Archive for the ‘Fiction’ Category

Ashes: Running (despite the word being completely absent)

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

When the empire was young the towers of the palace filled with white birds that flocked and sang to the people below. One year passed, and two, and three, and five and eight and thirteen, and the birds stayed.

As these years passed the people below talked about the birds and their singing. They talked about why they were there, they talked about the songs they sang. At some point, nobody knows when, the people below decided that the birds were there because the empire was strong. When the empire fell was when the birds would leave, and not a moment sooner. At the time it was a happy thought, a reassuring thought: the birds had been there since the people below could remember, since their parents could remember, since their grandparents. The birds would always be there, and so would the empire.

The people below were safe, and the birds sang to them.

In the years that passed the empire went to war, as empires are wont to do. Its kings donned violet capes and weighty helmets, riding horses into battle after battle. Some battles were won, some battles were lost. The empire won the war. And the war after that. And the war after that.

In the towers of the palace, the white birds flocked and sang, and the empire was safe.

Among the people below no one really knew what had happened. They were, for the most part, happy. Their kings fought wars, took wives, had children. The empire was enormous, stretching thousands of miles in every direction… so huge that it had to be sectioned off and given to local governments to rule over. There was no date recorded in a history book. There was no definitive moment. No great defeat. No mass invasion. One day the birds were just gone.

The people below had never known a time without birds overhead. They blinked in the sun like new fawns, searching for the raucous feathered ceiling under which generations had lived out their lives. For weeks the center of the empire fell into unease, which spread gradually to outlying regions.

Until one day the birds were back. But they didn’t flock, and didn’t sing. They fumbled through the air silently, as if searching for something, and they disappeared one by one until by nightfall none were left. The next day the same thing happened, the birds confused, silent, searching, disappearing by nightfall.

Inside the palace, a young boy rose every morning under cover of darkness, under cover of secrecy. He took up his net and he took up his sack, and went out into the world. When the white birds abandoned the towers of the palace, the empire would fall. His job was to keep the towers filled with birds, and every day they disappeared by nightfall.

______
In England there’s a legend that the British empire won’t fall until there are no ravens remaining in the Tower of London. Ravens remain, but their wings are clipped.

A small bit of narrated dialogue.

Monday, October 5th, 2009

In the early hours of the day, a man of middle years trudged over rock and sand, a large bundle slung over his shoulder, sweat making lines through the dust on his face. As he approached a small rise, he noticed an older man sitting on the ground, drawing lines in the sand with the end of a short stick. This man looked up, and hailed the burden carrier with a raised hand and dry voice. (more…)

ASHES: sidewalk

Friday, July 24th, 2009

The summer I turned fifteen was the hottest summer in the recorded history of our whole county. I knew because it was on the news. I always knew what was on the news. While other families sat together and watched sitcoms, my family watched the news.

I spent most of my summers barefoot, because sweating inside your shoes is the most disgusting feeling I knew of. It still is. Everyone wore shoes that year, though. Even the really tough kids couldn’t walk on the hot sidewalk with no shoes. (more…)

When you call me.

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

I think last goodbyes are like the flaccid ends of whip-cream cans. First goodbyes are pert and eager, sweet as anything. You’re just so excited to see that person later today, tomorrow, next week. As you go on the goodbyes and the cream all lose their body and turn into dribble. That’s just how it has to work.

(more…)

Just developing a character for my own use…

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

I Hate Charlie

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

Charlie said it don’t make no difference.
He said if the world was a dog, then dogs
wouldn’t be nothin’ but a bunch of fleas.
Then he laughed just like the big shit-turd he is.
I wanted to yell into his stupid grinnin’ face
that the world ain’t no dog, but he was drinkin’.
Ma says if I rile him when he’s drinkin’
I deserve what I get.

Lady watched Charlie as he took each scruffy
pup and put it in the sack. She sniffed his hand
when he grabbed one, and then she’d sniff
her porch spot where the rest was.
Then I was sniffin’ too, because I knew
she didn’t have no idea what was happening.
When they was all gone into the sack she nosed it
and just kept whinin’ and waggin’ her tail.

Charlie laughed at her. He said
What’s the matter Lady? You like fleas?

Then he held the sack close to her nose
so she could smell it better. I could see
them puppies wigglin’ through the sack,

and they was cryin’ for Lady. Poor stupid Lady

just kept on waggin’ her tail.

Charlie told me to come on and we was going to
throw them puppies off the bridge.
But I said no way, I ain’t no damn killer.

He said they was just a bunch of fleas

and then he laughed again. Lady was still standin’

right by him sort of shiftin’ her feet and smellin’ that bag.

Charlie got mad then and threw his beer bottle at me,
but I ducked and ran away. When I came back later

I guess he did it, ‘cause the puppies was gone
and he was sittin’ inside drinkin’ more beer
and watchin’ TV. He laughed at me again
and called me dumb flea-lover.
Lady sniffed all over the porch and around

the house the rest of the day. She cried all night
and I didn’t get no sleep at all.

The next day she stopped whinin’. For a week,
every time Charlie saw Lady he said

where’s your fleas girl?

Poor stupid Lady just wagged her damn tail.

The Birth of the Dragon

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009
I was born a Day Gecko.
Diminutive green scales gleamed, wet-like in the morning.
A flavorsome, buttery sunlight
melted through the awning of my jungle estate,
dribbling down banana leaves to nutrify me.
I grew robust and adventurous;
meandering, munching on invertebrates,
rolling my tongue down conical blossoms
to liberate sweet nectar.
Gecko life was good.
After some elapsing of days,
I observed my reflection in a bath
where dew had splashed together
in the cup of a stone.
Growths!
Gnarly bumps were bursting up,
spilling out of my shoulders!
I could feel my skeleton unrolling,
coiling like snakes inside a stretched bag.
My bones spread skin
over two fresh sprouts;
gangly limbs that oozed haggard fingers.
They draped themselves with leathery membranes,
then pruned,
folding flaps and sags until it was taut webbing--
until in my reflection
I saw a pair of wings!
At dusk, when shock began to peel itself away,
I found I had pitched myself up to the highest branch
of the tallest tree in Madagascar.
I flagged like so much runny yolk,
watching recumbant clouds coast buoyantly past,
summoning me.

Copyright (C) 2009 ThePontificators.com

The Boy and the Tiger

Saturday, March 14th, 2009

The sunlight sharply defined the uneven edges of the glass that still clung to the sides of the window frame. Odd curves and jagged points. The glass that had fallen to the cement floor lay in shadow, cold and still. Some pieces were the size of small plates, some, like the piece the boy pulled from the back of his wrist, were no larger than coins. A strange currency. He let the small shard fall to the floor where it clinked against cement and fellow glass. (more…)

A Beautiful Woman

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

“You know,” George says, “I heard somewhere that living in Seattle is like living with a beautiful woman who’s sick all the time.”

I don’t look at him. I’m too busy trying to keep my hair out of my eyes and the seagulls out of my fish and chips. “Huh,” I say, and wave away another seagull. “Sure does rain a lot.”

“I have to agree with you there,” George says. “You going to finish your root beer?”
(more…)