Makeover for worst ending

October 30, 2010

I think that we should totally have a night theme. Like, a moon where the search pen is and so on.

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

Rune: the novel, Chapter Four

October 30, 2010

 At last, it was 11:50. I was relieved, because all night I had been thinking about Wheetweeve’s words. Mother needed a son. Instead, she got a fanatic. Over and over these words played themselves in my mind.

I crept out of the house, shutting the door as quietly as I could. I sprinted along the cobbled path that led to the statue of Leonard Bernstein. All of the lights were out in the houses. Good, I thought, no distractions. Then, distractions came flooding into my mind like a tidal wave.

I began to think about Mother, and how I hadn’t called her that in almost three years. I thought of Wheatweeve, and how I hadn’t talked to her unless I had to ever! And then, I thought about someone I hadn’t thought about since I was nine. I thought about myself. I watched myself sit in the wheat field on the day my brother was fedon. I saw Whetstone show me the Dreamblade, then walk through the gate. I viewed the Nightmares swarming around him. I watched as his sword did no good. I saw my nine-year-old self scream as Whetstone was cloaked in darkness. I remembered howling like a wounded animal as my brother’s body fell to the ground, soul gone.

I arrived ten minutes late. Douglas was pacing around, looking anxious. When he saw me, he ran to my side and whispered, “Where were you?!? You’re ten minutes late!”

“Sorry, I responded, Got held up. Listen, do you think this is a good idea? I mean, we could be fed on!”

“It’s a great idea! C’mon, let’s do it!”

We clambered up the guards’ ladders. Douglas carried the rucksack. I carried the rope. Slowly, we climbed nearer and nearer to the top. All the while, the two sides of my brain were locked in a battle of wits. Don’t go, said the reasonable side, One of you is going to be fed on!

Go ahead! said the other side, This is what you’ve been waiting for! A chance to stick it to the Nightmares!

What about Douglas?said my conscience, Do you want him to get fed on?!?

He’ll be fine, crooned my ego, He wants to go, remember!

By the time Douglas and I reached the top of the wall, my ego had won the brain battle. I was convinced that the plan would see us through. However, all went wrong within seconds.

I tied one end of the rope to a battlement on the wall, throwing the other into the darkness on the other side. “I’ll go first,” I said confidently. Douglas nodded. Carefully, I swung myself onto the rope. I swung side to side, but the strands of fiber held firm, keeping me from falling and injuring myself. Sighing with relief, I began to shimmey down the rope.

In a matter of minutes, I reached the bottom. “IT’S OK!,” I shouted up to Douglas, “YOU CAN COME DOWN NOW!”

Douglas was about half way down the rope when his hands slipped. He flew away from the wall, and landed with a sickening THUD! in the wheat field. “DOUGLAS!” I screamed, and ran to find my fallen friend.

“I’m al-OUCH-right,” said Douglas, who, despite his words, did not sound in the least bit alright.I found my friend lying on one side in the wheat. His leg was twisted at such an odd angle, it had to be broken. “Oh man,” I said, noticing how crooked Douglas’s broken leg was, “Man, I’m so sorry.”

“No-OUCH-problem. Let’s just get out of-oh gods NO!” my friend screamed.

I looked. Gliding over the hills were nightmares in all of the hideous forms they could take. Skeletons danced, werewolves howled, but, most of all, there was just the dark mist that nightmares became when they wished to move fast. The moment when I would face the nightmares had arrived and I was totally unprepared.

I tried to drag Douglas at first. But, he was too heavy. He outweighed me by several pounds. I tried toget him to stand. He managed to raise himself a couple of inches off the ground before falling back down.

I tried to think of a solution. Nothing came to mind. Then, Douglas said something that would haunt me for the rest of my life. “Go,” he said, “If you try to save me, we’ll both be fed on.”

“No way. No way I’m leaving you to die,” I said.

“There’s no other way,” my good, faithful, and only friend Douglas said.

Then, he used his last bit of strength to turn and face the wave of nightmares. “BRING IT!!!” were the last words I heard Douglas say before I was forced to turn and climb up the rope. By the time I reached the top of the wall, and turned to see what had become of Douglas, it was too late. The nightmares had enveloped him.

I didn’t cry. I couldn’t cry. I was beyond grief. I had no more friends. I was useless. And, worst of all, Wheatweeve had been right. I wasn’t a good son. I wasn’t even a good friend. I was just a revenge obsessed fanatic. And now, I didn’t even have douglas to confide in. I just sat on that wall, dreading the dawn.

Categories: Fantasy Fiction, Fiction, Inspirational Fiction, Must Reads.

Tags: ,

Rune: the novel, Chapter Three

October 28, 2010

Night, we had decided, was the perfect time to carry out our plan. The guards would have gone home, leaving the protective enchantments to sheild Intisa from the Nightmares. The enchantments kept the Nightmares out, but they didn’t keep people in. Douglas and I would meet at the statue of Leonard Bernson, Intisa’s first mayor at midnight, then climb up the ladders onto the wall. We would use rope to help us climb back down into the wheat field. I knew that today was my turn to to go to Market to get eggs, and I began to form a plan.

After my encounter with Douglas that morning, I returned home. I was very polite to Wheatweeve, and even called Silk ‘Mother’.

“What has gotten into you young man?” she asked, “Are you up to something?”

“No Mother,” I responded.

Silk went back to the kitchen, eyes brimming with tears. “Mother,” she whispered to herself,”My boy’s finally calling me Mother.” I glared at her when she turned her back. You killed Whetstone, I thought, You all killed Whetstone.

Wheatweeve was annoyed. “But,” she complained, “You’re supposed to be brooding and rude! Now you’re….Nice! Where’s the fun in THAT?!?”

I just smiled politly at her.

A couple of minutes later, Silk asked me to run to Market and get some eggs. She gave me enough newly sewn garments to trade for something for myself. I thanked her and ran off to Market.

I bought the eggs, as promised. Then, I went over to Twinemaster. He was selling thread, fishing line, and most importantly, rope.

“I’ve got a nice, warm shirt and some wollen, your size, that I’m willing to trade for ten feet of rope,” I said.

Twinemaster raised his eyebrows. “Ten feet?” the burly man said, “That’s a lot of rope yer gettin’ there. What’re ya plannin’ on usin’ so much fer?”

“An experiment,” I said, ” Me and my friend are trying to measure the height of his house.”

“Fine then,” grunted Twinemaster, “Do whatcha want to do.”

He handed me ten feet of sturdy looking rope. I thanked him, put it in my rucksack, and began walking towards home.

“Boys these days,” I heard Twinemaster grumble, “Doing experiments and suchn’t. In my day, we solved problems with our fists not with our blasted brains!”

~*~

I gave the eggs to Silk when I got home. When she asked what I had gotten for myself, I told her that I had bought a wooden sword. “He’s finally acting like a child,” Silk said as I walked up the stairs, “He’s finally having fun.”

An hour passed. I continued my goody-two shoes act, trying to please both Silk and Wheeteweeve. At one point, I almost gave myself away. I was packing my rucksack with the essentials Douglas and I would need for the night. As I was stuffing a long, sharp knife in, Wheetweeve opened my bedroom door.n I barely had time to shove the dagger in and close my rucksack.

“What is it?” I asked her.

Wheetweeve scowled. “You know exactly  what it is, Mr. ‘I’m-so-perfect’. I know you’re up to something! I will find out!”

“I’m not up to anything.”

“Really?!? Then, say that it wasn’t Mother’s falt that Whetstone died!”

I almost shouted then. I wanted to scream in her face, say “IT WAS HER FALT! IT WAS BOTH YOUR FALTS!” Instead I said, as calmly I could, “It wasn’t Mother’s falt that W-Whetstone died.”

My voice wavered a little bit when I said my brother’s name. But, Wheatweeve didn’t notice. “FINE,” she said, “Maybe you have gotten over his death. But, I still don’t forgive you for all these years you’ve been moping. Mother needed a son after Whetstone died. Instead, she got a FANATIC!”

Then, she stormed out of the room, leaving me shaken and, to my own surprise, weeping.

Categories: Fantasy Fiction, Fiction, Inspirational Fiction, Must Reads.

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Rune:the novel Chapter Two

October 28, 2010

“Hello Mr. Jordon! Stopping by for some light reading?” joked Librarian. This had been a running joke for ever since my brother was fed on. It had happened by accident. After I had seen Whetstone step towards the three nightmares, try to kill them, and fail, I went straight to the library, desperate for knowlage that would help me kill the nightmares. ‘In for some light reading?’ Librarian had asked.

“Yes, of course I am,” I replied.

I went to my usual corner of the library and began searching for books. All of the volumes I had already read were there, as well as a new title. It was a book called, Nightmares; Everything We Know, by Reedy Melspike. I gasped. An author without a true name! Why, this book must be from the East, from the city of Gadorous! Maybe they know things there that we don’t!

I left the library disappointed. More of the same. Nightmares can’t be killed. Don’t waste your life. I refused to believe it. There has to be a way to kill nightmares, I thoght, Has to be!

“SILAS! HEY!”

I turned to see my friend Douglas running towards me. He had black, bristly hair, was short and squat, and had arms that spun like a windmill when he ran. His dark skin seemed even darker today, for clouds swirled ominously in the sky.

“Hey…Silas,” my friend panted, “I…get…my true…name tomorrow. They hinted that…it might…be Harvester! All because my dad was a baker! It sucks!”

“Well,” I said, “the only way you’ll get a couragous true name is if you do something heroic.”

“Like what?”

“You know old Mrs. Jackson?” I asked.

“Yeah,” Douglas replied.

“Well, some idiots took her broach and threw it way out into the wheat field beyond the wall.”

“So you mean…” Douglas said, in awe.

“Yes. I mean we go past the boundaries to get it.”

Categories: Fantasy Fiction, Fiction, Inspirational Fiction, Must Reads.

Tags: ,

continuing on…. Here, there, and everywhere

October 27, 2010
Death is a beautiful thing. There’s flowers and music and tears and a pastor that talks about how wonderful the dead person was and all the good things they did. He never talks about all the things they did wrong or all the ways they messed up or how dumb or plumb-crazy they were. I think I might like to be dead.My dad’s funeral was today, it was nice. A bunch of people came, my father was a well liked man. I wondered why I had never meant any of them before.

My second day back at school (one week after our conversation) I had gotten a visit from the police. My dad didn’t die saving anyone, he didn’t die because he was witness to a murder, he didn’t die to make a difference. He just plain out died.  He’d slipped away when I needed him most but I did enjoy that funeral. I also thought that dead must be kind of nice for me… He didn’t have to work or worry or be confused “no” more. He could just rest peacefully with God in heaven forever and ever and all eternity. At least that’s where the pastor said he was going. I’m not exactly sure what God or heaven is. I’ve read about them and I know that God’s a being and heaven’s a place but otherwise it just confuses the heck (word of the day–it’s a nice way to say hell which is a bad place) out of me.  I had asked dad about it before he died and he hadn’t stepped inside a church (a place where people come to talk about God and get preached at) since my mama died. He said that my mama had been a fearsome believer to behold and loved to go around saving people. Dad said that she had saved him too (literally) from the clutches of some girl that had been wanting to marry him. He said that my mama had her turned round’ and running like her pants were on fire before you could say “I do”. Then she brought him to church where he came under  Holy Conviction and then she brought him home for Sunday supper. Tyla-Mae Tomas and the renowned saxophone player “steady” Eddie Wilkins were married the following Sunday. My Mama was a woman who knew what she wanted and went after it with a passion that scared most folks off. Dad said she died in bed praying fervently for souls to come to Jesus’ sweet arms.Just before dad died, I had almost felt ready to think of him as “daddy” but then I’d found out he’d lied to me. The day before the funeral I found out I had a grandmother (my dad’s mother) who I heard about and met and moved in with all in the same day.

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

The Silence

October 26, 2010

5:34 am Friday

The cool air embraced me as I skipped down my front steps.  It was our favorite time of the day, but today only I could really enjoy it.  The sun had yet to wake up fully, and the ground was covered with a sparkling layer of dew.  Best of all, it was silent.  There were no loud neighbors yelling at their dogs, no little kids screaming, and no cars speeding by.   As I stretched my legs and started jogging, I started my  breathing chant.  In, out, in, out. It was so simple, two little words, and soon my mind was clear.  I wasn’t thinking of school, people, life or death.  I was free of emotions.  I was simply running and living.

“How was it?” Emily asked as I came into our room, damp with sweat and breathing heavily.   She was jealous, just as she was every morning I ran.  “Boring.” I lied easily.  “Elizabeth, was it quiet?” she asked.  “Yes” I replied, and as I said it I looked at her crestfallen face.  She was fading before my eyes, and I was scared she was simply going to disappear one day.  The chemo had barely helped, and we both knew she had little time left.  As I showered and slipped into my clothes, I unsuccessfully tried to think of comforting words to say.  Instead, I just kissed her pale cheek and went downstairs to eat and leave for school.

The Silence had always been our secret escape in life.   I remember when Emily was first going through high school drama, I would wake up to the sound of her slipping out the front door, never stopping to look back.  She rarely stretched, she was always too impatient; she would just take off, the wind whipping her thick ponytail around.  But, now she sat on her bed, quietly painting her nails and avoiding the mirror on our dresser.  Everything reminded her of her fading life, from her balding scalp to her clothes that now fall off her.  She was never able to clear her mind of morbid thoughts, thanks to the constant stream of tearful visitors with casseroles, un-helpful doctor appointments, and awkward phone calls.  Even when I got her to laugh, she would quickly stop as if happiness might make death come even sooner.

During school I thought of her sitting at home, just waiting for me to come home with exciting gossip, most of which I made up.  I went through my routine, class after class, praying the clock would speed up.  Finally, I was on the bus driving home.  I sat alone, and closed my eyes.

“Emie!  Emie!  Don’t go!”  Elizabeth wailed as she banged her chubby fists on the window.   She watched, through eyes full of tears, as the big yellow car took away her sister, her protector.   Her little mind tried to understand why her mommy would let them separate her from her sister.  Breakfast, playtime, lunch, nap…it all dragged on.  But she waited stubbornly by the front window, for the return of her Emie.   Finally she came home and scooped up her baby sister in her soft seven year old arms.  Emie kissed little Beth on the cheek and promised she would always come back for her.  Elizabeth sat by Emie and watched her do her homework and eat her snack, silently enjoying the safe feeling of being with her Emie.

I tried to imagine her leaving me and never coming back, and I felt that familiar tightening of my throat.  I quickly turned my ipod to my LOUD! playlist, the one with the music that drowned out my mind.  As I hopped off the bus, I saw her waiting for me by the front window.  Our roles had switched, and I didn’t like it any better.

2:27 am Saturday

I woke up to the sound of her in the bathroom, throwing up the small amount of food she had eaten at dinner.  I crept silently to her and held back her thin, wisps of hair.  As I went to flush the toilet I noticed blood in the vomit.  She leaned heavily on me as she brushed her teeth and washed her thin hands.  We tried to be quiet, but as we were leaving the bathroom the hall light turned on.  We turned to see our alarmed parents standing there.  Mom quickly over-whelmed Emily with questions.  When they found out she had thrown up blood Dad called the doctor and Mom grabbed the hospital bag.  Before I had time to grab a jacket, Dad was carrying Emily and Mom was dragging me out the door.

6:12 am

“Elizabeth, darling” my mother’s grief-striken voice slowed impeded my mind, and I jerked awake.  I had fallen asleep in the depressing waiting-room.  “Elizabeth, the Doctor said it wont be long.  You should go see her, before…” her voice cracked and she walked away with shaking shoulders.  I followed her to the room, summoning all self-control.  When I walked in, I saw my father, silently crying and holding her hand.  She was still as a statue.  My body was suddenly numb and my heart raced in my chest.  Somehow, I made it to her bed, and grabbed her other hand.  She slowly turned her head to me and softly murmered “I love you, don’t be sad.”  I buried my head in her hand and tried to slow my flow of tears.  She gently lifted my face and I saw a flicker of a smile cross her face.  “It’s quiet” she whispered, and then her eyes closed, her hand fell from mine and her heart stopped beating.  Before my mind fully comprehended what had happened, I realized she had gotten what she had wanted for so long.  No pain, no noise and no fear.

Categories: WORST.

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Skullduggery’s Rune

October 26, 2010

Skullduggery wanted to let y’all know that while he hasn’t been on WE in a while, he’s still working at Rune.

Can’t wait for you to be back with more, SD!

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

Urban Habitat (not related to the story)

October 25, 2010

1. I want to eat from a bowl shaped like the shell of a turtle.

I want to brush my hair with a comb like the spine of a fish.

I want to wear a scarf like the dry, cool skin of a snake.

I want to live in a jungle of everyday objects that conceal

tigers.

2. In the novels on the shelves are secret butterflies with

paper wings and book mark thoraxes.

Thin, tubular eels slumber in my sock drawer,

and, sheltering in the beads on my bracelet

are twenty nine potato bugs.

3. I want to be surrounded by secret animals

that you see only with half-closed eyes.

I want to watch them chase each other,

sneakily, so that you can’t see the movement

if you’re looking for it.

I want to watch my hidden creatures

run circles on my ceiling at night.

4. I have a lemon in my hand,

and only I can see the other turtle,

the citrus turtle, not the upside-down bowl one.

5. This is the only way I can truly know

animals.

Categories: Poetry.

Tags: ,

Tambourine – Eight (part two out of three)

October 22, 2010

Behind the covered wagon there are people. A redheaded girl, her great mane of hair wrestled into a white ribboned ponytail, croons over a ragged doll. A boy grabs at a frog, hooting for the redhead to join the chase, but she ignores him. An older girl-woman leans against the wagon, fiddling with a knot in her hands, staring darkly at the sky. Her face is covered in bright red leisons, frighteningly white against her flat crow-black hair, and flakes like snow fall from her face every time she moves her head.
Lizzy, the girl who found me first, plunges ahead and grabs the girl-woman’s arm.
“I found someone,” she says.
“She’s a ghost!” the boy says, abandoning the frog and running toward me.
“She’s not,” Lizzy says, sticking out her tongue.
“Of course she isn’t a ghost, Jimmy,” the girl-woman says reproachfully, her eyes never leaving me. She steps forward, Lizzy still hanging from her arm. “Hey,” she says. “I’m Marion.”
Jimmy stops and stands motionlessly, watching me.
“Hey,” I say hesitantly. I take a deep breath. I’m not scared, but there are so many people… they are not touching me, but I feel like they’re crawling all over me.
I look over at the redheaded girl, still playing with the doll. She looks over her shoulder and smiles. Her face is completely red, open and oozing. I’m startled. She goes back to her play, unconcerned.
“You have the Disease?” Marion asks.
I do not understand her.
She steps even closer and taps the cloth wrapped around my face. I flinch. “We all have it. You don’t have to hide your face if you stick with us.”
“I’m not sick,” I say.
Marion looks at me sympathetically.
“What’s wrong – ” I pause.
She watches me for a second, then gets a hard look on her face. “What’s wrong with us? Is that what you’re asking?” Her voice is angry.
I nod slowly.
“Yeah, well, some babies are kissed by angels at birth, and they get good luck and good looks. We were kissed by demons.”
Lizzy drops Marion’s arm and looks up at her with big eyes.
Marion softens and shakes her head gently, patting the top of Lizzy’s head. “No. We just got a hard lot. We have the Disease, only we’re not rich and we don’t got parents, so there’s no way for us to get the cure. So the Home for Orphans kicked us out of their building, and the city officials kicked us out of the city, so we get to make do on the outskirts.”
“I’m near the city?” I ask, suddenly hopeful.
“Yeah,” Marion says. “Right outside.”
I’m thrilled, but with a rush of memory I am left empty. What is left for me in the city? The man left me, and Rawnie is sick. She is probably glad not to have to keep a freak with her buisness. I would have kept customers out with my face. My hands go up to the cloth around my face.
“What’s it like there?” I ask.
“You’ve never been?” Marion asks, incredulous.
“No.”
“It’s clean,” she says. “And prissy.” She stares at me curiously. “What’s your name?”
“Tambourine,” I say. “I’m from the other side.”
“Just passing through, then, Tambourine?” she asks.
“Maybe,” I say.
Instantly she’s wary. “We don’t have much food. Water, but that’s it.”
“I have food,” I say. “And a little water.”
“You have food?” Lizzy chirps, tired of being ignored. “What kind of food?”
“Lizzy,” Marion hisses, but she looks up at me hopefully.
I walk behind Jasper and rummage in the cart. I take out the half-full basket of cactus leaves. Lizzy makes a face. The little boy – Jimmy – walks up, too, and hovers hopefully beside Marion. I look in another bag, and find nuts. They smell a little musty, but when I look up, I know I’ve found a treasure.
“Oh,” Marion gasps.
I am glad. I hand her the bag.
“Ours? All of them?” she asks, surprised, her eyes suddenly looking scared and young and wondering.
I feel shy and pleased. I drop my head.
“This will taste good with rat,” Marion says.
I nod, peeking back up at her. Her in-control face is back. She smiles.
I search the cart for any more unexpected treats. I find only the water jars, the tent matierals, a few blankets, two trunks of Rawnie’s dresses that Marion eyes longingly but I don’t let her have, a bag of Christoph’s clothes, and Rawnie’s colorful bags. I don’t open them. I feel like it would be wrong to touch her carvings and tools without her there.
I unharness Jasper and let him roam.
Marion leans against the covered wagon again and says, “You can stick with us for a while, if you want.”
“Thank you,” I say. “I – I will. For a while.”
She smiles faintly at me, pulls a knotted string from her pocket, and starts trying to unravel it. “It’s an impossible knot,” she says softly. “My father is the only one who can tie them.”
I would have watched her longer, but Lizzy runs up to me and tugs at my arm.
“Do you know how to play jumprope?” she asks. She looks behind her at Jimmy, who is drawing something on the ground with a stick. “Jimmy is setting it up.”
“No,” I say.
“I’ll show you.” She drags me over to him. Her hand is warm on my arm, but in a moment her touch is gone and she throws herself down to sit beside Jimmy. Jimmy scowls at her.
“Can she play?”
Lizzy tosses her head. “Of course. I told you she could.”
I watch them, my hands hanging awkwardly at my sides. “I don’t – ”
“I’ll go first,” Jimmy interupts me. He grabs a rope from the ground and grabs onto either side. As he spins it around, hopping over it, he counts. He gets to twenty-three before Lizzy shouts:
“You jumped out of the circle!”
He drops the rope. “I did not!”
“Yes you did! I saw! Your foot went out! She saw it too, didn’t she? Tam-bor-een, didn’t you see his foot go out of the circle?”
I look down and see that he had been jumping in the middle of a wobbly circle drawn in the dirt.
“Oh, I didn’t see – “
“See? You’re a cheater!” the boy shouts.
I start to back away.
“I am not!”
“Wait,” the boy says suddenly, seeing me leave. “Don’t leave. Do you want a turn?” His voice is suddenly kind.
“I don’t know how – “
“I’ll show you,” he says firmly.
He hands me the rope, and I try to hold it with both of my hands. But my crippled hand loses its grip again and again before I can try to twirl the rope over me.
“I am not a cheater, Jimothy Brown,” Lizzy hisses under her breath.
“Are too, Lizzy Nobody,” he hisses back. Then they notice me watching and stop fighting.
I try again, harder. My crippled hand trembles with the effort, but does not hold. I drop the rope to the ground and stare silently back at them.
“What’s wrong?” Jimmy asks.
“My hand – “ I say, my face burning with shame. I am glad they can’t see my reddening skin under my turban.
“What’s wrong with your hand?” Lizzy asks. Jimmy glares at her. “What?” she asks defensively.
“It’s crippled,” I say.
Lizzy stares at it. “Does it hurt?” she asks.
“No.”
“Oh, good,” she says. “If we find a longer rope, me and Jimmy can swing it while you jump.” She runs to Marion and Jimmy follows her. I stay behind, standing in the circle with the rope, feeling useless.
Marion looks at me while they explain, then climbs into the covered wagon to hunt for another rope.
I sprint across the camp to Jasper’s side, throwing my arms around his bristly neck. He brays in protest, but I am kneeling with my arms around him and I can’t let go. I do not know how to play. And if they saw my face under my pretty blue turban, they wouldn’t want me to play with them, anyway. I close my eyes.
“It’s alright,” an airy voice says quietly beside me. My eyelids snap open and I look over to see the redhead girl with her oozing face standing beside me. She holds out her doll. I watch her warily.
“You can hold her,” she says.
I look into its gray face and blue cracked buttons for eyes. I let go of Jasper and gingerly take it in my good hand, cradling its head against my arm.
“Her name is Beauty,” the girl says softly. “She’s my sister.”
I look up at the girl. Our eyes meet.
“Why do you hide your face?” she asks.
“To protect me from the sun,” I say.
“That’s not the only reason,” she says. I hand her back Beauty and she smiles.
I pull out my wood elephant and hand it to her. “She reminds me of Princess. She was a baby elephant at the circus, with little tiny tusks. They would dress her up in beads around her neck and feathers tied to her ears and scarlet paint around her eyes and little gold suns painted all over her back. Sometimes they would paint her whole trunk gold. Those days she didn’t even look like an elephant, she looked like a demon.”
Jo brought out the angels in people. I hear Mia’s voice and it stabs me with guilt. I do not even know why.
“Did she like that?” the girl asked with wide eyes.
“Never,” I say.
“I wouldn’t,” she says. She hands me back my elephant. “Do you want to play?”
“I don’t know how,” I whisper, blushing. I search and find Marion emerging from the wagon, triumphantly waving a long rope in her hand. My stomach twists.
“Not with them,” she says gently. “Beauty and your elephant.”
I look at her. Her face is like an open wound, bleeding and gummy with pus. Scabs are caked around her eyelids, and her eyelashes are stuck together with pus. They’re puffy, I can barely make out the green-gray of her irises. But I see a softness in her eyes.
“Alright,” I say.
She sits down. We are standing in a patch of scrabbly grass. I sit beside her and self-conciously place my elephant between us.
The girl holds Beauty in her lap and leans over her. “I have a new friend for you to meet, Beauty,” she says. “You must be very nice.” Then she looks up at me expectantly.
I reach for my elephant and place her in my own lap. She is much smaller than Beauty, so I have to balance her carefully on my leg and try hard not to move. “I have a new friend for you to meet, elephant,” I say.
“She needs a name,” the girl says.
“Why?”
“Everyone needs a name,” the girl says. “Mine is Nona.”
“Mine is Tambourine,” I say.
“Name her something special. Like the name of someone you miss.”
“Mia,” I say without thinking.
“Hello, Mia,” she says, waving Beauty in the air like Beauty is the one talking.
“Hello,” I mumble, touching Elephant Mia’s back.
“We’re going to the moon today, to make the moon children jealous of our wings,” Nona says.
“We are?” I stare at her.
“In the story,” she says.
“Oh.”
“Come on, Mia,” she says, and lifts Beauty up in the air like she’s flying.
I lift Elephant Mia up and twirl her in the air.
“Wow, you are incredible at flying,” Nona makes Beauty say.
I blush. “Thank you,” I have Elephant Mia say. “Are we really going to fly to the moon?”
“Yes,” Nona says with wide eyes.
“What’s it like on the moon?” I ask, looking up. But it’s too bright for me to stare for long, I drop my gaze back to Playing.
“White. And all the moon children wear silver gowns and they sing instead of talk, but none of them have wings because they aren’t angels.”
“Really?”
“Really,” Nona says, suddenly Nona and not Beauty. “Sometimes I look up and I see them shimmering there on the white. They wait for wishes there, and when a good wish comes, one of them catches it and turns into an angel. Angels have wings, so the new angel can fly down to earth and make the wish come true. After that, they are the wisher’s guardian angel.”
“What’s a guardian angel?”
“An angel who protects you and gives you invisible gifts,” she says seriously. “And even,” she leans in close to whisper. “Makes you a little more beautiful every day.”
I stare at her, my mind tossing in the spell of her breezy voice.
“Why are you over here?” Jimmy is back, now holding a new rope. I blink, looking up at him and Lizzy who runs up behind him.
“I’m playing,” I say. A swell of pride rolls in my chest at my words. Playing.
“I thought you were playing with us,” Jimmy says.
“I don’t know how,” I say, anxious. I do not want to make them angry, but I love playing with Nona.
Jimmy shrugs. “Come on, Lizzy,” he says loudly, patting her on her shoulder. “She’s Nona’s friend, not ours.” Something in Lizzy’s face broke as she looked at me.
“No!” I say, up on my feet hurriedly, dropping Elephant Mia on the dirt. “I don’t mind, I mean, I want – ”
Nona looks up at me, her face unreadable. Lizzy watches me with an expression that looks like she wants to swallow my words whole and keep them forever. Jimmy looks annoyed.
I feel miserable.
“Can’t we all play?” I ask. “Together?”
They all stare at me.
“She’s odd,” Lizzy whispers. We all hear her.
Nona turns away and gently smoothes Beauty’s face.
“Why?” I say, something hot rising in my chest.
“Her stories,” Jimmy says awkwardly. “She believes them.”
“Why shouldn’t she?”
“Well,” he says. “They aren’t true.”
“They aren’t?” The heat in my chest twists and crawls into the root of my throat, simmering.
He stares at me. “Don’t you know anything?”
The heat leaps out of my throat and its name flashes across my eyes, Anger.
“Yes,” I say. “I do. I know that Nona tells beautiful stories. And Beauty is beautiful. I like her. She’s my friend, and you are like a circus,” I say. But this time, I do not want to run. I want to fight.
Jimmy’s eyes flash.
I throw myself back down on the ground beside Nona pick up Elephant Mia. “I’m flying to the moon!” I shout, and spin her through the air. Nona smiles incredulously at me, a wide crack in her bleeding face. I smile back.
“Beauty is ugly,” Jimmy spits.
I glare up at him.
“And so is Nona,” he says.
I leap up. The air rushing against my face as I move suddenly shocks me, and I wobble on my feet feeling small and scared. I want to curl up into a tight ball. I turn away.
Nona is hunched over Beauty, whispering, “It’s okay, I don’t mind. It’s true, after all. You’re the beautiful sister.”
I spin around and smash my good fist into Jimmy’s shoulder. He yelps and leaps back, then raises his own fists. I stare him square in the face, blazing.
“What do you think you’re doing?” Marion grabs Jimmy back and glares at me.
My bravado deflates. My knees are rubbery as I open my mouth. “I – ”
“Don’t even think about giving me excuses.”
“I hit him,” I say.
“Yeah,” she says. “Get out.”
I stand frozen.
“I said get out,” she says. “I don’t know who you are. I don’t know how old you are. Under that blanket, who even knows what you are!”
“I – ”
“Take your mule and your nuts and walk,” Marion says. “You can’t attack the children.”
Suddenly I feel Nona’s hand take mine. It is small and cold, despite the heat of the desert sun. “I’m going with her.”
Marion takes a step backward. “What?”
“Tambourine is my guardian angel,” she says calmly.
Lizzy looks up at Marion. “Jimmy was being mean,” she says.
“You were being mean, too,” Jimmy hisses under his breath.Then he shrugs. “Don’t make her leave. I – we were teasting Nona. I don’t think she understood.”
“It wasn’t just teasing,” I say.
“Oh, grand,” Marion groans. “Come on, Jimmy. You know Lizzy follows you. Buck up and act like a man.”
Jimmy drops his head, scuffing the dirt with the toe of his boot.
“Tambourine – ” she says, looking at me. “We don’t fight here. We’ve got enough hot-headed judgement scowling at us. We don’t need it inside.”
I nod.
“Do you have the Disease?” Marion asks abruptly.
“I’m not sick,” I say.
“You’re going to get it now,” she says gruffly. “But if you don’t have it, why do you hide your face?”
“To protect it from the sun.”
“Right.”
I just stare somberly back at her.
“Listen,” she says, her hand resting on her hip. “There are no secrets in this family. If you want to be one of us, you’re going to have to take it off. None of us hide our faces, no matter how far the Disease has taken us.” She glances at Nona, who watches me placidly.
Panic rattles in my stomach.
She’s my guardian angel.
I’m not! I’m not I’m not I’m not. I’m the Origional Fruit of the Devil.
Jo! I call out with all my body, tears wobbling behind my eyes.
You can do whatever you want to do, I hear him saying, angry. You are a beautiful person in all the ways that matter.
I take a deep breath and drop my head to the ground as I reach up to my turban. I feel the roughened, sun cooked state of it as I slip my hands inside and begin to unravel it. I let it slip past my face and my body and to the ground, my eyes shut tight.
I am standing on my show box. The air smells like the almond perfume of the woman in front of me, her hair braided into a wrapped, elegant bun and veiled with a thin pink scarf. She is wearing a pink dress, and she looks beautiful. I stare at her, at her perfect skin and limbs, her gorgeous wholeness, until she steps back and grimaces.
“I swear,” she says in an ugly voice. “What kind of a zoo is it that oogles you right back?”
She walks away, thin chin propped up on the air, two fat, trussed children flouncing after her.
I gather all my strength and stand still, letting the eyes comb my face and belly and arms and legs, each of them taking me body with them as they walk away, and along with my body a little piece of my self. My skin aches with their glances, like every look gives me a tiny yellow-purple bruise.
A ruddy faced man jostles his son. “There’s a wife for you, boy!”
His son yelps with laughter, sticking his fingers in his mouth and spitting on my foot. I do not move. I must not move. “Incredible, the demons these circuses unearth. Where do they find them?”
“Smooching Hades, I assume,” the father says.
My sandal is wet with his bubbly saliva. I feel it soak through its thin make and dampen my skin.
“You can stay,” the son says. Suddenly he shrinks, then slims, then sprouts black hair. He becomes Marion looking at me anxiously. “You can stay,” she says again.
I stare at her.
She twiddles the knot in her hands. “You can stay with us, if you want. You’re only little, aren’t you? Eight?”
“Nine,” I say.
I feel Nona looking, but I ignore her, looking instead at Marion.
“I’m a Marvel,” I say.
She smiles queerly. “You are,” she says. “You’ll match up with us quite nicely. Welcome to the family. If you want.”
“Yes,” I say.
Marion nods and walks briskly back to the wagon.
I look over at Jimmy. He doesn’t meet my eyes, but I know he feels my gaze. “I’m sorry for hitting you,” I say.
“Yeah,” he says. He looks up into my face and attempts a small smile. Then he takes Lizzy’s hand and walks away. I hear them start jumprope again.
I look at Nona hesitantly. She just grins at me.
“You’re not scared of me?” I ask.
“You’re not scared of me,” she says.
“I’m not a guardian angel.”
“Why not?” she says. “Maybe you are, and you just don’t know it.”
“Thank you,” I say.
She smiles.
I sit down, and she sits too.
We play.

Categories: Fiction.

Tambourine – Eight (part one)

October 20, 2010

“Jo did this to me, too,” I say.
Jasper dutifully sets one knobbly hoof in front of the other, ignoring me.
“We might die,” I say. He swings his neck up to stare at me, bored.
The desert looks bigger on my feet instead of riding. The skinny, hopeful trees are less heralds of a swiftly rushing wave of civilazation, more like just another long dry mile ticked off, one out of one hundred. My legs feel sick. They know what it means to have so much walking ahead.
I am already scared to dip my hands into the last full water jar. I cup my hands pooled with water under Jasper’s mouth and let him lick the water out with his rough, sticky tongue. I suck off each finger once he’s done, tasting my skin’s salt and his dusty saliva in the fat drops of water.
As we walk, I scrutinize the ground. Knarled tree branches and twisty sage brush make me jump. The rough grass looks secretive. Even slithery pools of sun on the rocks make me shudder, thinking of snakes and Rawnie’s scream.
Clods of dry animal waste cook on the ground. Flies congregate, biting each other away from the feast. Again I think of the circus. Are they in the city now, getting fat on glutting rich men’s greed for shocking entertainment? Or are they still pushing slowly through the desert, a great wheeled trap, ready to snatch me back? I have only Jasper to stop them.
I look over at him. He snuffles a clumpy pile of manure, sneezing flies.
I smile. The circus will be in the city. These are someone else’s animals’ tracks. I am safe. Now we just walk, numb to everything except the heat and our aching feet.
Something red catches my ankle. It is a red scarf, pink with dust, rough with sun and matted fuzz. I hold it, staring, wondering what something so warm is doing in the desert.
Snow. The memory comes falling, floating white on the air, kissing the ground and my cheeks and the glass on windows. I remember cold, rain turning to slush knee-deep in leafy fall, slush hardening into hail and sheets of ice, ice softening into lacy flakes bundling the grass in thick white, making fire look feeble and small next to its great purity. I remember slipping to my knees to match my cinnamon arms against the snow, finding my paleness to be so dark on its white.
I remember cold that opened my bones and made my arm hair stand up straight and attentive. I remember being wet all over with snow, every cell soaking the cold wet delicious hydration, the lovely chill in my skin, the cold making my skin pink and my eyes bright. I remember the awakeness of being cold, the waking thrill of it.
The heat and the slow, drooping brain of the desert curls around my body like a constricting snake, my fingers sticking to each other with sweat and my arms sticking my my sides and my skin sticking to my bones and my bones sticking to my lungs muscles blood. I think I’m melting, like a snowflake falling on the great dark length of my skin and turning to a dull smudge in my heat.
I hear laughter. I look up.
A small covered wagon with faded pink canvas sits close by.
Laughter again. “Oh, look, Jimmy. There’s a flower,” a girl says.
“Sissy girl!” a boy taunts.
“I am not!” Something crunches.
“Mariiiion she just STEPPED on a FLOWER!” the boy belts.
“It – isn’t – my – fault! Don’t listen to her!” the girl shouts.
A girl with swinging braids runs around the wagon and throws herself behind the wheel, a dramatic pout pulling her lips down. Then she looks up into my face.
I stop walking, but she springs up and runs to me.
“Who are you?”
I watch her. Her legs are wrapped in thick, striped stockings, and her arms are gangly, wagging at her sides.
“Did your voice break?” she asks softly.
“No,” I say.
“Okay,” she says, smiling widely, revealing a toothy smile. I stare back at her hands. “Are you a ghost? Because you’re all wrapped up…”
My hands go to my turban swathing my face and tucked up in my hair. “No,” I say. “I’m not a ghost. I’m just – ”
“Good, because Jimmy says he saw a ghost and I told him there are no ghosts.” She peers up at me, her eyes a bright brown and her skin flaky pale except for a large, red sore on her cheek.
“Who are you?”
She shrugs. “I’m Lizzy. I’ll take you to Marion, okay?” She looks behind me at Jasper. “Oh!” She runs and throws her arms around his neck. He ducks his head up and down as she scrubs the roots of his ears with her fingernails.
She turns to me. “Come on. Marion will want to meet you.”
I follow her.

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

Standards

October 17, 2010

There are around or about twenty-eight definitions to the word standard.  They range from a long tapering flag or ensign to morals, ethics, habits… but the most common is perhaps this one:

“An average or normal requirement, quality, quantity, level,grade,etc.”
In other words… standards = normalcy.
Don’t you just hate it?

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

Unglossed

October 15, 2010

Hey, girl WEsters! Robyn and I have started an online magazine, and we’d love it if you could contribute writing to it.  If you have the time and inclination, we would be so so so so so blessed by your input!

So far, this is for girls only. Sorry guys!

LINK: unglossed.wordpress.com

We are currently accepting submissions that fall under the following topics:

Articles: Unglossed truth about real beauty, fake beauty, and everything that falls between – like confidence and self-esteem.

Ordinary Testimonies: Undramatized testimonies of real girls struggling with real problems – and doing really beautiful things.

Photography : Unaltered shots of real beauty – girls doing big things, girls without make-up smiling straight at the camera, girls being selfless and brave.

Poetry: Unblinded words that strike us deep about beauty and being beautiful.

If you have something that you think goes with our mission, but we don’t have a place for it yet, send it to us anyway and we’ll consider it.

Please include your name, a short bio, and an email we can contact you at. Send all submissions to unglossed@gmail.com.

THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

Life, Religion, and Other Perplexing Phenomena (Warning: contains gore)

October 11, 2010

     In  the  beginning,  there  was  only  emptiness.  Nothing   existed,  not  earth,  gods  or  men .  And  so  it  was  for  an  immeasurable length of   time. 

      Then,  there  was  something.  That  something  was  our  greatest  god,  Ometecuhtli,  he  who   encompasses  all  opposing  forces.  Ometecuhtli  was  alone  in  the  emptiness.  Through  sheer  force  of  will,  he  created  a  place  to  exist:  Omeyocan,  the  place  of  duality.  Ometecuhtli  was  still  dissatisfied.  What  good  was  a  world  without  others  to  share  it  with?  So  Ometecuhtli  made   many  gods,  and   the  greatest  of  them  were  the  four  brothers.

     They  were  Tezcatlipoca  the  trickster,  Quetzalcoatl  the  wise,  Xipe  Totec  the  generous  ,  and  Huitzilopochtli  the  warrior.  The  four  brothers  looked  around  them,  and  saw  that  emptiness  existed  outside  of  Omeyocan;  an  emptiness  that  could  be  filled  with  substance. 

     The  gods  created  the  sky  below  Omeyocan,   the  earth  below  the  sky,  and  Mictlan,  land  of  the  dead,  below  the  earth.  They  surrounded  the  earth  with  ocean,  and  created  people  to  populate  the  empty  planet.  But  no  matter  how  many  times  they  tried,  the  gods  could  not  make  a  race  that  survived.  They  would  fall  into  the  waters  of  the  ocean  and  be  devoured  by  a  sea  monster  called Cipactli.

     The  four  brothers  destroyed  the  beast.  They  used  her  head  to  make  the  thirteen  heavens,  her  body  to  protect  the  earth,  and  her  tail  to  hold  the  nine  underworlds.  And  so  the  universe  floated  upon  the  back  of  Cipactli. 

     To  complete  the  world,  the  gods  needed  the  right  sun  to  keep  their  people  warm.  They  created  a  sun  by  sacrificing  Tezcatlipoca.  They  populated  this  first  world  with  giants  that  ate  only  acorns,  but  Tezcatlipoca  grew  bored  of  racing  through  the  sky,  so  he  sent  jaguars  to  destroy  the  giants.  The  gods  made  three  more  suns,  sacrificing  one  of  their  own  each  time  to  create  it.  However,  each  time  the  world  fell  into  chaos,  and  the  sun  was  destroyed  through  Tezcatlipoca’s  treachery . 

     When there  was  no  world  left,  and  no  humans,  Quetzalcoatl  stole  the  blood  and  bones  of  sacrifices  from  Mictlan,  and  created  a  new  race  of  men.  The  humble  god  Nanahuatzin  was  chosen  as  the  sun,  and  the  proud  god  Tecuciztecatl became  the  moon.  The  gods  gave  their  own  blood  to  the  sun  and  moon  so  they  would  have  the  energy  to  rush  through  the  heavens.

     Quetzalcoatl  sent  the  new  humans  down  to  earth.  Those  people  were  our  ancestors,  the  first  Aztecs.  In  gratitude,  we  worship  the  gods.  The  gods  were  hungry,  so  we  fed  them  with  our  own  blood  just  as  the  gods  sacrificed  themselves  long  ago  to  give  us  life.  These  sacrifices  keep  the  good  gods  strong,  and  the  bad  gods  weak.  Should  we  forget  our  gratitude  and  abandon  the  sacrifice,  the  world  would  sink  into  chaos  once  more…

    

      The  earth  was  dark  and  wet  from  rain  in  the  night.  Moisture  dripped  off  the  vegetation.  There  was  greenness  in  varying  shades  all  around.  Wet,  dripping  greenness.  Birds  called  out  in  musical,  cacophonous  gibberish.  Drip.  Drip.  Drip.

     The  mountains  were  covered  in  dripping  green,  their  bases  wreathed  in  mists.  Amongst  these  verdant  goliaths  was  a  lake,  and  at  its  centre  was  a  city.  The  city  was  Tenochtitlan.  The  people  that  lived  there  were  the  Aztecs.

     The  streets  were  wide,  clean,  and  crowded.  It  seemed  like  the  entire  population  had  abandoned  their  houses  on  this  damp  winter  day.  At  least  half  the  citizens  were  carrying  homemade  banners  emblazoned  with  sun  mandalas,  bright  animals,  and,  primarily,  a  single,  distinctive  figure.  This  figure  was  a  warrior  dressed  in  leopard  skins  and  eagle  feathers.  In  one  hand,  he  held  a  shield,  and  in  the  other,  a  live  serpent.  His  face  was  painted,  as  for  a  battle.  He  watched  the  crowd  from  a  hundred  cloth  pendants.  And  it  seemed  that  many  of  the  people  were  singing  to  him.

“Huitzilopochtli! Huitzilopochtli!

Hummingbird  warrior,

Lord  of  the  Aztecs!

Huitzilopochtli! Huitzilopochtli!

Give  our  warriors  strength,

And  we  will  give  you  ten  thousand  hearts today!”

     The  mood  was  festive.  Canoes  congested  the  many canals  that  crisscrossed   the  city.  People   were   dressed  in  their  finest  clothes.  Women  wore  heavy make-up  masks  of  bitumen  and  ochre.  Jewelry  of  copper,  gold  and  silver;  shells,  clay  and  wood;  obsidian  and  feathers;  jade,  quartz,  moonstone,  and  turquoise  was  abundant. 

      Alongside  the  waterways,  a  number  of  bustling  open-air  markets  were  doing  brisk  trade.  The  wares  ranged  from    all-important  everyday  produce  like  maize,  avocados,  beans,  squash,  sweet potato,  tomatoes,  chilies,  fish  and  fruit,  to  live  turkeys  and  rabbits,  to  expensive  jewelry  and clothes,  to  slaves.  Commoners  bought  food  and  trinkets  with  wrinkled,  mahogany  cocoa  beans,  while  the  wealthy  made  larger  purchases   with  lengths  of  cotton  cloth  called  quachtli.  They  admired  luxury  goods  like   fine  green  jade  and  emeralds,  massive  tortoise  shells,  silky  jaguar  and  puma  skins  and  gem-like  amber,  imported  from  the  far  south.  The  markets  were  warm  with  close packed  bodies,  and  smelled  strongly  of  spices,  animal  droppings,  perfume,  and  the  overwhelming  odor  of  too  many  humans.

     Near  the  centre  of  the city,  the  streets  were  so  congested  that  a  cocoa  bean  dropped  from  the  roof  of  one  of  the  nearby  mud-brick  buildings  would  hit  a  human  head  anywhere  it  landed.  The  noise  was  overwhelming.  On  a  cleared  track,  a  number  of  adolescent  boys  were  racing  each  other  for  prizes.  Musicians  pounded  on  drums,  singing  loudly,  while  dancers  with  beaded  costumes  rattled  with  every  step  they  took.

     There  was  even  a  parade  winding  through  the  streets.  There  were  warriors  in  ceremonial  leopard  skins,  acrobats  and  magicians,  priests,  singers,  dancers,  drummers,  marchers,  and  a  variety  of  hangers-on  who  simply  wanted  to  be  seen.

     No  one  could  complain  about  lack  of  entertainment.  Families  gawked  at  the  myths  being  acted  out  on  the  streets.  They  were  elaborate  productions  incorporating  jugglers,  acrobats  and  actors.  They  all  seemed  to  feature  stories  about Huitzilopochtli.

“On  Panquetzaliztli,  the  raising  of  the  banners,  we  celebrate  our  war  god’s  birth.  And  a  strange  affair  it  was!  His  mother Coatlicue  was  impregnated  by  a  ball  of  hummingbird  feathers,  and  her  children  were  ashamed  and  jealous  of  the  unborn  baby.  Coyolxauhqui ,  one  of Coatlicue’s  daughters,  decided  to  kill  her  mother.  She  and  her  brothers  began  to  plot.  Just  as  they  were  about  to  strike,  Huitzilopochtli  was  born  in  full  war  regalia.  He  decapitated  Coyolxauhqui   with  a  turquoise  serpent  and  hurled  her  body  down  a  great  hill,”  the  narrator  of  one  play  explained.  The  actor  portraying  Huitzilopochtli   proceeded  to  mime  the  murder  of  his  half-brothers.  The  narrator  insisted  that  there  were  400  of  them,  but  in  the  play  there  were  only  ten  men  in  rather  grubby  costumes.  However,  they  screamed  loudly  enough  for  a  horde  of  a  thousand  as  Huitzilopochtli  whipped  them  with  a  snake  made  of  woven  reeds  and  grasses.

     A  nearby  pageant  dramatized  the  pilgrimage  of  the  first  Aztecs  following   an  eagle,   a  messenger  of Huitzilopochtli,  to  the  site  of  their  city, Tenochtitlan.  The  small  children  sitting  on  their  parents  soldiers  watched  wide-eyed  as  their  ancestors  overcame  unimaginable  hardships. 

     At  the  centre  of  the  city  loomed  a  massive  structure  that  dwarfed  everything  in  the  vicinity.  It  was  a  four-tiered  monstrosity  that  cast  an  imposing  shadow  over  the  crowd.  Each  level  was  slightly  smaller  in  volume  than  the one  below  it,  so  the  whole  construction  resembled  a  pyramid.  It  was  so  large  that  gods  could  have  used  it  as  a  stairway  to  Omeyocan.

     On  the  uppermost  level  were  two  temples.  The one  facing  north  was  almost  deserted,  but  the  southern  building  was  swarming  with  human  activity.  Priests  in  ceremonial  robes  and  towering  headdresses  hung  blue  and  yellow  flags,  lit  candles,  and  burned  bunches  of  aromatic  herbs.  The  air inside  the pantheon  had  a  smoky,  spicy  taste  and  smell  that  was  slightly  dizzying.  The  interior  was  rectangular,  and  decorated  with  vast  murals  of   Huitzilopochtli.  In  most  of  them,  he  was  vanquishing  hordes  of  foes,  but  others  showed  him   being  born,  leading  the  Aztecs  to  Tenochtitlan,  or  accepting  sacrifices  from  legions  of  devoted  worshipers.

     A  priest  stood  at  a  stone  slab  in  the  centre  of  the temple.  His  headdress  was  almost a  foot  and  a  half  tall,  and  his  robes  and  jewelry  were  so  opulent  it  seemed  impossible  that  he  could  stand,  let  alone  walk.   His  eyes  were  closed,  and  he  had  a  prayerful  attitude.  It  seemed  amazing  that  such  a  small,  shriveled-looking  individual  could  have  achieved the  rank  of  Quetzalcoatl  Totec  Tlamacazqui,  or  high  priest  of  Huitzilopochtli. 

     The  high  priest  stepped  out  in  front  of  the  temple  of  Huitzilopochtli,  and  stood  at  the  top  of  the  south-facing  stairs.  As  he  began  chanting,  a  hush  fell.  His  voice  was  strong,  steady,  and  surprisingly  loud.

“An  eternity  ago,  the  gods  sacrificed  their own  blood,  their  own  flesh,  to  give  us  life.  In  gratitude,  we  worship  them.  When  they  are  hungry  we  feed  them  with  our  own  blood.  These  sacrifices  keep  the  good  gods  strong,  and  the  bad  gods  weak.  Should  we  forget  our  gratitude  and  abandon  the  sacrifice,  the  world  would  sink  into  chaos  once  more.

Today,  we  celebrate  the  life  of  our  patron  god,  Huitzilopochtli.  He  led  us  to  the  sight  of  our  great  city,  Tenochtitlan.  He  gives  us  valor  in  battle.  when  warriors  die  in  battle,  when  sacrifices  are  given  to  him,  and  when  women  die  in  childbirth,  he  transforms  their  souls  into  hummingbirds  and  takes  them  with  him  to  the  sun.

The  Hummingbird  Warrior  of  the  South  is  a  good  god,  and  a  strong  one.  But  even  our  purest,  most  resolute  deity,  Quetzalcoatl  can  be  tricked  or  defeated  by  the  wicked  one,  Tezcatlipoca,  Lord  of  the  Smoking  Mirror. 

We  are  the  gods’  servants,  and  it  is  our  job  to  keep  the  good  gods  strong.  Without  our  devotion  and  sacrifices,  the  seas  would  boil,  and  the  sun  would  fall  from  the  sky.  The  earth  would  split,  the  dead  would  rise,  and  jaguars  would  devour  our  people. 

Our  warriors,  the  greatest  warriors  ever  to  be  seen  by  Aztecs,  or  anyone  else,  have  been  able  to  capture  1,596  of  our  enemies  to  be  sacrificed  for  our  great  god.   

FOR  THE  GLORY  OF  THE  GODS,  LET  IT  BEGIN!”  The  last  sentence  came  out  violently,  as  a  shout,  a  command.  The  crowd  cheered  and  waved  their  banners. 

     The  tlamacazqui,  or  priests,  began  a  chant.  They  prayed  for  continued  glory  to  come  to  the  Aztec  people.  They  prayed  for  prosperity,  and  victory,  and  valor.  They  prayed  for  protection  from  temptation  by  Tezcatlipoca.  They  prayed  that  the  sun  would  continue to  rise,  and  the  earth  would  not  devour  their  city.  They  prayed,  and  begged,  and  pleaded. 

     One  priest  lit  a  fire  in  the  ceremonial  hearth  within  the  temple,  and  he  fed  Huitzilopochtli  with  maize,  meat,  and  the  bitter,  frothy  drink  made  from  cocoa  beans.  Some  deer,  turkeys,  snakes,  monkeys,  and  quail  were  lead  in.  Priests  slit  their  throats  and  tossed  their  carcasses  into  the  sacred  fire.  The  smell  of  burning  fur  and  feathers,  as  well  as  roasting  meat  permeated  the  temple.

     Up  the  eastern  and  western  sides  of  the  step  pyramid  came  a  line  on  men  wearing  only  white  cotton  loincloths.  They  were  lead  by  warriors  in  full  ceremonial  costume:  the  sacrifices  and  their  captors. 

     The  men  did  not,  for  the  most  part,  look  dejected,  afraid,  or  even  hesitant.  One  of  the  soldiers  leading  the  line  beat  on  a small  drum,  and  the  sacrifices  marched  in  time.  They  sang  a  song  of  praise.  They  were  singing  for  Huitzilopochtli,  for  the  soldiers  that  had  captured  them,  for  the  priests,  and  the  crowd  of  onlookers.

     A  young  man  with long  straight  hair,  and  broad  shoulders  was  the  first  in  the  line  of  sacrifices.  He  stood  very  straight,  and  looked  heavenward.  His  eyes  were  bright,  and  almost  excited.  He  was  filled  with  the  importance,  with  the  honor  of  his  position.  He  was  saving  the  world  from  destruction.  He  was  feeding  a  god.  His  soul  would  live  on  forever  as  a  hummingbird  in  the  sun.  He  was  brimming  with  religious  fervor. 

        Two  burly  priests  escorted  him  to  the  table  in   the  centre  of  the  temple. The Quetzalcoatl  Totec  Tlamacazqui  was  waiting  with  a  bunch  of  smoldering  sage.  The  sacred  smoke  curled  around  the  long  haired  youth’s  body,  purifying  his  spirit.  He  took  a  deep  breath,  practically  tasting  the  strong,  almost  woody  scent  of  the  herb.

     He  lay  down  on  the  table,  feeling  the  cool,  smooth  surface  beneath  his  back.  He  was  composed  now,  no  longer  suppressing  shudders  of  excitement.  He  closed  his  eyes.

     The  high  priest  intoned  a  prayer  oven  him,  while  one  of  his  burly  escorts  brought  forth  a  ceremonial  obsidian  knife.  The  glassy,  black  surface  reflected  the  leaping  flames  of  the  sacrificial  fire.  Distorted  in  its  surface,  they  looked  almost  like  red-orange  hummingbirds.

     Gripping  the  serpent-shaped  handle  in  one  calloused  hand,  the  burly  priest  cut  the  youth’s  abdomen  open  from  navel  to  diaphragm.  The  young  man  writhed  and  bit  his  lip  so  hard  it  bled.  Despite  his  best  attempts,  he  let  out  a  long,  drawn-out  wail.  The  second  muscular  priests  reached  expertly  into  the  wound,  and,  with  a  mighty  heave,  and  a  grisly  tearing  sound,  he  withdrew  his  arm.

     He  was  holding  the  young  man’s  heart.

     Blood  coursed  down  his  arm,  as  the  organ  continued  to  pump,  not  yet  aware  it  was  dead.  The  youth  twitched  more  feebly   by  the  moment.   His  heart  gleamed  wetly  in  the  firelight,  pulsating  and  dripping.  The tlamacazqui  held  it  proudly  above  his  head,  as  the  drummer  increased  his  tempo  to  a  frenzied  staccato.  The  Quetzalcoatl  Totec  Tlamacazqui’s  chant  reached  its  climax  as  the  still-beating  heart  was  placed  in  the  sacrificial  flames.  The  young  man’s  body  was  carried  to the  southern  stairs  to  the  temple,  and  hurled  to  the  bottom.  It  rolled,  leaving  red  smears  on  the  steps. 

“Just  as Coyolxauhqui   was  hurled  down  a  great  hill,  so  we  tumble  down  the  temple  steps!”  The  high  priest  howled.

     The  next  sacrifice  was  led  to  the  table.  He  looked  as  though  he  had  spent  a  lot  of  time  thinking  about  what  was  about  to  happen,  and  had  decided  it  was  for  the  best.  He  half  bowed  to  his  captors  before  he  too  was  cut  open.  His  heart  joined  the  blaze,  and  his body  joined  the  long  haired  youth’s  at  the  pyramid’s  foot. 

     For  the  better  part  of  the  afternoon,  the  ceremony continued.  A  few  of   the  sacrifices  panicked,  and  had  to  be  dragged  to  the  table  and  held  down.  There  were  mutterings  amongst  the  soldiers  about  the  shame  the  cowards  brought  to  their  families,  their  cities,  their  kings,  and  the  gods.

     But,  cowardly  or  no,  each  sacrifice  was  sacrificed.  The  last  man  in  line  was  tall,  and  muscular,  but  he  was  trying to  make  himself  small.  He  drew  in  his  mighty  shoulders,  and  bowed  his  head.  His  earlobes  were  stretched  and  distended  from  the  earrings  he  would  have  worn  at  home.  This  marked  him  as  a  noble.  He  licked  a  moustache  of  sweat  from  his  upper  lip,  and  looked  around  for  means  of  escape. 

     Miraculously,  the  sacred  fire  emitted  a  spark.  It  floated  like  a  drunken  firefly,  and  landed  on  the  Quetzalcoatl  Totec  Tlamacazqui’s  ceremonial  headdress.  At  once,  it  ignited  with  the  acrid  smell  of  burning  feathers.  The  burly  priests  sprang  to  their  superior’s  aide,  and  the  tall  man  seized  his  chance.  Without  a  backwards  glance  at  the  blazing  high  priest,  he  burst  out  of  the  temple,  and  skidded down  the  blood-slick  stairs.  Leaping  over  the  gory  remains  of  his  fellow  sacrifices,  he  vanished  into  the  crowd.  There  was  a  shocked  silence.

     Smoking  slightly,  the  high  priest  emerged.  His  glorious  headdress  had  been  reduced  to  a  smoldering,  wiry  wreck,  and  his  grand  robes  were  full  of  burned  holes.  “AFTER  HIM!  HE  DISGRACES  OUR  GOD!  AFTER  THE  SACRILIGIOUS  SWINE!  AFTER  HIM!”

     There was  instantaneous  uproar.  Immediately,  the  crowd  dispersed,  searching  for  the  tall  man.  Nobody  could  agree  which  direction  he  had taken.

“I  saw  him  head  west  toward the  market place,”  and  old  woman  insisted.

“No!  He  was  going  toward  the  temple  of  Tezcatlipoca!  That’s  north!”  a  passing  man  called  out.

“I  could  swear  he  went  toward  those  buildings,  over  there!”

“He  was  running  to  the  slave  market!”

“No!  I  saw  him  near  those  buildings.  He  was  big  and  tall  and  wearing  a  loincloth.”

“Maybe  it  was  your  mother!”

“You  leave  my  mother  out  of  this,  you  shameful,  bald-bottomed  spawn  of  a  pinauiztli  beetle!”   

     What  began  as  a  scuffle involving  two  argumentative  young  men  erupted  into  full  a  scale  brawl.  Many  of  their  comrades  in  the  crowd  joined  in,  and soon  the  onlookers  had  either  vanished  in  pursuit  of  the  escaped  sacrifice  or  flung  themselves  into  the tussle.  The  warriors  and  priests  that  had  been  part  of  the  ceremony  scattered  to  search  for  their  missing  captive,  and  the  Quetzalcoatl  Totec  Tlamacazqui  was  left  in  his  blackened  robes  to  watch  the  sacred  fire  burn  to  ash.

     The  news  spread,  appropriately  enough,  like  wildfire.  Soon,  people  were  looking  in  sacks  of  grain,  under  up-turned  canoes,  and  on  top  of  roofs  for  the  escapee.  Most  of  them  had  no  idea  who  they  were  trying  to  find.  In  fact,  many  of  the  elderly  people  were  under  the  impression  they  were searching  for  Tezcatlipoca  in  the  guise  of  a  man  in  a  loincloth. 

     A  number  of  bystanders  were  taken  into  custody  by  accident,  and  there  were  several  fights  involving  priests,  soldiers,  and  falsely  accused  civilians.  The  sun  set  on  a  city  in  chaos.  The  temples  were  full  of  tall  men  in  loincloths,  and  soldiers  and  priests  were  scattered throughout  the  streets.

     Eventually,  they  did find  the  tall  sacrifice. He  was  floating  face  down  in  one  of  the  city’s  canals.  The  general  consensus  was  that  the  gods  had  taken  him  despite  his  unwillingness.  Children  were  told  the  story  as  a  lesson,  and  the  festival  continued.  People  drank  bitter,  frothy  cocoa,  and  ate  meat  on  tortillas. 

     They  forgot  about  the  man  that  drowned  and  went  to  Tlalocan,  realm  of  the  rain  god  Tlaloc.  In  the  spring,  they  drown  people  in  Tlaloc’s  ceremonial  pools  in  the  mountains.  They  drank  cocoa  and  ate  fish  on  tortillas.

       You  say  we  are  barbarians.  You  say  we  rip  the  hearts  out  of  our  enemies  because  we  are  cruel  and  stupid.  You  say  we  thirst  for  blood.  This  is  your  excuse  for  killing  us,  killing  our  wives,    our  children.

 

     We  do  not  thirst  for  blood.  We  are  not  cruel  or  stupid.  You  Christians  fight  wars  for  your  god.  Your  Christ  sacrificed  himself  to  take  your  sins.  Are  we  so  different? 

 

      You  say  the  world  can  survive  by  itself.  But  while  we  sacrificed,  did  your  world  end?  Did  the  earth  split  apart?  Did  the  dead  rise?  We  are  keepers  of  the  gods  as  well  as  their  servants.  Now  that  we  are  gone,  how  can  the  earth  hope  to  endure?  You  laugh  when  you  hear  that  in  your  year  2012,  the  world  will  be  destroyed.

 

     In  the  end,  there  will  only  be  emptiness.  No  earth,  no  sea,  no  sky,  no  men.  The  gods  will  be  alone  in  the  emptiness.  there  will  be  no  more  suns,  for  this  is  the  last:  the  earthquake  sun.  the  earth  will  split  in  half,  and  from  the  depths  of  Mictlan  will  rise Mictlantecuhtli,  god  of  death  and,  his  queen  Michtecacihuatl ,  with  an  army  of  skeletons.  Tezcatlipoca  and  his  jaguars  will  devour  all  humans,  and  the  monsters  and  angry  gods  will  break  free.  The  seas  will  boil,  and  the  sun  will  fall  from  the  sky.  The  world  will  sink  into  chaos  once  more…

 

     In  the  end,  only  the  emptiness  will  endure.

  

Categories: Historical Fiction, Short Stories.

Tags: , ,

Tambourine – Seven (part two)

October 11, 2010

AN: Tambourine will be written in a notebook from now on. I’ll type it up at the end and email it to whoever wants it. Sorry – but I think this is going to work best for who Tam is and who I am.


We go to the tent. Rawnie and the man fall asleep. I don’t.

Instead, I walk out of the tent and stand at the donkey’s side.

“I like you, Jasper,” I say, patting him awake.

I climb up onto him. He grunts, but I scratch behind his ears.  “I stayed so long at the circus before I learned to run away,” I say.

I push my heel into his side. He starts to move. The grinding of wheels behind me startles me. The man forgot to unhitch the donkey the night before. A wave of anger washes through me. They left him all night, chained painfully to their big, bulky cart full of their things that don’t benefit him at all.

I stumble to the ground and try to unhitch it, but I can’t. Instead, I drag out most of the water, the tinkering tools, the pots and pans, Rawnie’s colorful cloth bags, and leave them on the dirt. I keep some water and the food. They will be able to find more food, and I will need my share of the water.

I climb again on again, and we travel under the moon, the desert welmish under its strange glow.

It is hard to stay on the donkey, I have to grip him with my legs and hold his neck with my arms. He knows I cannot ride, but obeys me anyway. He likes me, too.

I climb again on again, and he begins to walk.

It is hard to stay on, I have to grip him with my legs and hold his neck with my arms. He knows I cannot ride, but obeys me anyway. He likes me, too.

I hear a rustling, and look behind me. Rawnie is running, her sandals untied and flapping, her turban lost on the ground behind her, her hair flying out behind her like a living thing. The moon shines on her face, pale on her chocolate skin.

“Jasper!” she calls, her mouth open wide.

Jasper stops. I dig my knees into his side. He takes half a step forward, then stops, looking back at Rawnie. I can hear her footsteps now.

“You have to run!” I say to him.

“Stop!” Rawnie cries.

She is right up against Jasper’s side, breathing hard, patting his neck and staring up at me with anger.

“What do you think you’re doing?”

I look away.

“You’re stealing my donkey and my cart,” she says.

“I couldn’t get the cart off,” I say quietly.

“Oh, so that makes it perfectly fine. You couldn’t get my cart off of my donkey, so you took them both.”

“Yes,” I say.

Why?”

“I need to find a good place,” I say. “With good people.”

She looks into my eyes. She is crying.

She is crying. It doesn’t make sense, but there they are, tears, brushed with moon and quivering on the soft skin just under her eye.

“Did I hurt you, Tambourine?” she asks.

“No!” I say.

“I did something,” she says.

I climb off Jasper and stand beside her. “I’m sorry,” I say, but I’m not sure what I’m sorry for.

She kneels down eye to eye with me. Her loose white tunic blows in the dry wind. “I want to help you.”

I flinch. Mr. Cutts’ face smiles in my head, teeth pure white, eyes cold. Rawnie sees the fear in my eyes, and backtracks.

“I want to be your friend.”

“You hate the man.”

“Christoph?” She shifts positions, patting Jasper’s side, the bounce of her hand on his fur louder than her voice. “It’s just – I don’t hate him, Tambourine. I’m – “ she pauses.

“You’re making him take you across the desert.”

She sighs. “Yes.”

I am silent.

“I know,” she whispers.

Jasper looks at me with sad eyes. I look back.

“I needed to get out,” she says. Then she looks at me and Jasper and smiles bitterly. “Like you.”

I close my eyes. “No,” I say. “You’re like the circus. You need something, so you hurt people. And you get it.”

She stares at me, her eyes wild.

“I don’t stay at circuses,” I say.

I walk away, watching the ground carefully for snakes and scorpions. When I look back, Rawnie is right beside me. She puts her hand on my shoulder.

“You’d be killing yourself to run away into the desert,” she says softly. “We’re almost at the city. Why don’t you wait until then to leave? I promise I won’t hurt you. Christoph won’t either, he’s just… just…” she doesn’t look at me. “Sad.”

I consider. They have water. They have food. I can always leave if I have to. If I really have to.

“Please,” Rawnie says.

“I’ll stay,” I say.

She smiles at me, then looks down at my arm and takes my crippled hand. The sudden warmth shocks me, and I almost move away. But I don’t. My shriveled fingers slide between her firm, whole ones. She looks at me contentedly.

The warmth in my hand suddenly fills my whole body, tingling. She is holding my bad hand. She is touching my crippledness. She is not letting go.

We walk to Jasper, hand in hand. Rawnie puts her arm around his neck, and we walk.

The man – Christoph – is awake. He stares at us queerly as we enter the camp together. He is cooking more cactus over the fire.

“So she didn’t run off?” he asks.

“No,” Rawnie says. “Just went out for some air.” She smiles conspiratorially at me. I smile back.

“That was stupid of both of you,” he says. “Who knows what’s waiting in the ground? And you could’ve gotten lost.”

Rawnie shrugs. Then she looks at me, looks back at the man, and says, “You’re right. I’m sorry.”

The man nods jerkily.

“I have some fruit,” Rawnie says suddenly. She runs over to her saddlebags and pulls out a small sack. She opens it, taking out two pieces for herself and handing me three. “We’re almost to the city. Let’s celebrate.” She hands Christoph the rest of the sack.

He looks up at her, wary.

She sits beside me and bites into her apple, closing her eyes and smiling. “It’s been a long time since there was something sweet in my mouth.”

“Yes,” Cristoph says. “Since our wedding, wasn’t it? We did head out right about then.”

She drops her head, mouth stiff.

I bite into one of my dried apple strips, ripping off a little piece and chewing. The outside is rough and wrinkly, but the inside is gooey and clings to my teeth. I take another bite, then slide the whole piece into my mouth. These apples were warm bellied apples, absorbing juice of sky, of sun, of green grass growing and green leaves dancing.  I have their whole world in my mouth.

Cristoph looks into the bag of fruit, then puts it on the ground, untouched. He pulls a cactus pad off his stick and bites into it instead, his eyes dark.

Rawnie looks up, stares at the bag, and walks away to the tent. When she comes back out, her hair is wrapped up in its turban and she is wearing a light brown dress. She begins to undo the tent. I slide my last two strips of apple into my pocket and help her, folding the blankets as best I can.

“What are you doing?” Cristoph asks. “We haven’t slept!”

“None of us are going to sleep tonight,” she says. “There’s no use pretending we will. You never sleep, and Tambourine and I won’t be able to tonight, either. ”

We pack the tent into the cart after unhitching Jasper, then sit back at the fire with Cristoph.

I pull out my strips of apple and start eating again.  Rawnie begins carving a rough block of wood.

I watch her fingers pressing out small grooves and chopping corners with a little knife, fingers that see even in this dark.

“What are you making?” I ask.

She doesn’t look up. “That’s like telling a wish before it comes true,” she says.

I take the little elephant from my pocket and run my finger up and down her back. I pretend she is walking with me, right here by the fire, big like Princess. I smile and close my eyes. I am riding across the desert on her back, her trumpeting waking up the sunrise and coloring the sky. I see her trunk roll in and out like a great leathery scroll, sucking water from a lake and blowing it all over my face. Water runs down my face and neck and even down my legs to my toes and I laugh and laugh and laugh.

I open my eyes. I am sitting by the fire with a wooden elephant on my open palm.

Cristoph finishes eating. He licks his fingers, looks back to where the tent was, then stares sadly at the sack of dried apples.

“You should have some,” I say.

He looks away from the fruit quickly, his face guilty.

“They’re sweeter than cactus,” I say.

He shrugs.

I take another bite of my own dried apples, finishing my second strip. I have only one left. I hesitate before slipping it into my pocket for later.

My eyelids are suddenly stubborn, trying to stay closed every time I blink. The fire dances and weaves into shapes, faces and hands and elephants and tigers. I see the fire-eater and think, but I haven’t seen any snakes.

“Tambourine?”

I jump. I turn to look at Rawnie, but she’s still absorbed in carving.

“Tambourine?” Christoph’s voice. I look across the fire, and he is looking at me expectantly.

“Yes?” I say.

“Why did you try to run away?”

I do not want to answer him.  “Why did you go with Rawnie even though you knew she didn’t love you?” I ask.

He stares at me, affronted. He glances at Rawnie. Her cheeks are pink, but she does not look up from her carving.

“I hoped,” he says gravely, telling her bent head instead of me.

She looks up, and their eyes meet. Chrisoph’s face is utterly frozen; Rawnie’s flushes redder and redder all the way up to her ears. Then she drops her head back to her carving. Her hands do not move, she just watches the wood. Cristoph sits back and watches the fire.

My blinks grow longer and longer, until I do not open my eyes at all. I just listen to the fire, smell the smoke, and eventually hear the gentle carving of wood.

I fall asleep.

I open my eyes to Cristoph kicking sand over the fire. I have a warm blanket wrapped around me. Too warm. I push it off as I sit.

Rawnie sits up next to me, her eyes bleary.

“I fell asleep,” she says, surprised.

“Guess so,” Cristoph grunts, finishing and walking to his horse. “Let’s go. The sooner we get to the city the happier we’ll all be.”

Rawnie stands. She smiles weakly at me, and I stand too. We walk to Chicka and climb on her back. Then we ride.

I fall asleep again leaning back against Rawnie’s chest. I wake up to her fixing my turban to cover my head and face from the sun. She smiles down at me.

We ride and ride and ride and ride and ride and ride. I am sick of riding. My legs ache, my head is swollen with heat, and my eyes feel scrubbed raw from looking so long for the end of the desert.

There are trees again, ugly knobby dwarfs. The earth starts rolling smoothly instead of throwing up choppy structures. There is more grass, rough and sandy and dry. I see a prarie dog’s head pop above the dirt, then vanish. But the sun is just as hot, and the sky just as starched.

We start to see a track emerge.  It is rough like an animal track, a line sketched sloppily toward the city. It is hard to see, but when Rawnie points it out to me, it is like an arrow, pointing vigorously toward a brand new life.

I am glad I did not run away. I am glad to be moving fast.

There is no Mr. Cutts. No Ringmaster. No Tiger Man or fire-eaters or dancers or handymen. There is just me. And when I live a life in the city, it is going to be my life.

I take a breath, and it fills me with rattling wings. When I breathe out, they do not leave. They stay inside, daring me to learn to fly. I feel huge enough to fill the world with my heartbeat, important enough for people to listen to it.

We stop to refill our water skin in the jars. Rawnie hands me the skin as I sit on Chicka, but stays on the ground.

“What are you doing?” Christoph asks.

“Teaching her how to ride,” she says, her voice determined.

“Bareback?”

“It’s how I learned.”

“Wild gypsy woman,” he growls.

I look down at Rawnie. “You’re a gypsy?”

She shoots a glare at Christoph.

“Jo told me stories about gypsies. They were families, always moving, always growing.”

Rawnie smiles ruefully. “Yes. That’s how it used to be. But my family settled down, and that’s not good for our blood. We splintered off, lost touch, and died tired. Now push your heels into Chicka’s side.”

I did, wondering at her. A gypsy!

Chicka walks forward. She is so much bigger than Jasper. I feel my knees slipping and lean forward and grab her neck, gripping as tight as I can.

“No,” Rawnie says, laughing. “Hold on with your legs.”

I try.

“Feel her,” Rawnie says. “Close your eyes.”

I do. I feel her fur against my ankles, feel her body under me. I feel her legs moving. Every step is connected through her whole body, her neck moving under my hands, her muscles tightening and releasing, her legs bending and straightening. I feel her strength. And I feel myself, the way I move with her shifting muscles, when my knees grip and relax.

I feel the space we are moving in and the trust I have for Chicka that she sees and will take me safely through it.

Then I see myself slouched loosely on Chicka’s huge back so far from the ground, and my eyes fly open and my knees let go, and I fall with a thump to the ground. Rawnie helps me up.

“She’s not a gypsy,” Christoph says.

“Again,” Rawnie says, ignoring him. She helps me on and I sit tensely, bruised and anxious.

I squeeze Chicka’s side with my knees and she moves forward. This time, I stay on.

Rawnie is very proud, Cristoph is frustrated.

“What are you going to do at the city, Tambourine?” Rawnie asks, avoiding Christoph’s glare.  She walks beside me as I ride, the donkey and his cart lumbering slowly behind us.

“I don’t know,” I say.

“You’ll have to find a job,” she says.

“Yes,” I say.  I remember trying to pluck the cacti leaves and feel a little sick.

“I’m need to find someone to work with me,” Rawnie continues nonchalantly. “Someone to keep me company, to help keep up my shop. I hope I can find someone trustworthy enough.”

I nod.

“If I’m lucky, maybe I’ll find someone like you,” she says.

“A freak?” I ask without thinking. I blush.

“A girl,” she says firmly.

I twist around and look at her.

She looks at me expectantly.  When I say nothing, she says, “Would you want to work with me, Tambourine? I’d love to hire you. I’d pay room and board, and maybe a little extra.”

I do not understand.

“I walk slow,” I say. “I can’t even pick spines from a cactus.”

“I need you,” she says. Then she looks confused. “Unless you still want to run away, and that’s why – ”

“I’ll stay with you,” I say. “You’re my friend.”

“I’m not really a good friend,” Rawnie says quietly. “But I like you, Tambourine. I want to help you.”

“You don’t have to,” I say.

“I want to,” she says.

I can feel the wings inside me rustling, and know that this is right. I can belong with Rawnie as my friend. She will let me be free.

“Yes,” I say.

Rawnie looks at Cristoph. He had been watching us, now he meets Rawnie’s eyes, sad. She stops walking. Cristoph and I keep riding, and after a moment she jogs to catch up with us.

“Stop Chicka, Tam,” Rawnie says. Then she screams.

I fall off Chicka,. A rasping rattle is loud in my ears, then fades quickly away.

“Oh,” Rawnie says. “Oh. Cristoph. Cristoph, I just got bit.”

Christoph is running. I sit up. Rawnie crouches by the ground, her eyes wide. Christoph bends over her, ripping off his turban and tying it around her calf.

“How big was it?” he asks, bringing out a knife.

“Big,” she gasps.

Cristoph slices the bite, red and purple on her ankle. Rawnie curses in a language I don’t understand. He leans down, puts his lips to it, and sucks. Then he turns away and spits red on the ground. He sucks again. He lets her ankle bleed as he spits again and again on the dirt, trying to get the taste of her blood out of his mouth.

I crawl over to them. Rawnie reaches out and grabs my hand. Her fingers are hot.

Cristoph grabs Rawnie and pushes her in front of her saddle. She grabs his horse’s neck as he swings up behind her.

“Get Tam,” she says, and closes her eyes.

He jumps off his horse, picks me up, and throws me on Chicka. Then he gets on his horse again, gripping Rawnie with his elbows as he holds the reins, and rides so fast.

Chicka follows him, galloping. I squeeze my knees into her side as hard as I can, trying to stay on. Then I look back and see Jasper, trying so hard to keep up, his neck out, but falling farther and farther behind.

“Stop!” I say. Christoph doesn’t, but Chicka slows down, confused. I lean back, squeezing her even harder. “Stop!” She speeds up again, and I look back at Jasper, terrified that we are leaving him to die alone.

I fall. I smack the ground on my shoulder, my head cracking down next to it. My skull rings.

Christoph glances back, but does not stop. Chicka follows him.

“Wait!” I cry.

He doesn’t stop.

“I fell,” I say.

The donkey walks up and nuzzles my hair, his tongue wet. I reach up and rub between his old, ragged ears. He pants, drooling on my ears. I stand, a little dizzy, and pat his neck.

“You and I are friends,” I say. He brays loudly. I smile.

My hand goes into my pocket, brushing the little wooden elephant. My body feels suddenly wooden, too. I look at the desert, stretched out big and thirsty ahead of us.

“He isn’t going to come back,” I say.

Jasper takes a wobbly step forward. I stumble ahead with him, and we are walking walking walking, each of us just as slow as the other.

Categories: Fiction.

Cl ea n

October 10, 2010
Pulling apart the natural fibers of
overlapping mess,
clean leaves to much space
between raw threads of life.
Eyes wag between the abrupt props,
trying
to
********nd
fi
a

OL

WH                                E
in
**** a

cl               ea                     n

r             o               o           m.

Categories: Poetry.

Tambourine – Seven (part one)

October 7, 2010

Seven

We are riding again. I have stopped watching the ground, the horses’ sides caving in and out, Rawnie’s foot pressing into Chicka’s side, then relaxing. I only see the sky. Blue, seamless. Unchanging no matter how far we ride. To the sky, none of us ever move.

When the day ends, we set up camp quickly. The man does not speak to me, does not touch me, does not look at me except when he thinks I can’t see. Rawnie is careful, but keeps up conversation. Conversation that passes through my mind like the sky in my eyes, unchanging.

We sleep. The night is cold, but Rawnie draws me close enough for us to warm each other. The ground is hard, but the blankets are thick and soft.

I wake before the others with restlessness in my limbs. I walk outside, feeling small in the quivering, dark morning.

The donkey raises his old head, ears twitching. His legs are tucked up under his warm body as he curled up beside the tent. I kneel beside him on the dirt, stroking his warm, wiry fur.

“Hello,” I say.

He looks at me with black eyes. I run my hand along his wide face, giggling as he ducks his head up and down.

I notice the blanket draped over his back.

“Rawnie’s your friend, too,” I say. “The man wants to be nice, but he doesn’t know how. And he’s so big.”  I rub his back through the blanket, his bony spine sticking out.

“At the circus, all the horses were Immortal, Fearless, Magnifico! Nothing could just be a donkey.”

He opens his mouth and licks his teeth with a fleshy pink tongue. I laugh, and lick my own teeth, my own mouth wide open. He brays, a hoarse rattle from the bottom of his throat.

“I like you better. You are a very old donkey, aren’t you?” I ask.

He watches me with tired eyes.

“I feel old, too,” I say.

The man walks out of the tent. He hesitates when he sees me. Then he comes and kneels beside me, patting the donkey’s side.

“Rawnie was determined we drag this thing through the whole desert,” he says. “Poor ass.”

“His feet must be tired,” I say.

He nods.

“Why doesn’t Rawnie like you?” I ask.

He looks at me quickly, then back at the donkey.  “Well,” he says, “I’m her sister’s widower. Things got sticky. Rawnie thinks I recovered too fast.”

“Oh,” I say.

“But she needed a guide to trek her business out of town,” he says, his voice tight. “She knew I would.”

We pat the donkey quietly.

“I’m sorry,” I say.

“It’s not your fault,” he says.

“For when I screamed,” I say.

He shifts, uncomfortable. “It’s fine.”

Rawnie walks out of the tent. The man stands and pulls the donkey to his feet, hitching him to the cart.

“I see you’ve met Jasper, my hairy donkey,” she smiles lightly to me as I stand and step back.

“He’s an ugly thing,” she says.

I think he is beautiful.

“Had him since I was seven. He was young thing back then, leggy with a bite and an impressive set of lungs. So impressive, even the town five miles from us was impressed.” She laughs. “But then, I was exactly the same way.”

The man chuckles. Rawnie walks to the tent and starts taking it down. I help her.

Why they did they take  Jasper when neither of them like him?

We ride.

Halfway through a day of dizzy hot sun the man leans back and says, “We may run into a few caravans or nomads. I’ve seen signs of people.”

My heart freezes. A glittering circus tent fills my head, dancers spinning spinning spinning with torches, the fire-eater spitting fire, and today Mr. Cutts burning Jo’s letter in the flames.  Rawnie pats my shoulder.

Now I see everything. Every rat, every lizard with their skinny tongues, every wasp flying past my cheek. I look at them as if the circus could be hiding in their stomachs, waiting to leap out their throats to steal me back.

At night, we make camp again.

When we are sitting around a fire, the man says, “The day after tomorrow we’ll walk into civilization.”

Rawnie nods curtly. Then she stands and walks away, mumbling about finding food. The man watches her leave.

“What is it like? In the city?” I ask.

“Busy. Clean. We’ll make ourselves pretty again.” Then he looks at me nervously, remembering that I can’t. “It’s ugly here, isn’t it?” he says, changing the subject.

“No,” I say. I reach down to carefully point out a rich green plant with thick, twisted barbs. “This place protects itself because it’s worth protecting.”

The man looks at me queerly.

“Why do you watch Rawnie?” I ask.

“I don’t.”

“You watch her like you want to say something to her, but then you don’t.”

“Do you watch me, too, little Tambourine?” he asks, suspicious.

“I watch everyone.”

“I see.”

The man stretches his neck, but his eyes never leave my face.

“Did you know that yellow isn’t just yellow?” I ask. “It’s lemon and blond and corn, too.”

“Only if you waste your god-given time with poetry,” he says.

I nod slowly.

His face softens. “That’s why I don’t see anything in the desert that’s worth protecting. I’m sorry. The world is prettier through your eyes, eyes that see lemons and corn where I just see a blanket.”

I smile. “Jo taught me.”

“Jo?”

My stomach twists. “My friend,” I say. “He was at the circus. He showed me how to see beautiful things. He told me stories. Then he left.”

“The devil,” he says bitterly.

“No!” I say. “He had to leave. He was my friend. He liked me.”

The man is uncomfortable because he thinks he knows something I don’t. But he’s wrong. Jo left because of Mia, because of Mr. Cutts, but not because of me and never because it was easier to just leave the circus where the people rot without a word of goodbye. He wouldn’t do that to me. He liked me. He was my friend.

Rawnie comes back and sits by me. The man looks at me quickly, remembering what I said about watching.

“Welcome back,” he says. “Did you find any food?”

“Light fare out here,” she says. “No.”

“So, like I said, we’re almost into the city,” he says.

Rawnie nods stiffly.

He looks at me again, then says, “So what’s going to happen between us there, Rawnie?”

She watches him anxiously. “What do you mean?”

“Well,” he says. “You married me to get across the desert. So when we’re across it, what’s going to happen?”

“Don’t accuse me of that,” she says.

“Is that denial, or just a lie to my face?”

“Excuse me?” Rawnie glances at me.

“Don’t do this to me, Rawnie,” he says. “I shouldn’t have come. I should have known it would be like this.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“Oh, please. Your sister didn’t spend the month after our marriage ignoring me and spitting little’yessirs’ in my face.”

“Maybe that’s the problem,” Rawnie says quietly. “Maybe you think I’m my sister, and I’m not.”

“Never!” he says, laughing wildly. “It’s completely impossible to confuse the two of you!”

“I see you looking for her in me,” she says.

“No.”

“I know what I see.”

There is a silence.

“Well, then, that answers my question. We’ll go our separate ways.”

“Yes,” Rawnie says.

I sit and do not move.

This is why Jo left. Love. Mia loved Jo.

This camp is just another circus. Small, with no performances or glitter or big wild strong animals. But this is people choosing things that hurt people. This is love breaking things. This is a different kind of not moving. This is hearts too angry to grow together, so they stay in straight lines.

We go to the tent. Rawnie and the man fall asleep. I don’t.

Categories: Fiction.

Classifieds – Writer’s Aid

October 6, 2010

must show proficient talent in the following:

brewing coffee

finding pens at 2am

reading unreadable handwriting

brewing coffee

reading & performing long-winded praises

finding my @#!! muse

brewing coffee

cooking, cleaning, watching babies

barricading doors

avoiding the rent people (and police, etc…)

brewing coffee

inventing creative excuses to be printed and given out to various relatives, friends, dentists, and bosses.

impersonation for my absolutely inescapable appointments

Applicants may call 111-222-3333 to schedule an interview with The Writer. Thank you.

P.S: You MUST be able to brew coffee.

Categories: WORST.

Assuaging

October 4, 2010

I know my mother’s neck,

muscles hard under my fingers,

uncoiling as I press. As I follow

hundreds of paths and arrows

to the root of tension,

to the core of pain,

I learn her bones and muscles.

And as I know them,

I know mine,

and my breath evens out with

my posture.

I feel her blood swimming through her veins,

her nerves tight, and the bones in her neck

that know the bones in her back and her feet,

and I know my neck, my back, my feet.

As she talks to me,

quietly,

I know my own words.

When I stop massaging, I have been

assuaged.

Categories: Poetry.

So you stand barefooted

October 2, 2010

In honor of our lovely Sandy’s upcoming birthday, I post before you all – A RHYMING POEM. *Gasp*

So you stand barefooted

on the naked bare limb of the tree

and you think you might be wild.

Nose to the blue white tiled

sky, you just might lick it to see

if a tongue could ever be pink again, once sky coated.

Categories: I'M TO LAZY TO CORRECTLY CATAGORIZE MY STORY!!!!!!!!!! :P.

Desolation

October 2, 2010

the Wild Moor Warlock

alone upon a purple hill

with the twilight heather

alone with a mug of mugwup Tea

he can offer it to the gorse blossoms

but they shake their Tawny Heads

alone with a pocket harpsichord

and a pocket full of quietude

alone despite the heather and the gorse

and the full penny moon

alone

lonely

alone

he boards a dandelion clock

brushes the stars from his beard

and steers his filmy coracle into the blooming

skyscape

Categories: Poetry.

Tags: ,

A Slaughter of Leaves (I’m not proud of it, but it happens…)

October 2, 2010

I need to break them,

grind them,

hear them crunch beneath my feet.

Leaves,

Dry autumn leaves!

The glorious crackling

brings unwholesome satisfaction.

They’re dead hands scattered

on  the ground.

They have the tiniest,

most delicate bones;

listening to them snap beneath my feet is a truly

religious experience.

Perhaps they’re creatures

with brittle exoskeletons.

That would explain the way they scurry

on the winds,

trying to escape my hungry feet,

Sometimes it works,

and they find somewhere remote and inaccessible to hide,

but mostly their  weak carapaces succumb to my stomping.

Crunch! Crunch! Crackle! Crunch!

Breaking leaves beneath my feet!

With chitinous Snaps! and Crunches! and Crackles!

Breaking leaves beneath my feet.

Categories: Poetry.

Tags: , ,

The Bench

October 1, 2010

The bench itself was unimportant to itself, really, it was the people who passed over it who mattered. A rosy cheeked daughter clutching a purple balloon in her left hand and gripping a chocolate ice cream cone in her right, grinning up at her father to make sure she has him, too. A homeless man with a frayed beard sleeping with a newspaper from August 15, 1945 over his face.  A gold-chained gangster in pants three sizes two big and boxers three times too bright sitting quietly, looking lost as he watches the city spin by him. The bench loved all its people, even the ones who stuck gray gum under its corners, and even the animals like the pigeons who pecked at the crumbs left on its lap and left lumpy white smears behind. But that, after all, was the way of the bench.

Categories: Fiction.