Hub City Blues

The Future is Unsustainable

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  • Hub City Blues

Small Fish, Big City (2)

Posted by Ebonstorm on October 31, 2013
Posted in: Fantasy, horror, Serial, Short Story. Tagged: Awkward, Big City, Big City Pizza, Clare, Door, kami, laundromat, Matthew, monotone voice, mother, NorthWest Frame, spirits, voice, washer and dryer, WPLongform, young adult. Leave a comment

med22-germs

Matthew put the dried fish into his pocket and ran out the laundromat into the cool evening air. He hopped into the back seat of the car, squeezing past the laundry that didn’t make it into the trunk.

“I passed a pizzeria here in the complex,” his mother began explaining, “and it smelled pretty good. Is that okay with you?”

Still reeling with the discovery of the fish and the laundry kami, “Sure, Mom.” Matt quietly acquiesced as he attempted to make sense of what he had seen. The old lady didn’t specifically tell him he couldn’t tell his mother, but he had the feeling he should keep his recent experience to himself.

This was the second day he had ever been in this shopping complex, the first time he and his mother had done a drive through, marking it on a map as a place to shop and probably eat. They didn’t even get out of the car the first time.

Having been in Big City for less than a month, school had been the only place Matthew had been on a regular basis almost immediately upon arriving here. They were a uniform-wearing school, so there was no chance for Matthew to flex his growing sense of individuality.

His mom got his uniforms delivered to the house while they were unpacking so she could be sure they would fit. As far as Matt was concerned, there couldn’t be a more boring place on Earth than school. The students looked the same, all about the same height and weight, most had blond hair, with a few brunettes, and there were even a few other Black students, so Matt didn’t feel so alone in the sea of yellow hair and blue eyes.

School was so painfully dull, Matt found it difficult to stay awake and only his habit of snoring loudly and disrupting class forced him to make an effort to remain conscious. All of the teachers had the same boring monotone voice, more than half of them wore glasses, really thick glasses, so thick it was hard to imagine how they managed to see out of them.

Though the teachers didn’t have to wear uniforms, most of them just happened to wear suits of brown, black, blue or grey nearly every day, making them appear almost as uniform as the students. From Matthew’s perspective, the school seemed designed to be as boring as anything could be.

The rooms were almost all the same size and, with the exception of the science laboratories and shop classes, every room was painted white with grey borders. Posters were allowed only in the science labs and they were designed to be informative, not interesting, keeping one from staring at them for too long even if they were the only color in the room. To be fair, everything looked pretty new and well maintained. Even if it was as boring as it could be, it was at least clean and well kept.

At least half of Big City seemed just like his school in that regard, clean, grey, and unremarkable in any way. The first few days they had been in town, Matt’s mom had driven to the center of the city’s financial district and the giant buildings covered in marble and glass were all so similar, it was hard to tell any two of them apart. People bustled, a sea of grey and black men’s shoulders and oh so dull haircuts. Matthew’s mom, Clare, wore a burgundy dress and stood out like a weed breaking through the sidewalk.

At the time, he didn’t think much about it but now his experience made him rethink that visit and now he knew what stood out but he didn’t understand it at the time. There were no other children in the center of Big City. None. No little kids, no mothers carrying babies. Not even the occasional pregnant woman. That revelation made his stomach sink and now he understood the feeling he had while he had been there. A feeling he should make every effort to leave the center of the city. He put it down to nerves at the time, but now, away from the place, he could feel the difference. This section of the city called the Lower Quarter did not have that vibe, that feeling of oppression. There was so much more to this place than he knew.

After parking the car and walking to ‘Big City Pizza’ a family came out of the restaurant before Clare and Matthew entered. They looked just like families at home. Happy, smiling and… what was that? There was a bow in the hair of one of the girls. She had to be about six or seven. At first it looked like a hair bow but as they passed by, the wings rose up and fluttered for a second and then returned to sitting perfectly still.

He blinked, stopping to rub his eyes in disbelief. He watched the family vanish into the lot before running to catch up with Clare. The restaurant was a mixture of old things and new things. There was a fountain, a wall where water ran down shimmering on a washboard-like surface making a tinkling, splashing sound. A large wooden Buddha sat in the corner near the door. These gave way to a modern environment complete with chrome trim and stone tables with red leather padded booths.

There was a short line the two of them had to wait in for a few minutes before being served. When they got to the front of the line, there were lots of pizzas and sizes to choose from. “I’ll have the super-combination please.” Clare paid while Matthew found the seats. That was a long standing tradition between he and his parents. Something they started when he was a little kid and it’s one of those things he could still do with his parents even though they were no longer together. The thought stung a little whenever he considered his father with that woman, Jasmine. He didn’t really hate her, but he wanted to.

His mother and father barely spoke other than to hand Matthew off on the weekends. Strange as it seemed, the only person who talked to him like he was normal was Jasmine. But he still wanted to hate her because whenever his mother looked at Jasmine, her face became so cold, so sad and lonely. He didn’t like anything to hurt her.

She was looking like that right now. Whenever we went out, dad’s absence was noticeable. Mom wasn’t a great cook, so we ate out often and dad’s muscular bulk always seemed out of place in most restaurants. “So Mom, how are things at the new job?”

“It’s fine, honey. People seem nice but I am focused on finding my way around. My new boss doesn’t seem like the easy-going type. How’s school going? Are you adjusting?”

“If I tell you I’m as bored as heck, would you be mad?”

“Only as long as you get your homework done and you don’t make your teachers mad, be as bored as you want.”

Awkward moment. This seems like a good time to go to the bathroom. “Did you see where the bathrooms are?”

“That-a-way, soldier.” Clare smiled and pointed toward the rear of the restaurant.

Eek. Restroom sign. Gotta pay better attention.

The pungent scent of bathroom air freshener slapped him in the nose as he opened the heavy bathroom door. Felt like he was opening a vault door. A sigh of relief was released while he liberated his bladder of its pungent payload. The cake at the bottom of the urinal paid him back in spades with a scent so strong his eyes started watering and he felt a little nauseous. Zipping up quickly, he got ready to run out to escape the smell and began to push the door.

It didn’t budge.

Feeling sicker, he pushed harder. A voice from the door responded to his push with an awkward statement: “What, you don’t believe in washing your hands? You can transmit disease that way. And you touched me with that hand. Get it off…get it off…get it off!”

Surprised, Matthew drew his hand back and stared at it as if it had become a cobra. “What do you mean, disease? That’s just a rumor.”

The door kami chuckled quietly. “Do you know how many people put their hand on that handle when they use the bathroom? Nearly all of them. Today that means one hundred and twenty seven people have used that urinal. All but two touched it. The first one to touch it was a homeless guy who sneaks in as soon as the door opens. He left a wonderful influenza right there. Something nasty. Since most didn’t wash their hands, they should be starting to show signs right…about…now.”

A nearby sneeze can be heard at almost exactly that moment. “That was young Daniel in the kitchen. You are certainly fortunate our kitchen kami are on duty or you might be enjoying a delicious flu-encrusted pizza with all the trimmings. Now young man, wash those hands immediately.”

The commanding tone of voice had Matt moving before he realized he was doing it. He looked at his hand harder and saw tiny hair-like cilia waving back and forth and getting larger before his eyes. Then he looked at the urinal bars and could see the same cilia-like strands waving back and forth. Then other strains bore new colors, bacteria with different body shapes, longer, faster tails, others with tiny chains of balls, some with large pitted spheres jittering back and forth against each other. The walls and floors soon showed their colors as other kinds of unknown bacteria moved all over them, where people had wiped their hands as they probably had to pass each other.

Matt washed his hands furiously until he couldn’t see any of the organisms he saw earlier. He tried not to look down as the floor was a sea of bacterial and viral action. Once he dried his hands he asked the door a question. “What are you and how come I can see you?” Now that he knew where to look, he could sense the kami in the door. A flicker of light gave it away. But to see it, Matt had to turn away and see it out of the corner of his eye.

“I, my dear boy, am a kami. Every building has a kami, a spiritual force which channels the energies of nature in a harmonious path through a home, ensuring fortune and prosperity and warding against spirits of misfortune and woe. I was once a house spirit, a spirit of a particular place.”

The door kami paused as if in deep reflection, then it continued, “When my home was destroyed in an earthquake, my family loved me so, that it freed me and I was able to move beyond the foundation of my former home and I wandered to and fro for years. Not sure of what I was looking for, but I was certain I would know it. I was pulled to this place one day and I was welcomed by the house kami and given the important task of keeping this place clean. I decided to stay. To pay my keep, I ensure hands are washed by those who are still able to see me. They are The People and we have to keep them safe.”

“I only understood up to the part when you said something about protecting the people. You couldn’t mean me, I just came to this town.”

“Are you seeing me? Are you hearing me? Are you unable to leave? Then you are The People. Now, dry your pants there and get back out to your mother. Your plague-free pizza will arrive shortly.”

Matt took another paper towel and wiped down the front of his jeans from where his furious washing splashed water all over him.

Matthew got ready to touch the door and then paused. “May I?”

“Of course, my dear boy. Your hands are splendidly clean – but, use a paper towel so you beautifully clean hands don’t have to touch this nasty door nob again.”

Before pushing the door open, he asked in an earnest voice, “What do I call you?”

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With a flicker of light, the door kami zipped around the frame of the door and across the boy’s field of view. “Door, of course. If you must know my formal name it’s Door, Northwest Frame. Do you see that pay phone? That’s how you reach me. As to when you can call me, never after eleven and never collect. Take the number, kid.”

“Why would I need to call you, Door?”

“Like you said, Kid, you’re new in town, you’ll have questions.”

“Meaning no disrespect but I have to say, you’re a bathroom door, what could you know?”

“I know you were about to walk out the bathroom without washing your filthy hands.”

Chagrined, Matthew put his head down and slipped down the hall. He didn’t stop by the phone to get the number.

Watching Matthew return to the table with his mother, Door thought to itself: I also know not to let the fish in my pocket get wet. The kami smiled inwardly in his secret knowledge.

The light played across Door’s surface, languidly flickering, like laughter in the dim hallway light.

Small Fish, Big City © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Small Fish, Big City (1)

Posted by Ebonstorm on October 25, 2013
Posted in: Fantasy, horror, Serial, Short Story. Tagged: kami, laundromat, Matthew, spirits, washer and dryer, young adult. Leave a comment

laundromat

Matthew hated the laundromat. Loud, crowded and filled with people who had strange smells.

It was bad enough to have to deal with his own laundry but the smell of other people’s laundry was something he could barely stand. Adding insult to injury there was an Indian restaurant right next door. The overwhelming scent of curry seemed to sweep into the laundry like a wave whenever the door was opened.

There was something about this place that made Matthew uneasy. Like waiting for a bully to slap you between the shoulder blades with a kick-me sign.

Matthew’s mother and father divorced last year and they sold the house. Living with his mother, Matthew became the ersatz man-of-the-house and needed to help with so many things he didn’t have to do when he was eleven. Now at thirteen, he washed dishes, cleaned up the bathroom and help with laundry chores. When they had a house, they had their own washer and dryer but after the move to the inner city, Mom had to come here twice a month.

He tried telling his mother they should go someplace else, but whenever he tried to explain it, she looked at him, shook her head and gave him her best “therapist face.” The face she reserved for clients who seemed a bit too far gone, but she continued to see them because the money was good. Matt could always tell the clients she liked because she smiled with her eyes at them.

“Now I am going to run some errands in the shopping complex. Don’t leave our laundry alone. When the washer is done, put the clothes in the dryer. I’ll be right back.”

“Okay, Mom.”

“Who’s my little man?” she smiles and lunges in for her kiss.

“I am. Mom, your embarrassing me.” He pushed her away. She laughed and turned away to run her errands.

From the corner of his eye Matthew saw a blue-green rope pop up out of a washing machine and snatch a towel off the counter. As quickly as it appeared it vanished when he swung around to get a better look at it. It slid back into the washer with the towel. No one seemed to notice anything untoward.

He went back to working with his laundry taking it out of the washer and putting it into one of the mobile baskets used to transport laundry from washer to dryer.

After filling his basket, he waited for a dryer to open up and a few minutes of sitting yielded a dryer near the far end of the laundromat. As he went over to the machine, the Chinese man who was using it seemed a bit reluctant to give it up. He kept shooing Matt away. Matt assumed he wasn’t finished and sat back down. As he was walking away, he saw that same flash of blue-green before the old man put his back to Matt and blocked the door of the dryer.

A few minutes later another dryer opened up but a little old lady beat him to it. He had seen her earlier but she seemed so feeble until it was time to get to a dryer, then she was a track star. No other dryer opened for another fifteen minutes until the light went out on the old man’s dryer at the far end of the laundromat. He didn’t have another basket so Matthew would get close, to beat out any fast grannies, and not so close he would be shooed away.

Then he saw it. In the pile of white laundry the old man was removing from dryer, there was a tentacle, except this time it was white. It handed laundry to the old man and it was coming out of the dryer already folded.

Matt watched amazed as what appeared to be white tentacles, two sometimes three folding clothing and presenting to the old man to put into his little basket with wheels. When he was done, he turned around, smiled at Matthew and pushed his basket past the boy and pointed to the dryer.

“Your turn. Don’t forget the fish. No fish, no fold.”

Matthew stared at the old man. Not clear what he meant, a dryer opened  in the middle of the laundromat. When the door was opened by a young yuppie listening to a iPod, a cloud of laundry flew out of the machine and landed everywhere.

The old man looked at Matthew. “See, that’s what happens when you don’t have fish.” The old fellow handed Matt a small and dried fish. “Get them from the machine in the corner. This will get you started. If you use that one, it does the best folding in the place. Our secret.”

Matthew went to the dryer and looked inside. He didn’t see anything. Standard dryer stuff. Tiny holes for heat, fins to tumble the laundry. Unsure of how to handle the transaction, he put the fish flat on his hand and inserted his arm into the dryer. Nothing happened. He turned his head away and as soon as he wasn’t looking he felt a cool, silky touch on his arm. It wrapped around his arm and after surrounding his arm he felt the fish vanish from his palm. Turning his head back to the dryer, the tentacle was gone.

Throwing the laundry into the dryer, he closed the door and after putting in his quarters, he looked around and noticed a number of the patrons seemed to have an easier time of things. Their laundry seemed whiter and was easier to get out of the washer. He might see the occasional flash of a tentacle but no one else seem to.

The buzz of his dryer finished and he slowly rose and opened the door. Blocking the doorway like he saw the old man do, the tentacles handed him a shirt, neatly folded. He took it and placed it into his basket. No one paid him any attention. In ten minutes his entire basket was neatly folded.

He walked over to the corner where the old man had pointed and saw a strange vending machine. It only had four icons and a five dollar symbol on it. Matt, took out five dollars and pressed the only symbol he recognized, a fish. Three small hard fish fell into the drop slot.

He walked back to the dryer and put his arm back inside.

The fish vanished.

Matthew said thank you. The tentacle reached out and closed the door to the dryer.

He didn’t even notice his mother coming up behind him. “Oh, you’ve even folded the laundry and you did such a good job. For this kind of work, you deserve a treat. How does pizza sound?”

“Great. I’ve just got to do one thing before I go.”

He walked over to the young man who had finally picked up his laundry and was about to try a second load in the dryer.

The old woman who beat him to the dryer slid in front of him before he could say anything. “Some people cannot use the fish. He is of an age he cannot believe in things he sees so he cannot see the kami which inhabits this place. Save your fish for your next visit. Keep them dry and they will work just fine.”

“What is this place? What is a kami?”

“Ah, maybe next time. Our city may be crowded but it holds hidden wonders to those who know where to look. Remember, keep the fish dry.”

“Matthew!” he heard his mother cry out. His reflex was to look in her direction.

“Coming!” When he looked back, the old woman and her laundry were gone.

He would forget her admonition and his adventures in the Big City would begin.

Small Fish, Big City © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Listening as the World Walks By (3)

Posted by Ebonstorm on October 24, 2013
Posted in: Fiction, Short Story. Tagged: angel, college, coma, conversation, Death, degree, ebonstorm, hearing, hospital, island, nature, psych ward, sight, sound, stoke, television, Thaddeus Howze, vegetative state, WPLongform. 1 Comment

island-in-the-sun-julie-grace

Last time we talked I told you about the loss of mental imagery. My inner landscape, the way that I see the world had faded from my mind. I lost the ability to visualize anything using what I used to think of as memory.

Impossible you think. No way to find yourself unable to create a mental representation of something. What if you hadn’t seen anything for three thousand seven hundred days. No, I don’t mean like a convict sitting in solitary confinement. He can still see the walls, the floors, he can draw, he can create representations that help him retain the ability to see the world, even if he is trapped in a cell. He can still see his guard, smell his stinking breath, eat low quality and tasteless food. He can walk around for an hour a day and remember what his body feels like. He can maintain a connection to the world.

I have no sight; the primary sensory system of the human being. My sense of smell is, as is the lot of humans, pretty pitiful compared to our natural cousins, but now, my nose can detect the tiniest scents as they waft in my open door. The scents of this new hospital are vile. I smell piss all around me. I think it might even BE me. My body hasn’t been handled nearly as much and I hear one or two people a day bustle in and out and then I am alone with my thoughts and a crappy, static-filled television. Thankfully, the last person who came to visit turned it off and it’s stayed off since.

My hearing not the most acute of senses drinks in every sound now. The wails of what I suspect is a nearby psych ward does not comfort me. I suspect the care I am getting is what I can afford, which at this point is little to none. A cry of despair, possibly from a visitor, I can’t sort them out yet, reinforces what I have been loathe to admit to myself.

I hate this new hospital. I think I’m going to die here.

All I have left now is the dream. I see an angel, okay, I don’t see her, I feel her. In a place filled with the glow of nature, plants, animals and this angel. This heavenly presence which makes me feel calm comes to me more and more often. When I first felt it I thought I might be imagining it.  Having lost my inner sight, all I had to go on was the feeling.

Whenever I was alone, I could feel her. She didn’t say anything though I hoped she might. She stood by me during the nights when I think I was cold, lost and alone. The only residual self image I had was of my body as I remembered me. A young man of twenty-two. I hadn’t been that man for a decade now. I tried to imagine myself and when I could start the imagination engine, I envisioned a sorry specimen. Underfed, starved, physically weak, once prominent cheekbones now gaunt and tight over the feeble skeleton beneath.

I turned off my imagination engine and sat in the comfort of the mental emptiness which was now my mind. Filled with nothing but the raw essence of thought, I formed a tiny spark and just watched it. I turned it into a classic atom of my childhood, with a tiny swirling light around an oversized neutron, proton core. Then I refined it to a more appropriate thing where the electrons were a cloud of gnats around an invisible center. I did this again and again, adding to it until I could remember what a carbon atom looked like. I began to rebuild the periodic table in my mind, keeping busy while I was going insane.

She was there more and more. She began to help me. We rebuild matter and I could see making simple constructs, things made from wood. But this wasn’t any particular wood, it was just Wood. The perfect embodiment of the substance. Heavy, but not too heavy. Strong and with my new envisioned Rock, I could begin shaping it. I used Rocks to shape new Rocks and with Wood, I rebuilt my world.

I had rediscovered Logos. The realm of perfect things as envisioned by men. The year flew by. As my body received the minimum care required for it to survive, I could tell things were different. Nurses came to see me and their horror was evident. It seems I was developing pressure sores. The night nurse was fired and I was given a series of antibiotics while I tried to heal.

A body as weak as mine doesn’t do anything fast or well. The new nursing staff were a bit more diligent but I can’t say I knew anything about them. They didn’t talk to me. They performed their work and were gone as quick as they could stand it.

No sense talking to the dead, I guess.

My loneliness increased. Only me, my angel and my island paradise. I had managed to rebuild a perfect reality crafted from the very essence of matter itself. It was all I could see, I had to painstakingly recreate everything. Every blade of grass, every tree, even the sand was lovingly created a handful at a time. Once I had completed the beach, I created the perfect ocean, blue-green reflecting the perfect sky-blue sky. Coconut trees, complete with coconuts heavy with milk fell only when I needed them to. I drank in their nectar, sweet, oily, natural. The first time I had envisioned eating anything in a long time.

Then I saw them. My angel complete with wings and another young woman. Beautiful, because in Logos everything is, they were everything I thought they should be, flawless, without blemish, without humanity, little more than living statues. As they should be here.

“I need to leave you for a time.” My angel’s lips didn’t move but I heard her perfectly.

“Who is she?” I pointed to her young friend, who appeared to be in her early twenties, her blond hair and pert breasts were no longer the distraction they might have been in the earlier, and imperfect world.

“She is the young woman in the room with you. She has been recovering from a terrible car accident. Her coma is not like yours. She held fiercely to life, but can no longer bear it. I must see her to her afterlife. Will you be alright for a while?”

“I’ll abide. I think I am going to try and create some animals today, maybe some fish.”

“That should keep you busy until I get back.”

“You’re the angel of Death, aren’t you?”

“Only if you wish me to be. Otherwise I am just your Companion, helping you pass the time. Her time has come.”

The young girl laid down and my Companion lifted her and raised her into the air. The two of them not touching began to float skyward and soon disappeared into my newly created sun. I was still proud of that. I think it wasn’t bright enough and didn’t quite move like the real thing, but it was perfect to me. I could watch them disappear into the light and I didn’t need to shield my eyes.

She was gone for ten days. During that time Kalie came back with friends.

She wept for quite some time at my condition. “I didn’t know. I didn’t know it would be like this. I’m so sorry. We’re going to get you out of here.”

Don’t worry about it, Bunny. I have found a way to keep myself busy. I’ve become God.

“Grant, I know I have been away for a while but I think these doctors will be able to help you.”

Help me what, Bunny? Contemplate my navel? Create the perfect fish for my perfect ocean? There is only enough room in here for one, Bunny.

“Today they’re going to run some tests and if they look good, we are going to go on a trip where they can work with you under better conditions. Everything is going to be fine, I promise, Grant.”

You know better than to promise things are going to get better, Kalie. It hasn’t happened yet.

The scientist doctors talked over my head while they set up their equipment. There was much lamenting about the conditions of the hospital up to the squishing of insect pests. They spoke German some of the time, so I wasn’t going to be following their conversation much anyway.

After ten days, my Companion returned. We reconstructed the scene as best we could imagine it. Connected to dozens of electrodes, my head encased in a tight fitting scanner device. Computer screens surround my bed. And the incomprehensible displays each tracked some individual aspect of my being.

“Grant, I am Dr. Astor, and we are going to be running some tests. We need you to help us. Can you do that?”

I was in the middle of making my first fish, when I realized he was talking to me. I continued with the fish. No sense in stopping in the middle of it. I visualized what the perfect fish would look like and by the end of the first week of Dr. Astor’s testing and prompting, nothing conclusive had been determined.

My first fish was, however, a success. He looked similar to a pirahna with a slightly better dental plan.

“Ms Kalie, we are seeing activity in his brain, that appears consistent with a dream state. But very little tells me he is anything but a normal coma patient. Perhaps if you talk with him we can get something conclusive to work with.”

“Grant. I know you are there. I have always known it. Now you need to prove it to these nice doctors.”

Kalie’s voice thundered in the sky around me. Different than any other time she talked with me. I was frightened.

She touched me. I could feel the connection. My Companion put her hand on my cheek and then I could feel Kalie’s warm and alive touch.

“Good, good, Ms. Kalie. That was the first time we have seen this kind of response. Keep talking to him.” Astor sounded hopeful, but from where I was sitting he was a distant storm on the horizon.

“Mom passed away last year. I wanted to come and tell you.”

I already knew. My Companion looked strangely like Mom. I think I knew when I saw her last, she wasn’t well. The winds was picking up and my perfect sky was now being obscured by the mother of all storms. Slow arriving, bringing in the surf, washing up on my once pristine beach.

Stop it, Kalie. You don’t know what you’re doing. I don’t want to care about you. Or Mom. Or Carl. Or these damned doctors and their scary equipment. I am perfectly adjusting to creating islands, plants, sand and now fish. At this rate, I could have an entire ecosystem in a decade. It only took me two hours to create ants. And another hour to decide I didn’t need them yet, and made them go away. You want me to come to you and pretend my life as a living cadaver is better than being here.

Honestly, I considered being dead as an improvement. My Companion, took my hand as the storm grew stronger. The waves swept over my island and began to destroy it.

“Carl doesn’t even acknowledge you exist, anymore. He won’t even talk to me about you.”

Lightning strikes and stinging rain begin to fall cutting into my residual image of myself. My Companion spreads her wings and wraps them around us, as the waves lap over our feet.

“I don’t want to care about her. Please let her know. I whispered to my Companion. I just want this to be over. I can’t go back to being a pair of ears in a ward of the dead and dying.”

“If I do this, you can’t go back.”

“Is this what being dead is like? The recreation of the self, the redevelopment of the psyche, where I recreate everything anew?”

“No. This is your mind slipping into madness, trying to hold on desperately to what you know about the universe at large. This is not Death. Not at all.”

“Then tell me about it.”

“Death is the sound of one hand clapping. Death is the gurgle of a child dying from SIDS in its crib at night while its parents are less than ten feet away. Death is the falling of pipes from a building on a construction worker, killing him instantly. Death is starvation in a small village in the Himalayas. Death is as near as your next breath and as far away as a gamma-ray burst in another galaxy. Are you truly ready to give up on living?”

She had to shout over the storm of Kalie’s will battering me, trying to push me back to choosing to live.

What did I have to live for? Didn’t you have to have a reason to live, something to fight for? A thing that makes life worth living? I had spent the last ten years freeing myself from all of those things. I wanted nothing, needed nothing. I was able to live silently with the sounds of my manufactured waves and winds. The slapping of tree fronds in the night breeze. I had even created stars so my nights were as perfect as my days.

My lie, my self-deception was almost complete. Once I was done, I would have laid down and she would have taken me away. All I was doing was making myself a very elaborate, self-defined, self-described coffin.

My Companion smiled at me. She kissed me fully on the lips, a sensation both magnificent and terrifying. The island was covered by a tsunami and swept away into my ocean. Death and I stood on the surface of the ocean, my stars above me.

And then I was alone again. Everything faded to black.

“Grant, I know it’s hard but we need you to be able to communicate with us. Right now, we have attached a series of electrodes that will respond to your brainwaves. We need you to think of two colors, red and green. It won’t matter which one you think of first. The first one will be red and we will mark it such. All you have to do is turn the light on. Can you do that?”

No. And I can’t believe you asked me to try. I was perfectly happy in my schizophrenia, thank you. I didn’t ask you to bring your pet doctors here, to map my brain and discover I was actually in here. Instead of dying happy, I am sitting here in a lab being pampered, IV dripped, cleaned and treated better than I have since Mom was alive. Yes, I resent this. Make a light come on? I want to beat you about the head and shoulders until I feel better.

“Yes, that’s it. We’re going to call that red. Can you hold that feeling?”

Why, yes I can. I can stay angry at you all day.

“That is very good Mr. Washington. Now we need you to stop thinking about Red. We need another state for the Green light. We have no idea what is triggering this for you, so we have triggered the signature of the first state to only work for the Red light. You will need to think of something equally powerful for the second.”

Okay. If I am going to do this, I have to put myself into it. Be calm. Be centered. Think about your first atom. Singular hydrogen. The probability cloud of the electron. Keep it in your mind. Focus on it, be the hydrogen atom. I exist.

“Oh that is very good. It’s a strong signal. You were right, Ms. Kalie. Your brother is very much alive and awake.”

Then there was the game of twenty-thousand questions. How do you feel? Do you feel good or bad? Can you feel this? How about this? Should we speak louder? After six hours of Yes, No, came the important questions.

“Do you hate us for not trying harder?”

No.

“Do you think Mom was wrong for sending you away?”

No.

“Do you want me to get Carl?”

No.

“Do you want to be taken off the ventilator?”

Kalie came and sat by my head, we had decided though I could hear from all over the room, close to my head was the sweet spot. “Your body is currently still very weak. It will be quite some time before you are able to breathe on your own again. Now that we know you are there, we have to ask, would you like to be removed from the life support equipment? I’ve been selfish and refused to consider anyone’s view but my own. This is really your decision.”

In the weeks I have had the ability to answer yes and no, I had refined the mental states necessary to control my lights. But this question didn’t have an easy answer. Both lights came on.

“I think he is very tired, Ms. Kalie. We will come back in the morning. He doesn’t have to rush. Mr. Washington, you are welcome here for as long as you like. Your family won’t be burdened with your costs and if you allow it, we will map as much of your brain and health in order to see if there are others like you out there. We hope you will choose to stay with us for at least a while, you can make a difference in the world.” Dr. Astor’s German accent was mild but I enjoyed listening to him talk. And his speech was compelling.

If I was going to be here. There were going to have to be some changes made. I flashed Yes.

It’s been two years since the night I agreed to stay. Kalie has completed her doctorate and I was able to listen to her graduation ceremony and her dedication was directed toward me. Once she was done, I turned off the computer video stream. I visualized a moment of silence and the speaker went offline.

Kalie spent the last two years helping me create a new way of thinking where my brain could distinctly create signals that would replicate the alphabet and an interface that would allow me to put my thoughts in a data stream.

She says, as we refine the technology, we may be able to get the software to recognize words instead of letters. But she always prefaces her ideas with “no promises.”

Until then, I get to write my memories of my beautiful madness and my fascination with Death one letter at a time.

That night I dream of my Companion and my beach. She has a bonfire and a group of laughing smiling people who seem to be enjoying themselves.

“Who are these people?”

“People with voices, who once had none. Now they flirt with me but refuse to come with me. They have you to thank.”

I look away. I’m no hero. Just someone who was too afraid to die.

“You would be surprised how many heroes say those very words, even as they do. Now get off my island. You have some writing to finish. Make sure I am beautiful.”

“Yes, ma’am.” I leave. There’s nothing there for me now.

And Death was beautiful to me, once, for about seven minutes.

Part 3 of 3

Listening as the World Walks By © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Listening as the World Walks By (2)

Posted by Ebonstorm on October 23, 2013
Posted in: Fiction, Short Story. Tagged: cap and gown, college, coma, conversation, Death, degree, ebonstorm, hearing, hospital, sight, sound, stoke, television, Thaddeus Howze, The Silence, vegetative state. 1 Comment

any01a_1549_01_700x452_Anytown

Do you know what’s the hardest thing to bear?

The silence. The godforsaken silence. The aliens in Doctor Who. The Silence. Capital T, Capital S. It inhabits you. It holds you close, it permeates your pores.

You don’t know quiet. You only think you know what its like to be quiet.

Imagine your house, right now. Now listen to the background. The hum of your refrigerator, the power supplies of your computer and power strips. Your cable boxes and console games. Your feng shui water fountain in the corner of the room, gurgling away.

Now imagine you are suddenly in a blackout. Nothing makes a sound. Now your house is quiet, truly quiet. But your neighbors are in an uproar so the silence is still broken by conversation and grousing about the failures of the power companies.

Move yourself toward the quietest place you know in the wilderness. The darkest most remote mountain forest, with the smell of old pine needles rising up as you walk through a place no one has seen. You stop moving, realizing there is no breeze. It’s late in the year, there are no insect sounds, no animals. Just you and the mountain. A stillness that aches within you.

Alone in your coma, your inner stillness is deeper than that.

And deeper still when there is no one on the ward. No machines near you. No lights on. Not in your room, if the door is open, not in the hall. That familiar hum which tells you the fluorescent lights are on above you. All you might hear is the squeak of the heel of a nurse at the very far end of the hallway, nothing more.

You strain your ears for any sound. The whisper of a fan, the creak of a door, the muted unintelligible sound of a distant TV. These sounds, when you are craving to hear them, and you didn’t know you would miss them, become more precious than gold. Move valuable than water in a desert, slaking thirst.

These are the sounds which hold you to the idea, there is even a reason to be alive. There must be a reason I am here. What am I learning? For the first time in my life I realized learning was for moments like these. It would fill the silence with science, with reason, with an effort to understand the real meaning of life, as best I could without research materials, wise words from ancient scholars, I would have to pare back reality to find truth on my own.

These were the worst nights. Nights when the silence couldn’t be countered with reason. Couldn’t be countered with silent rage filled tirades against my family, against my gene pool that cursed me with this immobile hell.

Why didn’t I just die? What is the evolutionary benefit of living as a vegetable? Was this a sign my ancestors had cared for an ailing relative for longer than they should and he managed to spread his defective genes? Or was this some congenital failure bred into the family line by accident, by mutation, by natural selection, reducing the lesser quality gene combinations until only superior specimens survived. Oh, and me.

I am in tune with nature.

I looked forward to visiting day. But for you to understand, know it wasn’t because my family were consistent visitors. God, knows they weren’t. But I loved to hear the sounds of relatives when they visited the coma ward. They would talk to their loved ones, voices quiet, talking of old times, young children, favored past times. Sometimes, I would hear illicit conversations with the spouses of those who had not come to grips with their loved one’s condition.

They might talk of lost passions and sometimes of renewed passions for someone new. There would be begging for forgiveness and then the quiet mathematical curve of reduction in their visits. In the time they would stay, the number of visits per month, what they would say while they were there.

After a while, I knew when the last visit would be. The curve would dip down in conversation until they would eventually come and say nothing the entire visit. This meant they had reached the resolution, the acceptance of the condition, that the person didn’t hear them, couldn’t hear them and would never hear them again.

They realized no words were necessary, nor would they matter.

They would make two two three more visits. Speaking a little more each time, tidying up, closing down the relationship from their end. Undoing their bridge that connected them to the person. They will go back, but at this point it will be when they felt obligated. When they felt guilty about being happy in their new life.

When their new life wasn’t happening.

I wept on the day of silence. When a visitor came and did not speak, I screamed out in pain. “Talk to me. I need you. I wait for you to come. I want to hear your voice. I don’t care what you are talking about. I just don’t want you to stop.”

They sit quietly. Sometimes I imagine the uncomfortable silence. The rustle of the clothing. The awkward downward staring, shoe string wondering, how long before the urge to leave, overpowers the obligation to sit, just a bit longer. On the day of silence, I want to scream at them. “How could you leave them? They need you. They loved you. You can’t go on with your life. You just can’t.”

It’s probably good no one can hear me. I eventually realize I’m wrong. They deserve to get on with their lives. How long can they live their life on hold?

How long can you live without sight?

As far as I can tell I stopped really seeing things in my mind after the third year. In the beginning I could still see everything like it was right in front of me. My spatial skills were always good. In my architecture class, 3D visualization, the ability to see a space from a blueprint was consider a great skill to have. I didn’t have the heart to tell my professor it came from years of playing DOOM and running through virtual dungeons.

Better that he thought I was a genius.

This power stood me in good stead in the early years. I imagined my route home from every location I had ever been able to roll over in a car. I would replay the journey from the house to the school to the market, to grandma’s to the hardware store, to my buddy Paul’s house, to the arcade, to the ice skating rink in the snow, in the rain, the burning hot summer, reflecting off the blacktop, heat ribbons distorting the distance into a visual curtain obscuring the future.

I miss those. It has been a long time since I could visualize an entire journey in sense-around 3D. After the fifth year, my distance vision faded. The breath of my visual illusion faded, my 160 degrees narrowed to 120 degrees and eventually to 90 degrees. I had to concentrate harder to maintain my sense of where I was, what things looked like, I had to focus on how to get there and nothing else.

It took longer. I got lost. Soon, I couldn’t see anything . I could, like a strobe light, see things close up, for a brief second in high relief, and then everything turned black again. I could make it home less and less often. My dreams, if I started in the hospital could never take me home again. If I woke up in home, I was okay. I could still see my house. I was more familiar with it than any place else in the world.

Eventually I gave up trying to drive home and just visualized myself in the house without the journey. I ultimately realized I would lose those memories if I didn’t use them but after seven years, I decided to conserve my mental energy for what was most useful.

I didn’t travel any more. I just teleported where I wanted to be. Closed my mental eye, visualize where I was going and bang. I was there. If I was stupid enough to open a door, there was nothing out there but blackness. Or super-bright whiteness, which can act just like black.

I was able to travel to these virtual places for another year before the only place I could remember was home. It had been eight years before I began to forget things in the house. A lamp here. A trashcan there.

By Christmas of the eight year, I could no longer remember anything about my home, except my family and a small brown and yellow teddy bear. My first teddy. Teddy.

Christmas Day, Carl, Kalie and Mom came to visit collectively for the first time in two years. I could hear it in their voices, something unspoken, still unresolved and contentious, their voices were strident, sharp, cutting and angry, even while they pretended they were having this conversation without rancor.

Once I got over hearing their voices, I listened to what they had to say and the most important part was that I would be moved into an inner city hospital where I would become a ward of the state.

I tried to be stoic. How much worse could my life be?

Part 2 of 3 – Jump to part 3

Listening as the World Walks By © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Listening as the World Walks By (1)

Posted by Ebonstorm on October 22, 2013
Posted in: Fiction, Short Story. Tagged: cap and gown, college, coma, Death, degree, ebonstorm, graduation, hospital, stoke, teenagers, Thaddeus Howze, vegetative state. 6 Comments

coma_infinity_by_levani11-d6j0zh3

I heard your brain takes seven minutes to stop thinking after you die.

Seven minutes for your life, compressed as you know it, to slowly unwind, to run through your mind, that construct of id, ego, superego and for you to un-become everything you spent your entire life becoming.

When my seven minutes came it was during my graduation ceremony, during the speech given by the valedictorian. Hotter than hell, outside in the blazing sun, my mother had me wearing a suit, complete with jacket, with our polyester robe on top. In hindsight, I should have said no. I was certain all of this contributed to my as yet, unknown condition. I found my way on stage because I was a student on the honor roll but I was happy just to be sitting on the stage with nothing to say. My new shoes pinched my feet which felt as if they had swollen two sizes that afternoon.

Mindy Yin was giving a dazzling speech, something that was both wise and still funny. Her compatriots in school fell into an easy rhythm with her speech which could have doubled as a comedy routine. Even the teachers and the normally wooden puppets that called themselves the administration slowly came to life. A chuckle, a snicker, a guffaw and then full out peals of laughter. It was the happiest I think I had ever seen my university. Ever.

Yin was killing them.

Yin was killing me, too. The laughter, combined with the heat, triggered a massive stroke. One moment, I was sitting laughing uncontrollably when I suddenly stopped being able to understand the conversation. I realized she was talking but I could no longer tell you what she was saying. Language stopped making sense and I was only hearing a noise, I could no longer identify.

I tried to speak and it was as if there was a giant standing with one foot on my head and the other on my chest. I was speechless and unable to even remember what speech sounded like. In that moment, I couldn’t tell you what speech was, let alone be capable of it.

It was then my mind began to think solely in numbers.

I could see into the room and there were three hundred and seventy four graduating students. There were five hundred and twenty guests not wearing our purple and yellow robes. How did I know this? At that moment, I couldn’t have told you but all forms of numbers became apparent to me. Things I knew I never would have noticed before stood out in crystal clarity.

Fourteen lights to light the stage, six yellow, four white, two red and two blue. I was even calculating the amount of time each was on. Not only did I see the lights above the stage, there were fifty two around the edge of the auditorium, and twenty five hanging down over the room casting a soft light onto the room.

Then there was the second hand on the clock in the auditorium. First it seemed to stop moving when I stopped being able to speak. It hung there between the eleven and the twelve for what seemed like two or three minutes. The roar in my ears filled them and language stopped being something I understood to something I couldn’t use.

Then the hands began to move. The seconds between my inability to read, hear, listen or think cogently in language, moved in rich syncopation with my increased numerical awareness. I began to see the seconds in segments of a second, perfect stopwatch precision.

I began to pitch forward in the second minute. One hundred and twenty six seconds to be exact. The fall took three very long seconds. I watched the stage wood, a beautifully cared for dark pine, cut into tiny inch wide slats, each three feet long and offset twelve inches making a textured wooden mosaic coming up to meet me. I focused on one particular piece. Darker than the ones around it, it became the central focus of my existence for three entire seconds, as I saw the faces of people trying to reach me.

I wanted to believe they were upset about what I thought was happening but I stopped being able to interpret their expressions.

Thirty two eyes, thirty two hands, sixteen mouths open in what I hoped was shock but I could no longer see that. Sixteen hearts leaped and bodies moved toward me.

I was unconscious for sixteen minutes. The only thing I could remember were the EMTs rolling me out the building. One with the bluest eyes I ever saw, he stared at me, flashing a light in my eyes. I couldn’t interpret that look on his face, but his increased movements, in relation to the flow of time, told me he was worried.

I couldn’t move. They immobilized me. A spinal board, keeping my head still and strapped to the table. They needn’t have bothered. I couldn’t feel my body.

Not in the normal sense. I felt as if I was trapped in a heavy meat suit. I was aware of me. I could feel at least half of me. The other half didn’t exist. The second EMT, a brown-skinned man who had stolen his voice from an angel. I couldn’t understand him, but his words felt like honey flowing over me.

I was no longer afraid.

But what was I… Oh god what is this pain?

I lost the feeling in the other half of my body and I could not longer interpret anything at all. It was a thing outside of my experience to be able to be a part of a space, yet have no true awareness of that space. No sense of its dimensions, barely able to comprehend the difference between inside and outside the ambulance.

My sense of time, was still perfect. Seven minutes to arrive at the hospital.

The brown EMT sat with me. Saying something good. Can’t tell you how I knew. It’s warmth was soothing, his eyes filled with compassion, I knew what it was now in my final minutes.

Clarity of mind seemed to be returning, but it wasn’t the clarity of someone who is getting better. It was the clarity of neurons firing, trying to reset themselves, trying to fight for life, my life.

He wiped my nose and mouth and crimson stained the gauze he used. I knew that look. Its was the same look my father gave me when our dog was hit out in front of the house when I was ten or eleven. My mother kept saying it was going to be alright. My father never said a word but his face told me everything he didn’t say. That thin line of his mouth, his eyes hardened, tightened and when he looked at me, he told me without saying a thing.

Be strong, be focused. Be there.

This EMT was there. He had done all he could do for the next seven minutes and I saw my dog taken away by Animal Control. I saw my sister being born when I was twelve. I saw my older brother break his arm when I was fifteen. I saw my mother and father fighting when I was six or seven, drinking, throwing things around, screaming at the top of their lungs. I remember Caroline Winters kissing me at sixteen at a school event. My first kiss, terrifying, wonderful, heady and filled with possibility. The clarity was fading. It was getting harder to remember, skipping around in my memories.

I thought this was supposed to be orderly. Neat, a procession of your life stories, playing out like a movie. This was not that. This was scary. This made me think ‘I’m dying’.

How long had it been since I couldn’t feel my body? Six minutes, ten seconds.

The EMT with the honey in his voice was moving around again and I saw Blue Eyes helping me from the ambulance, pushing me into the hospital. Other faces, other voices, too many, bearded man, gravelly voice, young woman, maybe twenty-five, smelled of lilac. My favorite.

It’s so bright now. Just want to sleep. No Honey voice, Blue Eyes, don’t leave me. This bearded man smelled of malice and anger. Alcohol too.

He’s was in charge, I was at the seven minute mark. I didn’t feel them touching me, I didn’t understand the looks on their faces. Nothing was making sense anymore.

The light was brighter, forming a tunnel and I didn’t see anything else. Just the light.

I don’t remember when I started thinking again. I just did. I felt as if I had been asleep. A rugged sleep, something gained at a cost. Not restful. Speaking of restful, I still couldn’t feel my body. Proprioception, the doctor called it.

“I’m sorry Mrs. Levette. He’s had a massive stroke. We have no idea how long it’s going to take for him to recover. A good percentage of his brain activity has been altered. We just don’t know. We will keep running tests until we know all of our options. This coma is his body’s attempt to pull it together, so we won’t count him out yet.”

All I heard for a while was her crying. My mother was always a bit blubbery. When dad died last year she cried for months, spontaneously and without warning. We learned to keep someone near her at all times until she got it together. Now this happened.

Wait a minute, count me out? I just got here and they want to call it a day? Hey, I’m living here!

The days faded in and out but the words that stuck to me most were ‘vegetative state’, ‘not waking up’, ‘shutting down the respiratory support’. That’s when I realized, they thought I was dead. They thought I couldn’t hear them. Why were they talking about me like I wasn’t there? Of course, I’m getting better. I can hear everything you’re saying about me.

I see you trying to kill me under the guise of kindness. Saving my family money, you say. Ending my suffering, you say. I am suffering, because I am listening to you all of you, nurses, doctors, chaplains standing over me telling me I can’t be saved. Get that damn chaplain out of here. Mom, if you knew anything about me, you would know I am atheist. I don’t believe in God. Cause if I did, I would be screaming to this unfeeling fucking universe, save me.

I don’t want to die like this.

They’re gonna do it. They are going to shut it all off. And there isn’t a thing I can do to stop them. You would be surprised what you come to think about and value when you can’t move, can’t open your eyes, only have your ears and to a lesser extent your nose to guide you to the world around you.

Its been seven hundred and seventy sunrises and sunsets that have taken place since I have taken up residence in this coma ward. They care for me, sometimes better than others, I have learned to recognize the shifts, the people who touch me and how. Big Hands, Rough Scrubber will be on today. He only has to wash me once in any month but he hates it. He scrubs me raw. I started feeling my body again late last year. Nothing like before, mostly pins and needles, but Big Hands is both welcome and hateful. I can feel him, but he so poorly suited to this work, his discomfort is palpable even to me.

The voices, the ideas, the secrets; I hear them all. I listened to all of my attendants. They all talk to me. Most not saying anything important. Some tell me about their lives, things they’ve done that week. A couple talk about their own families. A few grouse about their working conditions, or the quality of the hospital or the doctors they hate.

People have so many secrets they never share with each other. Only with the vegetables in the hospital cabbage patch.

Then there’s Kalie, my little sister. She’s a teenager now. She’s rebellious and tells me all about how things are going at home. How my bills are bankrupting the family, how my older brother and my mother fight all the time now about what to do with me. She squeezes my hand and I feel it.

I want to say something to her. I want to let her know I’m here.

“You look like hell, Big Brother.” You have tubes coming out of every part of you. I know you wouldn’t want this. But I can’t let you go.”

You have to. No one is going to save me.

“I know you are in there. I can feel you.”

Not useful. Subjective, without evidence. Won’t move a doctor or Mom.

“Tell me what to do.”

Go home. Stop coming here. Be like Mom and Carl. Forget I exist except when the bills come. Makes turning it off easier.

“I won’t let them do it.”

She is as good as her word. She shows her ass for the next three years and for three more years, I sit. Listening. Hearing their fights. Listening to interns fucking in the empty beds next to mine. God. I’m so jealous. I never even had sex. But it sounds so wonderful. Their muffled laughter. Their giggling. Their panting, their stifled screams of ecstasy. At least I hope that’s what it is.

I have a life, without the ability to participate.

Part 1 of 3 – Jump to part 2

Listening as the World Walks By © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Motus Vita (9)

Posted by Ebonstorm on October 21, 2013
Posted in: Chapter, Character Bio, Clifford Engram, Motus Vita, Serial. Tagged: Albrecht, Albrecht Fleisher, ebonstorm, ice cream, Manny Rodriguez, Nexus, Night Train, Oroborus, Primal Earth, Samuel Owiti, storm elemental, supernatural, Thaddeus Howze, The Dark Gift, The Darkness, Vita, Zhang Hongjing. 1 Comment
The Darkness

He who fights with monsters should look to it that he himself does not become a monster. And when you gaze long into an abyss the abyss also gazes into you. —Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, “Beyond Good and Evil“, Aphorism 146 (1886) 

He said I was screaming but I can’t remember. My head, my heart, my very soul was filled with the screams of millions.

I couldn’t hear myself anymore.

All I could remember was striking him again and again. He resisted, I was a series of burns, my upper body covered in nothing but smoldering rags. But I didn’t feel a thing. My arm rose and fell rhythmically, like a piston in a V-8 engine, hammering him into the ground. Dark energy surrounded me, flying off in every direction, souls dying within me, feeding the beast their lifeforce, enhancing its power a thousand fold.

Fenrir was almost free and unleashed. Paradoxically, my complete exultation in my rage kept him with me. Free to escape, he was drawn to the purest source of rage around.

Me. I had turned from a prison to a killing field.

I didn’t want to stop. I couldn’t stop. I wouldn’t stop. Vita misled us. He lied to us. He brought us here to die. The hammering continued even after Vita fell limp. I couldn’t feel the Phoenix any more, it was gorged and feasting, too busy to watch over me. Too busy to do what it was created to do.

The hammering continued. I was filled with a dark ecstasy, as if this was what I was born to do.

To kill renegade gods.

Then I felt something change. The air grew thick, heavy, a hand, a clawed one grabbed my left shoulder. Black as night, fingernails of onyx, a grip of steel. I could break it like a twig. The vampire held his grip, his darkness became an anchor to me. Metaphorically, I felt my spirit reach out to it.

Then a second hand, as warm as the other was cold. Filled with Life, Manny grabbed my hand, the hammer surrounded in the darkforce that is Fenrir, as I stood over the unconscious body of Vita. My dark-force filled flesh should burn him, it should eat of his mortal flesh like a bonfire does a witch’s. He should be burning before my eyes.

I cannot bring my hammer back down. My arm is frozen there. His hand using no strength holds me in place and I turn to look at him, mouth open, pure rage flowing forth and he was shining. A smile beamed out from his face. A smile as beneficent, radiating kindness as powerfully as he normally radiated intensity.

Just like that, the darkforce was dispelled. The blue black sigils which surrounded my right arm lost their light and returned to being a spiritual prison to a god-like force of destruction. The possession was over. The souls of this ruined Earth dissipated releasing me. Exhausted I looked down.

Vita, protector of the Earths, Traveller of the Hidden Ways, lay dead in my grip. What had I done?

Gears

My name was Samuel Owiti. I was born in Kenya in the year 1787. When the British were bringing their empire to Kenya, they decided they would do it using rail and would hire many of the local tribes to work for them, laying track and building bridges. I was a worker on such a track over the Keyosa river.

My tribe was a small one, barely two hundred members but the men worked for the British since it appeared they were not planning to leave Kenya any time soon. The British railway was enriching provinces and we thought it might be good for our small tribe to take advantage of this irresistible force.

Our people believed in magic then. The magic of family lines, of spirits of hospitality, of the power of the Orisha, of the spirits of nature. It was the spirits of nature we feared and appeased the most for they were the closest to us and often willing to manifest when nature was out of balance.

There was a spiritual war taking place when the British brought their train through our province. And when it was done, many lives were lost. More importantly, it brought our province under the scrutiny of older eyes. Older than the spirits wandering the plains, older than the mountain gods of Kilimanjaro. So old, they were born someplace outside of our world.

I met one of those spirits. On the night of the final completion of the tracks. After the bodies of our families were given their rights, I heard a train coming across the tracks. No one else seemed to hear it. No one else saw the fog that accompanied it. I found myself drawn toward the sound and I could see it as it crossed high above the river, making a thunderous noise, steam flaring from its nostrils, and a hellish light burned from its single eye. A light I can still remember all these years later.

It stopped before me. I had been struck motionless, in awe or fear, I knew not which. I waited as its steaming breath surrounded me and the world as I knew it fell away. Only the moon remained constant as day and night changed. The countryside around me grew more advanced, a small group of buildings in the distance grew larger, more prominent, and our village became a city.

“This is your future. We have seen it.”

I fell to my knees as the voice was like nothing I had ever known. Rapturous, making me ready to assume God had come to me, but in its next sentence I thought maybe instead Satan was before me instead.

“But only if you are prepared to die here. This future does not include you. It exists because of you.”

“What are you? Why should I believe anything you say? This is too much to be believed. Am I already dead?” All I had was questions, nothing coherent, nothing made sense.

“What if I told you, all your choices, all your decisions can cause the world you live in to change for the better or the worse, would you believe that is possible?”

I felt like this question was something I could comprehend, so I tried to focus on just that one tiny thing. “Yes, I believe a man makes the future he works toward.”

“What if I told you, there are multiple futures, some go forth and become great and vast things, others wither on the vine, based on the decisions of humanity as a whole. What if I told you there are some decisions at certain points which affect the lives of billions, sometimes positively, other times negatively. What if I told you, tonight, you will make such a decision, Samuel Owiti? I will go one step further and tell you, if you say no, and walk away, this decision will change your world from what you saw, to this.”

The city fell away, flames engulfed the buildings, towering clouds rose into the skies with a burning light within, destroying all they touched. People vaporized, nothing but their shadows remaining. All of mighty Africa reduced to a radioactive wasteland. “Enough, you monster, if your goal is to bring me to your cause, you need not have done this.”

“Done what, Samuel? Do you think I did this? I am not the cause of this event. You, humanity, are the monster. I am merely its Witness. That is what I do. I witness. I watch, I only intervene under certain circumstances. Very rigidly defined circumstances. But with you, I could do more. Much more. But perhaps you need more to convince you. Let us go forward from your last day on Earth to seven years in the future. You will return to your home to find it overrun with foreign troops. Smell the gunpowder, see the burning; find your families, all of them gunned down by the very same British who claimed they would bring prosperity to you. They brought it, but kept the prosperity for themselves. Do you see where you would be now? Dead. Valiant, but dead, just the same.”

I wanted to disbelieve him. But I could feel the veracity of his words. I could see my brother-in-law standing hip deep in the British dead, before he was gunned down, his machete dripping blood even into death. I know this is how he would die. He hated the British. All of my family fought and died. I even saw what I think was me but I flickered like a light trying to resist going out.

“If I go with you, will you stop this?”

“No.”

“What do you mean, no? You said if I went with you I would be able to change things?”

“For others, yes. Their futures will change because of your choices. But this spot. This place in time, this is a point that cannot, will not be changed. The only point in question is you. You are superimposed on multiple quantum realities. Because we are discussing your future, it is, for the moment in flux. You have only a short time to decide.”

“If I go with you, I will not die?”

“Not this day. Nor will you in seven years. You will live another two hundred and twenty six years before the threat of Death will be before you. You will have to make the choice again then. This assumes no threat as great as yourself, no being on the scale of what we are, no forces from realms outside of us whose power rivals our own, will you have to worry about. On any day you change something pivotal, you can expect to draw the ire of those who placed us in this service. You are not the first Conductor. Nor will you be the last.”

A door opened in the distance and through the fog, I could see a man come to the edge of the rear of the engine. He staggered down the ladder and walked to me. His coat was stained with blood. Fresh. He was a short man who wore his white hair long and braided in the back. In the moonlight he had a fine white mustache hanging over the edges of a wide and expressive mouth. He smiled at me while staggering in my direction to fall into my arms. “My time here is over. I have done what I could for as many as I was able in as many forms as I was allowed. The Darkness is coming and I fear I will not last long enough to overcome them. I give the power to save us to you. If you will take it up. I know you have and you did, and you will regret this too. This is as it should be. No such use of power should come without regret.”

“How long have you been doing this?”

“I have guided Hēi Lóng, the Black Dragon, for nearly a thousand years. Will you take this burden from me? I was suited to this task but now I realize I am truly a man out of my time. I can no longer make the decisions that need to be made.”

A thousand year old man. A train that was a dragon, whose fierce eyes now stared at me. A future of war, not just here but across time and space. A man who was out of time. I answered, “Yes. Tell me your name.”

I could barely hear him and had to lean my ear close to his lips. Then he coughed and drew in his last breath. With it he said, “Take my coat, and my watch. Create a new future.”

And then Zhang Hongjing, minister of a China before I was born, died of the wounds of treachery administered to him nearly a thousand years ago.

The coat was heavy and it changed into something more modern as soon as it was on. I felt my humanity fall away. Hunger, cold, fear, all replaced by something ancient, fearsome, godlike.

I took the watch from his hand and as I strapped it to my coat, I could feel the serpent wrap itself around my heart. Tendrils of magic filled me, and took my breath away as it squeezed itself into my chest, fitting itself, nestled around my organs.

“For a time, we will be as one. For a while.”

It would be twenty years before the Black Dragon, a creature older than Man, would speak to me again.

Gears

I am home. Just as he promised. I would die in the exact same space, my superposition ratified, my position confirmed.

After two centuries roaming all of time and space, I recognize the mountain in the distance, Kilimanjaro.

The gods of Kilimanjaro call me home after two centuries away. The two lions greet my spirit and lead me away from my death.

Movement was my life; my identity as Motus Vita is done. Their embrace means I am finally free. Once a demigod, I am content to be Samuel Owiti once more. As a child I was cast away, and raised by a man not my father, and a woman not my mother. My work as Motus Vita was to help others find a home when none appeared to exist for them. That work for two centuries was good. Now I, too, have come home.

I rise above the ruins of what was once a great city, my home, leaving behind three warriors, whom I, in my fear and desperation, lead to their deaths unless they can become something other than they are. In the minutes left to them, they must master the serpent that encircles the worlds.

They must master Ouroboros.

Angel

Paranormal 2

Motus Vita © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Wou Lonbraj

Posted by Ebonstorm on October 17, 2013
Posted in: Character Bio, Excerpt, Short Story, Steampunk. Tagged: angels, Bourbon, demons, intuitive nature, Josephus Daniels, Kansas City, nature, Wou Lonbraj. 2 Comments

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We are all time travelers. We just get to move forward one second at a time. –Unknown

Josephus Daniels was a watchmaker in the Old West.

When, is less important for our needs, because we are only going to be with Mr. Daniels for a single day.

But for an artifact like the Wou Lonbraj, a single day could last a very long time.

Josephus Daniels was a freeman. A Black man that had never been a slave in the year of our lord 1878. He learned his trade of watchmaking up North in Massachusetts apprenticed to a Swiss immigrant seeking his fortunes in the post war America. As a young man, Daniels was a good student. Attentive, skilled, possessed of both a keen mind and a steady hand.

Daniels was considered a bit touched mentally. He was slow to speak and often confused people who spoke to him but in his chosen profession he was masterful. His skill at making precise mechanical movement for watches and clocks gave him a reputation that preceded him.

Despite his peculiar state of mind, he was particularly fond of strange ways of keeping time. He created DeVinci’s water clock. Rebuilding it again and again until its timekeeping was perfect. He then scaled it up and sold one to the small town of Squatahawton in their central square.

From that moment on it was clear, Josephus Daniel’s awareness of time, and his intuitive nature of it’s flow would be his ticket to fame and fortune in this new America. Clocks were needed everywhere so Mr. Daniels began to tour America, from one end to another leaving a variety of unusual clocks, some wind powered, water powered and even the occasion sundial in those places which boasted reliable and steady sunshine.

One evening in Kansas City he was taking his ease in a local saloon when the sounds of gunfire were heard. No one moved, assuming it to be a local disturbance and not their business. Mr. Daniels agreed and continued teasing a spring into his latest client’s pocket watch.

A few minutes later, a disheveled gentlemen entered the saloon and dropped his hat onto the bar next to Josephus. He was a tall man, uncommonly so for this part of the West, but poorly fed, his face was gaunt, hungry and when his eyes caught Josephus’ there was a fierceness, a fire burning within them. He stared at him for a moment and a chill wind seemed to pass through Mr. Daniels’ very soul.

“Bourbon. Keep ’em coming.”

“Money, you got some? Otherwise, beat it,” was the bartender’s curt reply. His tone and the tight mien of his jaw gave credence to his veiled threat.

With a casual movement, federal dollars fell upon the counter, generously tossed, coveted, by scavengers avariciously watching through tightly slit eyes. All but Mr. Daniels who remained oblivious to the man and his money.

“How can you work in this light?” the Dangerous Man asked Mr. Daniels.

“I have done this so many times, sir, it is second nature to me. Time and I are old bedfellows, so often together, no one can remember ever seeing us apart. I could do this with all of the scourges of heaven or hell standing about me.”

“You speak in song, stranger. Why is that?”

“C-c-cause if I don’t. I have a t-t-tendency to stutt-tter. A woman doctor thought singing might help me. So I sing, mostly about time-time and I do much better.”

“What if I told you, your stutter has nothing to do with medicine and everything to do with a music only you and I can hear.” The Dangerous Man threw back his bourbon and another immediately followed. As he became lubricated, his voice became less gruff, smoother, clearer, and easier to understand.

“That’d be a right interesting idea. But I am a man of science, I believe only in what I can see, hear and intuit, sir. My lady doctor, a legend in her field has proven to me words as song are the cure to my ill.”

A brief cough before continuing, the Dangerous Man leaned over Mr. Daniels and looked at his watch. “A mechanical timepiece powered by a spring action and mechanical gear assembly. Fine workmanship for this era. You are a natural.”

“I see you know your way around a watch. Very few people do. How does a man who uses a gun, rides a horse, and wears bullet scars such as yourself, come to know anything about watches?”

“Let us agree that I am something of an expert myself. But I don’t have much time to explain.” the Dangerous Man reached into his pocket and pulled out a strange pouch which he held in his large hand. A trickle of blood had begun to slide down his arm over that hand.

Two men walked into the saloon at that time. Each was a study in violence. Their every movement oozed menace, their very aura spoke of death. Only someone whose eye was quick would have seen their shadows had wings for just a second before they entered the gloom of the saloon.

Their eyes had the same fire as the Dangerous Man’s. Josephus gathered his tool bag and his watch and packed them away as they approached the bar.

“Tell me your name sir, for I must take my leave and I would have your company again, if I may. I am Josephus Daniels, watchmaker, tinker, and inventor.”

“My name is Gabriel and I don’t suspect we will be meeting again, Mr. Daniels, but I appreciate the time we have spent together. The song is only part of the work, you need to hear the music, Mr. Daniels. You should go now. It’s not safe here.”

The blood spatters fell heavily upon the floor and Gabriel downed his last drink. “Barkeep, I am going to need the rest of that bottle.”

The bartender looked at the two silent men at the end of the bar and noticed the bar was now nearly empty. He handed the bottle over without protest and left out the back.

“We are here to finish what was started, Gabriel. You are alone while we, we are Legion. Look outside.”

Winged shadows flickered everywhere. The afternoon sun showed them long and frightening. People ran into their homes or got off the street in expectation of violence.

“Can you have the decency to let a man finish his drink and leave this establishment? No sense in shooting up a man’s place. You will have what you came for.”

The two men retreated from the bar and stepped outside.

“Since you didn’t have the good sense to leave, I would ask you to help me to my feet.” Josephus sensing Gabriel was out of time, complied setting his bag on the table. Gabriel was heavy and the two stumbled back and bumped into the table knocking over Josephus’ bag.

“Let me help you with that.” They repacked the bag and went to the door.

Josephus looked at Gabriel before asking, “Maybe you should leave through the back like the barkeep?”

“Wouldn’t help. They are Legion.”

“What are you going to do, then?”

“Die, most likely.”

“Can you use a gun, Mr. Daniels?”

“Yes, sir, but not very well. Never had the need.”

“Then I’m sorry.” The Dangerous Man walked out into the street and moved toward the far end of the street before turning around. The two gunmen stood at the opposite end of the street with several others positioned on the tops of rooftops with long rifles.

At that moment, the sheriff and two deputies rode up.

“There, there gentlemen, this isn’t that kind of town. We don’t allow no dueling here. Take your feud and head to the edge of town for that kind of…”

Three shots rang out and the sheriff and deputies drop from their horses. Each struck squarely in the head.

None of the men standing appeared to move to anyone on the street, except for Josephus. He saw the gunman on the street draw his weapon, shoot three times and put it back in his holster in the same time it took Josephus to blink his eye.

“Gabriel, leave it with us and you may go. No one will be the wiser. You can say we took it from you. We are Legion after all.”

“You were legion last week. And the week before that. And the year before that. You are always legion and yet you always lose.”

“Not today. That burning in your blood? That fever you can’t identify? It is a special venom that we covered our bullets with. You won’t be anywhere near as good as you used to be. Today, it will be ours.”

“Then take it.” People on the street that day still talked of the strange standing gunmen, who appeared to stand still for half a hour, unmoving, the wind blowing through the streets, dust landing on the still cooling bodies of the sheriff and deputies before all of the gunmen fell over dead on the street. Or the terrifying storm that followed.

Josephus Daniels saw something completely different.

Gabriel and the gunmen moved faster than the beating of a hummingbird’s heart. Bullets whipped though the air, barely missing the fluctuating vibrations of these strange gunmen. Then Jospheus heard the music. Gabriel’s was first, a french horn, tremulous, brash, arrogantly played, where the gunman who called itself Legion was the beating of drums, large angry drums with a sound that quickened the heart, created fear of an oncoming wave.

These two musics were separate, yet complementary as if they might have once been part of the same orchestra, playing music they might have once played together. But no longer.

Legion fired from rooftops, from behind corners, from windows, and Gabriel saw them all. His movement was fast as if he were on strings, whipping left then right. He fired at each target only once. They fell over dead, from windows, from rooftops, from around corners. Gabriel never missed.

But as his enemy was fond of reminding him, he was Legion.

Though bodies dropped, other took their place. The music grew louder. The sky darkened as clouds appeared almost as if by magic. Wind accompanied the rain which began to fall and Gabriel began to slow.

Josephus wanted to leave but something held him to his spot. An overwhelming urge to know what this was. The music now had a background, a rumble of thunder, with the crack of lightning adding a constant sizzling sound as the bolts of lightning began to touch down in the gun battle.

Then Josephus saw it. The battle was slowing, Legion was not replacing his gunmen. Gabriel was firing slower. Even the rain began to fall slower. In a few seconds, nothing moved.

Only the two Legion remained at the other end of the street, they had never moved until now. Both had drawn their weapons and fired. Josephus saw their rounds were moving where Gabriel would be. Gabriel fired twice and each bullet was only a split second after the first.

Then the sound of gunfire faded, only the music could be heard. Josephus walked out to Gabriel, drawn inexplicable to what he knew was truly a divine presence.

“You must take it. My time here is done. I can no longer protect it. In your hands, it will always stay a second ahead of Legion and his ilk.”

“I’m no gunman. How would I protect it from the likes of them?”

“That was my mistake. I thought I could use it, I thought I could control it and it would make me invincible. Fighting was the wrong way to protect something like this. You will find a better way.”

“Done right, you will have all the time in the world.”

The strange sundial made of a black metal was in Gabriel’s other hand. He reached out and touched it. And suddenly everything was clear. Time was not only a linear thing. It was a flexible construct, like a ribbon, where one could move around it, through it. You couldn’t change the past, you couldn’t travel into the future, but you could change how a thing interacted with the flow of time. It could age, it could grow older, younger, faster or slower. Its position in time could be moved and he decided he could fix this.

The language of time came to him and he knew he needed to avoid paradox. Walking away from Gabriel, he realized Gabriel used it the way he was used to seeing the world. From an immortal’s perspective.

He watched as time expanded again, the rain began to move at the corner of his eyes and he watched as Gabriel’s last two bullets found Legion and their last rounds caught him and laid him low.

Then the storm lashed out with a cascade of lightning striking the bodies of Legion where they fell and turning them to dust.

Gabriel lay in the street, as the watchmaker saw him nod and then lie still.

Josephus watched as the townspeople tried to put out the fires that sprang up from the lightning strikes.

Gripping the strange sundial, he considered Time again and everything sat still. Then he considered his small house on the edge of time. And he was there. He walked into his house and looked at his clocks. They all had the same time of five, twenty five. His pocket watch said, five o’clock.

He would keep it safe by moving outside of time. Gabriel used it as a weapon, speeding his reflexes, making himself faster, but the secret would be to simply stay away from anyone, living between the seconds.

Josephus Daniels, a man obsessed with time, held in his hands, the very passage of time itself. Hiding in plain sight, he spent the next fifty years, living between the seconds.

Yes, we know ultimately Legion did claim it. But a man did what an angel could not, he considered time in ways immortality could not. He did not see to use time, but to watch it, to husband it. To release it only as necessary.

He acted as if time was a finite resource, a uniquely mortal perspective.

Josephus Daniels died at the age of 102 in the town of Nicodemus. While he was there, he was known to offer Time to people who were in need of a little luck and every so often he was known to travel the Black Ribbon of Time, itself. But we all know time travel is impossible, right?

The Wou Lonbraj was captured less than six years after his death, taken from another foolish angel.

ScreenHunter_453 Jul. 01 18.14

Wou Longbraj © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved
Sundial Watch 2 © Bluebenu

Motus Vita (8)

Posted by Ebonstorm on October 14, 2013
Posted in: Chapter, Character Bio, Clifford Engram, Motus Vita, Serial. Tagged: Albrecht, Albrecht Fleisher, aliens, ebonstorm, Grand Central, ice cream, Indra's Vajra, lightning spear, Manny Rodriguez, Nexus, Night Train, Primal Earth, storm elemental, supernatural, Thaddeus Howze, The Dark Gift, Vita. Leave a comment
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You believe you can separate fantasy from reality. You’re starting from an incorrect premise. You believe there is a difference.
–The Night Train

The storm elementals closed us and the burning stink of ozone accompanied them.

We could barely handle one. How in the world would we fight four?

As we prepared to strike, their bodies powered up and they lit up from the inside. Then with a flash of lightning and a thunderclap that threw Manny and I away from where we were standing and sliding back up the ramp in Grand Central Station, they were gone.

It took a minute until my vision came back and my ears stopped ringing.

When I finished wiping the tears from my eyes, I saw Albrecht standing there whispering to the small elemental formation surrounding the heart of the elemental we mostly destroyed earlier.

“Should I ask why you weren’t flat on your ass?” Manny was more than a little pissed and I understood.

Albrecht’s sharp-toothed grin was disturbing both from a human point of view since he was a vampire and from a personal perspective since a smile was the last thing I would have expected him to show. To us, no less. “I guess it liked me and protected me from the other elementals leavetaking. Next time, I promise to warn you in advance.”

I bet. I dispelled the lightning blade and picked up the ice cream. “We’re here. Where do you want us to go?” I looked up the platform and noticed all of the staff that bustled around the engine had disappeared while we were blinded.

“ALL ABOARD,” boomed from all around us and no place in particular.

“I guess our ride’s leaving. And me without a ticket. What now, fearless leader?”

“After you, Mr. Rodriguez.” I smiled and waved toward an opened train car door.

“Oh, no. After you, Mr. Engram. I insist.” He wasn’t smiling. “No, really, I do insist.”

“For the love of all that is unholy, we will go first. Come along, Sparky.”

Manny looked at me and mouthed silently. “He’s named it?”

“Does that mean you’re planning on keeping ‘Sparky’, Albrecht, you hardly know him, her, or it? I’m not judging. Just asking.” I wasn’t surprised he didn’t answer, he seemed totally absorbed by his interactions with the elemental.

Albrecht entered the darkened car and Sparky started glowing with a low blue light, illuminating what appeared to be a modern passenger car for a transcontinental rail. We followed staying close to the circle of light being cast by the creature. The train doors snapped shut behind us and the train began to move.

No turning back, now.

“Before we begin our journey, I would like to have the ice cream placed in the dropbox at the front of the car. Engram, you remember your way around, don’t you?”

“It looks different, but I can figure it out. Do I have to scoop or will you just eat the container as well?”

I found the door and pulled it back. I just dropped the whole bag into the hopper and closed it. Out of curiosity I pulled the door and just that quickly the ice cream was gone. No sound, no thunk, just vanished. When I was here as a kid, I learned nothing was as it appeared to be, but now with so much more experience, I was beginning to think this wasn’t even a train.

“Please be seated and take a look out of the windows.”

I was disappointed for a few minutes, it appeared to be nothing more than a subway tunnel with the occasional burst of light from passing through a station on the center express track. No one seemed disturbed by our passage, their bored expressions told me they must be seeing exactly what they expected; an express train as it zipped by.

This wasn’t a revolutionary trick, most magic worked along the same principle. People saw what they expected to see or could rationalize away what they saw with just the smallest amount of effort. This lent itself to the Agency’s mission since most people simply refused to believe in the supernatural even when confronted by it face to face.

Zombies became drug addicts, demonic possession became psychological dysfunction, the face of Jesus on a pancake could perform a miracle but only the pious would believe it, even if it actually happened. By the way, it would happen because the person believed it would, not because Jesus would manifest Himself through a pancake.

There were two thousand such pancakes, toasts, paint splotches, skidmarks, togas, coffee spills which, through the belief of people all over the world, manifested such miracles spontaneously at any one time. This belief in the power of pancakes, as well as belief in such a charged religious figure caused an interaction with the ambient Magiosphere all over the planet.

There weren’t more because so many people didn’t believe it was possible for that to happen. But there were enough that the agency was forced to take action, so they created tabloids. Funding publications like the Enquirer, the Tattler and the Star to keep misinformation out there, seeding disbelief while confusing what people thought was real.

“And you believe the Agency is clever in this trick, do you?” The sound came from a crackling speaker system in the overhead.

“Do you have to do that? Can you pick one way of communicating with us and stick with it?” I wasn’t even sure which way to face so I just sat there like I was crazy and spoke out loud to no one in particular.

We came above the ground and were heading uptown into the Bronx. I knew this route. The train blew its whistle. I opened the window, stuck my head out and saw a train on the platform ahead of us.

Stopped ahead of us. With passengers getting into the train.

The Night Train sped up. Blowing the whistle more frequently and louder, it covered the distance between itself and the train ahead in a matter of seconds.

I sat back down and strapped myself in and counted down.

When I expected to be crunching up against the Number 6 train ahead of me, I instead saw the fog grow fantastically thick and the train was gone from view, and the sound of the track disappeared as well. It was replaced with a sound similar to the fridge in my old apartment, an annoying buzz and hum, complete with the scent of food gone bad.

Then I remembered the nausea that accompanied a jump. The move to a new track, someplace else. It didn’t last long but it was uncomfortable, something you never got used to.

I felt something warm running down my lip and I realized my nose was bleeding. This never happened before. I looked at Manny and his nose was also bleeding. He had taken out a handkerchief and leaned his head back. I never had a handkerchief when I needed one so my sleeve would have to do. I pinched my nose shut, leaned back and waited for the blood to stop.

Albrecht appeared to be unaffected. Oh, goody. Am I really surprised?

The train car door opened in front of us. A light backlit the shape of a man wearing a conductor’s coat. He came into our car and the door shut behind him. The lights in the car came on, thankfully quite dim. He was a man of middling height and build. He would have been completely unremarkable except for his lack of an actual face. That and he was noisily eating ice cream.

“Your noses will stop bleeding in a minute or so. Nothing to worry about.” His eyeless face was quite a distraction. Only slightly less so than the gusto with which he consumed his ice cream. His mouth flickered into and out of existence appearing only long enough to manifest for a spoonful of ice cream and then disappeared once the spoon was out of his mouth.

At this point, nothing could surprise me. I just decided to accept everything I was about to see. I didn’t yet understand what that would mean.

I had so many questions, some Agency related but many just to understand what this thing was that I owed my life to? Start at the beginning. “Do you have a name we can call you?”

“Call me…Vita. Without me, life on Earth might have never come into existence, so I will accept that as my name. I have to admit, I am glad you did though. Dinosaurs didn’t invent anything and they hogged up the Earth for sixty-five million years. All that time and they didn’t invent, create, or do anything interesting. When I saw the meteor that ended their existence, it was the first time in my existence I did not fulfill my design.”

“Excuse me? You have been around since the dinosaurs?” Manny looked up from sharpening his sword, intrigued but trying to appear nonplussed about the revelation.

“Yes, I let those bastards die.”

“Because they didn’t invent ice cream?”

“No, Engram, because they didn’t do anything. They just existed. Sat around eating plants and each other. Every day, day after day. Nothing changed. Until that moment, the entire universe for me was this tiny blue planet doing absolutely nothing. I knew when I let the comet strike the Earth, I had changed the face of our local reality forever. My choice damned this planet.”

Albrecht looked up from his preoccupation with Sparky and asked, “What does this have to do with today and your current affliction?”

Vita walked to the window and put down his ice cream. “What do you see?” Outside the window had become black as night, there was nothing to see. At first. Then I could see tiny lights twinkling in the distance. Stars. I noticed a section of the sky was blackened out, no stars, nothing visible. A crescent of light appeared at the edge of the blackness and then I realized it was a planet. A planet with three moons.

All pretense of aloofness gone, Manny pressed his face against the glass. “Where are we? Why aren’t we dying? This looks like spaceflight to me.”

“We are looking at Primal Earth. The perfect Earth, with the idealized citizens who make the right decisions, who do things the right way and have made the most correct decisions for everyone who lives there. This is the Earth all of the others are descended from. See that third moon? There is an entire civilization built on the Darkside which acts as a launchpad to the solar colonies established in the early 1900s.”

“Can we see it up close? I always wondered what a perfect world looked like.”

“No. This is the one Earth, I can never visit. My presence would disrupt what is a golden age there. But we came here because I wanted to show you what the Agency has never truly let you understand. Your civilization is one of many, more successful than some, less successful than others and all of you are reflections of this one planet. On Primal Earth, there are three species of Homo Sapiens, intelligent raptors, no over-population, no wasteful developments, travel to the stars, and a Humanity in harmony with itself and the universe around it.”

“What about my kind? Is there a place for my people with the Dark Gift?”

“Yes, on Primal Earth, the Dark Gift is nothing more than a mutation with beneficial capacities making your people tough, durable and fearless explorers of new worlds. The bloodlust, the fear, the destruction have been tempered with wisdom and kindness.”

Color me suspicious by nature, but I simply can’t help myself. “Okay, they have a perfect world and have managed to avoid all of the catastrophes my world did and they are now happy, peaceful and one with the Universe. Why did you bring us here?”

“I have to take you to a few other places to make that clear. You might want to lean back in your chairs. The transition will be jolting.”

I had never experienced pain like this. Every nerve in my body was on fire with each dendrite complete with its own personal torturer. It seemed to go on forever. When the pain stopped, I saw my skin was swollen and distended, blood covered my entire face and I wasn’t sure if I would survive the night. Manny looked almost as bad, especially given his weakened state, only the vitality of youth kept him moving. I looked to the vampire member of our party and found him motionless, still and covered in blood. The elemental sat silently upon his lap unmoving and without any form of elemental display.

“They are dead. While they recover, we shall continue our conversation. Clean yourselves up. We’re going outside.”

I looked outside the window and what I saw was nothing less than the end of the world. Broken buildings littered the landscape of what might have been New York or Shanghai or some other sweeping metropolis whose influence was nothing less than magnificent. Remnants of buildings whose superstructures touched the sky swayed in the hot and dusty winds we experienced as we stopped the train on a section of a monorail that still had a platform near it.

“What happened here?”  The air was cloying, hot, oppressive, filled with a sense of futility, of a war that had been fought and lost. Piles of sand were everywhere, and nothing green grew here. As far as the eye could see there was nothing but a war zone. Once I paid attention, I could see craters, as if bombing had taken place. I could see gun emplacements on the tops of the remaining tall buildings. This explained why the tallest were missing their tops. Someone shot them off.

“This is the result of a guardian who was unable to do his job to protect the people of this planet.” Vita stepped onto the platform and reached down to the sand covered ground and picked up a fistful of the fine brown dust. He let it blow between his fingers. The dust was pulled away in the wind.

The city was eerie in its silence. Nothing this big should be this quiet. I strained my hearing to find even a single sign of life.

Then I heard it. A wind that wasn’t a wind. The sound of an aircraft high in the sky. Then I saw it. A contrail. Then two, three, four. The primary contrail continued on but its three spawn changed direction and began to move toward our position.

“Is there something you want to tell us? Now would be a great time.”

“I failed these people. I wasn’t here when they needed me. You will help me make this right.”

“These people are dead. I don’t think we can do anything for them, now. If this was your job, you screwed it up.” Harsh, I know, but it was the truth he needed to hear.

“Don’t lecture me about duty, Ingram, Slayer of Dead Gods, Dog of the Apocalypse, what I need from you is your fury. This was a world filled with twelve billion souls just like your Earth. Are you saying you won’t avenge these people?” Vita was screaming, eyes bulging wide, standing over me and positively intimidating.

“Boss.” Manny tried to get my attention.

I got mad when he reminded me of my family name and the prophecy associated with it. I’ve run from that all my life and was content to keep running. “Avenge them? I didn’t even know they existed beyond a theoretical understanding they could exist! I see you’re having some kind of issue regarding this and it is a tragedy but there is nothing we can do for them at this point.” I grabbed his coat and pushed back trying to draw some kind of reason out of this entity I didn’t truly understand.

“Boss…”

“The part of me stolen on your Earth, prevented me from getting back here in time. I failed them because I didn’t understand Human greed. You must help me make this right. They will not stop here. They will continue to move through the Nexus, devouring Earth after Earth until they reach yours.”

Three explosions occurred less than a mile away from where we were standing. The builders on this Earth, made things to last. The impact of the three projectiles made a lot of noise but very little dust and barely damaged the buildings they landed on.  Then they started coming out of the craters.

The creatures on the ground took off, using some form of jet pack. They were humanoid in appearance and dropped out of the sky in seconds, landing all around the monorail platform and aiming strange weapons at us.

Then the howling began. The wind of an elemental burst out of the train car, surrounded with lightning reaching out to whatever was around it. The strange alien armors exploded as the creature struck one after another. After only a few seconds of local devastation, the elemental flew through the air toward the center of the landing spots and grew in size, larger until it dwarfed the sites completely a cyclone of devastation. No new units would join the hundred or so surrounding us.

Then the Vampire left the car behind the elemental. But it wasn’t exactly Albrecht any more. The Dark Gift had become completely manifest, showing him after another thousand years of evolution. His skin had turned completely black. He was swollen with lifeforce, his muscles rippled, veins bulged and his eyes blazed a fiery red. He leapt from the train car and disappeared from sight. Armors exploded one after another. Ripped apart, black blood shot from each, two or three at a time. Albrecht could be seen only for a second as he dispatched foe after foe.

Vita, Manny and I took cover as the aliens began trying to fight back, firing too slowly to track Albrecht. A few who managed to keep their heads tried firing at the three of us and their weapons shot pulses of hot blue light that destroyed whatever it hit. We began to run into the platform seeking cover. Then Manny stopped and screamed. I thought he was hit but he grabbed his head and a black energy started leaking from his eyepatch.

He lifted the eyepatch and a black light shot forth and scoured the sky. Anything it touched, died. Machine, being, technology. Only Albrecht seemed immune. A third of the invaders stopped and died. A few seconds later the black energy stopped and Manny fell over quiescent, mumbling to himself.

Then I felt it too. I was about to try and channel energy when I found myself filled with it. Not my personal qi. This was a dark and necromantic power. The power of angry souls crying out. There were thousands, no as their voice filled me I realized there were millions calling out to me. They filled me. They demanded vengeance. They demanded retribution.

They expected me to get it for them.

On the horizon, a dozen more contrails made their way toward us.

The Phoenix residing within my being, rose from its slumber. It feasted on the souls of the damned, each willingly giving themselves to it. Each increasing its already considerable power.

It took to the sky and I could not stop it. With the zeal of a million souls seeking retribution overcoming my will, I did not want to.

Vita stood and a face slowly formed, a cruel face, sharp and angular. A face that smiled a devil’s smile as the Phoenix streaked toward its prey.

Gears

 

Jump to Motus Vita, Chapter 9

Paranormal 2

Motus Vita © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Motus Vita (7)

Posted by Ebonstorm on October 8, 2013
Posted in: Chapter, Character Bio, Clifford Engram, Motus Vita, Serial. Tagged: Albrecht, Albrecht Fleisher, ebonstorm, Father Nosceti, Indra's Vajra, lightning spear, Manny, Manny Rodriguez, Night Train, storm elemental, Thaddeus Howze. 1 Comment

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A hair divides what is false and true.
–Omar Khayyam

“Since you are late, you can stop and bring me what’s left of my broken servant.” The telepathic message was imperious, haughty and downright pissing me off.

To hell with good impressions.

“Look lady, er fellow, whatever you are, I am not your manservant. I won’t be stopping to pick you up some ice cream, getting your laundry or picking up your servant on my way to an audience with you. Do we have an understanding?”

“Surely.”

The telepathic connection was suddenly gone. “Gentlemen, I’ve just had a conversation with the Night Train. It reminded me we’re officially late.”

I started back toward the train station when I noticed Manny and Albrecht just standing there. I looked in the direction they were staring. Then I could hear this electrical sound like a transformer trying to pass a current. I noticed EMTs grabbed their patients and started running back toward their vehicles.

Police drew their pistols and headed toward the ruins of the church while sparks started jumping and popping around what was left of the storm elemental.

Manny had lifted his eyepatch and slowly walked toward me. “You might want to take a look at that. I don’t think we’re done.”

A quick handsign and I was Looking at what appeared to be a matrix trying to restructure itself. The elemental appeared to have a self-repair capacity. Great.

“Are you sure you wouldn’t mind stopping to pick up my servant?” The telepathic tingle returned and a hint of smugness found its way along the link.

Then I got it. “This thing is yours?”

“He can be taught.”

“Okay, how do we turn it off before more people get hurt.”

“Say nice things to it.” The link grew quiet again.

Pinching between my eyes, I approached the cops. “I need you guys to get back. I’ve got this. I flashed my government ID and they tried not to look too eager to leave the scene. Most all but ran back to their squad cars and put some distance between them and the reforming elemental.

Manny reloaded his shotgun and came up behind me at the ready. “Just say the word.”

“Hello. Can you hear me?” I held out my hand and the lightning discharges began creeping toward it.

“Engram, is that wise?”

“I have it on good authority, it wants to hear nice words, not acts of violence. Manny, put your gun away and bring your friendly voice. Albrecht do you have any animal husbandry in your immortal repertoire of skills?”

“I knew something about animals, but since I have become Gifted, they have little to do with my kind.”

“Well, guess what? You get to be our ambassador.”

“Are you certain you might not be a better ambassador? You are, after all, a user of magic.”

“As I have tried to explain in the past, magic is just another technology where the rules are not known to most people. If you knew the rules, and weren’t already Gifted, you could use magic. It’s just like using a hammer.”

Manny added, “a hammer that tried to kill you when you turned your back on it.”

“Details, my boy, mere details.”

Albrecht studied the elemental. It seemed to be trying to pull itself together. There was something about the static discharges which told me it wasn’t doing well. “Stand back, both of you. Three of us might appear to be threatening. I will approach it alone.” The vampire waved us back and moved slowly toward the downed creature.

He murmured something soft in a language unfamiliar to me. Perhaps his native language. I didn’t know that much about him or his family other than the fact he was one of the possible heirs to his father’s financial empire. I questioned, to no one in particular, how one came into one’s inheritance when your father was immortal and wouldn’t experience True Death unless something bad were to happen to him.

The elemental’s sparking reduced as we moved back and the stink of ozone was lessened. Albrecht was almost standing next to the creature and knelt down close to it. The electrical discharges had almost ceased and a small wind vortex was beginning to form. Dust and debris could be seen being pulled into the creature and disappearing. The elemental seemed to be feeding on the debris as a form of fuel. Perhaps all elementals in addition to being composed of an element, fed on the destruction caused as a means of maintaining themselves. It made sense since they were not native to our world, being here might require a great amount of energy to maintain them.

“Engram. There is a metal device at the center of the wind vortex. It does not appear to be something I would expect to find in a church.”

“Don’t touch it. Let me take a look.” I slid up slowly and Looked. The object was a shaped like a barbell weight, with the two hand shaped ends wrapped around small glass orbs. One of the orbs was broken and a smoke was slowly escaping. In the center of the barbell shape was a third round sphere of black metal or glass. I can’t say I had never seen anything quite like this but Second World items vary so widely, it was hard to say anyone could recognize every single object. If I had my phone, I could have taken a picture and sent it to Home Office and someone might have been able to figure out what it was. As it was, I would have to just take a guess.

“I think this is the focus which was used to bring the elemental here. The two orbs are filled with an incense, representing air. The framework is an object which offers the creature structure. The black stone in the center is the binding focus. By damaging one of the orbs, possibly with the grenade launcher or the lightning strike, we have made it difficult for the creature to reform. But we didn’t kill it. And it is possible it might reform with less control if we leave it here.”

Manny slung his shotgun and sat down a bit of a distance away. “I’m not touching that thing. Anything that tried to kill me a half an hour ago won’t see me at my humanitarian best. You two better draw straws.”

It made sense for me to carry it, having the most experience with magic. “Okay little fellow, we’re going to be taking you home.” I reached out to grab the focus at the center. It was about the size of a loaf of bread. I tried to reach through the vortex of wind and found quite a bit of resistance, a surprising amount, in fact. But the resistance was nothing compared to what I experienced while trying to pick the focus up. It was heavy, easily fifty pounds, but I wasn’t surprised by that fact. What did surprise me was the electrical jolt it gave me when I tried to move it. This was the equivalent of touching a taser.

The unpleasant equivalent.

After ten seconds, I decided to put it back down as gently as I could without throwing it across the parking lot. After I finished cursing I nursed my tingling hand and said, “Okay, I won’t be carrying it. Albrecht, your turn.”

Amused by my expression while I tried to hold on to the focus, the vampire reached out and tensed himself for the shock. The shock that didn’t happen. He whispered something to it and began stroking it like a metal kitten. The electrical patterns and wind vortex steadied and formed around him.

“Okay, you carry it. Whatever. Let’s go.”

“Does that mean you’ll be picking up some ice cream on your way here? My favorite is pistachio.” The telepathic jibe was followed by silence.

On the way to the train station, we past a convenience store and grabbed a pint of pistachio ice cream. At this point, it couldn’t hurt  and I did owe the Train for telling us how to deal with the storm elemental.

“If you can talk telepathically, why am I coming to meet with you? For that matter, if you could talk telepathically, why haven’t you explained what you wanted to whoever took your part? While were at it, can you connect the others so I don’t have to tell them what you said?”

“These two are your companions for the journey?” the question seemed a bit odd but I let it go.

“Yes, for the duration, we three are a Company.”

“You mean, you four. I think the elemental likes your friend. I can share information with all of you.”

Albrecht’s mind came into the link and I perceived it as a cold, reptilian intelligence, all anger, all hunger, patient and cunning. Manny was the opposite, a bright, hot and eager mind, absorbing information, analysing everything around it; these two were polar opposites in a way that was frightening. It was only the geas holding Albrecht back from ripping Manny apart. And it was only Manny’s love for me, keeping him from emptying a shotgun filled with specialized rounds whose contents included holy water, silver nitrate and sharpened silver splinters into Albrecht and tearing him into vampire salsa. Even if the rounds didn’t kill him directly, it would make him vulnerable enough for Manny’s silver edged sword to dice him into manageable pieces.

And as usual, I was stuck somewhere between two extremes, living up to my name again.

As we descended the steps into the train station, the normal awe of Grand Central Station fell back against the mental energies as we approached the Night Train. The closer we got to it, the less the real world seemed to matter to us. I felt as if I was trapped in a surrealists painting with the world melting around me, becoming incoherent and unknowable.

As we approached the train, it continued its explanation from earlier. “I could have communicated telepathically but only with people who have been aboard the train before or know someone who has. Hence the reason you were summoned. To fully explain though, you will need to take a trip with me to understand why it is important for me to get the part back.”

“You can still travel without the part?” I was still trying to grasp the nature of the problem.

The Night Train’s response had the psychic equivalent of a chuckle. “Of course. There isn’t anything being done while I am on Earth that would be significant to me. The part they stole is necessary for humans to travel with me. Without it, I simply am unable to carry people to their new destinations.”

“Excuse me, you need this part for humans to travel with you? What happens to people who travel with you without this part?” Manny, ever practical took the words right out of my head.

“Without it, people can become lost to the forces of Chaos which comprise my being. They can be spontaneously turned into other objects, lose vital organs or even their skeletons. It is unpredictable.”

Albrecht who, up until this point, had been bonding with his new electrical friend, looked up and commented as if nothing said up to this point mattered, “If you had planned to kill us, you would not have bothered to tell us what it took to bring this beast back to you. So you must have a means to protect us. Stop playing with us and tell us what you really want.”

“Are all the Gifted as unpleasant as this one?”

Before Manny could evince his opinion, I thought it would be better if I answered. “No, not all of them are as angry or ill-mannered as Albrecht here, but he has extenuating circumstances. His older brothers have been trying to kill him for at least a century.” I only learned this recently when I was reviewing reports about New York’s Red Watch and its convoluted politics. His brothers were unpleasant members of a new faction, similar to the one that tried to kill their collective sire all those years ago. This probably explains why Albrecht had been hiding with Father Nosceti.

“I wouldn’t have called it hiding, Engram.”

“Sorry. Thinking out loud. No offense meant.”

“None taken. Inaccurate as your thinking may have been.”

“We’re here bearing storm elementals and ice cream. You haven’t told us how you plan to carry us without turning us into a pudding or surrealistic art.”

The platform where the train waited for us, was shrouded in a low-lying fog, the stuff you see in horror movies and ninth grade proms. Very theatrical and over the top. The train was of a design I had never seen before, something strange, made of a bronze metal. I suspected its appearance was part of the surrealistic aura surrounding the train and I was certain it would change again before too long. Ghostly shapes moved around it, looking busy and efficient. They stayed far away from us.

The sections of the train near us were not lit and appeared to be passenger cars. There were fewer lights at the platform levels. Grand Central without people was already an eerie thing, the lights and the fog only added to the creep factor. Our pet elemental’s energies charged up and began whipping the low-lying fog around his vampire warder. Sparks shot out with the creature making a popping sound like a terrier barking.

Suddenly the doors opened, a blast of air came out and three or four shadows stepped onto the platform.

The shadows approached us, silently, their intent unknown. The psychic link apparently broken, I could no longer sense anyone’s thoughts. The Train was no longer in our heads.

Albrecht’s right hand dropped down and his vampiric claws grew long and shiny. I knew he could carve his way through a brick wall with those. Manny’s guns effortlessly appeared in his hands, safeties clicking off his custom-made Sigs. I hadn’t received a tingle from my curse marks but I couldn’t take any chances.

I charged my cane and readied the lightning spear. Its blue illumination seemed pale and weak in this magical darkness.

As its light pierced the darkness, we saw four more storm elementals headed right for us, their energies contained in humanoid forms.

They raised hands crackling with energy.

I dropped the bag with the pistachio ice cream.

Gears

Jump to Motus Vita, chapter 8

Paranormal 2

Motus Vita © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Motus Vita (6)

Posted by Ebonstorm on October 5, 2013
Posted in: Chapter, Character Bio, Motus Vita, Serial. Tagged: Albrecht Fleisher, ebonstorm, Father Nosceti, Indra's Vajra, lightning spear, Manny Rodriguez, Night Train, storm elemental, Thaddeus Howze. Leave a comment
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And the things that we fear are a weapon to be held against us.
— Ian Rush 

Fifteen minutes can turn your entire world upside down. You get this on good authority.

I made this trip just to see what Agency informant, Father Nosceti wanted to tell me about the recent threat levied by the Night Train. The very fact he asked for me made me suspect he was involved.

Instead I found myself in a life and death struggle against an old vampiric enemy trying to finish something he started fifteen years ago. The situation escalated out of control. Names were called, geases were made, apologies were not.

After I got the vampire incident under some measure of control, the illusion was shattered by hearing a new sound followed immediately by screaming, gunfire and weirdly echoing car alarms whose wails were distorted by a dense and supernatural fog.

Now you know everything I know. Feel informed? Nope? Good, then we are all in agreement…

Ten seconds ago, there was the sound like a bomb had just been dropped in front of the church.

“What the hell was that?”

Nosceti waved and his guards split up, two went into the inner office and the other two took up station next to him. “Follow me. We’re leaving through the back.”

Given the screams I heard downstairs, intermixed with a liberal amount of machine gun fire, this seemed like a sound strategy. Manny was getting his color and I helped him to his feet.

Albrecht peeled off the scraps of what was left of his shirt and put on his jacket over his pale marbled flesh. His arteries and veins showed through his opalescent skin and he pulsed with infernal power. Power stolen from my friend.

“How many men did you have stationed downstairs?”

“You didn’t Look?, Nosceti’s answer was tinted with sarcasm.

“I was trying to be polite.” I replied. Manny stood up, nodded and I let him go.

“There were at least fifteen.” Nosceti followed his men and Albrecht brought up the rear behind Manny. I took point because I figured Manny would still be pulling himself together. He would be safest between Albrecht and I.

“Were these your best men?” Albrecht whispered as we descended a stairwell heading toward the rear of the church.

“Some of them, why do you ask?”

“Because there are a fewer of them now than there were ten minutes ago.” The vampire’s comment was dry as if he were giving a weather report.

We picked up our pace as we descended into an underground tunnel.

“Do you plan to tell me what this is all about? The short version that gets me information before I get killed by a ravaging horror.”

“I worked for some people who had it in their mind to use the Night Train as a means of smuggling… items along its route. So they inserted some people undercover in an effort to infiltrate the Train and try to become a member of the Riders, the permanent members of the Train’s staff.”

“None of them came back, did they?” I already knew this story. The Agency had tried it too. Anyone who was inserted with the goal of becoming a Rider never returned. Their memories were wiped and they forget they ever knew a life outside the Train.

The tunnel was longer than I thought and we could hear the fight in the distance growing louder.

“So we did the next best thing. We found out how the Train moved the way it did and tried to replicate it. But there was a key component missing. Teleportation is an unreliable magic and no one has managed to ever make it work well enough to commercialize it. Anytime we used the teleport markings we copied from the train, the caster died.”

Rats passed us on the way through the tunnel, only increasing my desire to get above ground to get the lay of the land.

Nosceti continued, “The circles worked, the product was moved. But no one was willing to die to cast a single spell to move something the size of a loaf of bread. The feedback from the spell simply fried the mage.”

Again, not news. The Agency eventually found a way around these limitations but we didn’t share that information. Even our method had some risks… “So what did you do? Because I sense what you did next is how you ended up in this situation, isn’t it?”

“Yes, we decided what was missing was the power source that allowed the train to move between dimensions. So we stole it. It wasn’t protected or even hidden on the train. We weren’t sure how to use it and we didn’t know what it did, completely, but we stole it and went underground. It cost us fifty of our best magicians to determine how it worked but it did. For a while.”

“What happened, then?”

The secret passage lead into the far end of the church’s parking lot. In case the place was ever rousted Nosceti could exit the church and look as if he wasn’t even on the property. Now over a hundred feet from the building in an open parking lot, we could hear voices from the side of the structure. People ran and screamed in horror. We didn’t see anything, at first. Some of them fell over clutching their throats and after a few moments, fell still, contorted in apparent agony. The rest of the story was going to have to wait for a second.

“Manny, tell me what you see.” He took a deep breath before lifting his eyepatch and looking around.

“There is a miasma rolling away from whatever it is that’s making short work of the Father’s men. I think it was a side effect of its arrival. It appears to be fading away.” He folded his eyepatch back down.

Since he lost the eye all those years ago, I had a replacement made that would allow him to see sources of magic.

“Do you hear that ?” Now that we were outside, it was easier to make out something besides the pop of gunfire. I looked around and noticed some of the trees near the front of the church were whipping around wildly, while the trees at the back were barely moving. It was a tightly localized wind. Something reminiscent of a tornado. Living in the Midwest, this was a sound you became familiar with and after you saw your first tornado up close, you never forgot it. Before I could try to figure out where it was, the rest of the church exploded.

Whatever had been tearing its way through the church had reached the rear of the church and made short work of what was left. The collapse of the main structure fell away behind the creature, adding to the dust in the air. The side walls of the church were still partially intact and provided a bit of cover for the remaining shooters.

Nosceti’s men leapt out of the subterranean tunnel and ran to their armored car. One opened the door, the other gathered a larger firearm from the trunk. The second pair picked Nosceti up and ran with him between them.

Once the dust cleared, it was a storm elemental that stood in the rubble of the church. Imagine if someone had given a storm the shape of a man and made it twenty feet tall. A cloud of windswept debris was caught in its aura and it hurled this debris at Nosceti’s men trying to buy their boss time to escape with their lives. Two were speared through the chests and pinned against cars like rag dolls.

“Fire in the hole!” was shouted by two men as they ran back along the side of the church trying to put some distance between them and their target before firing their grenade launcher.

They managed to get their round off before the creature gestured and lightning struck them both. They turned from live men to dead ones. The scent of burnt flesh wafted acridly through the windswept air. The grenade struck the elemental and exploded within its confines, igniting debris within it for a second. Then the light of the burning material went out. But the elemental’s form became looser, and less cohesive. Poor bastards had managed to damage it.

The roar it released as a response to being injured was unbearable.

Mix a steam whistle, an imploding building and a the roar of the Number 6 Express train at two feet from your nose and you have a sample of what this thing sounded like while it screamed.

Then it roared again and this time it had words. “GIVE IT TO ME!”

At our distance, we could barely stand it. You could feel it like it was inside of you, a sound that wanted to liquify your organs. People who were closer than we were, just dissolved into piles of pulpy flesh. It was horrible. Nosceti didn’t pay enough for that.

I reached into the car and grabbed the good Father. His flunky standing outside moved toward me and I ignited the lightning spear tip on my cane given to me by Magistar Tracy. He decided to stay out of this particular conversation.

“What did you take? And where did you take it? And you better tell me, because I am of a mind to step out of the way and let it have you.”

“They didn’t tell me where they took it. All they told me was it was more important than we knew.” Nosceti was becoming unglued, the presence of this storm elemental was screwing with his magical affinity.

He was untrained. His power more an aspect of his natural charisma, he lacked the discipline required to use it with sorcerous intent. A being like this elemental would resonate with his power and terrify him since it exposed him to the pure energy of the Eye of Knowledge. Such an unshielded exposure could warp his psyche.

“What did they call it? Those mystics you hired must have had some idea what they were dealing with. They wouldn’t have bothered otherwise. Spit it out.”

“YOU!” The storm turned in our direction, evidently something about Nosceti stood out to its mystical senses. The shout in our direction caused the security guard with the rifle to flee toward the fence and as he tried to climb it, there was a spontaneous electrical discharge and he fell away to the ground. This thing was starting to bleed electricity into all nearby metals.

Nosceti was screaming to be heard over the noise. “They called it ‘Indra’s Vajra’, that’s all I know. I have to go, I have to get out of here!” Nosceti pushed me away as the driver peeled out of the lot. Leaving Manny, Albrecht and I standing there. Unbeknownst to Nosceti, his untimely getaway might have just saved our lives.

“Cover your ears, I shouted to them.” The elemental seemed more upset than ever as the car pulled away. It had barely begun to move before turning toward the fleeing limousine. I turned the air before us into a dense medium slowing it just enough to prevent the sound from moving as cleanly, buffering the entity’s shout. I imagined the air molecules refusing to move to carry the sound.

“GIVE IT TO ME!” A wave of sonic energy ripped from the creature causing the ground in front of the creature to shred and rip like a pinata at a hungry kid’s party. The wave struck Nosceti’s car and tore it apart, shattering glass, fracturing metal and presumably shearing flesh and bone.

My hands shook with the force of the halted vibrations. I flexed and shook them to relieve the cramp from holding the air still.

As the scraps of Nosceti’s car slid to a halt, the elemental began emitting discharges of electrical energy. It was breaking down, becoming unstable. The electrical discharges were shooting out in every direction striking everything taller than a blade of grass.

“On your bellies. And stay there. I mean it. That’s enough electricity to kill even you, Albrecht.”

There was an old sedan next to me. Didn’t know the owner and I’m certain they wouldn’t approve but if we survived this, I would buy them a new car.

Extending the lightning blade from my cane, I sliced off the back end of the car straight through to the rear tire. Yes, I could have been more elegant, but I was pressed for time. Ten seconds was about all I had. Three good slices and the car tire fell off the axle and landed on it’s side. I stood up on the tire and prepared to channel more electricity than I had ever imagined.

A good lightning bolt from a storm had about a million volts of electricity. A storm elemental might not put out the same level of energy as a good storm but I had already seen it was capable of frying anyone caught by its powers. All I had on my side was the fact the creature was dissipating so its energy would be less than it’s peak performance.

I am not a mage. Not in the classic sense. Magistar Tracy was a mage. Someone who had dedicated a significant portion of their study to the manipulation of elemental energies.

Me? I’m a hack. I knew something about elemental energies, I could create simple ones, I could manipulate minor representations, turn a campfire into a bonfire, turn a match into a blowtorch, but these were parlor tricks compared to what most magi could do. If we had a mage here, he would be able to catch that lightning, play with it, make it sing an aria and throw it back with something extra.

As a hack, I could manipulate electricity, turn lights on and off, start a car without a key, run a computer for a minute without a power source, I could even act like a taser with just two fingers. As a hack, I could catch that lightning, channel it though my body, and redirect it back to the source. With some preparation or a circle or a sigil, I could do a bit more but that took time and preparation of which were in short supply.

All I could hope was it didn’t kill me before I was able to redirect its energy.

My cane did its job. With the lightning spear still extended, and using the magical principle of contagion, like attracts like, the lightning was drawn to me. It caught the discharge high in the sky away from Manny and Albrecht. The tire acted as an insulator to prevent me from grounding out.

Then the discharge traveled though my spell-charged body and out through my right hand, riding my cursed marks back to the target. I could see the surprise on its face as the redirected energy disrupted its elemental form. As it passed through me, I changed its nature, sort of converting it from AC to DC. Now it was a weapon against itself.

It shrieked and with a gust of wind, expired.

I was about to cheer, when my chest felt as if an elephant was standing on it. Heart attack. Not the good kind that comes on slowly. This is the other one. The one that arrives like a mugger in a dark alley with a bat and no remorse.

My breath seized up in my chest and I didn’t remember anything after that.

Gears

When I woke up, Manny was leaning over me, on his knees, dripping sweat into my blinking eyes. “Tell me you weren’t just kissing me.” I asked with every breath being agony.

“When I’m saving your life, its called mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. You were down for nearly fifteen minutes. I was about to call it.”

Albrecht stood over me looking down, decidedly unhappy. “You were dead, Engram, for quite some time, but your loyal lapdog wouldn’t leave you. Even when it was apparent you were too far gone.”

“If you thought I was dead, why didn’t you just leave?” I already suspected the answer, I was just curious to see if he would be honest about it.

“The geas would not allow it.” He was all but sulking when he said it.

“The same geas that didn’t let you kill Manny while I was ‘dead’ either.”

“Indeed. The same.”

“So you knew I wasn’t past saving otherwise you would have killed Manny and rifled my dead body for loose change.” The vampire pretended not to hear me.

The elemental’s wind had died down and with the loss of the wind, the fog returned, thicker than ever. Emergency vehicles were everywhere. Their existence confirmed the fact I was still among the living because I was very annoyed by flashing lights. The shrouding fog didn’t help, making them brighter and more annoying.

Manny stood me up and looked into my eyes with a flashlight. I resisted the urge to smack his hand away. Manny had been a corpsman during his time in the military, a fact I tried to appreciate from time to time.

“Pupils are responsive. You’ll make it. You might want to see someone about that ticker though.”

“Next time you get the urge to kiss all over me, you will be taking me out for more than pizza.”

“Whatever, boss.” Manny shook his head and smiled.

I took out my phone to check the time and found it little more than an electrically fried brick. “Any idea of what time it is?”

That’s when I felt it. There was a tingling, an invasive feeling, the feeling you get when your parents are looking through your sock drawer for your secret porn stash. I felt exposed and resisted the urge to cover my privates as I looked around for the source of the telepathic invasion. Then I realized it wasn’t a human mind, this was something vast, something whose mind was clearly as far beyond human intelligence as humans were above cockroaches.

The problem with telepathy is it’s a two way street, you can’t look without being seen. What I saw for a few seconds, took my breath away, then the message came through and I realized who was talking. It was the Night Train.

“Clifford Engram, you are late.”

So much for making a good impression.

Gears

Jump to Motus Vita, chapter 7

Paranormal 2

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