Archive for April, 2011

THE LAST RUN: By Jim Bronyaur

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

PULSATE: Episode 12

Prepare. Then fight.

Mr. Rogers had spoken the orders proud and repeated them every time Asa spoke with him.

Asa had never prepared for anything in her life. Everything always happened – from the beginning until now. Asa couldn’t remember much before the beginning other than her best friend dying.

For a couple of days and nights Asa walked the streets of her town hoping to find some creatures but there were none. She didn’t need to communicate with Mr. Rogers to know this was on purpose. The Old Man had sent the freakish sun walkers to torment Asa and that was her last taste of battle – almost defeat. And the “almost” was only because the vampires left.

The teeth marks were still on her neck – red dot scars that remind her of how quick life could change. Asa would rather kill herself than be bitten by the beasts she was meant to kill.

And when Asa tried to ask about the giant sun walkers, Mr. Rogers refused, only talking about the Old Man.

Paranoia had planted its roots deep into Asa and no matter where she went or what she did, she felt watched, felt that she was going be attacked.

At night she slept holding a piece of old world wood. The wood gave her horrific nightmares of creatures killing, perhaps something was greater in the wood itself too. She also went as far as to push her dresser in front of her door at night. She hoped it would give her time in case of an attack… she also hoped she’d be able to move within the seconds of time like the creatures did.

By the morning of the fifth day since the sun walkers attacked Asa knew she needed strength. Strength in herself and strength in the notion that she could fight and destroy an Old Man vampire.

She went back to her old routine. She stretched, ate, and went for a run. She grabbed her iPod and hit shuffle. When Knockin’ on Heavens Door came up she pressed the button to shuffle again.

Right Next Door to Hell (by Guns n’ Roses).

Seemed perfect.

So she ran.

_

Away, but not, Mr. Rogers stared into a cup of black coffee. His own paranoia had shown up after the attack on Asa. He hadn’t seen the attack happen but only caught the end, right when he spoke to Asa. On his screen he saw Asa happy and then he blinked and it went from a peaceful Asa to two creatures on her, ready to kill her.

The screen had shown those massive vampires. They were more of monsters, things that Mr. Rogers dreamed of. Supersized creatures.

Nobody had spoken to Mr. Rogers in days, there was no plan in place. He figured with something this big coming there would be help. Asa was the best… or so he hoped. No, he knew Asa was the best. He’d seen her travel to places and in time that nobody could understand.

It angered Mr. Rogers that anyone may cast a doubt, even himself.

Even still, the quietness of everything seemed too much. He felt the place should have been busy with work. Planning, helping, preparing.

Unless of course they weren’t allowed to help. The background of talking was sometimes just as bad as the blood shed.

_

Shuffle had given Asa a playlist creepy enough to be real, once Superbest (by Rob Zombie) ended she took her headphones out.

She stopped running and walked slow.

Before her mind could think a thought a hand shot out and grabbed her arm.

Asa turned and instinctively grabbed her waistband for old world wood. There was none. The piece she had tucked in her waistband must have fallen out.

The memory of the attack from days ago was fresh so Asa prepared to fight. Only when she brought back her hand to swing she realized she was looking at a homeless man.

“You’re the one…”

“Excuse me?”

“He told me. He’s looking for you. He said He will save you.”

Asa stared at the man’s wandering eyes and then noticed a worn out Bible laying on top of his bag. A man with nothing but faith…

“He comes for you.”

“That’s nice.”

Asa twisted herself free.

“Don’t be afraid. He’ll tell you! He told me he’d tell you!”

Asa started to jog away, trying to ignore the man. He kept yelling and everything he said made sense. It could have been coincidence. It could have been paranoia. It could have been something else.

Asa didn’t stop jogging until she got home where she told herself she’d wait for the Old Man.

_

There, but not, Mr. Rogers stared in awe. Asa had kept control when the stranger touched her. This made him happy – Asa was regaining her focus.

That all changed as Asa walked away.

The image for Mr. Rogers didn’t follow Asa. Instead it stayed on the homeless man. The man looked up at Mr. Rogers and winked. Then he opened his mouth revealing a set of fangs.

“What the…”

Before Mr. Rogers would finish, his image went snowy.

It was time…

_____________________________

©2011 Jim Bronyaur

Jim’s site:  www.jimbronyaur.com

Follow Jim:  www.twitter.com/jimbronyaur

In the Corner, Jim Bronyaur’s novel, is available here: http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/s/ref=is_box_/177-9177525-5616338?k=Jim+Bronyaur+

TIME TO SPEAK OF MANY THINGS: By Lori Titus

Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

The Marradith Ryder Series: The Art of Shadows, Part 34

Lysette was relieved when Granthem was called away. She wasn’t sure how she was going to tell him that she had no interest in meeting his family or having anything to do with him.

Through the years, Lysette had heard many things about her Father, and most of them were not good. Part of the fault was her Mother’s, and part of it was on her stepfather. Between the two of them, they’d kept Lysette’s paternity a secret. Justin couldn’t be blamed for abandoning a child he wasn’t told about.

The next morning, Lysette used her laptop to log into the database of Ramshead, Pollard, and Stuckey.

As a field agent, she was allowed high level clearance into the company’s records. Ramshead claimed that his company was a law firm, but it was really a lot more. Their contrracts had little to do with ordinary human law. They dealt in pacts and blood contracts between Others, or humans that were willing to sell their souls to other entitites. There was something to be had on both sides, as they worked for both The Sojourners and The Circle, depending on who paid the higher amount.

One of the things that the company also kept track of were the members of the “community” of Others. It was important that an agent know who they might come across during their work.

She typed in the name “Marradith”.

Lysette had noticed Justin texting back and forth during their lunch, and the unusal spelling of the name stood out in her memory.

She’d only heard of one person who spelled her name that way.

Not only did the offices of Ramshead, Pollard, and Stuckey have information, they had an entire file compiled on one Marradith Ryder Granthem.

Lysette read the file and then re-read it.

The picture was a blurry shot,  apparently taken on a street somewhere, but Lysette had seen other photos of her before: a thin girl with brown skin and shoulder length hair, wearing jeans and knee high black boots, her eyes hidden by sunglasses.

The facts were laid before her like bare bones: the girl was sixteen, soon to be seventeen years old. Marradith was a Lamia, and in the last several months, she had become Sojourner. Her career, as of yet, was just beginning. She’d only had one confirmed kill.

She killed her great-grandfather, Leighton Ryder.

Lysette got up, and picked up the water glass that sat next to her monitor. She threw it against the wall and watched as it shattered.

****

Danny Ryder had made a good argument for staying at Ryder House while his sister and parents were in New Mexico, keeping vigil for Rafael Castillo.

He didn’t want to miss school. He was going to be bored and have nothing to do while all the adults waited for news.

In the end, Nora caved. He was the baby, and she liked giving him his way.

What he didn’t tell his mother was that he liked the quiet of the house without as many people around.

There were loads of new security since the house had been compromised, and new security protocols that made the place impenetrable.  But the new guards were not familiar to him yet, and he was not picking up on the roar of their thoughts the way he did the others, who were now gone. There was a low grade tension among them, because everyone knew that Sojourners had died here, trying to protect the family.

Danny did not see any of the dead guards. Though their lives were cut short, it was done in the commission of their duties.  He wasn’t sure why that was, but he was relieved that they did not haunt him.

Caroline, however, was around more than ever.

What bothered him was that she was changing.

When Danny first began to see the ghost of his great-grandmother, she wore old fashioned clothes, old fashioned heels with laces and pointy toes. As of late he was seeing her dressed as a modern young woman, often in a plain sundress, with her hair plaited into one braid down her back.

He joined her outside one day, sitting beneath the shade of an oak tree.

“Did you ask Will that question that I requested?” she asked primly. “About Leighton’s body?”

“No,” Danny replied. “If you haven’t noticed he’s been really busy with the house, and other things that happened lately. There’s a new Wolf here too, a girl named Jenny. Cord’s been trying to keep them both busy.”

She sniffed.  “So much for fulfilling the will of your Guide,” she said.

“Well I’m still not clear about this whole Guide thing,” Danny said. “No matter how young you look, you’re still my Gran. ”

“You should listen to me as such.”

He smiled. Danny was not one to fuss, but he rarely did exactly as he was told.

“I don’t think Leighton is the problem,” he said. “You’re not resting for some other reason.”

“Perhaps,” she said cooly, her dark eyes fixed on the horizon. “He is certainly not the only danger there is.”

“How come you never say what you mean?” he asked.

“How come you never do as I say?” she replied.

Danny rolled his eyes.

“Daniel,” she said softly. “If you should ever see a man with dark eyes, and a shriveled body, who wears an overcoat,” she paused. “You should know to run.”

“What? Gran…”

He turned, but she was gone.

_________________________________

©2011 Lori Titus

See Lori’s interview on Richard Godwin’s Chin Wag @ The Slaughterhouse:

http://www.richardgodwin.net/interviews/chin-wag-at-the-slaughterhouse-interview-with-lori-titus