Tuesday, October 31, 2023
Monday, October 30, 2023
Sunday, October 29, 2023
Excerpt: Orphan - Who is Iris Hill?
IRIS HILL STEPPED
on the pedal, pumping it. It took a while for the car to respond, but
eventually the green city commuter lurched forward. She hated it, but funds no
longer permitted an upgrade. This was her transport now, had been for fifteen
years … not that she even recalled the years already gone by between buying
this at an auction and her current position. Sometime after year two alone, her
memory started playing tricks on her. What was, was no longer part of her
reality. It wasn’t illness of a kind with a fancy medical name –as folk
whispered to each other in the butchery the other day – it was deliberate. Iris
did not want to remember her past and therefore she locked everything away,
even the moments spent on a lot bidding for a five-year-old baby sedan.
The car swivelled, losing
traction on the gravel.
Swearing, she stomped on the
pedal again, the other one, the one that brought the vehicle to a halt, but
missed it and lunged ahead instead.
A young boy flashed into view,
and Iris screamed, seeing him grow alarmingly larger in her sights. Huge blue
eyes swung her way, as panicked.
She stomped and stomped, and screamed.
ADIN HURTLED SIDEWAYS
into the brush, suffering slashing from sharp branches, and bruising his knees
as he landed on rough stone. A green swirl filled his vision, causing him to
cover his face. A strangely dulled scream filled the surrounds, eclipsing all
birdsong, even the pounding of his heart.
The world stilled.
All sound vanished, and life fell
into breathlessness.
A car door slammed extra loudly,
jerking him back to life.
“Boy! Where are you? Are you
okay?”
The woman’s voice was deep. He
expected it to be shrill, but that was probably perception based on the sound
of screaming. Where had she come from? He could swear her tyres made no sound
on the gravel road as she approached. Maybe he had been careless in his
attention, rapt in the sight of so much nature.
He crawled from scratching twigs,
searching for her. She had been as terrified as he was. There was a chance she
needed him to be as fine as he needed her to be on her way and leave him alone.
She wouldn’t do that until she saw him.
The old and dinged thing she
drove listed to one side, hanging into the ditch on the opposite side of the
road. He noticed the ditch when he chose this backwater rural lane, and opted
to walk on the incline side, where trees grew, and grass. Lots of grass, and
wildflowers. He liked grass. Grass was far easier to sleep on than a concrete
step in a city.
Another swirl entered his field
of vision, this one greyed out black rather than dusty green. A swish of too
much material became a dress. Adin stared at her dress. She was like a witch
from the tales with her long robe billowing out in the breeze.
He shuddered, wondering if she
wanted to eat him.
Pointed red shoes appeared under
the rim of her mighty dress affair, causing him to smile. That wasn’t a sign of
evil; that was a sign of cheekiness.
Adin looked up … into the kindest
green and brown flecked eyes he had ever seen. It wasn’t her eye colour that
got him, for he had seen eyes of every colour in his short life, it was her
kindness. She exuded it. Stranger still, he knew it as kindness.
“I’m okay,” he said, but his
words emerged croaked and broken.
Arms akimbo, she studied him. Her
hair was dark, far darker than her dress, and all she needed was a pointy hat,
and she would be a witch. Freckles
covered her face, though, and he couldn’t make out wrinkles. Maybe not so much
a witch, then. Maybe she liked to play dress-up.
“No, you’re not fine. We need to
see to all those scratches and your poor knees. And I think you’re hungry and
thirsty.”
Yes, he was, but he wasn’t going
anywhere with anyone.
He drew himself up. “I’m fine.”
“What’s your name?”
“What’s yours?”
Grinning, she said, “Iris Hill. I
live up there.” She pointed to a space above his head.
He craned around, but couldn’t
see anything other than trees guarding the road. When he faced here again, she
had one eyebrow raised.
“Adin,” he muttered.
“Adin who?”
“Don’t know.”
“Ah.”
In that ‘ah’ was a world of
understanding, as if she knew exactly what he meant, as if she had once walked
the same path in life as he now did. He stared at her.
She glanced at his knees weeping
thin trails of blood. “Adin Stone, is that your name?”
Nodding vigorously, he swallowed.
She did understand.
“Well, Adin Stone, we gave each
other a fright. I need help getting my car back on the road and you need help
with your injuries. Shall we make a deal? I help you first and then you help
me? Tomorrow you can be on your way again, but I’d welcome the company at
dinner tonight, if that’s okay with you.”
This time he nodded slowly.
Man, she read him too well.
An orphaned boy searches for a lost girl.
A woman abandons her new-born at a motel in the back of
beyond. Adin grows up unloved, bullied, and no one remembers him. He doesn’t
exist.
Until he sees a poster for a missing girl on a lamppost.
There is an instant connection to little Sunflower, kidnapped for ransom, only
to disappear after the money is paid. He exists because he must find her.
Alone, he searches, a journey that takes him into the wild places, meeting
along the way some interesting characters.
In dreams he speaks to her, for she is the one who will
remember him.
Saturday, October 28, 2023
Friday, October 27, 2023
Thursday, October 26, 2023
Feast Night
Happy Halloween!
🎃😈👻💀🎃
The town of Flarant
is abandoned to its fate, year after year. Year after year the people of
Flarant lose their children to the ghosts and ghouls on All Hallows Eve. They
cannot flee. They are beyond all hope. And then a stranger enters the town in
the days leading up to the event. This year, there is difference in the air.
This year, the children are not alone.
🎃👻🎃
#halloween
#shortstory #trickortreat #ghosts #ghouls #WhoWillSaveThem #mustread
#BestHalloweenStoryEver
Wednesday, October 25, 2023
Tuesday, October 24, 2023
Monday, October 23, 2023
Sunday, October 22, 2023
Lore Excerpt: UNICORN
Frozen
Forest
IT
WAS EVEN COLDER when he headed out into the dark.
Torrullin cursed as he stumbled over roots and branches, but dared not create
light to ease his path. It took hours in the cold and dark to situate every
trap in a wide perimeter and to draw the shield to encompass all, but
eventually it was done, and he could head back. The lure of hot coffee was an
all-consuming need.
As he approached the gate something
new in the environment drew his attention. Until then the forest was filled
with the usual night sounds - owls, scuttling creatures, a flap of wings,
squeaks - and now everything was silent. That kind of quiet generally occurred
when something new was in the region and the creatures waited to see whether it
meant danger or something to be safely ignored. This silence went beyond what
was there while he tramped around.
He could not see, but he could feel.
First came the silence, and he stood
still.
Then came hot breath on his cheek.
He did not react, but his heart
jerked wildly. He made no move.
Lorinin.
His heart thumped hard. Gods. “Who
are you?”
What am I?
Fine. A game. What are you?
A slight glow appeared over his left
shoulder. He turned with exaggerated care. The glow strengthened and took form.
This time his heart threatened to burst from its confines.
You are surprised.
Torrullin placed a hand over his
heart. More than words can describe.
It was a creature of myth and
legend. The purity of goodness. The beauty of tireless strength. A unicorn.
White, ethereal and incredibly beautiful. It made no sound as it moved to stand
in his field of view, its hooves silvery and seeming to float above the forest
floor. A horn of incredible simplicity glowed faintly blue from the centre of
its forehead and long lashes swept over pale sad eyes as it studied Torrullin.
Many years ago, the little flower needed aid.
Rose. You created her citadel.
I could not feed her. I wish I could have fed her.
She survived. Today she is strong.
I am glad.
Is this your domain? Torrullin
asked.
We do not claim domain, Lorinin. We are and we are not.
You call me Lorinin.
Your blood sings with song so glorious the multiverse awaits
the next note with breathless anticipation.
He was out of his depth. This
creature spoke of the multiverse; it thus transcended every barrier. My song must be filled with fury.
No.
I do not understand.
The time comes. Go forth now and find the Danae. I shall
guard your charges. No harm shall befall them on my watch. I shall answer every
question you may have, I promise, but you must ask it with the Danae at your
side. He needs you more than you need clarity.
Where is he? Do you know?
The storm has gathered and must unleash. In havoc will new
tools be forged. Enter the void of lifelessness, Torrullin Lorinin Valla.
Elianas is in the void?
He may be tracked from inside. Energy of that magnitude
holds what he is together.
I must do this alone.
The magical head dipped. The seer would not survive it.
How much time do I have?
Never enough.
Torrullin moved closer.
The unicorn retreated. Stay in place. It is hard to maintain the
light under your shield.
Torrullin halted.
Other spaces may be forced onto your plane of confrontation.
Why?
I am not a farseer, Lorinin, but I offer this advice. Bring
what you need together and do so without hesitation. It places your song above
all, and thus they must listen.
How do I do this?
The Danae knows.
He threaded a hand through his hair.
He seemed to do that with regularity in this new present. Gods. Concentrate.
Elianas possessed a greater answer. Was that what their games were about?
Elianas Danae is not aware that he knows.
How do I then ask the question?
You ask nothing. You touch.
A wry laugh erupted from his throat,
loud in the silence. Please elaborate.
There was no sound and no movement
for many minutes. The unicorn stood as if frozen, but its glow did not
dissipate. Clearly it was thinking. Perhaps it, too, knew moments of self-doubt.
I shall now do something I may not have
the right to interfere with, and yet I trust this will aid you in forging the
tools of the future. Please wait.
Torrullin waited, and wondered what
that communication meant. The unicorn pulsed with shivering light, and it moved
forward swiftly. It halted a breath away from him and transformed into a column
of light. An instant after, Torrullin suffered a hard tug at the centre of his
gut, and looked convulsively down.
A flowing river of gold translucence
bridged the tiny space separating them, joining them. Then he was emptied, and
flew back to land hard up against a tree. Snow shuddered on the branches
overhead and tumbled over him. Shaking and spluttering, he straightened.
The unicorn had retaken form, but
now a faint golden glow emanated from within the white silver. The Goddess of Souls is removed.
Motionless thought assailed him
then. It meant absolute change.
Touch is safe, Lorinin.
No, it was not. Every temptation
could now be bridged.
He is not your brother. He is your Eternal Companion, as you
are his. Touch is safe. Touch, and your answer will be there.
This changes all.
The time for that is due.
Perhaps. Torrullin nearly
hyperventilated in the onset of emotions, of questions … of need.
For years and ages, the battles have run and they were
fought and there was result, and nothing altered. The same questions plague and
the same answers disappoint. Personalities of the past have intertwined into
this time and others, and it is time to be free of them and what remains
stagnant. Unleash the storm, Lorinin, and allow the song freedom. It is the
right moment to change the concept of time.
Time?
Yes.
I do not understand.
The Danae knows. Ask.
Touch?
No, ask this of him direct. He must then answer.
He was afraid to. Elianas was not
easily confronted.
My time in light is at an end. The
glow that was the unicorn began to fade. I
have the watch, do not fear, and we shall again speak. Bring the Danae.
The forest was dark, a greater dark
than before, and gradually the sounds of normality intruded to prove the state
of otherness had passed. Torrullin stood in that dark and carefully examined
every thought shared, and understood he had no choice.
In a nowhere place, everything is possible.
Saturday, October 21, 2023
Friday, October 20, 2023
Thursday, October 19, 2023
Wednesday, October 18, 2023
Tuesday, October 17, 2023
Monday, October 16, 2023
Sunday, October 15, 2023
The Echolone Mine: Standing Stones
Lethe
HOW LONG THE blackness lasted
would never be known and never discussed. For a time, they were oblivious to
time, space and each other. They were together somewhere and so apart the state
of togetherness would eternally remain unmentioned. Only those able to see
beyond the boundaries knew how proximity did not imply connection and they,
naturally, never told. Still, let it be said the three men were beyond usual
intelligence and thus not without suspicion of the state of separation.
When the alien dark receded like water pulling
back from a beach, they were in a rough circle of standing stones. The stones
and the configuration thereof were a protection mechanism, and they knew it,
but as awareness returned, they looked at each other as if questioning the
nature of life itself.
Elianas’ eyes hooded. He lay beside Torrullin.
Those silvery eyes stared down at him from a seated position. Feeling
vulnerable, he cleared his throat, pushed up to sit and look around. Tristan
sat cross-legged nearby staring at the two of them as if attempting to
determine a great secret. Beyond Tristan were the standing stones and beyond
that was nothing. Nothing.
“Where are we?” Elianas asked. He deliberately
did not move. Those silvery eyes had not left him and now filled with knowing
amusement. Elianas frowned and surrendered. “You are frightening me, Torrullin.
For pity’s sake, tell us what this is. What have you done and where are we?”
Tristan rose and stretched.
Torrullin’s glance flicked up at him, and
returned to Elianas, who cursed. Torrullin leaned closer. “This is still Lethe,
but now it is a different realm and I suspect it may be a different time also.
But I did not bring us here. Something fools with us. I may enjoy a challenge
and I am particularly enjoying how you squirm at the moment, but this is going
too far.”
Tristan strode nearer. He stood arms akimbo
over them. “This is precisely why we go nowhere - you two and your lack of
conviction. Reaume is unprotected and you carry on as if we have all the time
in the universe. I am well aware you were warned not to delve the issues in
Lethe, yet I’m saying, unless you do, even if it is scratching at the surface,
we are headed to nowhere for eternity. Look …” and he swung one arm in a wide
arc, “… a stone henge, a place of safety. Either you brought us here,
Torrullin, or we brought ourselves here by consensus, or we were bloody chucked
in. Whatever and however, get to sorting enough out so we may actually aid
Reaume and, yes, aid the Dryads also. Understood? This is why you wanted me to
come, wasn’t it? To get your arses moving?”
Torrullin exhaled, a weary sound. “We are
exactly one year back in time. Whatever is to happen to Reaume has not yet
begun.”
Elianas glared at him. “What happened to ‘I
suspect’?”
A shrug answered him, before he added, “To see
you squirm.”
Tristan interrupted, “Good god, will you stop?
Would you please do something more than taunt each other?” Both men looked up
at him. Tristan cleared his throat. “What did I say to make you do that?”
Elianas clambered to his feet. “So,” he
murmured, “a whole year back in time. How does not concern me, nor does why -
the why I can figure out, I trust. What concerns me is the where of this place.
A year ago - biological count - we were not returned. You had not remembered
your past and I was in the Throne.” He swung around to stand with his hands on
his knees, leaning so that Torrullin could not escape him. “Why choose a whole
year?”
Torrullin did not attempt to escape that gaze.
“I do not desire to change anything, if that is what you imply. We have been
through trauma recently, but it revealed more about us than it hid, and I am
not running away from it, and neither should you.”
“Agreed. Now answer the question.”
“A year? It was a round number.”
“Really?”
Torrullin gave a quick grin. “Yes, really.” He
pointed a finger. “More than a year passed in reality than for us in realm
travel. Whether I deliberately tweaked or not, does not influence either memory
or return.”
“I’ll get out of your hair now,” Tristan said.
“Before I do, I would like to hear the where of this place also. A year ago, I
wondered who would become Vallorin, even if everyone else counts a few more
years than we do. I don’t want to find myself revisiting that time.”
“This is Lethe. I do not know.”
“You are a Walker,” Elianas frowned.
“Not when another pulls the strings,”
Torrullin said. “It does not matter what we do, what we say or how we feel or
even where and when we are; we are not in control.”
Tristan licked dry lips. As Elianas stared at Torrullin,
Tristan said, “The only way out is to start talking to each other, don’t you
see?”
Torrullin frowned. “Maybe, but it does not
return us control.”
“Which control do you seek?” Tristan demanded.
“Which is more important, Torrullin? Elianas? The control over Lethe or the
control over self? Is it that hard to imagine one may lead to the other?”
Silence. “Well?”
Elianas shrugged. Torrullin threaded hands
through his hair.
Tristan smirked. “I guess my point is made.
I’ll be over there if you have need of me.” He walked away, leaving them alone.
He did not go far, but was outside of hearing range. He knew words were telling
between the two men.
Step over the threshold at your peril!
The two men swerve through different realms unravelling what now lies between them and every step reverberates in reality. As loved ones pay the ultimate price, old enemies again step forward to challenge their right to rule, particularly Nemisin, First Father of the Valleur.
It will also shatter sacred space.