Showing posts with label fantasy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fantasy. Show all posts

11/22/12

Thom Shift

There were five men in the water.  Before anyone could give a name to the sound we were hearing there were five men stumbling stupidly toward the starboard side, knocking their hips against the railings and tumbling, heels over head, into the sea.   “Man overboard!” went the call and it repeated with every third man that heard it.  “Man overboard!” Called Mr. Swanson, a grizzled old gentleman with a body filled with bright tattoos over leathered skin.  “Man Overboard!” called Riptide Jack, who had always threatened to throw a man or two in himself whenever a dice-game wasn’t going in his favour.  “Man overboard!” called Mr. Kawai, who was the first to toss buoy and rope with one good hand and one dull, blunted curved hook.  By the time the crew had assembled for a proper rescue, several great fanned tails were seen lashing at the surface of the water and it appeared as if three of the men were already being dragged underneath.  A fourth man, a brute and a brigand known as Jonas Black, was seen floating on his back, though no one was sure whether the sounds he was making were sobs or bouts of laughter.  

There were creatures all around him.  Four of them swam with him, lashing at the water with their tails every so often.  Their bodies resembled women.  No, they more resembled girls; young girls with budding breasts, wild, short hair and grotesque shell-shaped ears.  They caressed his sun-beaten skin with strange webbed hands.  In a moment they flashed eyes black as coal up at the crew, then turned back to Jonas, smiling at him and revealing tiny, pointed teeth before biting into the flesh of his chest, his belly, and his legs.  

            “Mermaids” someone in the crowd muttered in wonder.  

            “Worse” another man cried out.  “Sirens!”  He plugged his ears and a wave of panic ran through the crowd of us as we realized it was the sirens’ song that had made them do it.  It was the sirens’ song that we’d heard before, and were still hearing now.

            “Keep your wits about you!” barked Mr. Swanson, and he threw another of the buoys and managed to chase off one of the creatures gnawing at Jonas’s leg. 

            “Don’t save me, gents.” He’d managed to say just as he pulled up the one free leg and kicked away the buoy meant to save his life, or at least give him hope.  “Oh, God.  Oh, heaven.  Oh, hell that awaits me!  If you could feel what I’m feeling you’d beg for the same.  Don’t you dare try to save me!”

Later, at the wake we would have in his honour, the men would remember that the only time Jonas had responded to anything with more than a miserable grunt had been that very moment.

Thom Shift was the fifth man in the water and he clung to the buoy meant for Jonas as though he meant to tear the thing apart.  He’d escaped somehow.  Perhaps the sudden splash of warm brine had shocked him back into his senses.  Perhaps too much time working the cannons had made him deaf to the last faded notes of the sirens’ song.  Whatever way he’d managed it, he came up kicking and thrashing his way to the surface just as Jonas disappeared from sight in a stream of bubbles that broke the water where he’d last been seen, weighed down and delighted.  Still in shock, we’d all watched those bubbles.  Perhaps some of us were imagining old Jonas, cold hearted Jonas, stoic, stone-faced Jonas laughing all the way down.  Thom Shift, on the other hand, was screaming!

It took ten of us to pull him aboard and when we finally had him he was still babbling.  He’d start out in fright at every touch, screaming and swatting at phantoms. 

            “Swallowed too much salt water” suggested Riptide Jim with a knowing sort of nod.  “That and I suppose having the sea-hag’s voice in his mind...poor bastard’s gone insane.”  The men all nodded and murmured their approval at Jim’s wise assessment.  Swanson’s was the only dissenting voice.

            “No, you fools.”  He groaned.  “Look.  Look at his flesh.”  It was then that we saw them.  In the spots where his skin had been exposed, and in some spots where his clothes had been torn away, were bite marks.  They were all bright red and in the shape of two semicircles on top, and two on the bottom; one for each row of mermaid teeth.  Peculiarly, they did not bleed.  And while the flesh was pierced, it was not torn or gnawed at.
            “Poison.”  Swanson suggested.  “The beasties have poison in their bites.”   There began a debate among the crew on whether it was better to nurse a possibly mad sailor back to health or cast a poisoned man back into the sea.  The only thing that could break us out of our shock in that moment was the captain’s voice, and it came in a furious bellow.  The captain, a great barrel-chested, long-bearded beast of a man, had appeared on deck without us even noticing and was already tearing through the crowd of us, shoving men aside. 

            “All you men get back to work!” cried.  “Unless you’d rather join those we’ve lost today on the ocean floor!  We’ve got the Spanish at our tails and have to clear these damn monster-infested waters.  Back to work!  Back to work!  We set sail for Port Royale!  Get us clear of these beasts or it’s the lash for you!  Get back to work!”

And so we did.  And for some time Thom Shift was forgotten by his shipmates as we again made ready the sails to give us best speed in the wind.

That night we all mourned with grog and song.  The men who we had lost that day had been bunkmates with us.  Faces we had known nearly as well as our own.  We found their names in their absence.  Glenn Paddock, Jim Tillet, and Isaac Fletcher had been the first three dragged in.  We prayed that their deaths were as happy as Jonas Black’s had been.  I spent half the night still awake, for on the bunk above mine Thom Shift laid still as a corpse.  I eased out of my bed to peak at him, to check if he’d succumbed to the poison.  But as I eased my head out to peak at him I saw his eyes, wide open, staring back at me.  Even as I left the quarters I saw his eyes following me, filled with fright and anger.  I went out to find Swanson on deck that night and told him about Thom’s peculiar state.

            “That’d be the poison working its way into him.” Swanson said.  “First it kills the sleep, and then it’ll kill his taste for food, then his taste for everything else.  The only thing on his mind will be the beasts that bit into him.  The thought of them will drive him mad and take him away from this world.  The man won’t be a man again soon.  He’ll be something changed.  We’ll lose him eventually.”

            “Why doesn’t the captain make port and find him a doctor?” I asked.

            “No friendly ports around these parts.  Throw yourself roughly into the waves long enough, lad, and you lose many a friend.  Our captain’s been at this long enough the make quite a few enemies.  Only safe port is Port Royale, and that’s at least a four day journey.”

            “Do you think those things will be back?”

            “I’m sure of it.  We’ve got their prize now.  They don’t give up that easy.”

            “But the siren song didn’t affect us.  Only those few went in.”

           “Yes, that one handful for that one song, but that’s not the only song they know.  What you saw in the water  were juveniles.  The elder, the hag, hunts in a different way.  She has her tricks about her.  She knows just which songs to sing.  Be brave and you should be fine.” 

I could bare it no more.  I had to ask him how it was he knew so much about these creatures.  That’s when he opened his pea coat and pointed to his painted skin.  “Here is the adult mermaid”, Swanson said and pointed to one section where the fanned tail I’d seen earlier snaked around a ships anchor, and on the other end of the tail was a woman, but with hair far more luxurious and breasts much larger than the ones I’d seen that day.  “She is crafty, swift and dangerous.  All that only adds to her beauty, which is a blessing, since seeing her may be the last thing some men ever do. 

In another section was the face of a woman, reasonably done, which Swanson pointed to, saying “Here is my wife Maria, now dead.”  And in between the two sections of his stomach, he pointed out the barely visible double arcs and said “And here is the mark of the only time I have thought of taking another lover.  A time when the sea-hag’s song shook the sense out my head, and the kiss of a mermaid nearly took me to her ocean bed.  I escaped.  I went mad.  But with the help of my crew I found myself again.  But I promise you this, boy.  In four days, when we find ourselves in Port Royale, I’ll never sail the seas again.”

The next day we all worked diligently, though I’d never heard the crew so quiet.  Each man had their eyes on the water.  Each man was listening for a hint of song.  Each man watched Thom Shift report to mess, take a bowl of gruel, and weep bitterly into it. 

            “You see this hook?”  Mr Kawai said to him after placing a cup of grog in front of Thom.  “There used to be a hand where this hook is now‘till a recoiling canon tore the damn thing to shreds.  Dr. in Tortuga said there was no way of savin’ it, and it had already started to rot.   He had to saw through the bone.  And he had no anaesthetic.   Do you think I cried in my gruel after I got this hook?  Well I didn’t.  I know pain, sir.  It’s a good way of knowing you’re still alive.  And you haven’t even lost any limbs, so buck up, damnit!”
Thom Shift did not ‘buck up’.  That night, just as I was drifting off to sleep despite the sound of sobbing coming from the bunk above mine, I heard him stir.  I watched him make his way for the cabin door, letting in the moonlight...and the siren song.  I raised the alarm, though I barely had to.  The men had all been too afraid to sleep, their minds too busy anticipating this exact moment.  In the end, three men were holding down Thom Shift, who screamed and begged to be let go.  Four more men plummeted into the sea.  We did not look to see which of them had been dragged down immediately and which were being consumed. 

At noon the next day, after we’d adjusted our course and trimmed the sails, and after we’d fixed new bars to the cabin doors so that they would be locked from the outside, the Captain himself officiated the ceremony in honour of the men we had lost the night before.  Of special mention was Riptide Jack who, much of the crew agreed, was never quite as tough as he led on.  It was no wonder the siren song had gotten to him.  It was no surprise that he should surrender himself so eagerly that night.  Meanwhile Thom Shift had stopped his sobbing.  Now he only stared out at the world silently with a despondent look on his face.

That night they had come again, and again it was Thom who heard it first in the hold.  Some of the men had counted themselves lucky that the captain had ordered they be locked in.  That is, at least, until Thom brought out the knife.  The sound of the fracas inside along with the voices begging to be let out must have swayed old Swanson at the door.  At the end of that night, four other men joined the mermaids in their beds, including Mr. Kawai who, with a knife in his back, dragged a bloody trail across the deck and tossed himself over the railings.  Thom Shift had been struck over the head before he could get that far.

The next day the sun rose.  The men ate and worked, and they whispered amongst themselves.  One more night was all it would take.  They simply had to survive one more night and they would be in Port Royale, on land, and safe.   They whispered about killing Thom Shift.  They whispered about seizing him now from the hold where he called out the rest of the crew, torturing them with contrived love poems dedicated to his aquatic beauties, and tossing him into the water so that the mermaids would claim him, and possibly leave them alone.  The whispers got back to the captain.  A man received ten lashes for conspiring to murder a fellow crewman, and the whispers stopped. 

That night, no one slept.  We listened to the sound of the ocean against the hull, to the creaking of the masts as the winds urged them on.  That night we waited for the call we knew was coming.  We had expected the worst to come then, on our one last night.  The next day we would be in Port Royale, but this was something most only half expected.  The other half was the expectation of something horrible.  Thom Shift would find an errant keg of powder, or would claw his way through the hull and sink us all, or find some other way to put us all in danger.  But that night nothing happened.  All was quiet.  All was still.

The next day the sun came up and set us all to work.  Today would be the day: the day we made landfall.  We ate, we sang, we made full advantage of the wind.  The Captain stood on the aft deck, nodding approvingly and stroking his massive beard.  Just before mid-day a call came from the crow’s nest: “Land Ho!”  The crew rejoiced!  We had made it!  We had survived the night and would arrive in Port Royale within hours.  Over the reverie, I could hear a voice calling out, shouting over and over again. 

            “Captain!  Captain!  The rock!  Look there, on the rock!  Captain!”

A hush fell over the crowd, and then shouts of anger as a few of the men produced their spyglasses and focused on a jagged rock less than a mile away that jutted out of the sea.

The creature that sat upon that rock was at once frightening and arresting.  What must have been a full century in the sea had turned her hair a pale green.  Her bare breasts settled lower than the illustration in Mr. Swanson’s tattoos.  She did not look especially inhuman.  In fact, except for the massive tail which wrapped around the rock she had perched on, she looked exactly like some of the women that so many of the men had been longing to visit in Port Royale.  That, I would argue, might have been the most terrifying thing about her.

That is to say, I would argue that point had I not witnessed what happened next.  Just before the spyglass was snatched from my hands I saw the creature breathe deep, filling her chest with air.  The next thing I heard was the groaning of men.  All the men, all at once, fell to their hands and knees.  Some began immediately to weep, suddenly aware of the loss of every great love in their lives, and confessing it all aloud.  A horrible pain filled my chest just then, a pain which I couldn’t understand then, and can barely describe now.  It was, if I am forced to equate it to anything, the feeling of utter loneliness.  I listened to the entire crew weeping, even the captain, and I felt so much like dying from the fact that I could not cry with them. 

Somehow, though, I knew what I could do.  Without thinking much about it I found myself opening the cargo hold and lowering a rope for Thom Shift.  If I could not weep, if I could not feel the satisfaction of knowing that loss, then I could at least set him free.  He thanked me, and made a straight line toward the creature on the rock a mile away, as if he meant to walk the entire distance into her arms.  He didn’t even step over the railing.  Just as he had done before, he ignored everything that was real and stumbled quite stupidly into the water.

At least, Mr. Swanson was a bit more graceful than that.  He stood at the edge of the railing staring toward the siren on the rock and sobbed quietly.  I called out his name and he turned to me, eyes pouring tears, and said “I hear her.  I hear my Maria.  I think she wants me with her.  I think I want to go.”  He perched himself on the edge of the railing, removed his pea coat, and dove in headfirst.

11/2/10

Lizard Tales [NaNoWriMo 2010]

It was dark when they first came. The clutch of us nestled in the spaces between the louvers and the nooks of the window frame. Lizards seldom abide each other's company, but there'd been rumors of a strange new threat that had driven others from as far as the hinges in the front door. Many had run scared and even more had gone missing, so we temporarily gathered together for protection. When the sun came up the light would warm our blood and we would part ways as lizards ought to.

As I remember it there were no signs of their approach. No scurrying, no hissing, not even breathing or heartbeats. From where we were the shadows of the trees in the back yard shifted behind the louvers, blown by the night breeze. My need for sleep had long overcome my vigilance, but I opened one eye and spied three-toes sprawled on the glass, his silhouette contrasting against the sparkling glass louvers and shifting shadows. I opened the other eye to get a better look and noticed that one of the shadows failed to move with the others. I tried to hiss out a warning three-toes, tried to tell him to take off running, but a terrible chirping broke the night's silence and swallowed my frightened rasping.

Just as the other lizards awoke and sluggishly stirred, the creatures attacked. They looked like lizards for the most part, but their four legs had short round toes. Their skin was pale, so pale that they blended into the white walls and were invisible from afar. They didn't shoot in a straight line, but rather took jagged steps toward us, changing directions like raindrops falling down a window pane. When they came close enough, their veins shone out through their skin and each of them had a quivering, black heart that throbbed excitedly as their jaws snapped hungrily at whatever was nearest. We saw the ghostly white creatures seize our brethren, holding them tight in their maws as they proceeded to swallow them hole. It became obvious that they were more than just lizards. They were predators!

Three toes hardly had a chance. They were upon him before he knew it and as the cold blood in his veins moved like tree sap toward the ends of his limbs, the attackers already had his tail. One of them had it in its grasp and the tail writhed of ts own volition. Another of the ravenous lizards seized the bleeding end and while the two squabbled over the dropped tail, Three-toes made a run for it. He'd hardly started off running when another of the creatures waiting in the shadows had him held by the throat.

Some of the others had escaped. I could see wood-brown scurrying through a hole in the screen and was about to make a dash for it when that sound froze me once again. This time the clear, startling chirp erupted from right behind me. It reminded me of the grackles that stalked the back yards, only to swoop in on an unsuspecting lizard bringing a flurry of inky black feathers and an even darker fate. That sound meant death to us all, and when the others echoed the initial cry from all directions, I felt my blood freeze and my joints seize up.

I didn't watch, like some would have you believe, but I didn't run away either. I cowered when I felt the tug and heard them slurping and gnashing, and I squeezed my eyes shut as they devoured my tail. When I opened my eyes again the sun had risen and the light warmed my blood, but I still felt weak. The creatures were nowhere to be seen, but i knew it wasn't safe. Not here. Not anymore. These new creatures had taken my home, but spared my life. Now I would have to brave the grackles and cats in the back yard, and with only half a tail to distract them with.

5/22/10

Fairy Tale

Once upon a time
I would say something
and somehow your heart
would know my meaning.
It was back when
men knew the names of their Gods
and there were dragons in the earth.



5/7/10

Once upon a Time

Once

Once upon a time the world was flat.

Unicorns lived in magical glades, tended by winged sprites and tiny elves.

And there was a vast difference between being dead and staying dead.  And that difference was a simple matter of choice.

Yeah.  Simple as that.  A man (or woman) could simply say 'I'm tired of this life business'  And give up on breathing.  And later, once sufficiently dead, he could decide that he'd like to go pay cousin Eustace a visit in the country and he'd be there, quick as a thought, rattling chains or moaning through keyholes.

Then, something happened.  It was gradual of course - time being relative and 'sudden' simply meaning 'details lost to human memory.' - but irrevocable.

So, before this 'something' - which we will call 'the sundering' since that's what everyone else calls it- happened people had a pretty good grip on things.  Flour spoiled in the jars or bread molded over because the piskies got to it, or fires would erupt in forests unannounced because will-o-whisps were angry, and people died just because, and they came back for the very same reason.  And for the most part they were spot on.
:
But things changed around the sundering.  Men wanted to understand things.  They invented enzymes and bacteria that were invisible to the eye, and they invented refraction that could focus light and create fire, and they invented disease, sickness, infirmary, and they invented death, and the dead, and the insurmountable barrier between them.

Science killed the unicorns.

(besides, unicorns - the female ones at least - are actually vile, mean-spirited creatures.  Many an Elf had been trampled and gored in the course of tending the glades.  This leads some to believe that they had a hand in the sundering, selling out the secrets of the universe in order to make a place for themselves in the new world.  And who can blame them.  It was an inevitability.  And it was either them, or the unicorns.)

Right, so science killed the unicorns.  But it wasn't all astrolabes and microscopes, oh no.  Philosophy was as much a part of the physical sciences as experimentation was.  Great thinkers would sit for hours on end and sort of guess stuff, as they had done since the beginning of time.  And it would lead them to some really nutso ideas.  And in that time, just around the middle of the sundering, there were four schools of thought that managed to siphon off the last of the worlds magic.
The first were the Algrins.  Pronounced All-greens.  They were botanists and apothecaries, healers and biologists.  Their interest was in living things, plant, animals, and otherwise, and what it was that made them tick.

They came up with all sorts of kooky ideas, like humors - viscous liquids in the body that controlled mood and behaviour - and a blood tide that ebbed and flowed within all living things.  There was even a common belief among them, highlighted in the Flora Angelicus Tract, that Plants were the purest and most pious of gods creations, and that even though plants were alive and possessing of a mind, their entire being was dedicated to constant prayer.

Eventually the Algrins sort of went collectively insane.  In a sudden fit of practicality - what alcoholics often call a moment of clarity - Florida Algrin, the schools founder, rounded up and dissected the his three brightest students.  Finding no Humors and no blood tide he retired to his bed and made his surviving students swear to continue the explorations he'd begun that day.  Then, Florida Algrin promptly died, convinced that there was absolutely nothing that was keeping his 138 year old body going.

The school continued, and flourished, and their most learned students became known as the geomancers.  You've probably never heard of them.

And then there was Ignacio Giovanni.  He was an apothecary, though not a very good one, and he was obsessed with Florida Algrin's teachings.  The geomancers, however, would not accept him.  They saw him as a bumbler, and an ignoble butcher.  Ignacio was just as interested in the workings of the human body as any other Geomancer, but unlike them he wasn't so much interested in the healing arts.  In fact, Ignacio killed more test subjects than any single geomancer in his time.  And when he was done he would find ways to re-animate the corpses and receive second hand accounts of the land of the dead.  Later, Ignacio would meet Guido Romero, a self proclaimed medium and half hearted undertaker, and they would use Algrin's teachings as a springboard into their own endless ocean of crackpot ideas.

Their school was completely unique.  One had to be naturally gifted to become a necromancer - a term they gave themselves as a form of bitten thumb at their geomancers who spurned them - And as they became the last few people who still trafficked with the now alienated and often lonely dead, their school grew where others all but perished.

They built their headquarters in the open in Rome and in the Catacombs in Venice, the city of bones that kept the gilded city above safe and try, in more ways than one.  When the plague struck, they moved to Paris and found it teeming and most fruitful.  And when most were afraid of possessed warriors and cannibals, they found helpful friends in Zimbabwe, friends who even taught the now ancient pair a thing or two.  Their school was the second most helpful in history.  Though you've probably never heard of them either.

The story of the elementalists is a sad one.  They are, if I may use a school analogy without reproach, that kid that always gets picked on because they're too smart for their own good.  No one took the elementalists seriously, you see.  There was very little space for their sciences in a world ruled by faith.  So when they said things like 'Everything is made up of spinning particles' everyone laughed.  When they said 'said particles get hot when they spin faster, and cold when they spin slower' they were scoffed at, and when they said 'everything in the universe spins: The particles, planets, the stars, even god spins' they were run out of town, usually by the geomancers.  They were the least loved of all the schools, the smallest, the frailest, the last picked in any sports.  If anyone had taken the time to actually look at things the way they looked at things, they might have learned that they were the closest to the truth.

The final school was founded by a man known only as 'Greyface'.  He was a merchant by some accounts, a Duke by others,  but most usually - and most believably in my mind - he was a priest and advisor to a certain line of kings.  Whatever he was he had the funding needed to organize his school without anyone knowing, until it had grown to match the size of the geomancers, and spread to rival the reach of the necromancers.  They were hermetics, they were gnostics, they were alchemists.  They did not know The Truth, but they knew A Truth and it was the most important truth of all.  "There is no god." says the preamble to the principia hermetica.  "There is only the faith in one.  And faith, being a product of man, can be turned with the slightest of gestures.  It is not a god who makes the sky stay up and the ground stay down, it is not a phantom hand or the devil that plucks the breath from mens chests and leaves their rotting husks.  It is faith, belief, concentrated from every living being that makes this things happen.  And with the faith in our hands, we are the gods."

A grim truth to be sure, especially when a certain greyface - as their most learned members take on their founder's dour persona as a mark of prestige - caught wind of the other lingering schools.  Radicals that were an affront to their paradigm.  How could they control the masses, and as a a result the universe, if there were these other wackos out there filling people with ideas like praying petunias and communicative corpses and spinning.  And so, Greyface waged war on the other schools, silently but effectively.  There were witch hunts and crusades in those times.  Churches that had once told stories of spirits impregnating virgins and men reviving their best friends from the dead because they were REALLY looking forward to that dinner party, suddenly spoke of loathsome tales of defilers and commune with evil spirits.  Kings that had once been mostly concerned with counting their coffers and mounting the prettiest virgins in the land became suddenly transfixed with the ways of the universe and had scientists, real scientists, on their pay-rolls.

The other schools were slowly having their last bit of power torn from them.  The necromancers sounded the horn.  The geomancers said 'leave us heathens' and slowly died out.  The Elementalists; they'd switched sides, sold out, became hired geeks for the goon squad.  And the remainders went into hiding.  The alchemists called that time, and the time just before it - the time when all the schools had formed - the sundering.  And as a result, so does everyone else.



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