The three boys walked into the old village.
Tuesday, March 30, 2021
THREE BOYS
Wednesday, March 17, 2021
THE FEAST IN THE MIDDEN
The colossal landfill bubbled in the mid-day sun like a giant bowel.
Dran's bulldozer muscled its way across the huge mound, barreling bags of household crud further up the slopes all the way to the steaming summit, where he stopped. He got out of his sweltering cab and stood on the footplate mopping his sweating face with his T-shirt. From here he could see the stricken city below, spread out like a terrible buffet beside the midden. Misery ruled its streets since the great crash.
Dran saw it all clearly from the landfill. He stared at the city he loved and despaired. The future was bleak and no comfort formed on the horizon, no shining knight in armour was coming. His own job was ending. Still in his twenties and made redundant. His final week. The rubbish would have to rot at the foot of the hill, where the trucks let loose. Nothing he or his mates could do. All on the junkpile he thought standing there on the garbage. The irony wasn't lost on him and he shook his head. I'm already there he thought. He took one last look at his city, where men wandered aimlessly in the streets, stalked by the indignity of sloth. He wondered how his Mother and little brother Lamb were coping with the hard fists of his violent Father.
Suddenly, there was a ear-splitting roar from deep within the earth and the ground shook violently. Dran was thrown headlong from his dozer straight onto the garbage. It shifted like a million bodies beneath him and shuddered back and forth as the noise got louder and louder.
"Oh Shit! an earthquake!" cried Dran, desperately trying to get back into his vehicle, which, unbeknown to him, was now teetering dangerously on the edge of a wide rift opening up at the peak. Dran managed to clamber back into the cab and seeing the split widening he gunned the tracks in a wild bid to escape, but it was too late. A vast hole appeared at the summit and Dran's bulldozer fell in, engulfed by the yawning dark inhaling like a hideous mouth. The vehicle and its driver Dran plummeted down and down into the bottomless guts of the landfill, a massive thing fed by a thousand years of the city's burgeoning filth. They smashed onto the bottom-most layer, the ancient foundation of its mass and the canopic heart of a world forgotten.
The bedrock split.
Something stirred.
It arose, awoken from an arcane slumber in which its songs had fed its dreams for thousands of years. Now its hunger was millennia-old and it yearned for the music of flesh.
The crippled Dran saw the thing unfold from the cleft and screamed.
"Mum. Dad. help meeeeeeeeee!"
He was fed upon as he watched.
The creature licked its red lips and unfurled its gigantic wings. She began to wail.
A darkness then crept over the city. No, a doleful lament, like the cries of a buried child, which slipped out of the wasteland, her melodic notes fingering the doors of the depressed.
It found easy access in the houses of the hopeless.
A miasma of desolation had befallen the once industrious state. Its denizens were broken. The slump had bit deep and the jobless numbers rose like a funeral pyre. Crestfallen men were desperate, their souls aching for work. Women were bereft, their larders empty. The pall of desolation hung in the air like smog. It could be seen by those who lived there. Felt by everyone else.
The creature's song entered Gristo's house first. It contained a hint of deep distress among the slurry of notes.
"You've seen what its like so get off my back. There are no bastard jobs out there!" bellowed Gristo at his wife as she dried the dishes. She had scrimped her money and cooked gyros for him this week but it hadn't helped. It had made things worse somehow, aggravating his already bruised ego and deepening his growing emasculation.
"I only asked if you were going out tomorrow Love. I need some honey for baklava. Not much mind."
"Honey! You want fuckin honey! When we can't even afford glasses for our Lamb! Are you fuckin serious!" He roared and threw the last of the beef stew against the wall.
"That was Lamb's tea you damned oaf!"
"A bastard oaf am I now?"
He was up on his feet in a flash and grabbed his wife by the throat, pinning her against the cupboard with brutish force.
"Well make some fucking more you stupid bitch!" he roared and smacked her hard across the face. She fell down and lay sobbing uncontrollably on the kitchen lino cowering.
He stood above her with clenched fists shaking with misplaced fury. As guilt began to flood his heart he turned, grabbed his coat and stormed out of the house.
Lamb had seen it all from the staircase and when his Dad had left he went to comfort his Mum.
"He doesn't mean it. Your Father. He's a good man really. He just gets things mixed up in his mind. He misses Dran and he still loves us little Lamb."
Gristo still fumed as he trudged up the street, past the allotments and into the broad stony ground between the city and the country beyond. The wide realms stretched out like new beginnings and he yearned to step into them, to leave this living death behind and regain his rightful place.
He thought of his boys. On good days his youngest was the apple of his eye before he became weary of life. He'd been so small and cute they nicknamed him Lamb.
From without his reverie he now heard a sweet trill whispering from above.
It was so faint that he doubted he'd heard it at first. A mere breeze across his ears, a hint of song. A skylark? Yet it appeared to grow louder and his curiosity got the better of him. He looked to see where it might be from.
His gaze took him to the landfill site. Gristo was entranced.
The musical note carried him to its dark edge and he began to climb. On he went to the black summit, where the song bid him enter the cavern. He was compelled to do so, the allure of the singing so strong that he forgot who he was or what he was doing. It spoke of a life of unbridled passion, of vast wealth and public success, a life far beyond the cursed one he had.
He descended into the crevasse. The pitch dark swallowed him but the music guided his steps ever onward. In time he came to a gigantic cluttered jumble of ancient statuary, a decrepit shambles of stone figures and clay coffins and it was here the voice was loudest. As Gristo stared at the archaic ruins his heart pounded and his neck keened to see what could be making those alluringly sweet sounds.
"Come here my love!" Came a whisper from the coffin nearest to him. He thought it sounded like his wife.
"Come and join me!"
Gristo was sure it was his useless wife's voice now and somehow she had lured him down here to humiliate him. Well she was in for it now. He'd beat her so hard she'll never look in the mirror again! He clenched his fists as rage surged through him.
"Come out witch! Come out or I'll drag you out!" Gristo roared.
"As you wish my love," came the soft response.
A pale hand with enormously sharp fingernails clutched the side of the coffin.
Gristo momentarily teetered.
The hand was joined by a long arm and lithe shoulder and then a face.
It wasn't Gristo's battered wife.
It was the face of a beautiful girl, pallid but alive. Her lips were scarlet and full, her eyes deep and enticing. She was quite gorgeous and a glorious main of reddish tresses framed her voluptuous features perfectly. She rose completely and Gristo was now transfixed by her naked body. Her breasts were firm and tantalising and a dark v-shaped shadow between her thighs spoke of untold pleasures for the fortunate man.
Gristo was that man. He was sure of it and as with all the women in his life he would make sure of it and use his fists of he didn't get what he wanted. This young sow was no different and he stepped forward with tightening knuckles as she stepped out of the coffin.
Gristo grabbed the woman by the neck and forcibly kissed her face, lips and breasts, whilst throwing in a punch to her kidney. She winced but smiled. A smile that Gristo had never seen on a woman he was about to force to the floor and he stopped. The smile grew and he saw for the first time a mouth filled with razor sharp teeth. The smile widened and the teeth turned to fangs as the woman brushed off his arms. She seemed to get taller and Gristo swore he saw wings unfold and rise high into the abyss. He was frightened for the first time in his life.
The winged female leaned towards his quivering face and she laughed loudly. As she did so she rose into the air with a single flap of her colossal wings and cackled and sang in a caterwaul of terrible sounds.
"Puny human! You think you could have me! No human has ever! I am the defiler of hearts and the jailor of souls. I devour all that you have. I eat your future for I am damnation. I am Terpsichore and I am a Siren!"
Gristo stared in horror at the creature.
"I am the lurer of sinews, the temptress of flesh and the end of courage. Heed my song and you shall perish."
At this the Siren screamed a discordant mewing, which filled the cavern and entered the world. Her neck craned and her mouth opened wide.
Gristo could now hear a new sound. A stampede clambering along the hollow streets making its way gradually to the tip and then up the side of the landfill's slope. The cacophony echoed around the chamber and then he saw.
Hundreds of men where flinging themselves into the mouth of the hole and falling with a hideous thud on the hard ground at the feet of Terpsichore. The bodies piled up around her, a bloody necropolis of the worshipful dead.
The stench of iron consumed Gristo as he gagged at the sight of the broken men, their blood swilling round his feet. As he wretched he saw to his horror the mangled face of his eldest son Dran poking out of the midden, where the beast had feasted.
Terpsichore smiled as she felt the father's agony and licked the dead youngster's cheek with her immensely thick tongue.
"I shall gorge myself on all men but I will not be sated by this fat larder. To live again I require a sacrifice, a tender offering of immaculate flesh. I need a child. I need your child, who kneels sobbing in the arms of his crying mother, their tears cleansing his innocent being. I want to feast on this child. Now bring me Lamb. Do this for me and I will spare you."
Gristo stood aghast, his shoulders slumped. He know he was no good. A wife-beater, a psychopath and deserved to be punished. he knew that. He was emotionally inept, a castle ogre lost in the dark but but really in his shredded heart he loved Lamb above all else in this world. His eyes filled with hot tears of remorse.
"I'll be damned to Hell before I let you near our Lamb as well!" he yelled at the Siren.
"So be it."
Terpsichore pursed her lips and blew an awful melody round Gristo's head. She slinked and slithered over the corpse-heap wrapping her victim in song. He winced as the vile notes squeezed his face and made his ears bleed. He tried to cover them but the music enveloped him like a shroud and he knew that all his stature, his rage and his violence meant nothing here in the face of this supreme creature from pre-history.
In a final gathering of strength Gristo faced upwards and bellowed his own final words of regret.
"I'm sorry Dran. I'm sorry Lamb. I always loved you!"
Terpsichore ate Gristo there and then and he was gone, but his dreadful note carried out of the pit and across the town to the his old home.
Lamb, still weeping into his Mother's breast, suddenly stiffened and heard his Father's dying cry. Lamb stands and, as if hit by a lightning strike, arches his back and yells in agony. Bright light filled the kitchen and Lamb appears to grow, his body becoming that of an adult, his muscles expanding and his chest bared. He stood six feet tall in a pool of luminescence and in his hand was a long spear.
His kneeling mother gawped in wonder and touched the side of her son. He stroked her head and whispered gently.
"I love you Mother. It is your strength and Father's remorse that carries me now. For I am aggrieved, this boy. I am the lamb. I am wrath."
The sun-lit figure unfolded vast wings and flew into the darkening sky heavy with men screaming as they hurtled toward the landfill and their death. Lamb shot past them like a falcon, his heart breaking and his spear quivering with fury.
He descended the chasm and landed with a blinding flash, his massive wings outstretched to their full size.
"Lamb! How nice of you to visit again. Its been too long!" rasped the Siren.
"Terpsichore, you wanton harpie, it is always a pleasure to dispatch you once more"
"Tut tut, young titan, I have sacrificed you as many times. Who knows. Maybe this day too!"
"I think not Siren. In this life I have a spear cleansed in agony and forged in penance. Even your fell symphony will not withstand it!"
"Ah, the spear. Last time it was a sword. A sword hewn in truth I recall. Truth, Agony, Penance, you are running out of virtues my illustrious foe. Your God grows bored with this pointless fray. Put down your spear and I shall fill your life with charm and melody."
"Waste not your broken squawking on me Minstrel, for I am renewed and the Lamb will prevail once more!"
At this the statuesque figure ran at the creature, his spear outstretched. Terpsichore spiralled upwards sending corpses spinning in a whirlwind. She flung her hands this way and that hurtling bodies at the running boy.
Bathed in the blood of the innocent, Lamb parried the unrequited dead, ran with all his might and finally stood in front of the Siren, his spear tip pressed against her throat.
"So, my sacrificial Lamb, you appear to have the upper hand. Let me sing one last song before I am vanquished."
"There is no time for singing left Terpsichore. We must restore the balance and let the world renew itself once more. It is the way. It is your time."
"I am sorry".
As the titan heaved his spear deep into the throat of the Siren he regretted this part he had to play. He always had, even more than his own death each thousand years. Feeling an overwhelming sense of loss, like that of his father, Lamb paused his pushing.
He paused too long and realised the fatal error of his reverie but it was too late. Terpsichore was able to emit one final trill, a dreadful note of wholesale destruction, which carried like a devil's seed on the rising air and out into the world, where it sounded like a titanic child crying before descending to fertile soil.
The boy covered his ears shrieking.
"Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!"
Lamb slumped onto his shaft dying as the spearhead cleft the Siren's neck. Her face fell against his and she hissed as her wings wilted around his drooping head.
"Both of us!"
SLINKY
Sunday, March 14, 2021
FOR GOD'S SAKE DON'T YAWN!
It all started when the world got hotter. The seas receded and their sandy shores grew like deserts. The Earth was drying up.
The coasts were parched and inland it was even worse. The land cracked like eczema and water become the new gold.
Animal and man faced a common enemy, thirst. It stalked us like a virus as everyone and everything slowly dried out.
Yet the richer countries stayed wet. Money bought water and their citizens hydrated every day as gallons of fresh liquid gushed through the pipes of the wealthy.
They watched the rest of the world with moist vacant eyes. They were okay as long as the water kept flowing in their direction. It didn't matter if they sucked dry the remaining underground stocks and so the tentacles of the rich spread out across the world, a secret mesh of pipelines bleeding the water from the very mouths of the poor.
The hotter southern regions became a death zone. Waterless corpses rotted on the sun-cooked roads and only the crows grew fat for a short while, until even they searched in vain for life-giving pools.
It was around this time that those in the Southern hemisphere who had the strength to notice saw the first crabs.
They crawled out the vanishing seas in their millions desperate for the the sanctuary of anything damp. The search for moisture drove them inland and eventually they found the secret pipelines full of sweet liberating water heading North.
They entered and walked along the pipes until they came to the cities of the Northern zone.
Its thought that the very first crabs to encounter the citizens there were those siphoned straight from the countless street hydrants into large glasses of clean fresh water guzzled on the spot by the thirsty residents. These were smaller crabs and were washed straight down as people drank and drank and weren't even noticed.
But then came the big ones.
They'd seen their little cousins enter the humans and sensed a damp, warm, attractive hole waiting for them too. The best holes around in fact; mobile, dark, wet and with a constant food supply coming through the teeth.
But as much as the big crabs tried they just couldn't get in. They'd hide in the undergrowth. They'd sneak by the buckets. They'd clasp the defiles between the walls and pounce.
Launching themselves onto the screaming victims the crabs pawed and clawed at their mouths forcing their way in but to no avail. As long as the humans kept their mouths shut the crabs would suffer in the sun relying on the small drips from the outdoor taps and meagre scraps from the bins to keep them alive.
Citizens became intensely fearful of the crabs and attempts were made to crush as many as possible. Gangs with mallets were paid to patrol the streets. They swept the cracks and nooks for secreted crabs, smashing any they found, leaving their flattened guts bubbling in the relentless heat. The towns began to reek of rotting seafood and the greedy crows had a field day.
The remaining crabs muttered in the darkness. They needed a plan. They needed a breakthrough, so they hunkered down and waited for it to come.
It came as a unusually wealthy man was sleeping by his pool. He snored contentedly under a wide parasol shading him from the damaging rays. A tray containing a half-eaten lobster thermidor shell, a used lobster fork, several lemon slices and a tall drink stood on the marbled patio next to his lounger. A female crab was lurking there too enjoying the cool shade. It picked lazily at the crustacean's cheesy carcass and licked the droplets of condensation slowly descending the glass.
The man woke and sleepily reached down for his drink. The crab was balanced on top. The man hadn't seen it and momentarily paused lifting his drink as he yawned dramatically. It was a huge wide loud yawn, the yawn of the carefree rich and lasted and lasted.
The crab sensed the appealing damp breath of the man's wide-open mouth and leapt. It landed smack inside and for a split-second rested on his tongue as it squeezed its rear legs in as well. The man gagged and reached for his lips, desperately trying to drag the creature from between his teeth. He let out a muffled scream and his wife came running to his aid from the house.
She arrived to find her husband on his knees clutching at his mouth and imploring for her to help him as he choked and screeched next to the pool. She knew he was choking. Quickly getting closer and clutching his hands so she could inspect his mouth, his wife peered deep between his teeth and was horrified by what she saw.
She screamed and screamed as she watched the crab gingerly turn itself over so that its soft belly pressed neatly onto her husband's upper palette and its mouth faced his top teeth. It hung there like a bat, snug in its new wet dark place. The woman fainted when the crab's long thin maxilla began to finger her husband's incisors and pick the lobster flesh wedged there in the gaps.
Other crabs near the pool had seen the way their sister had gained its entry and spreading out they tapped out their hideous observations to the others.
And so it began, the terrible invasion as people yawned; unseen crabs legging into their mouths before they could shut them, sitting inside and turning to rest on the upper palette like hard cats, their twitching mandibles waiting for their hosts to feed and drink, which inevitably they did after the initial days of wretching.
The notice went out not to yawn. Posters, billboards and webspots proclaimed that 'under no circumstances must citizens yawn!'
People tried so hard to keep their lips tight as crabs stared directly at them, but it was no use.
The natural human urge to stretch and yawn after a day playing croquet was too strong and as soon as mouths widened in flew a crustacean.
Adults, men, women, children and the infirm all succumbed to what became known to scientists as Palette Crabs and to citizens, Gum Fucks.
To their utter disgust, over time people got used to the passengers inside their heads, the gum fucks. A few hundred citizens died from choking after trying to chew the crabs inside their mouths but many thousands settled into a new life with their visitors and any further attempts to chew them resulted in the crabs descending lower into the throat until the danger passed and the violent heaving stopped.
As months passed residents became familiar with seeing crabs' small front pincers waving around between the lips of their friends . Lovers got used to their maxillae touching as they kissed, which somehow heightened their arousal to a whole new symbiotic climax.
For their part the palette crabs were settling down in their new homes and learning how to make things easier for themselves. Rather than wait on tables and beds for someone to yawn they began to sit on top of people's heads until the inevitable mouth opening came. Some crabs even sat directly on people's faces, hanging vertically over the nose with their pincers dug slightly into their cheeks or even stretched them to hook into the ears. This was particularly evident in children, where the smaller crabs were much lighter and could hang like this quite easily. Even babies had tiny crabs waiting for them in maternity wards, standing on their foreheads bobbing up and down, waiting for their tender yawns. These small crabs were guarded by much bigger ones inside their adult hosts, so that no-one was tempted to flick the little ones away. Every crab deserved a home and like their hermit cousins, as kids grew up, different sized crabs would take up residence.
As time went on the behaviour of humans began to change. They could no longer speak in the same way, as their mouths were now more or less full. A new way of talking came about, with muffled words, hisses, head and hand gestures and even some crab teeth tapping. Eating and drinking were also affected. Food tended to be partially liquidised because there just wasn't enough room for anything substantial and besides, chewing had become awkward to say the least. Drinking was easier and both host and crab would open their mouths.
In the beginning their was a lot of resistance to the crab invaders. Posters were plastered on billboards denouncing the creatures. 'Kill the Gum Fucks!' and 'Chew the Crabs: they're just Seafood!' and 'Our Mouths are Ours!' were popular. But the occupation continued apace and hosts resorted to drastic measures: attempting to rip them out of the mouth, drinking bleach, piercing them with screwdrivers, drilling into them and burning them with lasers, but these usually ended in the hosts being badly injured or even dying. Some truly desperate hosts took themselves and their Gum Fucks out of the cities and walked way into the parched deserts beyond to lay down and dry.
But by and large the situation stayed the same for decades and over the next half- century, whilst there was still enough water for the rich, the two species co-habited without much trouble.
After about 70 years some reports eventually trickled through of the two species merging, suggesting that humans with crabs' faces were ambling around a few towns and in the far reaches of the enclaves there was talk of humans walking on all fours in a sideways fashion.
There were even rumours of really big crabs, much to big for mouths, about the size of dogs in fact, mating with citizens and even giving birth to crab children.
And have you guessed, I'm one of them!
Wednesday, January 20, 2021
DAUMEN KINO'S MESMER
Daumen Kino was obsessed with flicker books.
He just couldn't get enough of their whispery animations and regularly spent entire days mesmerised by the flapping images contained within. Its fair to say that Daumen got utterly lost in the flickers and was hypnotised by the sound.
He had hundreds, if not thousands, of flicker books in his higgledy-piggledy house. They were everywhere and covered every surface, only interspersed by the candles Daumen loved as well, rising like spectres from the gloom.
Not only did Daumen buy flip books from wherever he could, he also made his own flickering images. Birds, explosions, feasts, unfurling leaves, pies rising, gun's firing, children yawning, eyes closing, mouths opening and suns setting. He drew them all and adored watching his efforts murmur past his eyes like glimmers of another world.
It was this other worldliness that really caught Daumen's imagination. He felt sure his twitching images held the key to unlocking the thin veil between the spheres, the gossamer betwixt vast dimensions.
Like mayflies, the flickering papers conquered the light in a fury of existence and are gone. Once flipped they are done in a instant. A flick. A fleck. A mote. A speck. A ghost.
Daumen Kino felt sure he'd seen evidence of ghosts in the depths of the fluttering papers. Hazy figures skipping on the edges of vision like crystals forming in his tears. He was transfixed by the possibility and felt both elated and frightened in the midst of these animations.
Daumen craved entry into the filigree within his dancing leaves. He sought traces of the ether and dreamt of crossing the untouchable boundaries therein and lighting a candle on the other side. He would have given his very soul to gain passage.
His lust for the ethereal took him to every dusty emporium within the county and beyond and the older the book the more excited he got, as they were clearer portals, more perfect mirrors and the thinnest of curtains through which to step.
The best subjects were the wispy minstrels favoured by Victorians, the jittery troubadours and shadowy fools. Within the dust of these frozen dances lay the stepping stones to a younger world. He searched deeper behind the murky windows of antiquarians and delved further into the dark heart of the Capital's relics.
Owning countless originals, Daumen sought a truly rare item, an 1886 Melville Living Picture Book. Now, one of these Melvilles would have been hard enough to find but Daumen wanted the fabled hexagon, a mythological array of six books creating an almost animate entity within. None had ever been found and Daumen did not hold out much hope but trudged the metropolis nonetheless.
If Kino could locate such a hexagon he might stand a chance of discerning the shapes within and at last touch the lodes of the ancients.
He felt compelled to continue and it was only at the very end of his quest that he made the discovery. After months of disappointment it was a non-descript public library down a poorly-lit alleyway into which he stumbled one summer morning.
At the end of a remote aisle covering magic and lore his fingers, piercing deep abandoned cobwebs, scratched a small spine. Slowly pulling it out he released a bank of dust which surrounded him like a fog. Kino coughed and spluttered but continued to pull.
As the booklet fell finally into both his hands he could not believe what he was seeing. A Melville Hexagonal Book of Living Pictures.
"Oh my God!" he shouted loudly, so loudly in fact that he caught the attention of the librarian sitting at the front desk behind a stack of leathery tomes. The librarian stood and walked slowly towards the farthest aisle.
Daumen Kino had struck the motherlode. He had actually found what was probably the only copy of the book in the entire world. He shook with excitement and his hands quivered as he turned its rare geometry round and round.
His mouth formed a huge grin and his eyes widened as he realised the enormity of his find. His rapture knew no bounds as he commenced his greatest wish, his destiny, a moment he had been leading up to his whole life, the moment he would riffle these legendary pages.
He began to work the papers.
Immediately a flickering image of a young girl appeared. At first she was sat at the back of the picture slouched on a small stool. Very quickly she looked up and ran towards the front, her face appearing large on the page. her mouth was opening and closing as if shouting something and she clung to the edges of the book as if it was a window frame. The final image was of the girl screaming and sobbing into her hands as a shadow passed by.
Daumen was mesmerised. He gawped at the fluttering life in his fingers. He was shivering with glee but began to feel something else. Was it hesitation after all his searching?
His body felt fatigued as if it were fighting to stay upright. He felt his shoulders hunch and his face descend a little towards the Melville hexagon. His balance shifted. He staggered forward, his hands quaking, clenching the book. His knuckles were white with the strain and slowly but surely his nose nudged the flickering pages, now powering themselves in an endless image of the girl yelling and shaking her head wildly.
She stopped suddenly and Daumen realised that his hair was actually entering the picture, then his face and then his entire head. He grinned euphorically as his dream came true. To peek at secret alchemy, the spirits behind our eyes.
But a dark stain welled up in front of his eyes and revealed its absolute hatred for the living and its stark compulsion to enter our world to feed its toxic appetite.
Kino shrieked in terror as he stared at this malignancy and tried desperately to force himself back out but to no avail. His torso plunged into the book and with one final scream he knew he couldn't hold on and he vanished completely into the papers.
Scwhupp!
The librarian reached the aisle just as Daumen Kino was no more. The book, as if hanging in mid air, fell to the floor with a thud. The librarian picked it up and looked at the first page of the drawings.
Sat at the back of the picture was a young girl on a stool. Near her a young man was on his knees with his face in his hands howling. He ran to the front and began to mouth something imploringly to the librarian, something like "I know now. I can see what's here. I've seen the ghosts. Now please let me out. Please!"
A smudge suddenly rushed past him and a shadow darkened the face of the Librarian. She shut the book and smiled.
She date stamped the ticket for that day. 1st April 1936. It sat below the only other stamp, exactly fifty years earlier, 1st April 1886. The day Melville had secretly hidden a copy of his Living Pictures hexagon in the bookcase.
Still grinning, the librarian tucked the book back into its dusty slot deep in the shelf and walked back to her desk, where she began making her own shadowy flicker books to give away to her lenders.
Friday, January 1, 2021
THE RED TUSSOCK
It was a dark day. Winter full done. The sky was heavy as quicksilver and my mood were no better having told my Father in Law to shove his blue potion up his arse.
Sick of him balling at me I'm no good. That I'm a wastrel. A retard. He can fix me. Well, he's a pompous old crusty bastard warlock. Yes. He damn well is. I don't need fucking fixing!
The tussock thing was right before me now. I'd walked across the whole rank plot. It was more reddish than green and stank to high heaven.
I prodded it with my boot and I could have sworn it moaned. It groaned like a kicked dog. I kicked it this time proper and it screamed. I had to cover my ears.
"By Jesus! What the fuck is that!" I heard myself shout as the high pitched wail filled the air.
It then split. Scarlet gunge oozed out and spilled onto the ground, sizzling like puke. It reeked like rotten meat and bubbled and popped as it pooled.
The scream had stopped but the liquid just kept coming. It was then I noticed some on my boots and socks. It fizzed and stung. It burnt through my cloth and hurt. More of the stuff poured over my feet and before I could turn and run it had smothered my legs.
The pain was inexplicable. It was agony as the red fluid turned my limbs to fizzling puss. I fell onto my hands and knees and it was I that now screamed.
My entire body from head to foot was blathered in the foulsome gunk and I felt my form dissolving.
"What is this vilest magic!" I yelled till my thinning lungs burst.
Only my head remained fully intact resting on the ground. I could see a figure approaching. His cape blowing in the winter gloom.
He arrived and towered over my pitiful carcass. I looked up.
My Father in Law!
He was Holding a big bottle of red potion.
"You sorcering gobshite!" I burbled.
He laughed and tipped out the rest of the bottle onto my face.
"Nooooooooooo!" I croaked like someone drowning.
"You should have drank the blue stuff you fucking wastrel!" he said and pressed his boot onto my head.
Monday, December 28, 2020
THE WITCHWIVES' PRAYER
Upon'st you make your progress up our stairs to where we wait
Atop the mattress on all fours to pleasure for our date,
Me, my kin, as we give in to all of your hot wiles,
Seeding pouting hams, farming the defiles
Of us submissive sisters, from whence your regal grain shall rise,
As cherubs from the puke of hares and babes from dying flies.
Saturday, November 28, 2020
Saturday, October 31, 2020
Shaz's Gothic
It was Halloween. The darkness sat on the town like a burnt dress.
Cass revved his bike and spun. Smoke plumed from its burning tyres. He was in a hurry to pick up his girl and give her real a trick or treat surprise.
"Get on Shaz!"
"Where we going Cass?"
"Its a surprise!"
They rode out beyond the town along lonely unlit roads. Panthers in the night searching for secrets. The queuing foothills arrived and Cass let rip up the steep incline to Reekin Fell where the old graveyard lay.
"What we doing here Cass?"
"Its Halloween babe. What could be cooler than a graveyard on Halloween!"
They dismounted and left the bike under a huge Yew. The gate screeched like a midwife and they walked up the curling path between the graves. It was pitch black save for the glint in Cass's eyes as he thought of Shaz in his arms.
The headstones stood at odd angles like rotten teeth. Worn angels stretched dark wings out over the bigger plots. Watching. Waiting. Like a family gathering eager to start.
Cass chose the biggest, darkest most weathered angel. He felt drawn towards it. Oddly its face had the look of his mother he mused. He touched her face and lay down on the grassy grave beneath.
"C'mon Shaz. Its nice and soft on here. We can get real comfy and watch the stars at midnight. It's Halloween after all. It'll be fun"
"You're sick you are Cass. You just want to have it off on a grave don't you! "
"What, me? I just want us to get warm and comfy and look up at the sky. I might kiss you. Yeah. Sure! Oh, and this is for you!"
Shaz opened the black box and pulled out a bottle.
"Gothic! I've dreamt about this perfume all week! Thanks babe. You're such a sweety!"
She sprayed the scent from head to toe and winked at her man.
Cass gave Shaz a big smile and he held out his hand. She took it and lay next to him on the grass.
"You're welcome".
They peered up at the endless depths above, beyond the ink of space and they kissed.
Shaz's Gothic infused the night. Cass had felt compelled to get it for Halloween. It wafted round the grave like a ghost and they embraced under the luminous crescent moon. It looked like a thumb clasping the darkness and Cass and Shaz both stared at its ancient glow.
Shaz's scent drifted into the grave itself and descended into its depths. It eased its way through the rents and rifts of death's past and reached a shrivelled dessicated face staring into the earth.
It stirred.
Twitching its dead nose, this mummied entity from eons past took in the aroma. A curious and startling sensation from long ago. A pheromone from a time steeped in smoke and flesh. A time when the entity had been a fertile witch among weak malleable men. A time for procreating with them, for raising pups, for which she was burned on the hill.
The creature had then been buried, barely alive and thrown upside down in a makeshift shaft hardly wide enough for a human. Over the two centuries of ice and worm she had forgotten which way was up and had dug deeper into the earth, sealing her fate further until she stopped altogether and hung motionless like a bat drying up in the infinite murk, dreaming of her witch babies and their own.
But now. This scent! Oh what a smell. Of potions and pestled spices. Of beds and familiars. Foetal and so enticing. Like lust and domination. Invigorating and coming from above. Or was it below. The Witch thing concentrated with all her dry brains and followed the perfume's direction. It was at her feet. She was upside down! The dullards! But no matter. She need not her previous form!
I can unfold and dislocate like a sack of bones she whispered.
She turned and crawls. A maggot in the filth. Rising in the dark she ascends slowly, her rancid nails coming away with an audible tear. Gradually the scent gets stronger, mixed with another that she knows full well, her children. Leather nostrils flare to savour its blended promise, the promise of release from her soiled cell, the chance to breathe the stench of humanity once more and at long last be the matriarch of her brood.
Light appears from the surface. The two lovers lie in each others arms unaware of the creeping fiend climbing towards them. They cuddle and caress in the Halloween moonlight trembling with the pleasures yet to come, the hot coupling on the grassy grave.
Cass stands and walks away to pee behind the Yew. He wouldn't desecrate a grave direct. Who knows what might happen! He shivered.
Shaz waited for her man, laughed and turned her head to look where he was. As she did she found herself staring straight into a hideously squalid face sticking up out of the ground. It smiled a toothless grin and Shaz screamed like she had never screamed before.
Cass jumped, his blood ran cold. What the hell?
"Shaz. Shaz! What's happened? " he yelled, zipping up as he ran, stumbling over urns and vases.
Shaz kept on screaming, her mind failing as she witnessed an entire monstrous thing emerge completely from the grave. It cracked and jerked as it began to stand, unfolding like a moth.
The witch opened empty eyes and yawned. Shaz's fragile senses snapped and the witch stroked her hair.
"You have freed me my dear, my pretty descendant! You and your brother! For this you shall both be rewarded my babies!" smiled the witch, grating her words through a walnut voice box not used for speech for two hundred years. She reached into Shaz's handbag and lifted up the bottle of perfume. She sprayed it allover herself, its liberating scent settling on her parchment skin from head to toe. She kissed the girl's forehead and whispered 'Sharon'.
Cass found Shaz still sat on the grave rocking from side to side. There was a large hole in the ground next to her. The smell of Gothic was everywhere.
In the distance he could just make out a dark figure with a strangely familiar gait shambling through the headstones towards the open arch.
He knelt down and held his girlfriend.
"That was our great great great Grandmother Cass! We're brother and sister!" she screamed.
Friday, October 9, 2020
THE FORMICARY
Kotzkas had been a permanent feature of the side-street as long as anyone could remember.
It had been a fine neighbourhood when he and his wife had bought it. It was their pride and joy after getting married. The Kotzkas were popular straight away.
Children came with parents to see the animals in the shop. Zebra finches, Love Birds, Tetras, Guinea Pigs and tortoises.
But it was his ant circus that really drew in the kids. It was Kotzka's variation on the flea circus of his childhood in the far-away hills of the Tartra.
The ant circus was so popular some weekends that Mrs. Kotzka had to issue tickets at the door.
The queues sometimes stretched round the block to the old cinema.
They could have charged folk to see the ants perform but they were just happy to see children enjoy their shop and side show. To strangers it might have seemed they were making money. Maybe even lots of money.
Kotzka had a way with the ants. He could understand them and they him. After they'd completed each small task he'd squeeze a little sugary water from a syringe and offer each ant a tiny blob. They seemed to love it and almost shook with delight as they accepted their sweet wages.
The show's finale was the favourite bit among the kids. The ants would carry little home-made balsa toys across the counter and drop them in front of the eager children, who were allowed to take one of them home. They were visually enthralled and the parents were immensely grateful to this kindly old couple.
One boy, however, was never ever satisfied with the show or the balsa toys. He heckled Kotzka constantly with a barrage of complaints and grumbles.
"That's soooooo boring! Can't they do anything gory Kotzka?"
"What do you feed them. I bet it's live stuff. I bet it's live mice! Show us that you tight old twat!"
"Can't you get them to kill anything?"
The boy would grab the balsa toys with a few ants and stand on them viciously before pushing past his shamed parents and out of the shop.
His name was Norbert. Norbert Vark.
"Don't mind him!" the other parents would say to the Kozkas. "We love you. Our kids adore your shop and the ants. Please don't let that delinquent ingrate Norbert Vark get to you!"
But the longer it went on it did get to them. Particularly Mrs. Kotzka, who after years of the boy's heckling started to lose faith. Norbert never seemed to let up and went on to torment them into his teenage years.
It seemed as if he hated them and the ants. After a particularly furious onslaught in the shop, the police said they were sorry but they couldn't do anything because he was only 17. Norbert was still a minor but they would speak to his parents as they had done many times.
"We can't do anything with the boy Officer. He's always hurting animals in the wood and he's obsessed with killing insects. Ants mostly. We've given up and when he turns 18 next Christmas we're done. We'll kick him out!"
It was summer when Mrs. Kotzka fell ill. She was anemic and nothing stayed down. The old woman was withering away. Kotzka had moved her bed into the cellar where it was always cool. Their bedroom was sweltering.
Sadly, Kotzka placed a sign in the window, "Shows Over for Now" and the queues fizzled away.
Mrs. Kotzka lay in a bed next to a huge glass tank. It was full of soil and sand and leaf litter. It was as big as a large cupboard and you needed to climb a wooden ladder to see over the edge.
If you had climbed it you would have seen thousands of ants marching round in lines holding bits of leaves above their twitching heads before descending into the tank's depths.
It was a formicary. The ants' home.
Kotzka knew the ants were in trouble. They needed a queen but none had emerged. He blamed himself. Food was short and he'd worked his show-ants much too hard over the years. They'd grown too. They were much larger than the workers. At least six inches long. They were the most agitated about not having a queen and sat in a row at the edge of the tank. They blamed someone specific for crushing their old queen years before. They blamed Norbert Vark.
Kotzka was now trying to feed his dying wife, all his animals in the shop and the ants. Provisions and money were running out. All that was left was a vat of sugary water.
He dribbled some into his wife's thin lips and amazingly she drank. He dribbled more and more and she drank and drank and drank.
One morning he came down to see her and to his astonishment, a few of his show-ants were standing on her chin and dribbling more sugary fluid into her mouth. She was lapping it up like cream!
Kotzka sat down and left them to it. They were doing a better job than him and his wife seemed to really enjoy their twitchy attention. But he knew she needed more than this and fell asleep worrying.
When he awoke his wife was not in her bed. It was night-time and dark in the cellar. He lit a candle and saw to his horror the body of his wife. It was slowly tipping over the edge of the tank! The ants were dragging her in!
He leapt up screaming but his wife turned her head and said lovingly,
"It's alright dear. They will look after me. I loved my time with you but I am theirs now. It will be fine. You will see! Every day you can see!"
And then she was gone. Kotzka ran up the ladder and watched his beloved wife sink into the humus, pulled under by a thousand gentle jaws.
He wept all night and all the next day. Ants collected his dripping tears and took them to her. She whispered through the soil.
"Don't cry my love. I am with our children. Our ants. I am their mother. I am their Queen now".
Kotzka peered into the tank and his wife wriggled slowly toward the glass side. Ants helped her move round and continued to feed her sugary syrup from their palps. She sipped and smiled at Kotzka. A tender smile that said it would indeed all be fine.
The old man ladled lots of sugar water into the formicary and the ants on the surface applauded with acid squirts. This was his role now. To keep them fed and safe in the cellar.
Kotzka reopened the shop and even put on a few shows. He often looked at the big show-ants who seemed happier than they ever had. Word spread and the queues formed once more.
Even after all this time Kotzka's ant shows were still famous.
To make ends meet and buy tons of sugar the old fellow had to now charge a fee to watch his shows. The money came rolling in and he soon had more than he could manage.
He bundled up notes and stacked them on a shelf at one side of the ant tank. Coins he threw in for safe keeping. The Queen sent some up when he needed any.
And so they lived another year like this. As happy as they'd ever been. Kotzka. The ants and their human Queen. He could speak to his wife whenever he wished and occasionally she rose up and they kissed lovingly, the old man standing on the ladder.
"Kotzka. My dear beloved. I have good news. We have more children. I gave birth during the night. Big children. They will be the wonder of the world!" explained the Queen.
Like any Father the old man worried. About his brood. The sugar vat was nearly empty. He needed something more. Maybe the townsfolk could help.
It was coming on Christmas and he'd decided to put on a special festive show. Word got around. Kotzka wanted sweets and chocolate instead of money. It was a huge success and the children thrived. Soon they would be able to travel.
It was at one such yuletide show that Kotzka heard a familiar and unwelcome voice, even harsher and viler than before.
"That's shite that! There's more action in my Grandma's bush! I want my chocolates back you old bastard."
The crowd gasped. It was Norbert Vark. He'd turned 18 and like his folks had vowed, they'd kicked the good-for-nothing brute out. He was drinking and sleeping rough. He still hated Kotzka. Even more now.
"You can have your chocolates back Norbert", explained old Kotzka.
"Fuck the chocs you old skinflint. I want more than chocolate."
At this Vark left the shop growling at the kids and parents as he stormed out but not before swiping some of the bigger ants off the counter and with a huge grin on his twisted face stood on them. They flattened under his boot with a nauseating pop.
That night, drunk and raging, Vark returned to the shop. It was dark. He clumsily broke in and stumbled past the aisles of sleeping birds.
"So where do ya keep your fuckin' loot Kotzka, you miserly old bastard?" he mumbled to himself, whilst burping loudly in the cage of two love birds.
It was then he heard a soft purring from behind the door at the back. He jostled through and realised it was a cellar.
"Yes!" He exclaimed. "This is it. This is where you keep the goodies eh you miserly old fucker!"
Greed and adrenaline swept Norbert down the steps. He reached the bottom and in the moonlight could just make out a large glass tank and next to it someone sleeping in a bed.
He shoved the sleeper roughly and Kotzka sat up.
"Norbert? How can I help you. What time is it?"
"Shut the fuck up you old git and show me where the loot is stashed. Or else!"
Vark had pulled out a small axe. One he'd used many times on animals. An old man was a step-up. He was excited and sobering up. He stepped forward and hit Kotzka at the back of the head with the blunt back. The old shopkeeper staggered and gingerly touched the wound. It was bleeding.
"N-N-Norbert! No need for unpleasantness. The money? It's there - in the tank."
"The tank? No funny business Kotzka or you'll get the sharp end! What's the tank for?"
"Oh, just the old straw and droppings from the birds. I sell it to local gardeners for a few shillings. The cash is on a shelf up there, where its safe. Use the ladder. You can take it all Norbert!"
Vark was unsure about it but avarice rolled round his eyes like slots when he saw the brown paper envelopes stacked on the plank.
"Go on up. Its yours. Just reach across the tank Norbert. I've lost my wife so what do I need money for?"
Vark stared hard at Kotzka and then cautiously stepped onto the ladder and began to climb. The old man slowly moved forward.
"I'll cut your fuckin' hands off you old bastard if you try anything. Stay fuckin' there!" Vark warned ominously waving the axe around.
Kotzka raised his hands submissively and beckoned the young man to go all the way.
Vark reached the top of the tank. He saw a few ants scrabbling about.
"What are these ants doing here?" he shouted.
"Oh, nothing. I always end up brushing a handful when I'm collecting the old straw. Just reach over for the money."
Vark stared at the ants staring back at him. He shrugged and leaned over to the shelf. It wasn't easy standing on the top rung, holding an axe and arching over the tank but Vark had the prize in his eyes and he went for it.
As he was reaching out for a stuffed packet a hand shot up from the top of the straw and grabbed his arm.
"Jesus fuckin' Christ! What the fuck is ....." Vark screamed but before he could finish an entire head, torso and another arm were clasped around his middle in a frighteningly tight embrace.
"Hello Norbert!" the head said looking him straight in the face.
"Miss .. Mrs. K-Kotzka! Fuuuuuuuuck!" He shreiked as his feet faltered on the ladder. He struggled against the superhuman hold but it was useless. Mrs. Kotzka had acquired the strength of ants during her time in the formicary. Just to make sure Vark didn't escape the old man flitted up the ladder and pushed him over.
"Thank you my love," smiled the ant woman, who then turned to Vark and whispered, "I am the Queen of this nest now Norbert and you my dear are my coronation feast. After all the trouble you've caused us I shall enjoy you slowly, as will my many beautiful children. Have you met my children Norbert?"
Thousands of fiery ants erupted to the surface and eyed the intruder hungrily. The Queen then opened her mouth to release two huge jagged mandibles. With lightning speed she pincered Vark's face, his shredding cheeks coming away like fillets. The teenager writhed in agony as the ant woman licked at his gushing blood and leered at him with crimson lips.
"Children. Come." she whispered.
"Noooooooooooooo!" Vark yelled as his mouth filled with ants and his eyes were burnt away by formic spurts.
The Queen and her children dragged his flailing body deep into the tank and he was gone.
All that could be heard was a muffled suckling by countless mouths, one big, the rest small.
"Ah, what a lovely sound. Eat well my darling. Eat long and well!" smiled old Kotzka as he walked out of the cellar.
He went into the shop and placed a handwritten sign in the front window.
"Ant Shows postponed till next Month. Nesting Season has Started!".
Sunday, October 4, 2020
Dead.Not Dead Fly.
Stiff on its back the dead fly simmered in the sill sun. It had died the day before just before laying eggs on some rancid chicken. Job done.
The window had a bubble in the glass. It magnified the high noon sunshine into a hot beam of energy.
This beam hit the fly smack where its heart was. Despite shrivelling, the muscle twitched in the searing ray and made its first bu-dum in the fly's scorched chest.
It woke. Dead. Not dead.
Righting itself the dead not dead fly shuddered and shook its head. Hairs fell out that had been singed on the sill.
It gnashed its sucker and rubbed its hands like a dirty doctor. Fly was hungry. It flew through the open window.
It landed on a piece of liver melting near a wheelie bin. Spooning bile fly felt sick and puked it back up. Yuk! It thought.
Licking its legs it saw a shrew nosing round the rank grass. Fly jumped on its back and a loud zap flashed and cracked. The shrew howled in pain. Fly entered its mouth just before it died and clamped onto its heart, squeezing.
Shrew awoke. Dead. Not dead. It shat. Starving, it scurried off to the turkey farm for fresh meat. It shot up the big bird's arse just before it laid. Schwupp! A sharp slap snapped the Turkey's neck and it collapsed. Shrew burrowed deeper in where it kicked its aorta over and over until it thrummed again.
Turkey blinked. Dead. Not dead and was plucked from the pen for the butcher's window, where it hung like a shirt buttoned up. Bump. Bump. Bump. It made its way to the Christmas Table
Stuffed. Glazed. Basted. It quivered on the platter just before they carved. It stood and delivered shrew who delivered fly. They twitched in the gravy. The spark that hit the carving knife careened around the room and all the seated family fell as the lights blew. Dark.
They arose on Christmas afternoon as their friends came a knocking.
They all feasted late into the night and then went out of the house next door, where leftovers were being cling-filmed for the following day.
The bell rang. Hello.
They entered. Dead. Not dead.