looked up to find her sister in the other seat. Dressed in her running gear, Evie sat with fingertips pressed together and her elbows resting on the arms of her chair. She did not smile and she did not frown. Her sister nodded before pushing green folders towards them.

Nerissa watched her sister while she held her breath to the count of five. She exhaled and smiled. The corner of Evie’s mouth turned upwards slightly. She took the folder.

“These are the rest of the forms I need you to complete. The first one outlines damages for the various work-related possibilities. The next one is for next of kin, legal contacts, and banking information.” Nerissa folded her hands. “After you’ve completed these, we’ll discuss our next assignment.”

“Are we going after that bad ass that wandered off the other night?” Nathaniel riffled through the paper without reading a page. He eyed the boss lady.

“No.”

“No?”

“But didn’t he kill your husband that I didn’t know about?” Evie dropped the papers into her lap and slumped down to Nathaniel’s level.

“Listen. If you’re going to be on this team, you will do as I ask.” Nerissa looked from one to the other in a point of making eye contact. Her face remained serious. “It is not to be touched. Not now. Not for a while.”

No one said anything. Nerissa stood from her desk. “Right. Let me give you a tour and then we’ll discuss our first assignment.”

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Project 365 Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Project 365

Monday, June 8th, 2009

With a wave of her arm and a scattering of sea salt, dried lemon rind, ground spearmint, white willow bark and wild clover, Evie brought forth a large wave from the ocean. It rose over the warehouse and crashed at her feet. The water fell between the warped planks of the wharf. It disappeared as quickly as it appeared, taking the fire from the depot with it.

“Nerissa!” Mel stretched his hand towards her, but Nathaniel grabbed him up before he could enter harm’s way. As he dangled in the large, glowing outlined hand, he dropped his outstretched arm when he saw her silhouette. The light above the warehouse door was twisted at an angle but still lit.

She was plastered against the metal siding. Her eyes were wide. She smiled. She smiled wide enough to show teeth before laughing. As she walked towards her team, she covered her mouth with a louder laugh.

“That was outstanding, you guys!” Nerissa opened her arms at the last minute for Mel to sweep her up. He hugged her tight and spun around.

“What where those things?” As his feet touched down, Nathaniel stuffed his hands in his pockets.

“What do you think they were?” Evie gave him a wink before she hugged her sister.

“Are you serious? Dude. Fucking no way.”

“I warned you it might be dangerous.” Nerissa rubbed his long, hanging bangs. She smiled along with him until his smile started to fade.

She turned. From the mist and smoke, within the glow from the warehouse door, a figure appeared. It sauntered with a swagger that would’ve given a big game hunter pause. An arrow whispered by her ear. It swatted it away; a second and a third. It didn’t even break stride. Nerissa held her breath.

She was stock still though Mel, Nathaniel and Evie stepped back and away in a fan position. While the creature circled, Nerissa started to tremble. Her pupils dilated down and the white of her eyes grew. Her chest heaved short, fast breathes. She squeaked when it leaned in and sniffed.

“You smell familiar.” Its voice was dusty dry with a thick, iron-curtain accent. “Have we met?”

“Stay away from her.” Mel raised his bow to point his metal arrowhead at the creature’s eye. It smiled.

“I don’t know you. None of you – but you, I know.” With a small flourish, it took hold of Nerissa’s chin. Its nose met hers. “I have no time to know humans.”

“T-T-T-Tom,” Nerissa squeaked. She swallowed hard. Her tremble turned into a full-body shake.

“I have no time for human names.”

“My husband.”

“Who’s Tom?” With his fists clenched at his side, Nathaniel whispered out of the corner of his mouth.

“Her husband.” Evie dug into a pocket on the thigh of her pants. “He died.”

“Do you not know?” Mel spared a glance at her to see if her face said she knew. Evie shook her head. “Nerissa never told you.”

“No.”

“Ah! The faction that came. Yes. You thought you could finish us.” The creature grinned ear to ear to show long, sharp teeth. One of its hands rubbed the other as its too-pink tongue licked its pale, blue lips. “Great sport, it was. Dinner brought in. Delicious, warm, tell me, how many did you lose?”

Its laugh was cruel as the dry, desert sand in one hundred mile per hour winds. With its long, lean fingers, it peeled back her coat to see her neck. Its eyes grew wide as it inhaled when her white scar tissue was revealed. “How did you survive? Much blood you lost, mostly in my belly.”

“Get away from her!” Mel stepped closer. His bow was stretched and ready. Evie side-stepped in the opposite direction while she rubbed her herbs into the point of her wooden stake. The creature glanced over its shoulder and laughed.

“You came back to finish. For revenge?” It released her coat. “You kill my family because I killed yours? Is that what you think we are? You are pathetic. You will never know what it is because you are unworthy worms. Go now.”

No one moved except for the creature that turned and walked back the way it came. It faded into the smoke and mist. Silence filled its space, broken by a distant fog horn.
“What the fuck was that?” Nathaniel gasped from holding his breath so long. He looked to Mel then to Evie for an answer. They looked to Nerissa.

“Nerissa,” Mel reached for her. Before his hand could land, she spun and slapped it away. The smack caused Mel to pull back. He withered in her stare.

“Don’t you ever do that again. Do you hear me? Not without my command.” Her voice was filled with every bit the gravel that a smoker should have. Nerissa snatched his bow only to shove it back into his chest. She swung at her sister as she tried to approach. “Get out of here! All of you get out of here!”

“Nerissa,” Mel tried again, but Nathaniel snagged his shoulder. He shook his head. His hands found his pockets as he walked away with Mel. Evie stared until she realized that Nerissa wasn’t going to look up. She tisked and sniffed before walking off.

When the cold from the mist and the darkness of the night swept in, Nerissa’s knees buckled. She sank to the dock. Her hand covered her face as her shoulders started to shake.

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Project 365 Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Project 365

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

The old, metal door buckled under her boot heel and the door jam splintered from the force of her kick. Inside the warehouse, the outline of boxes and crates filled the darkness. Her hands pulled two, clear bottles from the silk pockets on the inside of her trench coat. She brought the white cloth jammed in the bottles’ necks up to her lit cigarette and inhaled. Fire sprang to life right before her face.

Nerissa tossed both bottles through the open door. The glass shattered against the cement floor. Her homemade accelerant spread across the floor with flames following close behind. The
boxes and crates went up like kindling. By the time Nerissa flattened herself against the outer wall, the inside of the warehouse burned like Hades itself.

The first two bodies out the open door were pure flame. Within a few steps onto the wharf, the humanoid forms burst into ash. Their fire died out like Saint Elmo’s light in the mist. The next body out the door ran. Its face was distorted by its demon mask of ridged eyebrows and long, sharp incisors. As it raced down the dock, an arrow struck its chest where its heart would have been, had it had a human heart. It burst into dust.

“What the fuck?” Nathaniel grabbed his head as he watched two more run out of the burning warehouse. “Are you kidding me?”

From behind a crate nearby, Mel took aim. His straight arm dropped to bring the arrowhead into alignment with his target. But it was too fast; it slipped past the flying arrow to grab the boy. Nathaniel screamed. He bent in the creature’s hands as if made from dough before his father’s red glow grew around him.

It hissed as its grip slipped. A large, red hand encased its chest and began to squeeze. How dare you, contaminated, touch my son? You are not fit to clean my hooves.
Two more dashed from the flames to hide in the crates. In shadows, they hid easily. If they moved, they didn’t make a sound. Evie watched where they disappeared. She reached into one pocket for crumbled, black root. From a pouch on her belt, she scooped a deep red powder. From her vest pocket, she extracted a single, dried leaf with two fingers. She rolled the combination between her hands and whispered sweet nothings to it.

When her hands parted, two balls of flame hovered over her palms. She smiled. “Go.”

The burning spheres flew from her hand fast. One looped around the other as if nothing more than playful spirits, until their light drew the creatures from the shadow. Before they could move, the spheres hit their clothing with a force that engulfed the creatures. Within seconds, piles of dust were all that remained.

“Nathaniel!” From her place behind the rusted warehouse door, Nerissa cupped her mouth as she yelled. “As they come out, throw them into the air.”

“What?”

“Throw them into the air!” She raised her voice to be heard over the depot fire. Three more half-charred creatures dashed from the flames. Nathaniel and his father took two large steps to grab the first. As if picking dandelions, he popped the creature over his shoulder into the air. Mel’s arrow struck the flailing form in mid-flight. Only dust landed on the docks.

- More. Bring me more so I may crush their worthless existence. -

“Dad, for once, can we can the world global conquest talk and do the job?” Nathaniel floated in the center of his father’s protective form. He watched from within the glow of red as another creature flew over his head only to be met by a ball of fire.

- These are things for you to contemplate, my son. For when you are of age, my full vestige will walk the Earth. We will turn it away from the contemptuous Heaven and into our own Hellish domain. -

“Dad! Why is everything about you? What about me? Maybe I want to go to college or something.”

- You will possess all the knowledge you will ever need through our special bond. -

“Will you shut up?” He placed both hands over his face. Nathaniel’s shoulders sagged. “You’re embarrassing me.”

“So, any humiliating details you can share about your sister?” With a spin, Mel pulled his bow. His arrow was true and turned another flung creature into dust. He stopped within a few feet of the concurring Evie.

She threw her flame. “I’m sorry, but we haven’t met. How do you know I’m her sister?”

“It’s obvious, isn’t it? You look alike, same build, same determination”

“Fucker, if you don’t want your ball-hairs singed, I would never compare me to my sister again” Evie held the ball of fire in her hand until the last second. She grunted as she threw it at the creature that had managed to twist around in the air. It was poised to attack.

Mel dove. With his arm and shoulder, he moved Evie out of the way of falling flame and ash. His straightened arm and flattened hand stopped both he and Evie from crashing into the crate. While she gazed up at him, breathless, he watched as four more creatures rushed out of the blaze.

“Last ones by my count!” Nerissa placed her hand against the open door. The heat caused her to pull it away and shake it with warmed, pink skin. She blew on it as she shouldered the door closed. “Evie, ready the wave!”

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Project 365 Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Project 365

Monday, May 25th, 2009

The ember from her cigarette flickered in the darkness of the docks. The storage carts kept them all in shadow, hid from the light that hung over the warehouse door. Rusted tin walls held up its rusted tin roof. The sea air threatened to sink the depot through the rotted, wooden pier into the oil-slicked ocean. Nerissa tightened the knot on the belt of her coat against the mist as it rolled in from the water. She watched the door.

“You have got to be kidding me.” Nathaniel slouched into her peripheral vision. His black, baggy jacket hung off his slumped shoulders. He flipped his wispy bangs out of his face with a shake of his head. “Why am I meeting you here? This place is, like, nowhere. A dump. Is there a rave in there or something?”

“Doubtful.” When he leapt down from the stack of boxes, Mel landed as quiet as the shadow in which he stood. The black hood fell from his head. A hint of a bow peeked out from the black cape. Mel smiled at Nerissa before turning his steely-eyed scowl on the young man. “If we’re here, it’s for a mission. This is serious.”

“Serious?” Nathaniel snorted. He slouched in the way that only a teenager can and folded his arms over his chest. “Dude, I’m in it for the cash. What mission?”

“What’s the target?” She stepped around the corner of another crate. Evie wore a vest with bulging pockets to match her pants with many bulging pockets. Her hair was pinned back. In her hand, she twirled a long, wooden stake.

“Small nest.” Nerissa exhaled the smoke as she ground the cigarette into loose tobacco under the point of her boot. “Should be nine to thirteen by now. No more.”

“Small nest of what?” Nathaniel jammed his hands into pockets as he stopped slouching. He stared as if his eyes were metal and the ill-lit door was a magnet.

“Are these — ?” With a small nod towards the warehouse, Mel glided until he stood behind Nerissa. His question hung in the air with the fog and distant harbor horn. He watched her from over her shoulder take out the pack of cigarettes.

“Yeah,” she said around the cigarette screwed into her lips. Nerissa lit it from behind a cupped hand. She sighed. “You can take them all out except the head. I want the head.”

“Hang on, sugarbutts.” He glowered. Nathaniel actually frowned. “What are we talking about here? I’m confused.”

“Look, you just get into trouble and Daddy will come running. You’re lead.” Nerissa winked.

“And how are we going in?”

“We’re not.” Her heels clicked along the damp planks as she walked towards the haloed door. Her laughter was the kind that covered a great many sins, sins specifically for someone in her line of work.

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Project 365 Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Project 365

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

“You shouldn’t be fucking smoking in here.”

“Kiss Mom with that mouth, Evie?” Nerissa flicked ash from her cigarette onto the cold cement floor at the base of the slate steps where she sat. She watched her sister sweep up the remains of her “sacred circle” of herbs and salt with a broom she’d found in the corner of the basement.

“What do you want?” Evie swept her sister’s ashes into the pile of heather, ague root, dirt and salt. She dropped the yellow plastic dust bin. It clattered against the floor.
The ember flared on the end of her cigarette as she inhaled deeply. Nerissa held her breath, turned her eyes to the lumber beams running along the ceiling, and exhaled a pillar of smoke. “I need your help.”

Her sister stopped and leaned against the broom. The straw sank under her weight. “No fucking way.”

“You don’t even know what I’m going to ask.”

“Yes, I do.” Evie picked the dust bin up before staring at her sister a while. She clucked her tongue before walking around the back of the stairs, past the white, front-loading washer and dryer, to a large, unlidded waste bin. It was grey much like everything else in the room. “I know you think I’m a moron, but I know what you do for a living.”

“It’s not surprising considering what you do for a living.” With the cigarette in the corner of her mouth, Nerissa pushed her wild and jagged hair around her head as she scratched her scalp with her short, painted nails. “Professional witch. How embarrassing is that? I cannot believe you had business cards printed up.”

“At least I have cards. Can I see one of yours?” Evie snapped the dust bin to the broom’s handle like she’d found it. She crossed to the corner where the cement basin of a utility sink met the beginning of the metal shelving unit. She leaned the broom and dust bin in the small space between the sink and wall. “Oh, I forgot. You’re all fucking super secret government bullshit.”

“I don’t know why you take it so personally.”

“Because it’s fucking bullshit is why.” Her black, combat boots stomped around until they met her sister’s designer boots, toe to toe. Evie put her hands on her hips and tilted her head up to look her sister straight in the eye. “It’s not like we both know what really goes on in the world, what’s really out there. Why you pretend you don’t know is beyond me.”

“Okay, this is me no longer pretending.” In a flash, Nerissa cupped her sister’s cheek. Her thumb stroked her make-up-free cheek. She smiled. “I need her help, Evie. Please.”

“What the fuck do you need me for?” The tender touch didn’t soothe her rough voice. Evie shifted her weight to one leg. Her eyes narrowed.

“I need you to do what you do best.” Nerissa took one more hit off her cigarette before she tossed it down on the man-made floor and crushed it out with the pointy toe of her boot. “I need your A game and everything you can carry.”

“For what?”

She turned and walked back up the stairs. Just as suddenly as she turned to leave, she spun back around. With her left hand, she pulled back the collar of her coat and dress shirt to show the large, web-like scar on her neck. “We’re going after the bastards that did this.”

Creative Commons License
Project 365 Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Project 365

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

“This should do it.” A circle of heather, salt and ague root, six feet in circumference, sat upon the cold cement floor. The damp, grey walls matched the floor. Set high in the wall, small rectangular windows let in the light of the late afternoon sun. Elongated patches of light dotted the basement, but not a one touched the circle or the dull, metal shelving units that lined the walls.

She stood in the center of the circle. Her black, combat boots rested ankle to ankle, with her green, military pants tucked in for good measure. From one of the multitude of pockets in her pants, she pulled out a white candle and a box of wooden matches.

“Okay, buddy, I hope you’re ready.” She wrapped her long black hair into a ponytail. She tugged at the thick, leather belt that held as many bags and containers as it could before sinking into an Indian-style sit. Her black, tribal tattoos absorbed the light from the match as it lit the candle.

She mumbled. Her hands rested palm to palm. When she closed her eyes, something under one of the shelving units, in the shadows, moved. The sound of small claws skittered along the cement.

She paused to take a breath. The dust motes moving through the streams of sunlight paused in their floating descent. A blue light haloed her hands. She spoke again the words of ancient, dead languages. An expanding ball of light forced her hands apart.

Eyes glowed red under a shelf with clear plastic containers filled with Christmas decorations. It hissed as it stared at the blue orb. She smiled.

A blue swirl of sparkles reached out from the orb to grab the glowing red eyes. It screeched and clawed at the floor. Its body was curved and hunched while covered in reddish brown hair. Yellow eyes sat close together above a mouth of sharp, pointed teeth. It looked at her and hissed.

“Too late for that, asshole.” Her hands drew further apart. The creature screeched again before popping into the blue sphere. As soon as it was trapped, she forced her hands together. She met resistance. Sparks flew. She gritted her teeth and pressed her hands together until the palms could touch. The ball of light flashed between her hands before disappearing.

“Nice.” From the stairwell leading down into the basement, she descended in designer boots. Sharp-pressed pants matched her pretty, white blouse. Her wild black hair matched her dark eye make-up and lipstick. “What was that?”

“Goblin.” She wiped her damp brow. Her breathing was labored, but she calmed with a few deep breaths. “What brings you down here, Nerissa? How did you know where to find me?”

“Me? I have my ways. What kind of sister would I be if I couldn’t find you?”

Creative Commons License
Project 365 Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Project 365

Monday, May 11th, 2009

After passing under the black iron “City Park” sign arching over the opening in the high brick wall, Nerissa walked along the smooth, clean sidewalk. She stuck to the cement instead of wandering off into the grass. Graffitied park benches and dented garbage cans lined her path. A street lamp flickered off as the sky changed from a dull, carbon-filled orange to yellow. With her coat wrapped and tied tight at her waist, she sipped from a cup of coffee. She placed her cigarette between her lips and inhaled. The ember burned bright until she let go a long pillar of smoke.

She smiled. A woman with her hair pulled back and dressed in a shiny gym suit jogged past. Her blue earphone cords bounced against pink windbreaker. One face lift left her eyes narrow and almond-shaped. Nerissa spared her a glance whereas the jogger didn’t. She smirked as she took another hit from her cigarette. Up the path, where the curve in the sidewalk met the slope of the hill, a tall, old oak tree and thick undergrowth marred the horizon. The tip of her shoes stopped at the edge of the sidewalk. The ground just beyond her toes was turned in hopes of the new rows of flowers.

Her cigarette butt smoldered for a while in the fresh dirt until it died. She watched the hill. The early morning sun warmed her back. She waited.

Without a single movement in the underbrush, he appeared as a shadow. As he marched towards her, his fine features contrasted his heavy, huntsman coat. His walk was brisk and determined, with a hint of caution as his sharp eyes marked everyone and everything in the park. Nerissa smiled as he completed his scan.

He stood six inches taller than her. She reached up and pulled off his dark green hat. Long, thick blonde hair fell down around his narrow, sharp face and past the mantle of his coat. She smiled wider because he smiled. He brushed his knuckles down her face as he stepped into the dirt.

“You received my message?” She took his hand from her face and wove her fingers with hers.

“Yep.” He lifted his hand holding hers and kissed its back. He paused to notice the indented white mark on her ring finger. “Leave it to you to use a carrier pigeon.”

“Well, I don’t know where you’re living now.” With her free hand, Nerissa wrapped his silky hair behind the pointed tip of his ear. His ears matched the graceful curve of his cheek and brown eyes.

“Lexington and forty-fifth.” He chuckled in the same way birds sing for worms. “Second floor. Great view of this park.”

“Not bad for a half-breed.”

“Not bad for a half-breed.” His laughter petered out into a bittersweet sigh. He stared at her face for a moment.

“Is it time?” he asked.

“It’s time.”

“Finally.” He looked to the sky as a large, black bird flew over their heads. He squeezed her hand. “Anyone else coming along?”

“A few.” She reached up and stroked his cheek. “I need you for range and back-up. ”

“You’ve got muscle?”

Nerissa gave half a grin. “Yeah. More than enough, I hope.”

“Anyone else?” His eyes narrowed.

“One more.”

He kissed the back of her hand before leaning into kiss her cheek. “I’ll be ready. Call me. Stop with the stupid pigeons.”

“All right, Mellathion Shalandalan.”

“It’s just Mel. You know that. You can never get the accent right.”

Creative Commons License
Project 365 Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Project 365

Friday, April 24th, 2009
“So, you’re with whom?” He clutched his messenger bag to his chest as he sat at the tall stool next to an even taller, circular table. Across the table, Nerissa set a paper cup down before Nathaniel before scooting her kester up on her stool.

“No one you’ve heard of.” She flipped the plastic lid off her coffee and blew the steam from the black brew. She smiled with a deep inhale.

“Try me.” He looked at the cup before tightening his grip on his bag. The corners of a laptop poked against the canvas material.

With her lips pursed, Nerissa flipped out her identification wallet to flash the laminated I.D. card and badge. “S.I.C.N.”

“Sicken?”

She laughed. “Supernatural Investigations, Criminal Negotiations.”

“There is no such thing.” Nathanial stated it without malice or mockery. It was a matter fact in the same way he sipped at his cup and set it back down.
“Oh, really?” She tilted her head and raised her eyebrows. “How’s your dad?”

“You mean my step-dad.” He sounded full of derision. He frowned as he looked at the ground. “He’s another in a long line of losers my mom thinks she needs to live with.”
“I’m not talking about him. How’s your dad?”

He wilted like a delicate flower under a heat lamp. His frown deepened with the curving of his spine. He let slip his bag from his lap but hung onto the strap to keep it from hitting the floor. Nathaniel eased it down until he could release the band. “I don’t know what you mean.”

“I think you do.” Nerissa sipped her coffee with a smile. She smacked her lips. “May I meet him?”

“Do we have to do this here?” Both glanced around the posh coffee house filled with brown pillows, browner stuffed chairs and highly varnished brown wood. Being the only patrons, the barista wandered between the curtains that separated the counter from the kitchen. Nerissa rested her chin on the heel of her hand and drummed her fingers against her cheek.

Nathanial rolled his eyes. He extended his lower lip to puff his bangs out of his eyes. “Dad? Dad, come on.”

The air heated by twenty degrees. Nathanial glowed faint red for a moment before a meticulous outline of an eight foot demon appeared around him. With eyes wide open, Nerissa leaned back. She could still see the boy, but the demon swallowed him whole with its presence.

“Dad, this lady wants to meet you.”

You called me for this? Its voice was verbose. Vibrations rippled her coffee. Nerissa looked up and down at the unhallowed figure before she sipped her coffee.

“Look, it wasn’t my idea.”

How many times have I told you –

“Shut up, Dad. This wasn’t my idea.”

Do not tell me to shut up, young man. I am your father.

“Or what? What, Dad? You’re going to do what? Nothing. That’s what you’re going to do. Nothing.”

Just because you are my son and we’re bound by blood and bone does not mean I cannot punish you.

“Oh, yeah? When have you ever done that – oh, right. Only every day of my life!”

You are lucky I am stuck in Hell. That is all I am saying.

“You don’t frighten me.”

Nerissa buried her laugher in a large gulp of coffee. When she couldn’t stop laughing, she took another drink. She coughed and straightened up. “My name is Nerissa Compton. I work for a secret government agency that handles unnatural crimes. I hope to recruit you for my team. I am prepared to make a very handsome offer for your services.”

Creative Commons License
Project 365 Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Project 365

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009
Nathanial slouched in the crappy, plastic chair outside of the principal’s office. The chair was straight out of the sixties, where Nathanial was straight out of today. His dark, brown hair was mussed in that perfect, teenage way. The silver ring that pierced his brow matched the silver bolt under his bottom lip. He didn’t use black eyeliner; he didn’t need to with his thick, black lashes. He looked skinnier than he was in his over-sized, Hot Topic clothes. His black sneakers surrounded his messenger bag covered with pentacles and safety pins.
From the safety of her desk, Ms. Dawson watched him while she typed away at her computer. She updated the absentee list for the day, but could read the print out with her peripheral vision. Her hand would turn note after note as she typed the student’s name in the spreadsheet. Nathanial glanced at her once. He snorted. The corner of his mouth lifted as he looked away.

If asked, Ms. Dawson would have said the air heated in the small office while she and Nathanial waited. Once the principal’s door opened, she tugged at her collar and sighed once the door closed. The nearest absentee note worked as a fan.

“Nathanial, I wanted to see you today – ”

“Whatever you say,” he said with a voice that cracked at the highest pitch. “I didn’t do it.”

“No, Nathanial,” Principal Hall folded her knotty, age-spotted hands on her desk. She looked every bit the stereo-typical, tight-assed head administrator in full tweed and hair bun. She squinted at him from behind her horn-rimmed glasses with a death stare. “I – whatever you did – listen, Miss Compton is here to see you.”

Without moving his head, Nathaniel slid his eyes to the woman sitting against the dull, white walls of the principal’s office. She sat in a hippy-style chair beneath the plaques and framed diplomas. He didn’t smile at her wild hair or dark make-up, but he did nod. She flashed him a very small smile.

“Nathaniel, would you like to get something to drink?” She reached for her over-sized, black leather purse on the floor as she stood.

“I’m seventeen.”

“Ms. Compton, I cannot allow you take a student off school grounds.”

“It’s coffee.” With a flick of her wrist, Nerissa held up the government ID and badge that she produced from her black leather coat pocket to Principal Hall. Her eyes stayed on the young man. “You game?”

“Sure.” Nathaniel pulled his messenger bag strap over his head as he walked out the door. Nerissa followed while the principal sputtered nonsensical protests. From her seat, Ms. Dawson stopped typing to watch them go before leaning over to see the look on the principal’s face.

Creative Commons License
Project 365 Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Project 365

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009
It rained. It was the kind of rain that drove the average person home to curl up under a soft blanket and cry at old black and white movies. It was the kind of rain that spurned the dark soul to sling the hang man’s noose over the rafters and tighten the knot. The rain settled in for the day. The sheets of water ran down the café’s front window to distort the pedestrians into post-modern art: blobs and colors passed in humanoid form, but details were washed away in the glass and rain.

Nerissa found herself captured in the café by the rain. Her hair was perfect in that jutting, bed-head, wild woman way that she liked. It complimented her dark eye make-up and heavy eye-liner. Her dark, red lips drew on the white cigarette as she watched the people with umbrellas, hats, and newspapers over their heads pass by. Her chin rested on her fist as her elbow rested on the small, round table.

Also on the checkered, table-clothed table rested a stack of brown file folders, each an inch thick. The brown was once dark but had faded a shade or two lighter from age and use. Next to the stack, an old, dull brass ashtray overflowed with burnt and stubbed-out cigarette butts: a sign of a long captivity. But the expression on Nerissa’s face reflected nothing of her self-imposed captivity for the sake of good hair. She stared with empty eyes and a guarded face at the passersby.

She stubbed out her cigarette as the ember glowed as close as it dared to the filter. She pushed the porcupine mass of filter butts about to find a place to extinguish the cinder. Her large, blue eyes glanced at the choreographed “No Smoking” sign hung in a wooden frame above the thirty year old, hard plastic cash register station. By sheer luck, the owner was in her debt. Nerissa could have her way in his small coffee house café so long as she didn’t upset the other customers. Since she was the only person in the shop, she pulled another cigarette from the dwindling pack. She tapped it on the table twice while sweeping the room for a sign of her waitress. By the time she sucked her first blessed lung-full of smoke, the small, college-aged girl appeared.

Her long, braided hair with pretty red ribbons offset the 50s style glasses that hung from the tip of her broad nose. The waitress wasn’t pretty by any stretch of the imagination, but Nerissa didn’t look at her long enough to notice. She was the contrast opposite: neat fitting sweater, expensive dress slacks hemmed for her short height, boots with the right amount of heal to give a nice lift to her ass but she was still able to run despite the heal. Her clothes were all black to match her hair. Nerissa would be beautiful if she didn’t dress and style her hair as if she were executive Goth. “Another coffee.”

The waitress with the white, button-down shirt and short, pleated skirt spun on her terribly, practical shoes. She marched through the soft, white curtains that cut the back of the café off from the main floor. Nerissa lifted an eyebrow as she could see the pot of the sacred java on the counter behind the cashier station. She shrugged and reached for the top folder file.
The brass, hanging bell on the front door rang as the door swung in. The static sound of rain filled the front area of the café as he stepped in. He shook off his brown overcoat to spill the water on the rubber-bottomed matt. His shoes scuffed off the grit of the streets as he rubbed one then the other on the matt. He rubbed his dark, brown hair until it spiked on end.

He dropped his damp stack of file folders onto the table next to Nerissa’s. As he slipped out of his coat, he pulled out the chair opposite her. He slipped his silk-lined coat over the back of the chair before sitting.

“Nerissa.”

“Geoffrey.” Nerissa made no attempt to hide her fake smile except to take a long drag from her cigarette. “It’s good to see you.”

“Likewise.” He watched as the waitress set the cup and saucer of coffee on the table. When the waitress looked at him, he pointed to the cup and held up one finger. She nodded before disappearing into the back room again.

“So,” she shook four packets of sugar before tearing the small, white envelops and pouring the grains of sweet into the black liquid. The spoon clanked as it bounced off the sides of the cup. Nerissa blew on the steaming java before sipping. “What did you need, Geoffrey?”

“Thirteen hours of surgery. Six weeks in recovery. Three months of rehab and two weeks vacation.” He slouched into a supervisory position. His eyes met hers until she turned away. Her thin fingers covered the spider web scar that covered the right side of her neck. The wound was still pink at some of the white, thick parts as a sign of healing. She could feel it start from behind her ear, spread half way around her neck and stopped at her collar bone.

Nerissa swallowed. “So?”

“It’s time to go back to work.” He pushed his file folders until his topped hers. After the waitress approached, he took the cup of Joe from her hands with a brief smile.

“Is it?” Her fingers left her scar and combed through her hair. She watched the faceless, blobs of people pass by the window. She didn’t smile. She didn’t frown. She didn’t look at Geoffrey.

“The problem hasn’t gone away. In fact, from what we are able to monitor, activity is growing.” He sipped his coffee. “I brought you some candidates. You need to put the team back together.”

She flipped open to the top file folder. Her eyes scanned the page as she tapped the ash from her cigarette. After another long inhale, she exhaled the smoke in Geoffrey’s face. “Is this the best you have?”

“Former MI-5 isn’t good enough since when?”

“Since they killed Tom and my team.” She pushed the files back to him. Her chin rested on the heel of her hand as she stared at him with the same look of boredom she had since he walked in the door. “I have started finding the new team.”

Her hand rested on the top of her pile of folders. Her deep red fingernail polish matched her lips. She did not move her hand when Geoffrey reached for the top file. He peeled back the corner, but couldn’t read much. Nerissa smiled.

“I am guessing I won’t know who until it’s too late?” Geoffrey sighed before taking another sip.

“No, you won’t. It’s my team now. We’re doing things my way.”

“So long as you continue to pass your psych evaluation.” As he stood, he lifted his coat from the back of the chair. He slipped it on while staring. He scowled as if he couldn’t read Nerissa’s blank face. He shrugged his shoulders until the wet coat settled. “Keep your appointments.”

“Will do, chief.” Her eyes never left his, even as she took another drag from her cigarette. It was long and deep so she could exhale straight into Geoffrey’s face. He coughed and waved it away. He closed his eyes against the white whirls and turned to leave the café.

Nerissa smiled wider until she looked down at the table at his full cup of coffee. “Fucker stiffed me.”

Creative Commons License
Project 365 Short Stories by Mary Lewys is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Project 365

Monday, April 13th, 2009
Matt didn’t mind the blood, not after the blow broke his nose. His face was purple and swollen in the middle with a fine cut across the bridge of his nose. It took away from the aches from the bruises all over the rest of his body. But when the cuffs clinked around the wrists of that creature, that slimy, black-hair fairy that taunted Zee, he took a great deal of satisfaction. He took more when he sliced the points off the creature’s ears.

He stopped thinking of the creature as “the creature” when he realized she had breasts during the body search. Though Zee and Marmaduke said nothing from the shadows of the warehouse, Matt figured the fairy leader had grown into a twisted version of the woman from which she exploded. He shoved her into the back of the patrol car and slammed the door. Her spittle covered the window as her ranting voice grew muffled.

As he folded and slammed her over the booking desk, Matt wondered about the evidence he would have to manufacture. It would have to be good to stick in court, especially since the paperwork on this creature didn’t exist. However, she started her rambling again. A full, demented confession blasted from her mouth, “She was my form, not hers! It was mine to take! It was mine!”

Full confession in front of other officers sealed his case shut. Matt never showed his inner sigh, but he did nod back at the cheers for an excellent arrest. But it was Zee dashing in at the last minute, with a gold fish in a glass of water that stole the show. She told everyone to relax, the fish was okay.

“So, that’s how the case ends?” Zee raised her margarita glass. Her purple umbrella clashed with the crushed ice green dish. Her platform, black boots knocked together as she dangled them off the edge of the building. Matt sat next to her on the roof of her apartment building with his own iced drink. He bumped his glass against hers with a smile. He wore a clean suit.

“Pretty much. Full confession like that may not put her away in prison, but a psychiatric ward will do.” He sucked at the bent straw under his own umbrella. He closed one eye and twisted his head. “Ow.”

Zee laughed and pointed. “Brain freeze!”

Over the rooftops of the other brownstones, the sun sank to leave the sky a shade of purple only found in orchids and crayon boxes. Below their feet, streetlights popped on one by one as their sensors discovered enough darkness. A taxi rumbled down her street and round the corner. Matt took another drink before he set the plastic glass down on the cement ledge next to him.

“If I haven’t said it, thanks, Zee.”

“You’re welcome Matt.” As she sipped at her own drink, Zee wiggled closer. Her shoulder touched his and her head fell against his shoulder. “Wait until you get my bill.”


Inspired by a photograph from Jamie Brelsford

Project 365

Sunday, April 12th, 2009
“So, you understand.” Matt walked with long, fast strides to keep pace with the wandering troll at his side. The pebbles for the path through the garden crunched more under his sneakered foot than it did under the bare, thick-skinned feet of his companion. Matt chalked it up to magic, or the fact that he had to walk faster, because he could be stealthy if he had to be. But as the two walked through the celestial gardens of the monastery, all the brown robed monks gave them a wide birth.

“Yeah. Just because I look like a dinosaur doesn’t mean I have a peanut brain,” Marmaduke cupped his brow and looked to the sky. The sun was sinking. The sky changed from bright azure to a medium blue with the promise of a royal blue in a few hours. The old, spiral towers with gothic crosses cast shadows across the green grass and elder trees of the garden. He watched a few birds overhead before glancing at the human. “No matter what Zee’s told you.”

Matt smiled a cock-eyed grin. He rubbed the back of his neck before running his fingers through his hair. “Good. How do we go about it then?”

“Well, the wizard – ”

“Monk. He said he was a monk a hundred times.” With a roll of his eyes, Matt shoved both hands in his pants pockets. His walked turned into a shuffle after a glance back over his shoulder. “I don’t know how you kept from snapping his neck every time he corrected you.”

“I’ve known Jimmy for years now.” He waved Matt off with a large, lumbering hand. Though his face was flatter than the average human’s, Marmaduke grinned with full tusks in view. He shook his head with a laugh.

“Jimmy the wizard.”

“I know.”

With a snort, Matt kicked at a large, dark stone in the path. It skipped across the other rocks as a flat stone would a smooth lake surface before rolling to a stop in the grass. “Jimmy the monk, the former wizard.”

“Don’t try to figure him out.” Marmaduke tossed the velvet, brown bag tied with a dramatic gold rope up into the air. He caught it with his other hand. “Your life-span isn’t long enough.”

Matt couldn’t help but notice the ripple of strong muscle through the troll’s arm. The creature wore a black, leather vest and tan sweat pants. His black hoodie jacket was tied around his waist. Either loose coins or keys jingled in his pockets, but Matt couldn’t decide which a troll would have. “Thanks.”

With a tilt of his head, Marmaduke eyed the human at his side as they passed through the open, wooden gates. The stone path ended and the pavement of the parking lot began. Two older cars with great gas mileage sat near the single parking lot lamppost. Marmaduke stopped staring. “Can I say something?”

“Sure.”

“You’re a cop, right?” He tossed the full bag up into the air and caught it with the opposite hand.

“Yes.”

“First time talking with a troll and dealing with fairies?”

Matt nodded with his bottom lip sticking out. “As far as I know. However, as I run through old cases in my head – ”

With a swift pat on the back that sent Matt stumbling forward, Marmaduke reached for his shoulder to help keep him upright. He pretended to dust off some lint from the grotesque Hawaiian shirt in order to cover up his helping. “You are handling this amazingly well.”

“Really?” Matt coughed. He blinked to make sure his eyes were still in his head. His hand rand down his chest to remove some of that invisible lint. “That’s because the screaming is on the inside.”

“Most humans can’t handle it – especially doctors, firefighters, and cops. It’s like they can’t handle the monsters outside of what they’ve been trained to see – the usual monsters: child molesters, pyromaniacs, serial killers.” He didn’t glance back. Marmaduke left the monastery’s small parking lot for the winding, tree-lined drive to the main road. The sound of end-of-day, rush-hour traffic filtered through the long bows of the pine trees.

“I didn’t have much of a choice.” With his hands back in his pants pockets, Matt double-timed his steps to keep up. He spotted passing headlights as he walked up the drive. He spotted one, a white taxi cab, passing and wondered if the troll would fit in the car.

“Zee tends to do that.”

With a large, grey-skinned hand, Marmaduke gripped Matt’s arm and lifted it from his side. He looked at the watch. As he released his arm, he looked down the street from the end of the drive. “Yes, yes, she does.”

Matt stood at the edge of the road, only a few steps from the white line where commuters raced home for dinner. He watched with wonder as not a single car swerved. Each vehicle stayed its course despite the fact that he was standing next to a troll. A large, elephant-skinned, large-tusked creature stood in a Village People vest and held a bag of magic powder and no one noticed. If they noticed, the drivers and passengers didn’t care.

With a laugh that he buried in his hand, Matt rubbed his face. Two day’s worth of growth covered his jaw and cheeks. He looked like hell and he knew it, but he couldn’t do anything about it no – just like he couldn’t do anything about the ridiculous clothing Zee picked out for him from her ex-boyfriend’s stash. He laughed and rubbed his face, believing that Zee was the only person who could cause this type of situation in his life.

“With this, we can kill most of the fairy tribe set up underground.” Marmaduke tossed the brown bag into the air and caught it. A shiny, new pick-up truck slowed in its approach. “However, if one is as large as you say, well, it will be a little messy.”

He stepped back. Matt watched the truck roll to a stop before him. The driver side window rolled down. Zee’s grinning face was reveled from behind the shaded glass. Matt chuckled. “So long as we can arrest it with enough evidence for a conviction for one of the murders – ”

“Evidence shouldn’t be a problem.” Marmaduke clamped a hand down on Matt’s shoulder to help steady his climb into the truck’s bed. The axles groaned from the weight. Matt did as well. Once in, he filled the bed and leaned his back against the cab as he sat. He tucked the bag between his legs and offered a hand to Matt. “Turning it in will.”


Inspired by a photograph from Sachie Yamazaki

Project 365

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009
The doors swooshed closed. Matt paused while Zee crossed the old, iron platform to scan for another person or creature. No one or nothing followed as Zee sauntered towards the chipped and rusted stairs, bypassing the puddles of urine. As the lite-train clicked away from the station, random bits of paper skipped past. Matt studied her face for a moment to see if Zee was even aware that she was walking downstairs towards her street. Her eyes looked a thousand miles away.

At the bottom of the stairs, after another glance about, Matt placed his hand on Zee’s shoulder. She spun with her patent leather purse flapping in her fists. He stared while the knot in his brow deepened. He pursed his lips. “What just happened?”

“Well,” Zee rolled her eyes up to the station’s platform, “we took the Z train across town to my stop and – ”

“No, back there in the tunnels.” He placed his other hand on her shoulder. The weight of his arms was carefully balanced, but he lowered his chin to catch her eyes. “What was that place and who was that – what was that thing?”

“Oh! Well, that was Charlie’s – it’s a fun place if you know where to find it. Great jazz band on Saturday night. The pixies don’t even play instruments. You should hear them – ”

“Zee!”

“I don’t mean The Pixies, as in the band.” With a toothy smile, Zee mimicked Matt by placing her hands on his shoulders. Her purse hit him under his arm. “I mean wee little pixies that are so cute you just want to take one home, but don’t. Just don’t. Really.”

The lines on his face grew deeper as Matt frowned. “What did we just do?”

“We hired a troll.” While she tried to frown, she could manage a suppressed grin only. She dropped her hands and slipped out from under his hands. With a quick skip, she bounded off the sidewalk to cross the street.

Matt did not follow. “We did what?”

“We – well, I hired a troll to take care of the fairy problem.” Zee spun in a circle, stopping long enough to grin at him. She walked with a brisk step to the sidewalk down the street. Overhead, the street lamp glowed on to encircle her in light. The two-story brownstones lined both sides of the road. Unlike other sections of town, the windows here didn’t sport flower boxes or pretty curtains. Front stoops were empty and surrounded by rusted, dented garbage bins.

A brown, dented taxi cab rumbled by before rounding the corner at the end of the street. The smell of exhaust and burnt oil snapped Matt back to his senses. He jogged to catch back up.

“What? Why? Who?”

Zee laughed as she wrapped her arm around his. One long leg with a knee-length, platform boot crossed over the other as she leaned against him. “Look, he’s going to be well equipped to take care of this. It’s standard subcontracting, Matt. Like you do with me. When you run across something hinky, you call me and I do my whole lay-hands-on thing and give you the intel. Then, I give you an invoice and I pay my rent and buy groceries. You should know how this works.”

“That’s not what I mean.” He glanced back over his shoulder: still nothing. His eyes moved along the windows for any watchers. “What am I going to tell the Lieutenant?”

“Um, I don’t know.” She shrugged. “That it’s been taken care of?”

“By a troll?” Once at her stoop, Matt stopped. He rested one foot on the first step, but he left his weight on his other foot as if he had no intention of moving further. “Why, yes, I want a psych evaluation, sir. Zee, you can’t be serious. What am I going to tell these girls’ family?”

“How about nothing?”

“And then it goes into a cold case file where they live with the knowledge that whoever killed their loved one is running free.”

She clicked her purse open. Her long fingers pushed items about until she pulled out a ring with a key and small, plastic skeleton on it. “But they’re not.”

“But they won’t know that.” Matt rested a hand on his knee as he leaned over. He looked up at Zee with the most worried expression Zee has ever seen. Matt hinted at pleading with his voice. “I have to have a body, clues and a case to close.”

“So, what do we do?” Zee dropped her key back into her purse and clicked it shut.

“We’re going back.” He lifted his hand to take hers. Behind him, a police van zoomed by with sirens wailing. The noise bounced off the old stones of the buildings before fading. Matt kept his eyes on Zee. “We’ve got to find that troll and work this out.”


inspired by a photograph from Witold Barski

Project 365

Monday, April 6th, 2009
With one clean, fingernail, Matt picked at the coffee stain on the table cloth. He sighed and stared up at the slim-covered, cement ceiling. Around him, tattered umbrellas capped the table side café next to the drainage and sewer pipes for the city. Small bowls filled with questionable water floated small, globs of candles. Light through the paper windows of the café mixed with the smoke from its grill and steam from its boiling pots. Matt pinched his nose as he looked around once more. Only he and Zee sat outside the café. He could make out humanoid shadows in the café, but he didn’t want to make assumptions.

A large figure sat down at their table. By large, Matt sized the figure out at least twice his size. He couldn’t see the figure’s face because of the hoodie pulled down as low as it could go. The jacket was zipped up tight under the figure’s square chin. As Matt scooted his chair closer to Zee, he noticed skin like a rhinoceros covered the hand that was spread out over the table.

“You called?” The figure’s voice was deep as a subway train rumble. If the figure breathed, Matt couldn’t detect it. He went to pull at the tie that wasn’t there. Instead, Matt sighed and ran his hand down the loud, Hawaiian-printed shirt Zee had lent.

“Hey, Marmaduke.” With her black and white, fingerless gloves, Zee patted the figure’s hand. She rested her chin on her laced fingers and batted her thick, black eyeliner eyes. “Thank you for taking my call.”

“I was heading home. You’re lucky you caught me.” Marmaduke rubbed his nose.

“Lucky for us then.” Zee smiled. “We need your help.”

“We?”

“Matt here is my,” she turned to look at Matt for a moment, as if the right word would be written on his forehead. Zee smiled wider at the site of him out of his element: the shirt, the khaki pants, and the running shoes. His hair was as snappy as ever. She picked at her nails to keep from running her fingers through his thick, brown hair and messing it up. “Associate. He – ”

“Fairies are infesting the sewers and undergrounds. We need a large amount of iron – ”

“Is he serious?” With a shift of his shoulders, Marmaduke turned to Zee. “Fairies?”

“Unfortunately, yeah.”

Matt’s mouth hung open. Zee reached over and closed it.

“It’ll cost you.” Marmaduke pushed away from the table. His chair scraped against the cement to shoot up sparks. He stood with a heavy hand on the chair’s back.

“The usual?”

With a small nod, Marmaduke walked off into the darkness without looking back. Zee watched him go and gave a brief wave after he disappeared.

Matt grabbed her arm. “Do I want to know what the usual is?”


Inspired from a photograph by Dimitris Kritsotakis

Project 365

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009
Matt stood still. With his bare arms at his sides like two, wet noodles, his cheek under his right eye twitched. Light from under the old, wooden door two steps behind him lit the damage and wear to his black, leather shoes. The rest of the small, apartment living room was dimly lit with mismatched lamps at opposite ends of the room, covered with dark red scarves.

From down the narrow hallway, a door clicked opened. Zee walked stark naked from one room to the other across the hall. She was pale and lithe. Her head was dropped as she pulled black elastic ties from her hair. The defused lighting blurred the details of her body. Matt squinted until the bathroom door closed.

“I’ll shower first.”

He waited, even after the light glimmered from under the painted bathroom door and the sound of running water wandered down the hall. He stood still. His eyes shifted, but he remained glued two steps away from the front door. “Despite everything that has happened tonight, this is by far the weirdest.”

Zee’s apartment had dark blue walls. Plastic stars mapped out the constellations on the high ceiling. From where Matt stood, he could only see one window in the far wall. If three unique blue curtains didn’t cover it, he would be able to see the street below. She owned a ratty, old couch that faced a small television on a black, painted stand. A 50s style oval pattern rug of blues and grays covered most of the floor. Any free space was filled with book shelves containing various plastic toys, old books, left-over chemistry kit parts, half-burned candles, and random stacks of paper that Matt didn’t want to know about or touch. He ignored the spines on all the tomes as he took another step in.

On the bare patch above the couch, an old print was thumb-tacked to the wall. It looked to be an ancient painting of the arch-angel Raphael. Creases ran through the angel’s dark wings, face, and just below its exposed knee. Matt folded his arms over his bruised chest as he wondered about the long quill in the angel’s hand and the half-serpent, half-man chained beneath the angel’s foot. In comparison to all the plastic gizmos and doodads filling up Zee’s place, the print seemed out of place.

He heard the water turn off. Returning to his place near the front door, he folded his arms tighter over his chest. He rocked on his feet and wiggled his toes against the grit that had wormed its way through his socks. His arms dropped as the dark purple, bathroom door clicked open. Zee stood in the doorway with her hair wrapped in a white towel on the top of her head and a matching, terrycloth bathrobe. The smell of lavender and lilac filled the air as Matt stiffened.

“Ever been to my place before?” Zee leaned against the doorframe. She stuffed her scrubbed-pink hands into the robe pockets. She had a gleam of tease in her eye.

“No.” Matt barked. He winced at the loudness of his voice in such a tiny place. “No, first time.”

“You want to shower?”

“Do you have any clothes I can borrow?”

Her shoulder pushed her towards her bedroom. “Yeah. Plenty of exes left one thing or another.”

“Allow me to rephrase that: do you have any clothes I would wear that I can borrow?”


Inspired by a photograph from Xiskya Valladares

Project 365

Monday, March 30th, 2009
“Are you serious? Iron?” Matt grunted as he swung the lead pipe at barf-brownish light. A door with chipped green paint closed and locked as he turned to face it. His bare, sweaty chest heaved. Angry, red chaffed marks encircled his wrists. Bruises were blooming all over his thick, muscular body.

“Light bulbs.” In the small storage room, Zee pulled down the boxes and tore at the tape. She opened one and tossed it away. She pulled down another box. Her black hair blended in to the ill-lit room. She puffed air like she did after her morning run on the treadmill.

“Really? Light bulbs?” After another swing, Matt paused long enough to see what Zee did.

“What?” She threw another small box filled with smaller boxes of bolts aside.

“Light bulbs – you know,” he swung with another grunt. The pipe knocked the fluttering light straight into the wall. It stuck before sliding slowly down to the floor. It flickered on and off as it went down. “Light bulbs are the fairies weakness?”

“What? No!” Her big, black boot buried itself into a box. Zee grunted as she struggled to pull it out. “Lead. We need lead and lots of it.”

“We’re not going to find it in here.” He grabbed her hand. She reached to touch his black eye, but stopped herself. Matt tugged on her hand as he swerved around the boxes to the other, old door. “We need to get out of here.”


Inspired by a photograph from cumhur kahveci

Project 365

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009
“It isn’t ours. So, you can drink.”

Zee leaned forward as she sat in an old, school desk chair. Her deep, cherry lips reached for the plastic straw. The handcuffs encircling her wrists reminded her of how far she could go. Luckily, she could reach and sip the water in the store-purchased bottle.

“Thank you.” She wiggled her bottom to sit back. The metal of her metal restraints rattled against the metal of the back of the chair. “So, where were we?”

“Why, we went underground instead of under knoll.” It sat across the table. When the light from the dangling, single bulb caught its face, shadows ran into the deep crevasses. It looked human with two eyes, two ears, a nose, and a mouth, but the eyes were large and milky. The nose overshadowed its face, shaped like a summer squash. Square, odd-angled teeth jutted out between thin, chapped lips. Dark hair framed the gruesome face.

“Right.” Zee looked up at the lights dancing over head. Bruised purple, sickly green, and baby-shit brown lights wobbled back and forth. One landed on a rusty, slimy piece of pipe. As it fed, sucking up the filth and decay, the light grew larger. If Zee squinted, she could see a wee human form at the center of the light. As muck and gunk disappeared, the fairies grew in size and shape.

“The green is soft. The green makes us gentle and kind.” It rested its glittered arms on the table. Its skin was as gray as long dead flesh. “We came to the city to grow strong. We are strong.”

“I wouldn’t say that.” Matt grunted as a large ball of light struck his bare stomach. His arms pulled on the chains wrapped around his crossed arms and tied to the pipes on the ceiling. He coughed a few times. Light glistened off his sweaty skin. “You’re not so tough.”

“Quiet, human!” It pointed a finger at Matt. Another ball of light struck at his back above the kidneys. He gritted his teeth against crying out.

“You know, I’m not going to argue with you.” Zee sucked on her straw. She smiled when she finished with her drink. “But I have to ask a question. Why so many? You live like forever. Why do you need so many?”

“We are strong. We make a home. We call it ours.”

“Ah. And you’re unwilling to share?”

We are strong.” It beat a fist onto the table.

“That’s all I wanted to know.” Zee slammed her fist down on the table as well. The handcuffs fell to the floor behind her chair.


Inspired by a photograph from Felipe Wiecheteck

Project 365

Monday, March 23rd, 2009
“There are plenty of places for us to tuck should a train come by. It’s not like it is in the movies.” Matt held his flashlight at shoulder level. His other hand pointed his gun to the ground, away from his body. Zee walked on the other side of the rail. Her boots crunched on the gritty rocks.

“If a train comes by.” She glanced behind but only darkness followed. Her eyes were wide. “Doesn’t it seem weird that a train hasn’t come by?”

“Now that you mention it.” Matt stepped in a way to keep the noise of his shoes against the gravel down to a murmur. “An awful lot of people at that last station waiting for a train.”

“Is it making you nervous?”

“Yes.” With a twist of his wrist, Matt lit a small walkway on the far side of the subway cavern. The dull metal handrail tried to glitter in a light it rarely saw. “Want to try again?”

Zee sighed. Her hand rested on his shoulder as she stumbled. “Not really.”

“Please?”

“Matt.”

“Pretty please with sugar on top?” He rolled his eyes. Zee clapped her hands together as quietly as she could before stomping her way across the tracks to the short steps up to the archway. Set deep into the arch, a green, utility door reflected the light from Matt’s flashlight.

She peeled off the fishnet glove that matched her fishnet armbands. With one deep breath, she reached out and touched the rail. Matt held his breath. He stepped closer the longer Zee stood.

“And?”

She blinked.

“Zee?”

“I think we found our door, Matt.”


Inspired by a photograph from Sylvia Neugebauer

Project 365

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009
“An abandoned toy factory? Doesn’t it seem a little too Batman and Robin for you?” Zee wanted to reach for Matt’s hand, but she knew he had extended it behind him as a warning. He held his gun in the other hand, moving along the packing room floor. A stack of empty boxes flanked their path as Matt and Zee moved deeper into the dark and dusty factory.

“It makes sense.” Matt stopped and listened. The factory floor was silent as the grave. Street lights from outside gave enough light through the windows high on the factory walls for Zee to make out the forgotten toys on the conveyor belts, boxes, and floor. She grabbed onto the bottom hem of Matt’s suit coat.

Matt glanced back at her before walking towards a dark, gray door against the back, cinderblock wall. “It was centrally located to all the murders. It would be a good gathering point for newborns.”

“Younglings.”

“Whatever.”

Zee tugged on his coat. “But fairies gather in knolls, under fallen trees, grassy areas.”

“Not if you’re building an army.” Matt wrapped his hand around the rusting door handle. He glanced back. He searched behind him as if he was certain someone or something was following. He squinted his eyes and sharpened his ears.

With a brief glance back, Zee stepped into Matt’s line of vision. She nodded. He pulled the door handle. The metal on metal sound of a large, door grinding against its doorframe filled the air. Zee swallowed as Matt took a deep breath.

The stairs on the other side of the door led down. “What army?”


Inspired by a photograph from juan bernardo

Project 365

Friday, March 20th, 2009
She stood out like a sore thumb against healthy fingers in the store’s interior. Too-white walls glared off the overly white, tile floor. The door chimed in a dainty tone as the metallic framed glass door closed. Her black, knee-length, laced boots, black mini-skirt, black baby tee and black fishnet on all limbs clashed with the orange, pink, and blue clothing that covered the clean walls and floor on shiny, silver racks. With her butt against the glass, her feet froze just inside the doorframe.

A clerk with a red poof of dry, frizzled hair approached. She wore a clashing orange sweater that could have been off one of the racks. Her small, brown eyes stared at the black eyeliner, black eye shadow and deep, red lipstick with a certainty that Satan would soon appear. “Can I help you?”

“Oh, no, thank you.” Zee smiled. She held back the laughter from the thought of what she must look like against the setting. “I’m just looking.”

Since she said it, she started doing it. With two strides, her black fingernail polished fingers pushed the soft, tightly woven sweaters along the circular, chrome frame of the floor stand. The clerk didn’t move but watched her – not with the look that Zee sometimes received: the look as if she was no better than a common criminal, perhaps worse. Out of the corner of her eye, Zee saw that the clerk held no contempt or judgement on her face.

When Zee moved on to the next rack, the clerk mimicked her movements. The red-head rested her elbow on the center isle rack and continued to stare. Zee bit her lip and glanced at her once to offer a brief flash of smile. By the third rack, Zee stopped smiling. She stopped pushing hangers and stared back.

“Waiting for your boyfriend?”

“What makes you say that?” Zee turned to pick up a neatly folded, white silk shirt from a white boxed shelf.

“You don’t look like you usually shop here.”

Zee smiled with teeth over her shoulder. “He’s not my boyfriend.”

In her mind’s eye, she could see Matt in his conference room with the guys. All around was evidence collected from the crimes: a map of the city with pin points for body locations, pictures of the women hanging on a cork board by brightly colored push pins, and hand written ideas and notes on a whiteboard. She knew he was pouring over all the information with a new set of eyes. What she hoped for was something that could point them in the right direction.

“Oh.” As if she had all the information she needed, the clerk returned to her post behind the back counter register. She fiddled with the loose hangers in a bin under the counter top.

Zee put the shirt she had no intentions of buying back on the shelf. She walked along the wall and looked at all the pretty clothes other girls wore. The corner of her mouth lifted at the memory of picking out clothes like this when she was so much younger and with her mother. She sighed and shook her head.

From within her square, shiny granny purse, her cell phone rang – not like a bell ring, but it played the Violent Femmes’ song, “Blister in the Sun.” She clicked the two metal balls to open her purse and pulled out the slim, black phone. Its digital display read “Matt.”

“Hey.” Her head tilted to pin the phone to her shoulder. She slipped the handles of her purse over her arm so she could pick up a pair of black pants. “No, I’m done at the coffee bar. I’m shopping. What did you find out?”

The clerk stood behind the counter and watched the pair of pants in Zee’s hands. When Zee placed the pants back on the shelf, she stepped to the return rack and started sorting through the clothes on plastic hangers.

“I’m on my way.” Her finger pressed the button. She dropped the phone into her purse. She clicked it closed and walked out the front door.


Inspired by a photograph from Regine Bosch

Project 365

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009
“A wizard.”

“Yeah.”

“Seriously.”

“Used to be.”

Matt walked with a long gate. His practical, soft-soled shoes stepped in light and shadow along the walkway leading out of the monetary. Zee half-skipped to keep up with him. She clapped her patent leather purse with both hands. It bounced from one fishnet stockinged thigh to the other. Her black ponytails bobbed.

“Zee, you’re asking a lot of me.” Matt set to double-checking his person: his gun was tucked under his left arm. His wallet with his identification and badge rested in his front, suit coat pocket. His St. Michael medal was attached to his keys in his pants’ pocket. “Fairies. Wizards. What’s next, the Easter Bunny?”

“Funny.” With a small giggle, she hooked her arm through his and bumped his shoulder. “Everyone knows there’s no Easter Bunny.”

“So, who’s Bendith?”

“Not who. Bendith Y Mamu. Sir Gaerfyrddin found them in the 13th Century in Carmarthenshire, one of the thirteen historic counties of Wales. Bendith Y Mamu means ‘Mother’s Blessing’ which is very funny.” She rounded the corner with him as Matt marched towards the front gates.

“How is that funny?”

“Well, according to most books, these fairies were known for stealing babies and toddlers to raise as their own.”

The mid-morning sun beamed on Matt’s scowl. Zee tilted her head as she watched what she knew where his wheels churning away. His lips grew thinner and thinner.

“What do they want? Babies?”

“I don’t think so.”

“Why breed in the women then?”

“I don’t know.”

“What are they doing in my city?”

“Don’t know.”

Matt grabbed the black iron bar attached to the large, wooden door. His knuckles turned white as he yanked. “Zee, what good are you?”

“It seems to me, Mister Detective, this is where you come in.” She patted his cheek before walking out the door.


inspired by a photograph from Elizabeth Porter

Project 365

Monday, March 16th, 2009
“For give me, Father, for I have sinned.”

“Zee, how many times do I have to tell you? I’m a monk, not a priest.” His light blue eyes brought Matt up short as he approached the old, well-polished reading table. The high, stone walls of the monastery library acted like an echo chamber. Luckily, the high, wooden book shelves filled with ancient tomes muffled what little noises the monks manufactured.

“You know I’m just funning you, Marv.” She patted his white, boney hand across the table while wearing her fishnet, black gloves. The monk clutched the corner of a thick book. The characters on the page didn”t look Earthen. Zee grinned her cute little grin. “This is my friend Matt.”

“Ah, the guardian.”

“Something like that.”

Matt nodded at Marv once. He noted the new growth of stubble on the monk’s chin and the mussed black hair underneath the hood. If he had to bet, Matt would have said that Marv the Monk was an ex-junkie on the road to redemption, but he waited for more information before making a decision. Matt pulled out a hard, oaken chair opposite the monk. He waited for Zee to sit before taking a seat in the chair next to her.

“What can I do for you, Zee?”

“Fairies.”

Marv glanced at Matt. He rubbed his chin while leaning back. His chair creaked. “And?”

“We have had a rash of murders.” Matt rested his forearms on the table. The white cuffs of his clean shirt were the perfect length beyond the cuff of his fresh, dark suit. “Women of all races, ages, backgrounds, tax brackets, have been found torn to pieces. We haven’t been able to connect the cases or find a pattern with the killer other than leaving the remains unidentifiable.”

“And you suspect fairies.” Marv folded his hands over his flat belly. His bottom lip stuck out as his closed his eyes.

“We saw close to forty last night,” Zee pulled the book over without taking her eyes off the monk. “That’s really a lot.”

“It is.” Marv rubbed his thumbs together.

“Could the things we saw last night – ”

“The younglings, you know, small, light – ”

Marv sighed. “I know, Zee. I know.”

“Could they be responsible for these murders?” Matt tilted his head as he stared at Marv. He waited and watched, almost ignoring Zee to his right. She flipped the pages of the book without spinning it around. Marv sat, rubbed his thumbs, and pooched his bottom lip over and over.

The trio sat in silence until the last monk left the library. The thick door closed with the softest of wood-against-wood sound. Marv lifted his head. “Yes. When certain fairies enter this world, they require a human host to transcend. But to have so many – fairies are ageless and timeless, walking worlds humans cannot. Our blood assists in their births while it ties them, but they can do things greater than we ever can.”

With a sudden jerk, Marv closed the book before he lifted it up. He cradled it in his arms as he rose from his chair. If he noticed Zee’s fast frown, he gave no indication. “So, to make so many, it would be almost wasteful.”

Matt opened his mouth but Zee’s fingers touched his lips. She shook her head and returned to the dutiful student pose. Matt pursed his lips as he watched Marv the Monk slip the book back into its home on the bookshelf behind him. He turned with a gasp. His light blue eyes turned white. “Bendith. Bendith is here.”

“Bendith?”

“Who is that?” Matt scowled. “And for that matter, who are you?”

With a quirk of his head, Marv blinked as he froze. Zee touched her partner’s hand. “Marv used to be a wizard.”


Inspired by a photograph from George Crux

Project 365

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
Under the early morning sunlight, the blue of the sky looked bluer. He slumped in the middle of the wooden park bench, his arms spread along its back. His legs sprawled out with his heels dug into the grass at the edge of the sidewalk. Matt looked up at the sky with his mouth hanging open. The dark circles under his eyes indicated he hadn’t slept all night.

“Coffee?” Her voice was as pert and chipper as the previous morning when he’d picked her up. Matt lifted his head to focus on the white, take-out cup with a white plastic lid. He took the cup and drank deep of the straight, black coffee.

Zee plopped onto the bench. Her knees knocked as she sipped at her café mocha. She hummed as the delicious mixture of steamed half percent milk and chocolate warmed her belly. “So, do you want to go over it again?”

“What makes you say that?”

“Most people do. Even people who seek out psychics to help with their cases.” She took another sip before cupping her drink in her lap with both hands.

“There are fairies.”

“Yep.”

Matt pushed with his legs until he sat up. He bent to rest his forearms against his knees. He took another long drink. “There are fairies.”

“Matt.” With a soft sigh, she touched the shoulder of his wrinkled suit coat. “You know I can read things by touching them. I’ve helped you before. Is it such a leap to believe in fairies?”

His hand sunk into the armpit under his coat. Metal sliding against rough leather turned her head as he dropped his gun into her lap. She lifted her coffee and pressed her thighs together.

“That’s my life, Zee. That’s what I do. That’s what I am.” He pointed at the gun. His cheek muscles ripped with tension. “Explain to me how fairies fit into that.”

She used her index finger and thumb to pick up his gun by the handle. It hung in the air for a moment before he put it away where it belonged. After another drink, she rubbed his back. “Think of them like a virus.”

“A virus?”

“That’s what fairies do to, well, make more fairies. They infect a host and when it’s time, a fairy emerges and kills the host.”

Matt tilted his head and twisted his neck. “You mean like Alien?”

“The movie or actual aliens?”

“The movie.”

“Oh.” Zee sipped her drink. “Yeah, something like that.”

“Fairies have been killing the women I’ve been investigating as victims of a serial killer.” Matt shook his head. “You know, vampires would’ve been more believable.”

“Vampires are like transfusions.” Zee shifted until she was scrunched against him. “They drain you and if they want to keep you, they give you their blood.”

He didn’t move. His eyes started where her thighs pressed against his and stopped at her shoulders. Matt lifted his chin to stare into her eyes.

“What? I don’t like vampires.”

“You dress like a vampire.”

“It’s so obvious you’ve never met a vampire.”


Inspired by a photograph from Rodolfo Belloli

Project 365

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009
Zee pulled on his suit coat sleeve until Matt squatted down behind the hedges. The lazy town square was empty due to the late hour. Not even the call of birds or crickets could be heard; only the slight rustling of grass beneath their feet. Matt rolled his eyes as he sighed.

“Now, don’t look at the lights.” Zee explained with both hands. Her black and white stripped arm bands added the much needed accent to her instructions.

Matt stared. His eyes had dark circles. His hair was a mess. His suit was rumpled from a long day’s run. He stared at her like the last of his patience had just run out.

“I’m serious. Don’t look at the lights. Look over there.” She pointed to a shadow of a leafless tree near the center of the grassy square. Her hand darted away from the corner of her eye. “Look over there but look with – you know, your side vision thingy.”

Matt stared harder. “Peripheral vision?”

“Yeah, that thing.” She squatted lower to wrap her arms around her knees. Her eyes bore into the bark of the tree.

Matt opened his mouth to say something but waited with his jaw hanging open. He studied her for a long, quiet moment before closing his mouth and staring at the tree.

Out of the corner of his eye, Matt saw a shadow and a light move up to the old fashioned streetlight. He didn’t move when it moved away.

“Did you see that?” Zee clutched his hand.

“What was that?”

“Wait for it.”

A few minutes later, three shadowed lights fluttered into the soft glow of the streetlamp before continuing into the dark of the night.

“Zee?”

She turned to face him. “Fairies.”


Inspired by a photograph from Ralph Morris

Project 365

Monday, March 2nd, 2009
“Time’s running out.” Matt skulked along at the same bouncy pace as his partner. Zee’s hair bobbed along with her skipping. She tore into the puff pastry she’d bought at the shop around the corner. With a tug of his hand, she led him down the cobble-stoned back alley as a short cut.

“Running out?” Zee spit bits of pastry as she dodged a refuse bin. The hem of her pleated skirt brushed the green plastic lid.

“Running out for the girl.” He pulled on her hand until they both stopped. His chest heaved as he stared hard. “You know, the one who’s gone missing? If we don’t find her in seventy-two hours – ”

“It’s not what you think.”

“Not what I think?” He shoved his hands into his pockets before he did anything else. He bent his waist to lean over to match her eye level. “Would you like me to escort you down to my office to see crime scene photos?”

“No.”

“He tears them apart. No one has ever seen this much blood at a crime scene.” Matt’s voice echoed off the walls like steel hitting brick. In the far off distance, a dog barked. The thumping of bass called from the end of the alley. With another large bite, Zee stuffed her cheeks until her face billowed.

“No, he doesn’t. They’re not dead. Well, okay, they’re no longer human, but they’re not dead.”


Inspired by a photograh from Antonio Jiménez Alonso

Project 365

Sunday, March 1st, 2009
“Matt? You’re freaking me out.” Zee’s eyes bugged out as he squeezed her tight. His large arms pinned hers to her body. She teetered on her platform boots.

“You’re all right.” Matt grabbed her shoulders and held her away. He scanned her thin frame for any signs of damage. His chest heaved from the flights of stairs and parking lot ran.

“Yeah. Why wouldn’t I be?”

He shook his head. He stepped back. “I – he – he said that he had you.”

“Who did?” She ran her hand along one of the pieces of pine wood that made up the set. Without a second glance, she looked up at the fly system overhead.

Matt realized that he was in the downtown Shakespeare Theater. He stood back stage lit by a single, bar bulb on a tall, metal stand. Bare of another living soul, the silence and strangeness of seeing the set from behind left Matt with his mouth hanging open. “That man. In the top hat.”

“Oh. Leslie didn’t tell you?”

“Tell me what?”

“He was helping me.” She pushed aside the purple satin curtain that hung in one of the archways that led to the stage. Zee passed through with her eyes focused a thousand miles away. “He’s playing Don Pedro in the up-coming production.”

“Well, he’s downtown in lock-up.” His hands found their way into his pants pockets. His suit coat rumpled. He followed behind her. “He won’t be doing anything for a while.”

“Really?” Zee pushed on his shoulder as the curtains closed behind him. “What did he do?”

“He said that the girl was dead and that he had you.”

She stopped. Her boots thumped like a drum on the stage as she spun and ran into his arms. Matt stumbled back but managed to catch her and stay up right. He smiled when she squeezed him tight.

“I’m so sorry. He was helping me. He was being, you know, him, and helping me reenact. Oh, Matt, I’m so sorry. I should’ve told you and him.” She babbled as she bounced and rocked him like some over-enthusiastic mother. “I found out that he’s an actor, or at least he thinks he is. He’s been here, Matt. I know he’s been here.”


inspired by a photograph from David Chambers

Project 365

Friday, February 27th, 2009
“WHERE IS SHE?”

“Good Evening, Mister Smith.” He touched the brim of his top hat as he bowed his head. In the light of the abandoned warehouse, his black tank top and black faded black jeans stood out against the faded and stained white drywall. He didn’t sweat despite their run. His eyes were too close together, but his smile was perfect. “And how may I help you this evening?”

“Where is she?” Matt took one step closer, one step into the light to show how serious he was. His pressed, dark suit coat was unbuttoned and his red, silk tie dangled free. He wasn’t close enough for the .45 semi-automatic handgun from both his hands. It was trained on the stranger’s heart.

“Who?”

“You know who.”

“Your little friend? The little bit of trouble?” He cleared his throat and took a few steps out of the light and away from the wall. A wall of paned windows was only a quick run away. His black sneakers crunched on the gritted cement floor.

Matt took a step. Like a chess board, he moved one square to keep the Black King from making an escape. “Yes. Where is she?”

“That’s the game, isn’t it? You both wanted to save the girl. Well, you’re too late for her.”

“You son of a bitch.” Through gritted teeth, Matt raised the gun. His finger tightened on the trigger. Sweat beaded on his brow.

“But that’s not the game now, Mr. Smith. Or is it Detective Smith? Special Agent Smith? The game now is finding your friend in time.”


Inspired by a photograph from Gilbert Tremblay

Project 365

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009
“The first thing I see is a big spider.” Her hands splay like jazz hands before her face. Zee leaned over the empty plate, cleaned of every trace of sushi. “It’s big and black, with fangs, hanging in its web.”

“What does that – ”

“It’s the first thing he thinks of before – you know.”

Matt slouched in the simple, wooden chair of the Japanese eatery. He reached for the tall glass of beer. The condensation was gone from the outside, but he sipped from the amber ale anyway. “Right. So, is he the spider or is the victim the spider?”

“I think he is because the web is elaborate. It’s amazingly huge, but I can’t see what it hangs from. Green tea,” she told the waitress to send her on the way. “And I think that’s what he does. He watches them and gets to know the people around them and then they’re trapped in his web.”

“You think or you know?” He folded his arms again over his chest. His tie had been loosened right around the last shot of sake. His cheeks and nose had a cheery glow, but his eyes remained sharp and trained on Zee.

“Okay, all I see is the spider.”

“That’s it?”

“No, but that’s where the vision starts.” It was one of Zee’s smiles that made the creases in Matt’s face deepen.


inspired by a photograph Matthew Jones

Project 365

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009
“How did you manage to get his car? It looks old – as in, not used.” With a butt-wiggle, Zee gazed around the light wood walls and drop tile ceiling of the restaurant. She held onto her chair with both hands and waddled it towards the table. Her black hair flapped against her smiling face.

“Believe it or not, he left it in a parking lot.” Matt sat with his legs apart and his arms folded. He did not smile. His brow creased over his dark, brown eyes.

“Which parking lot?” She pushed the items on the table around into a certain order. The chopsticks folded in her white, cloth napkin were placed above the bamboo mat. Her napkin shifted from right to left. The small, shallow dish for soy sauce was lifted and placed above the corner of her place mat and her napkin.

“I can’t tell you that.” He watched her push things around with a subdued curiosity.

“Yes, you can.”

“Fine. From the latest abduction.” His lips thinned about as thin as she had ever seen. Zee stopped straightening her dinner setting and reached over to pat his forearm.

“It’s a break, Matt. It’s a real break.”

He frowned hard enough for the corners of his mouth to reach his square jaw. “Yeah, provided he follows his standard routine. We have seventy-two hours. But whatever you tell me can’t be used in court. Hell, if the guys even knew – ”

“May I take your order?” The waitress was pert wrapped in her silken, pink kimono. Her make-up was western as was her hairstyle, pinned up with matching barrettes. She held her pad and pencil at chest level with a company approved smile.

“Yeah, may I have the edomae chirashizushi special, please?” Zee smiled to show teeth at the waitress. Her pronunciation of the Japanese words were perfect. A few scribbles on the pad later, the waitress turned her eyes to the gentleman.

“Nothing for me.” Matt lifted a hand to accent the fact that he would not be having anything to eat.

“Are you sure? California roll?”

He stared at her until she went away. Zee bit her upper lip and didn’t laugh.

“So,” Matt rested his elbows on the table without unfolding his arms. He stared hard at his guest. “What did you read, Zee?”


inspired by a photograph from Lotus Head

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Monday, February 23rd, 2009
“You know, I can get into big trouble for this,” Matt hissed as he held her arm and marched her through the side garage door. His tailored suit with his white shirt and black tie looked out of place against the cold, cement floor and gray, cinder block walls. Dangling fluorescent lights dotted the floor. He walked from one spotlight to the next.

“Yeah, but you don’t have any choice, do you?” Zee allowed herself to be dragged. Her big, black, eight-eyelet boots stomped along the floor. Her black dyed hair glistened under the lights. Her smile was red lipstick smugness. “You need me.”

He half-heartedly flung her in the direction of the object under the big light. An old, dusty, not to mention dingy, VW bug rusted in the police’s evidence lock-up. She stumbled to a stop with her knees locked together. Her gray eyes grew wide. “Oh my God! Is this…?”

“It could be. I can’t say.” He folded his arms over his chest to stretch his suit tight. “You tell me.”

With one deep breath, she walked towards the car. Her fingers with black painted fingernails trembled. She touched the car. “Ooo. Aaah. Wow. I mean, all kinds of Wow.”

“What does that mean?”

“It means exactly what you think it means.” Zee turned to stare at Matt. She looked scared. “This is the car. This is his car.”


inspired by a photograph from jorge vicente

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009
Her black leather gloves creaked around the bouquet of flowers wrapped in green paper. She walked the winding, dirt path to the graveyard nestled in the rocky hills of her one-horse, one-stoplight town. The Mid-West fall winds whipped her long, black hair out of her face. She looked up at the approaching storm clouds against the cool blue skies.

The dry grass crunched on her thick heeled boots. She was careful not to walk on anyone’s grave as she wove her way amongst the old, family headstones. She touched the large Celtic cross of the O’Brien’s. She smiled enough to show her white teeth beneath her ruby red lips. Tears welled in the bottom of her eyes, held in place by thick lashes and black eyeliner.

“I got’em, baby.” She leaned over to put the flowers against the smallest marker. It was an arching stone with only a name: Amelia. She ran her fingers over the carved letters.

Her hand dug into her leather coat pocket to pull out an old six-shooter. She tossed it onto the grave without pause. Her tears spilled down her face and dragged the eyeliner with it. “I got’em all. I got’em good.”

Thunder rolled through the valley. She inhaled to smell the rain on the wind. The first drops hit her forehead. Her arms spread wide as she closed her eyes. The rain came down.


inspired by a photograph by Brian Lary

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Saturday, February 21st, 2009
She moved faster than the second hand on her grandfather’s watch. She didn’t actually run. It was more like: TICK, she was in the kitchen and TOCK, she was in the living room. TICK, she stood on the front stoop of her suburban, white picket fence home in Vermont. TOCK, she stood outside the Lincoln Monument in Washington DC. She didn’t blink. She didn’t gesture. She thought it and she was there.

It took her time to work out her travel. She searched online and reviewed as many pictures as she could. She practiced by making sure the coffee was always fresh in her office (TICK, at Starbucks picking up a large carrier and TOCK, filling the coffee maker’s glass pot). But before long, she was TICK in the car with the man who slid on the ice and careened over the overpass barrier and TOCK on the sidewalk of the overpass. Together, the man and she watched his car smash into the pavement below.

And every time she moved, every time she saved a life or stopped crime, she had one thought. Every time she moved, she thought, “If I only had this power when my baby died.”


inspired by a photograph from Michal Bahn

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

(no picture for this story)

“Oh, wow.” She caught her breath. Her eyes focused on the off-white ceiling with years of paint. The small, metal bed frame held her body and his. Her shoulder overlapped his. Legs twined. She ran her hand down the center of her torso to feel her damp skin cool.

“Yeah,” he chimed in. He exhaled. He didn’t move because there wasn’t room to move. His college dorm room bed was twin size. “Was it good?”

“Was it good?” She laughed. The thin, old mattress bounced as she did. “That was fantastic. Seriously, how do we keep on getting better?”

“I don’t know.” He turned on his side. His arm wrapped around his head for support. He looked at her with a cock-eyed grin. “But I like it.”

She turned her head. He was a handsome boy besides being a good friend. He brushed her cheek with his knuckles. She smiled.

“Let’s not ruin a good thing.”

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009
Seventy miles per hour was too slow. With miles of swamp brush on either side of the stretch of road, she noticed the brighter green in comparison to the Northern Evergreen she was used to seeing. She pushed her over-sized, convenience store sunglasses up her pert nose as she drove towards the orange-red sky. The purple-blue of night colored her rear view mirror.

As she crossed over the junction that led to the nuclear power plant and federal prison, she smiled at the miles to go sign. It wasn’t far now. She rubbed her tummy pooch. “Not long now, baby.”

She turned the radio on as she drove the rental car over the first causeway. The bridge spanned the first of two rivers that surrounded the barrier islands. It rose high in the air, giving a wide view of the lush island dotted with expensive housing. She cranked the beach music louder as she drove over the second causeway.

At the first street, she turned off the highway. Driving down a quiet lane lined with 1950 TV sitcom houses, she stopped at the intersection. She looked left and right. Without a car in sight, she steered her car towards public parking. Hers was the only car in the lot.

She pressed the button on her keyring to lock the doors of the car. She climbed the wood stairs to the walkway that crossed over the State protected dunes. At the first step of sand, she kicked off her shoes and buried her toes in the beach. She inhaled deep and smiled.

“You know, I don’t think we need your father.” She patted her belly as she watched the sunrise. “And he won’t find us here. Don’t worry, little one. We’re safe.”


inspired by a photograph from Iwan Beijes

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Monday, February 16th, 2009
Her whole hand wrapped around two fingers of her mother’s. Though her shoes were hard shoes, she still tottered with each step. Her white socks folded neatly over her ankles. Her pink, frilly dress bounced with each knee rising. The bows in her very fine hair held it back from her round face. Chubby cheeks and large blue eyes made her too cute to miss.

Between steps, she would look up at the high shelves. To someone so small, the shelves looked like giant metal trees that housed books rather than leaves, birds and bugs. When she slowed to reach out her hand to try to touch a tome on her level, her mother would pull her along. She would focus on her feet again and forget the books. She marched along until her mother reached the check-in desk.

All she could see was cheap, wood paneling. The blue, industrial carpeting had been swept clean before opening, so nothing interesting to put in her mouth there. Her mother pulled her fingers away to lift her purse to the counter top she could see. She raised her arms for a moment and fused to be picked up. When her mother didn’t respond immediately, she wrapped an arm around her mother’s polyester pant leg.

She looked back at the book shelves, bigger than trees. Bigger than the special tree Daddy lets her climb in the back yard. She stuck her thumb in her mouth to suck. Her fingers rubbed the material of her mother’s pants. The words over her head were nothing more than garbled gibber-gabber. Unable to resist the pull any longer, she released her mother’s leg, removed the thumb from her mouth (two arms meant better balance) and wobbled her way back towards the books.


inspired by a photograph from steph p

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Saturday, February 14th, 2009
The hunting was good today. With a fresh layer of snow, I could spot the light imprint of footsteps – four small foot prints on the surface of the snow. I had to walk lightly too because far too often the predator became the prey in the woods. Without the cover of the green, I stand out against the white ground.

Only my ears hear the sound. Munching – small teeth gnawing against some nut. As I become perfectly still, sinking a bit deeper in the snow, I inhale slow so I don’t draw attention of myself. I smell it. Yes, only a few paces away.

I scrunch down low. My feet pad fast and silent over the surface of the snow until I see it. Just over the curve of the hill, I spot the little, brown fuzzy thing small enough to be a suitable meal. He holds a small nut. Its paws clutch it tight as it trying to break the hard shell.

I stop. I watch. The little, brown fuzzy thing works on that nut over with its teeth until I sure he’s going to pitch it away in frustration. When the small black eyes blink, I move. I pounce.

“Mr. Mufasta!” The elderly woman claps her hand against on the wooden deck attached to the back of her house. Still in her bathrobe and slippers, she zips her down, wooden coat up with her knotted and gnarled hand. “Mr. Mufasta! Here, kitty, kitty, kitty!”

I answer her call, not because she’s calling. I’m full and want to curl up on that big soft sleeping place of hers for a long, long nap. I leap up on to the wood rail and pick my way through the branches to her. She scratches my head, which I love and cannot resist, and petted my back.

“There you are. Where have you been, bad kitty? You know you shouldn’t leave the house.” She picks me up in her arms. I twist so I can see over her shoulder. “You know you can’t handle yourself outside. You could get hurt or worse. Come on. I have a nice bowl of milk with your name on it.”


inspired by a photograph from sofi gamache

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Thursday, February 12th, 2009
He smoked too much. A pile of cigarette butts decorated the ashtray in the center of the table. He tapped the ash from the end of his latest into the pile. He slouched in the wooden café chair. The umbrella from the sidewalk café covered his face. His sunglasses rested near his leather coat elbow.

He took another puff. The sins of the Earth will follow you into heaven, he thought. He had no intention of going back, so he took another long drag. The tobacco and paper burned down to the filter. He pushed the past cigarettes out of the way so he could stubbed the current one out. No, he wouldn’t be going back anytime soon.

Through the café doors walked a middle-aged man in a very fine, grey suit. It matched his grey hair and contrasted his blue eyes. He was surrounded by young men in dark suits and very dark glasses, but that didn’t matter. No, all that mattered was the envelope being delivered to the local police precinct. It outlined the middle-aged man in a very fine suit’s violations of earthly laws – the ones that coincided with his duties. It carried evidence to be used in court as well. Also, it had instructions on which hospital to find the middle-aged man in a very fine suit. It was sealed with an angel’s kiss.

He stood. From his shoulder holsters, he pulled two shiny semi-automatic pistols. The woman with her new boyfriend at the table next to his gasped but not loud enough to alert anyone. He straightened his arms and inhaled deep. He held the unnecessary breath as he squeezed the triggers. No, he wouldn’t be going back anytime soon.


Inspired by a photograph by sanja gjenero

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

(No picture for this story. This is what I was noodling about with in my head before falling asleep last night)

Molly exited the back hallway through the ancient, wooden door. The lace curtains that covered the door and hallway’s ample windows provided little comfort from the English cold. As she pulled the tarnished, brass knob, the wood and glass rattled against its frame. She didn’t hear the noise. She had become so accustomed to it that she no longer worried that the door would break.

With her thick, plump arms, she wrapped her wool sweater over her kitchen maid’s uniform. She grabbed at her white, doily hat before the wind could blow it off. Her black, leather shoes shuffled through the synthetic gravel as she walked towards the iron bench. The “fake” pebbles sounded like the real thing which is why the cost so much, but she didn’t know that. She knew they didn’t carry the dirty and dust like the real stones did.

“It’s almost too cold to smoke,” Molly said as she sat down next to another kitchen maid. The other maid chattered her teeth in between puffs.

From the pocket of her sweater, Molly wrestled a black, cardboard box. Warnings over the dangers of smoking covered it. She flipped the lid and pulled out a cigarette that was more filter than tobacco. From under the lid, she plucked a small dot. Her thumb pressed it to her fingertip. When she moved her thumb, flame shot from the dot. Two quick puffs lit her cigarette. The fire died and a tiny dot of burnt paper fell from her finger without leaving a trace.

“Can you believe Mrs. Stewart?” Molly exhaled smoked in the form of a long sigh. The other maid snorted and nodded. “She has no room to talk about anyone with her past. Oh, she thinks no one knows, but we all know.”

Across the courtyard, a light flared between two, sterling silver discs. One floated seven feet over the one embedded into the gray gravel. In the light, a well-dressed man appeared. He was groomed within an inch of perfection. Nothing showed that more than the profuse moustache that covered his upper lip. His eyes were close together but sharp under his huntsman’s hat. He stepped from the gelatinous membrane that bubbled from disc to disc. Behind him, another flash and his good-lady wife materialized.

“Where, how – excuse me, but is this the Russell estate?” If the cold touched him, he didn’t show it – stiff upper lip and all. The Scottish wool scarf and fine leather gloves kept him warm. He sniffed at the end of his question.

“Yes, Lord Bolingbroke.” Molly stood and hid her cigarette behind her back. She curtsied, along with the other maid, and bowed her head. Her eyes didn’t squint against the cold – stiff upper lip and all.

“It’s the servants’ entrance.” He lifted his fist as if he grasped his mistake. Turning on his well-polished heels, he crossed to the black glass display on the metal stand near the discs. “Damn it, Regina. What did I tell you?”

“I don’t know what you told me.” His wife clutched at her stylish hat with long feathers curving over her head. She pursed her thin, red lips and rolled her thick-lashed eyes. “You didn’t want to listen to me. This is your fault.”

“It’s no one’s fault.” Bending to read the screen without his glasses, Lord Bolingbroke tapped the screen.

“My Lord and Lady, I would be happy to walk you through –”

“No. That won’t be necessary.” He stepped between the discs. He sniffed and lifted his chin before disappearing into a flash of light. His wife sighed as she inspected her gloves. Once the discs readied, she followed in her husband’s footsteps.

Molly finished her cigarette in quiet on the bench. She pulled up her stockings and tightened the suspender belt’s clips. As she ground the butt under her shoe, she looked up when the transport lit again with Lord Bolingbroke’s valet and maid. As well manicured as their master, the pair carried bags and headed straight to the entryway. Molly stepped before them with a curt smile and opened the door.

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Monday, February 9th, 2009
“Is this it?” She pulled a thick strand of red hair from her mouth. She pursed her lips and looked at the man standing next to her. His short, brown hair barely waved in the wind. He hunched and stuffed his hands in his pockets.

“Yup.” He rocked back on his heels. His sneakers were worn to keep him from falling back. He smiled and rubbed her back. Her arms were folded over her chest. She shivered.

The sky was gray with thick ,light clouds. It caused the green grass to appear darker than it was. The limestone rock that peeked up in patches looked black without the sun. In a dell amongst this vast isle, a cylinder of stone rose to hold a shiny, blue sphere. It made no noise. It didn’t have a sign.

“No, really. This is it?” She sounded a little more annoyed as she took a step closer. The heels on her dress shoes caused her ankles to wobble. She managed to keep from toppling with a shift of her ample hips.

He nodded and stuffed his hand back in his pocket. “It’s the quantum modulator for this planet. It’s perfectly aligned with the magnetic fields and lunar cycles. It’s quite amazing.”

“So, what would happen if I did this – ” She reached out with one finger for the shiny, blue ball.

“NO!”

The planet the humans called Earth, and the rest of the Universe referred to as Sol 345, flipped its axis and spun out of orbit. Skipping by Venus, its atmosphere burned off within a matter of minutes. Its seas boiled away to leave a little water to freeze under the layers of soil. It started its new life in its new orbit.

Now, its moon is a whole different story.


inspired by a photograph from gianni testore

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

With a finger on the touchpad button of her laptop, she clicked the "Randomizer" link on the stock photograph website. She sat on her worn couch, arms scratched down to the foam, in her woven pajama bottoms and overly large tee shirt. Her hair matted to her head with a day’s worth of natural grease. She rubbed her nose and sniffed. She clicked her built-in mouse again.

Picture after picture popped up after the website reloaded in her browser window. She sighed at the third or fourth picture. She frowned after twelve. Click. Click. Click.

The small, black cat walked behind her on the back of the couch. He paused to glance over her shoulder to look at the screen. But with a blink of his large, yellow eyes, the cat continued along his way to the opposite arm. She ignored his claws sinking deep and pulling up foam.

She pushed the dirty plate, half full bowel of cereal, and an empty glass out of the way to place her laptop on the coffee table. Behind the screen, a tall stack of books and magazines threatened to topple and take the computer out. She pushed her knitting, a thin scarf from a cheap spool of yarn, to the side of the books. The woven basket of potpourri couldn’t compete with the dried, stuck-on food on the dishes.

She clicked on her mouse once more. She sat up once the picture appeared. She tilted her head to the right as if voices could be heard from places other than her television. With another mouse click, she opened her word processor and began to type.


Inspired from a photograph by Andre Veron

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Saturday, February 7th, 2009

“You’re breaking up with me?”

BOOM! The midnight sky exploded overhead in an array of sparks from the fireworks. She could see his face clear as day. His large brown eyes that she loved so much said “I’m sorry.” He reached for her hand by the way of caressing her wool, coat covered arm. She jerked her mittened hand away.

“It’s just not working out.”

BOOM! Red and blues painted the skies. Her eyes welled with tears. She tried to talk but nothing came out.

“It’s not you. It’s me. It’s all me. You’re terrific. You really are. It’s just – it’s just we rushed into this and I should’ve taken time after my last break up.”

BOOM! She looked up and watched another growing flower light the sky and harbor. A small breeze brought the chill of the ocean sea to pink her face. Her eyes were red. She wiped her tears with mittens.

“Please. Say something. Call me names. Yell at me. Something. Please.”

BOOM! “Happy New Year.”

Project 365 – A Story A Day

Friday, February 6th, 2009

“IGNORE”

1 INT. THEATRE HOUSE – MORNING
The Swan is a beautiful, old theatre that is the showcase of the town. The house has fresh paint, cleaned carpet and polished seats for the new season.

THEATRE
Good Morning, Ms. Fisher. Welcome back.
From the back of the house, a young woman walked through the doors that lead to the lobby. Her hair is pulled up into a ponytail. She carries a backpack. She looks ready to work at whatever needs work. She walks down the stairs towards the stage.

REBECCA
Oh, hello, old theatre. How many times have I told you not to call me “Ms. Fisher”?

THEATRE
I have lost count. Beside, it is in my nature to be polite. Give an old building some consideration.

REBECCA
Fair enough. How was your summer?

THEATRE
Quiet. A bit of refinishing work – a facelift, if you will.

REBECCA
You didn’t need it, if you asked me.

THEATRE
Oh, always so kind. A horrible liar, but kind. So, when are you going to ask?

REBECCA
Ask? Ask what?

THEATRE
Yes, he returned this season. The higher-ups hired him for the whole run.

REBECCA
I don’t know what you’re talking about.

THEATRE
Yes, you do. I told you: horrible liar. You may be able to fool everyone else, but not me, sister.

REBECCA
All right. So, Angelo’s back. Big deal. It isn’t like I am going to talk to him any more this year than last.

THEATRE
Oh, you need to get over yourself. Talk to him.

Rebecca climbs the temporary stairs at the end of the isle. She stands at the edge of the stage for a moment before turning to look over the seats of the house.

REBECCA
I can’t. He’s too pretty.

THEATRE
So are you. Talk to him.

REBECCA
I am not. What’s first this year? Tempest or King Lear?

Rebecca walks towards backstage, stage right.

THEATRE
I will make you talk to him.

REBECCA
You’re just a building. Shush.

THEATRE
Just you wait.

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