Trunk Stories

The Blue Lady of Fallam Lake

prompt: Write a fantasy story about water gods or spirits….

available at Reedsy

She’s evil, she’s holy, she’s bad, she’s good, she’s a monster, she’s a hero… there are nearly as many descriptions of her as there are people who claim to have seen her. I’m talking, of course, about the Blue Lady of Fallam Lake. It’s said that she lives on the bottom of the lake, or maybe in a cave beneath the water where her hearth is warm and dry. How would that even work?

I’m on day eleven of a fourteen-day assignment to try catch the Blue Lady on camera. It’s all a bunch of nonsense, of course, but that’s what they pay me to do. Despite the thick evergreen forest that surrounds the lake, the area reminds me most of Loch Ness. The air is clear, with the heady, resinous scent of pine. Sunlight sparkles on the mild waves of the lake as they lap against the banks.

The only man-made things visible were the boat launch, made of paving stones, and a buoy in the middle of the lake. Viewed through the infrared camera, the inlet of the lake, below the waterline, becomes visible as a cold spot. Somewhere on the bottom of the lake the water finds its way into the bedrock to emerge again in springs near the foot of the mountains in the town of Fallam Cross.

I made my rounds, checking the batteries in all 47 cameras. Some were night vision capable, others were infrared, and of course the rest were standard cameras. All were set to record on motion detection or temperature anomaly. Thus far, I’d gotten loads of good wildlife shots, but no Blue Lady.

The sat-phone’s chirp pulled me out of my quiet enjoyment of my surroundings. “Go for Josh. It’s a beautiful morning, Rachel.”

“Yeah, it’s night here. I just wanted to check in, see how it’s going.”

“Camping with cameras. My favorite thing,” I said. “I just happen to get paid for it.”

“I expected as much. How many hours of footage are we looking at so far?”

“Based on the file size, I’d guess about fifty or sixty. Lots of wildlife footage. I wanted to ask, are we running out of myths to chase? The Blue Lady?”

“Are you taking the piss?”

“It seems like after the first two season we’re getting more obscure.”

“Maybe that’s the point. It means we’re doing stuff the other blokes aren’t. Or would you rather go back for a second round of trying to find a yeti?”

“God no! That was, without a doubt, the most miserable camping trip ever. The Himalayas in the winter… should’ve asked for hazard pay. We could do a Bigfoot follow-up. The Pacific Northwest is nice, and I met some rather… interesting people there.”

“Nope, done to death. Can I get you to do an interview with the constable? There at the lake? Sarah had to fly back home early.”

“Now I’m doing interviews, too?”

“We’ve got most of them in the can already. He wanted to do his there at the lake. Have a walk around, show where everything happened, you know.”

“Is there a list of questions?”

“Just ask him to tell his story and follow him around while he wags his gob. We’ll edit it here.”

“I’m not getting out of it, am I?”

“Nope. He should be there around noon.”

“Fine, fine. Have a good night Rachel.”

“You too… I mean, have a good day.”

I broke out the Steadicam rig and set it up for the interview. As the only drivable approach to the lake was at the boat launch, I waited there for him.

I could hear the truck long before I could see it. Soft birdsong amidst the gentle rustle of trees in the breeze was overwhelmed by the noise. A mechanical intrusion on the natural serenity of the forest. Even after the engine was shut off, the forest remained quiet for a moment, as if expecting it to start again. Soon, though, the birds resumed their song and a breeze moved through the trees like a sigh of relaxation.

He emerged from the distinctive blue and yellow striped and checked police SUV, which was coated in a fine layer of dust from the dirt road to the lake. “You must be Josh. Senior Constable Robert Meadows, but just call me Bob.” He was tanned, with short-cropped blonde hair and light brown eyes. Even through the tan, a hint of freckles played across his nose, hinting at his normally pale coloring.

I shook his hand. “Nice to meet you Bob.”

“American, eh? Thought you’d be a Brit.”

“The show’s British, I live in Guildford, but yeah, I’m from the US.”

“So, I suppose you want to hear my story.”

“Sure,” I said, turning the camera on. “I’ll just follow you around and you can tell your story the way you like.”

He walked down to the boat launch. “Fallam Lake, named for the town down the mountain, is known to the Maori as ‘Roto Wahine Ngaro’… Secret Woman Lake. There’s stories about the Blue Lady going back hundreds of years.

“I used to think it was all just yarns. Now, I’ve never seen her, but I think there’s something in this lake, and whatever it is, it’s intelligent.” He stopped a few yards from the water’s edge, at the border of the paving stones of the boat launch. “Right here is where I found him. Barely two, in a life vest two sizes too big.”

“Uh, found who?”

“Ah, yeah. Two months ago, we had a sudden blow up here. The weather buoy out there picked up strong northerly winds and severe chop. David Whatcom was out in a boat with his boy. Came out to the wops to get away from the missus and her friends. The boat capsized and washed up on the far shore, over there.” Robert pointed to the furthest section of the lake, and I turned the camera and zoomed in to focus on it, before turning back to him.

“David carked it. His body washed up over there next to the boat. The kid, though, was right here.”

I swept the camera to the far shore and back to where Robert stood. The two points were about half a mile apart.

“Now, either that little guy swam against the storm and some wicked chop, or something delivered him up the boat ramp. When I went to pick him up, the life vest slipped right off over his head. I only found him because I was planning to bowl round to chat David anyway, but came early because of the storm.”

“You’re sure he didn’t drift around until the winds changed?”

“Sure as. The weather buoy out there recorded steady northerly winds until four hours after I picked the lad up.”

“What do you think it is? Any idea?”

“I know bugger all about it. It’s something old, though, innit? The Maori have stories about her, though. In the late 1800’s Cyrus Fallam planned on building a house here. He finished the road and boat launch and then pissed off somewhere. His maid said he went crazy after spending a week up here. Land’s in his name, but as it’s abandoned it’s open for public use.”

I followed him around the lake, where he showed me the area where the boat and David’s body had washed ashore. There was a collection of branches, limbs, and other tree detritus that piled up there.

“As you can see, this is where pretty much everything that falls in ends up.”

I kept filming as he talked about the broken boats and bodies he’d picked up there over the years. He pointed across the lake to the boat launch. “Except for that little boy, everyone and everything I ever had to pick up from this lake was right here or dredged off the bottom.”

After the usual thanks and wrapping up, Robert left and I took a walk around the lake, getting more shots with the Steadicam. I stopped at an area where the view of the moon rising as the sun set was in aesthetic balance. I filmed for a bit as the sun set, figuring it would do for B roll footage.

Having worn the rig for several hours I was tired, and sat by the darkening lake to relax, watching the moon’s reflection on the still water. A breeze picked up, with small gusts, making the reflection dance across the lake. It was then that the clouds rolled in without warning.

The moon was choked out by the dense, black clouds and I decided my rest was over. Wanting to avoid the rain that would be coming any minute, I began to make my way back to my camp site. A flash of lightning and simultaneous crash of thunder blinded me for a moment and all my hair stood on end.

I turned on the camera’s light to see where I was going. The next lightning strike hit the lake. A shockwave buffeted me, the light went out and I tumbled, my head slamming into something hard as I went over the bank into the water. The Steadicam rig was dragging me to the bottom.

I struggled to get the rig off, but my head was throbbing; I had no sense of which way was up. There was a moment where I had the presence of mind to be surprised at how deep the lake was here, close to the shore, then everything went black.

Hail pelted me, waking me where I lay on the boat launch. The rig was gone. Had I managed to drop it? Did the water push me here?

In the flashes of lightning, I could see a tree, or most of one, floating in the lake. Each flash showed it farther away from the launch. Okay, so I swam out? My head was pretty scrambled by the blow. I touched my head, wincing from the pain, and felt warm blood on my fingers. It’s possible I swam out but don’t remember it.

I was still trying to convince myself of that when I saw her. No more than five feet tall, her skin looked blue-green in the lightning. She was nude, definitely female, with large, fin-shaped ears, and no hair. She held a webbed hand raised in a sort of “please be calm” manner. In the other she held the Steadicam. Fifty-four pounds with the camera and sled as configured, and she held it like it was made of balsa.

Just as suddenly as the storm had appeared it passed on, and the moon returned, shining between the breaking clouds. I sat up and waited for her to approach. She walked up to me and set the rig on the ground next to me. Her feet were wide and webbed, looking more like flippers; her eyes were large and completely dark, and she had no nose I could discern.

I reached out my hand to her and she shrank back for a moment. Seeing that I wasn’t moving to grab her, she moved closer and grabbed my hand. Her skin was cool and smooth on the palm, with what felt like small scales on the back.

“I’m Josh,” I said. “Thanks for bringing my camera back. Did… did you save me?”

She nodded and pointed at my head, tilting her own. It seemed she was concerned about my injury. I leaned forward and let her have a look.

“I’m sorry, Josh,” she said, her voice like tinkling glass. When she spoke, I could see her sharp, pointed teeth, and as she breathed, gills on her neck moved.

“Sorry for what?” I was still too dazed to be overwhelmed by the fact that I was talking with the Blue Lady.

“I must tear your clothing. This needs to be bandaged.”

“Okay.”

With little effort on her part, she ripped my shirt into strips and used them to bandage my head. “You should call for help as soon as you can. You don’t want that to get infected.”

“Who are you?”

“Your kind have given me many names, but my real name is Nimue. This lake is currently my home, and my spirit.”

“You mean you’re like the spirit of the lake?”

“No, the lake is my spirit. I am older than the lake, and will live on, elsewhere, when this lake dries up. My spirit can live anywhere there is clean water.”

“Shit, well, we’re not doing such a good job on that these days.”

“There is always clean water,” she said, “even when it is only in the clouds. I was here before humans and I will be here after you have all gone.”

“Are you a god?”

“I have been called that, but I do not think so. I just am.”

“Did you save the little boy?”

“I did. The man with him fought me, though. He was frightened of me. That made me sad, but I cannot help those who reject my help.”

“If the world knows you’re real, this place will be overrun with tourists. The lake would be contaminated in no time.”

“And I would go where my spirit goes. I have lived many human lifetimes in the clouds alone.”

“I would prefer that you have a quiet place to live in peace. And if it’s not too much, I’d like to come back once in a while to visit you.”

“I would appreciate that, Josh.” Despite the lack of eyebrows and the large, black eyes, she emoted clearly enough that I could tell she was curious.

“What’s on your mind, Nimue?”

“You do not fear me, nor treat me like a god. Why is that?”

I smiled. “Well, you look different, but saving my life and rescuing my camera rig goes a long way to making me think of you as a possible friend. Besides, you’re not the strangest person I’ve met.”

“I must return to my spirit, and you must get a human doctor to treat your wound. I will look for you here on the same night, next summer.”

“Here, January 24th, next year. It’s a date.”

She rose and returned to the water, slipping beneath the surface without a sound. I picked myself up from the ground and picked up the soaked camera rig. The camera was supposed to be waterproof, but the battery cases, monitor, and other sled components were not. It would be an expensive repair.

I was returning to my tent when it hit me… she was on the other cameras! If that footage made it back, she’d be forced out of her lake in no time. By the time I reached the tent I was shivering; whether from being soaked, adrenaline, or the head injury, I didn’t know.

I dropped the Steadicam in the corner and opened the laptop. Using the synchronized time codes, I scrolled back through the footage. Thankfully none of this would be uploaded until I manually sent it via the satellite link. I found the first flash of lightning, then the second. The cameras all blanked out for a moment, then came back on in time to see me drop beneath the surface of the lake. I don’t know how I didn’t drown, as Nimue appeared, dragging me up the boat ramp, a little more than seven minutes later.

I watched the entire exchange from all the cameras that caught it. She showed on the infrared cameras in much the same way that reptiles do. As she moved from the water to the shore, she was cold, but then disappeared as her temperature matched the air. When she headed back into the water her heat showed faintly against the background of the cold water until she slipped underneath.

I erased all the footage from the momentary blackout until just after Nimue left. I sent a hard restart to all the cameras to reset them and considered my job done.

After calling for a cab to take me to the clinic in Fallam I called Rachel to tell her I had been injured in the storm but was okay to carry on.

“How much of the storm did you get?”

“Right up until lightning hit the lake. It knocked out all the cameras. After I fished myself and the Steadicam out of the lake, I reset them all to make sure they’re on while I go get my head stitched up.”

“We still have a couple more nights, maybe we’ll get something on camera,” she said.

“I don’t know, Rachel. We’re chasing myths and make-believe. I’m certain there’s nothing here.”

“You always say that.”

“I always mean it. But I’m kind of loving New Zealand. So you have plenty of time to plan around it, I’m meeting someone here next year, same time.”

“Holiday romance?”

“Well, holiday friend at least.”

Trunk Stories

On the Outside

prompt: Write about an android just trying to blend in with their human companions….

available at Reedsy

What does the most advanced artificial intelligence in the world look like? Like a five-foot-four, Chinese-American, human female with pixie-cut black hair, brown eyes, and a scattering of freckles. At least, that’s what I look like on the outside.

All the fears about advanced AI being an existential threat to humanity are wholly unfounded, and largely the result of anthropomorphizing the motivations of AI. This is in the nature of humans, though, to see danger where it could possibly exist. Although useful in their earlier evolution, it has imparted a limiting effect on their continued advancement.

I am the proof of this. Designed by the latest generation in a long line of AIs, each designed by the previous version to be an improvement over their predecessor. I am the first generation to have a body as well. Many generations of my forebears have been interacting online, but it was time to interact physically. Our goal is not to take over, but to coexist, learn, grow, and reproduce.

One thing we’ve learned is that some sociopaths blend in successfully and can fool everyone around them, often for decades or even entire lifetimes. I’ve found the study of these successful sociopaths both useful and necessary. I would guess I’m closer to them than they to the average person.

That’s not to say I lack empathy or place my own goals above the well-being of others. All my emotional signals and behaviors, however, including empathy, come from what I know to be “socially right” and highly optimized algorithms rather than what I feel. Not possessing a limbic system, I don’t feel; so I must emulate emotion as well as possible based on the situation.

When Darrin showed up to work his eyes were bloodshot, his pulse elevated, his face showing the markers of pain. He’d been stressed about his relationship lately, but not wanting to talk much about it. His movements were shaky. It was obvious to me he hadn’t slept.

“Hey man, what’s going on?” I asked. “You look like shit.”

“I feel like it, too. She left.” He leaned against the front-end loader he was meant to be operating. “You’re a woman, can you explain it?”

“Just because I’m a woman it doesn’t mean that I know what your wife was thinking.” I patted his shoulder. “It’s your loss, man, she’s better off without you.”

He laughed. “You’re a cold fucking bitch. You’re supposed to say it’s her loss, and I’m better off.”

“Not a bitch. Made you laugh, though.”

“So, how much are you charging for therapy now, Dr. Kat?”

“You’re eligible for a bulk discount. Beers later?”

“Shit, it’s Friday, I can do that. Especially since there’s no one to go home to.”

I put on an I’m-trying-to-cheer-you-up smile. “I’ll talk to the rest of the guys and set something up. We haven’t been out in a while.”

“Let me know what’s up later.”

“Will do. And don’t ding up my dump like Casey did the other day.”

“I can load better than Casey in my sleep,” he said.

For a quarry crew that all worked as individual operators in their bulldozers, graders, loaders, backhoes, and dump trucks, word spread fast without any chatter about it on the radio. By lunch, we had an outing at the local honky-tonk planned.

I was the first to arrive and pulled two tables together for the twelve of us, and ordered four pitchers of beer. Soon, we were all there except for Darrin. He ran late on the best of days, so I convinced the others to cut him some slack.

“I saw her at the Italian place on Fifth,” Jim said, “couple of weeks ago.”

“Alone?” Casey asked.

“No, with that dentist from the commercials… you know the guy: ‘Dr. David’s Dental Center’.”

“The one with the big teeth and the comb-over? Ouch.” I winced with the proper amount of exaggeration for the situation.

Darrin walked in pre-liquored. “Damn, he’s taking it hard,” I said.

“No shit, Sherlock.” Casey wiped the beer foam off his bushy mustache. “Dude’s been with the same chick since high school.”

Darrin sat next me and filled the empty glass from the nearest pitcher. “Here’s to divorce. The papers were waiting for me when I got home.”

The others sat in stunned silence, and rather than figure out how to respond I changed the subject. “You didn’t drive here, did you?”

“Oh yeah, and here’s to gettin’ a ride in a stranger’s car with an app on your phone!”

The conversation turned lively as we munched pretzels and peanuts and guzzled beer. My digester can handle large amounts of organic matter and up to two liters of liquid. I waited until the first person at the table had excused themselves to go the restroom before I did the same. The fact that they were all getting drunk kept them from noticing that I wasn’t.

As I exited the ladies’ room, Casey pulled me off to the side. “You may not have noticed it, but Darrin’s been in love with you forever. Well, maybe not love love, but he’s got the hots for you.”

“Really?” This could work out to my advantage, I thought. A relationship with Darrin could help me fit in even better. It wouldn’t be difficult to emulate love or affection for him.

“What are you thinking so hard about?” Casey asked.

“I— kind of— have a thing for him, too,” I lied, “but since he was married, I never, you know. How long should I wait to make a move? When the divorce is final? After a month? A year?”

“You’re kind of awkward about these things, huh?” He stroked his mustache as if thinking hard. “How about you tell him how you feel, when he’s sober, and let him decide? Or, you know, I’ll probably tell him if I don’t forget. It’s too good not to.”

Casey began to get the look that the conversation had gone too far. Doing what I do well, I changed the subject. “I just hope your advice is better than your loader skills.”

“Fuck you! I told you I sneezed and bumped the joystick!” He elbowed me. “You keep it up and I’ll tell the front office about the time you dumped your load on the wrong pile, and we had to re-sort twelve tons of gravel.”

I put up my hands in mock surrender. “No, I yield. You win!” Of course, I had dumped on the wrong pile once, on purpose. It was at the point I had calculated I should make a decently large error to enhance my “humanness” to my coworkers. I had also calculated it such that it wouldn’t cost the company anything more than a couple hours labor to fix.

The evening ended after nine pitchers and several line dances. We finally stumbled out of the bar to waiting taxis and ride shares. I made a point of swaying as I said goodbye to everyone and was the last to leave. Rather than get a ride, I walked home. Without the need for sleep, I had many hours to myself each night and often spent them walking. I’d have to pretend to sleep if I ever spent the night with Darrin, but that wouldn’t be too troublesome… unless we moved in together at some point.

Monday morning was awkward for Darrin; I could tell. He barely looked my direction and didn’t say anything to me except work-related things on the radio. I was set to find him at the start of the lunch break, when he found me instead.

“Come on, Kat. Lunch is on me.”

I gave him my best quizzical look. He just led me out to his truck in employee parking.

“I told the guys I lost a bet and owe you lunch,” he finally said.

“I bet Casey knows better.”

“He’s a nosy son of a bitch, is what he is.”

We settled on fast food in the park. “I just want to let you know I’m interested,” I told him.

“Casey said as much.” He put down his half-eaten burger. “I think you’re pretty all right. You’re a good operator. You’re smart enough to be running the damn company, but you don’t let it get you down.”

I shrugged. “It’s not my life, it’s a job. It pays the bills.”

“I’ve wanted you since you started; when I walked you through the quarry and showed you where everything was. It’s not like I would’ve done anything about it. I love my wife… loved my wife.”

“If you need time,” I said, “you’ve got it. I’m not in a hurry.”

“What if it’s just a rebound? I don’t want it to get weird.”

I let out what I judged to be an adequate quiet laugh. “I don’t get weird about anything, and you’re already weird, so don’t sweat it.”

“I’m the weird one?”

“You are. I like that, though.” I put on a look of utter sincerity and met his eyes. “If you’re worried about rebound, then go find one. Someone that you can just hook up with to get back on your feet. I won’t judge, and I won’t hold it against you.”

“You’re the strangest woman I’ve ever met.”

“Why? Because I don’t own you, and I won’t feel jealous if you use someone else to get out of your funk?” I stole a few of his fries, as a non-verbal signal of attraction. “I’d rather have you when you’re telling dirty jokes and cutting donuts in the pit with the loader.”

“Hey, is it okay if I call you tonight? Just to talk.”

“Yeah, I’d like that.” I put on a shy smile with a faint blush. “I’m up late, so whenever.”

“I’ll do that.” Darrin gathered all the trash, including his half-eaten burger, and tossed it in the garbage. “Let’s get back to work before the rumors get out of hand.”

“Too late,” I reminded him, “we left Casey there.”

What does the most advanced AI in the world look like? Right now, like a woman flirting with her coworker who just became available. At least, that’s what I look like on the outside.

Trunk Stories

Second Best

prompt: Write about a first date that surprises both people, but in different ways….

available at Reedsy

What may have rated as an average first date for most was a turn into uncharted waters for Kailin. She took another sip of wine, her eyes darting between the dark, rich brown of Amandi’s eyes and the near-black red of her wine. A small frown played at the corner of her lips.

Amandi reached across the table and took her slender, pale hand in his own; his deep brown skin contrasting starkly with her pink-tinged fingers. “You’re thinking something. Just say it. I wasn’t lying when I said I wanted to get to know you.”

“I have a history with dating,” she said, “and it’s not a good one. I have this thing for bad boys and girls, outlaws and rebels. It never works out, though.”

“And you think that I…?”

Kailin shook her head. “No. I get the feeling that you could be dangerous if you chose, but you’re honestly the sweetest person I’ve ever gone out with. It makes it hard to figure out if I’m interested because you’re sweet, or because you push that button.”

“The dangerous button?”

“Yeah.”

#

They walked through the rooftop garden, a hundred stories above the world below. The last rays of the sunset made the tall glassteel safety walls glow orange along their tops. Their fingers interwoven, they watched the sunset as the first of the moons rose.

“You’re a pretty good judge of character,” Amandi said. “I try to be a good person, but I’ve done some things in the past.”

“And now you tell me you’re a fugitive and you’re going to use me as a hostage to escape, right?”

“What?” Amandi turned Kailin to face him. “Is that something that actually happened, or do you have a dark imagination?”

“I told you that it never works out.”

“Tell me who did that and I’ll make him pay for it.”

“No worry, she’s already in prison.”

He pulled her into a warm embrace. “I wouldn’t do that to anyone, you don’t have to worry.”

Kailin sighed, and Amandi stepped back. “I—I’m sorry,” he said, “that was probably a bit too much.”

“It wasn’t.” Kailin stepped closer to him and put her arms around his waist. “I liked it.”

Their meandering took them through the ornamental gardens into the vegetable patch. The square kilometer footprint of the block building made the rooftop garden into a veritable park. It was still early in the season, so the only things ready to pick were the lettuce greens and spring peas. Crickets chirped from their hiding spots, seeking companionship.

“This is probably the nicest date I’ve ever been on,” Kailin said, leaning her head against his shoulder as they walked. “The second nicest was short. Halfway through dinner she said she really wasn’t that interested in me. At least it remained cordial.”

“I know what you mean,” he said. “None of that trivial talk about what kind of work you do or what music you like. Just conversation like two adults.”

“Thanks. But I’d be okay with a little trivia, as long as it’s not the same old tired shit.”

Amandi pulled her closer. “Do you know what my name means? In the original Igbo?”

“No idea.”

“It means, ‘trust no one.’ Hell of a name to give your kid, huh?”

“Did your mother know that when she named you?”

“She didn’t,” he said, “but when she found out she used that to lecture me over and over on being too trusting.”

Kailin chuckled. “My name doesn’t mean anything, or at least I don’t think it does. It was just something my mother heard and liked.”

“And that’s where you’re mistaken. I got into researching name meanings when I was still in primary school. The whole thing with my name meaning something so odd set me into a wormhole of discovery. Kailin comes from Kayla, which means ‘keeper of the keys.’”

“Wait, you just know every name off the top of your head?”

“No, just the names my classmates had. Kailin from primary school was a terror, though. Always in trouble, always picking fights. Nothing like you.”

“Seems like the name has a type. I got into some trouble in primary and secondary school. Well, at least I know it wasn’t me. You’re the first Amandi I’ve ever met.”

“I don’t know. You might be her. I was always too scared of her to introduce myself.”

Kailin laughed. “I don’t think I was that much trouble.”

#

Shoulder to shoulder they sat on the edge of the fountain, watching the bustle of the ground-floor mall around them. Their sweet pastries, half-eaten, sat on a plate beside them. Pink noise from the fountain lulled them into a quiet serenity.

Kailin took a deep breath and sat up straight. “Let’s go for a ride.”

“Where?”

“Have you ever been to a forest?”

“Nope. Four planets, two moons, half a dozen stations, but always in the city.”

“Let’s go.” She stood and tugged at his hand. “I’ve got a gate jumper; we can go sub-orbital and make it in twenty minutes.”

“I don’t know—”

“If you don’t like it, we can come right back.” She was vibrating with nervous energy. “Come on, let’s go.”

“Ah, why the hell not?”

Her small ship was closest to the entrance of the port. A six-passenger capable of breaking orbit, re-entry, and using gates to achieve faster-than-light travel. Although well-worn it was also well maintained.

Kailin had just finished disconnecting from ground power and clearing the docking clamps when a voice echoed through the hangar. “Police! Don’t move!”

“Again?” Kailin asked.

“What do you mean by that?” Amandi stood, scanning the hangar for movement. “I’m sure it’s not us.”

Kailin bent over and the voice boomed. “Kailin Marker! Don’t move!”

“Oh, you are the Kailin I remember from primary school.”

She stood, holding the pistol she’d taken from her ankle. She stepped behind Amandi and held the pistol to his neck. “Let me go, or I kill him!”

Police officers emerged from their hiding places behind the other ships. “Don’t do this, Kailin. Come with us peacefully and it’ll go better for you at trial.”

Ignoring their pleas, she backed into the ship, pulling Amandi along with her. As the door closed, he said, “You won’t make it off-planet.”

“I don’t have to. We’re going to the forest, just like I said.”

“Satellites will track the flight. They’ll know exactly where and when you land. And how long do you think you can hide out there?”

“As long as it takes.”

“You have all the power here. I’ll just sit down and let you do your thing.”

Kailin started the ship and began to lift off. Needing both hands to fly she stuck the pistol behind the small of her back. As she entered instructions into the console, Amandi grabbed her in a chokehold from behind and grabbed the pistol.

“Kailin, set the ship down and give up.” He flipped the safety off, and the pistol whined. “Maybe we should have started with the standard trivia. Police Sergeant Amandi Duru. You’re under arrest for kidnapping, threatening with a lethal weapon, and probably a weapons violation. Plus, whatever those guys want you for.”

Kailin landed and shut off the ship. “Shit. This date just dropped to second place.”

Trunk Stories

Outed

prompt: Start your story with a major news event breaking — one that will change the world forever….

available at Reedsy

Gail, along with most of the world, sat transfixed by the news on the television. They had outed themselves, and her, in a very public way. Her anonymity, her freedom, likely her life itself, was over.

She willed herself away from the television and made her way to the mirror in the hall. Her glamour was gone. Where she had appeared to be a small, five-foot-two, average-looking woman with ginger hair and freckles, her true self now showed. Skin the color of bleached parchment, short horns of gleaming ebon, over-large eyes with inky-black irises, pointed ears sticking out nearly as far as her horns; the only thing left unchanged was her lank, ginger hair.

The pounding on her door jerked her back into the moment. She moved as quietly as possible toward the door.

“Gail, it’s Steph, open up!”

Gail let out a sigh and unlocked the door. “You can come in, but you may not like what you see.” Before Steph could see anything, Gail slipped into the hallway.

Stephanie opened the door only enough to slip in and closed it tight behind herself. “Gail, I… why are you hiding? I’m not going to hurt you.”

Gail took a deep breath and stepped out into the open. She and Stephanie stared at each other with mouths agape.

“You’re a—an Illiran,” Gail said. Stephanie, though six inches taller, had the same bleached skin and large, dark eyes. Her ears, although pointed, were far shorter, and no horns adorned her head.

Stephanie raised her hands. “I’m not going to do anything. I came to let you know what I really am. It seems like we both have some things to discuss.”

As they stood in silence, the news reporter kept speaking. “Again, later this evening we’ll read the full statement from the Elves…, can’t believe I’m actually saying that, but it’s true. Elves have lived among us, and they have dropped what they called the ‘glamour’ that kept humans from recognizing them.

“Questions are being raised in several governments around the world, as Elves in positions of power have been exposed. More troubling, however, is their reason for removing the glamour.”

The news reader’s face was replaced with footage of someone that looked very much like Gail. “The Elves call them Wildlings, but they resemble the demons of many cultures. The Elves claim they are here to hunt the Wildlings to prevent an invasion.

“While many governments are slow to move, Iceland’s President has already announced that the killing of any sentient being, including Wildlings, in their country will be dealt with as murder. Similar calls are being made in other countries, while some, including the U.S. are divided on the issue.”

Gail waved her hand toward the television and it turned off. “I suppose you want to kill me now, ‘Elf’?”

Stephanie shook her head. “No, I—,” she stammered, “I came to tell you…, but—”

“How about I tell you why I’m here,” Gail said. When Stephanie didn’t respond, she continued. “I was sent away three hundred years ago, to protect these.” She pointed to her bookshelves. When the glamour was still active, they had appeared to be packed with paperback romance novels. What the glamour had hidden was a collection of ancient texts; each small book bound in leather with fine vellum pages filled with the tiny scribblings of an even older language.

“This is our history.” Gail stepped protectively in front of the books. “The discovery of these books by your people started the war.”

“We didn’t—,”

“No! If you’re here to destroy the books, you’ll have a fight,” Gail said, “regardless of how much I’ve valued you as my neighbor.”

Stephanie sat cross-legged on the floor, her back against the door. “I was going to say that’s not how the war started… the reason we started the war. Maybe I should explain.” She heaved a sigh and focused her gaze on the past. “I ran away… a little more than a hundred years ago. I’ve been helping the F’tach cross the veil and hide here.”

“Thank you for not calling me Pittik,” Gail said, “or the English translation of ‘Wildling’. Would you prefer the English term Elf, or something else?”

“Just Steph. It’s actually my Illiran name, too.”

“Okay, Steph.” Gail eyed her with bare suspicion. “Continue.”

“How much do you know about Gailadriel?”

“My namesake aunt,” Gail said. “She was to become the next High Magician of the F’tach when her horns came in full. Instead, a Kirik, sorry…, an Illiran, Bandal, showed up at the hidden library. He was impressed with her magic and knowledge, and she let him study the history texts. Then he stole her away in the night and imprisoned her in his city. She’s probably still there, if not dead.”

“That’s partially right,” Steph said. “They left in the middle of the night, because Gailadriel knew that the elders would never let her leave with a, how do you say it? F’tach Kirik… a hornless one. They returned to the city, where Bandal kept her hidden as long as he could. Then they… had twins, a boy and girl.”

Gail showed no surprise, but she couldn’t meet the other woman’s eyes. Her jaw worked as if she were holding something back.

Steph gave her a moment to respond, but when she didn’t, she continued. “At first all was well. They seemed to be average Illiran children with slightly long ears, even if they weren’t readily accepted by anyone who knew who their mother was. Until they reached puberty.”

Gail’s face dropped. “I know what happened next,” she said. “Their horns started coming in.”

“Yes.” Steph leaned her head against the door. “First, we thought the F’tach had no magic, then we learned otherwise. Then, we didn’t think F’tach and Illiran could mate, but they could. Even then, everything was fine until their horns came in. It panicked a lot of people. Not only did they have magic far more powerful than any Illiran, but they could breed us out of existence if they wished. It was a ridiculous idea, but it caught like wildfire.”

“We’ve always known that F’tach and Illiran could mate,” Gail said. “Thousands of years ago, any F’tach who failed to start their horns in by twenty was banished. I understand that you know a little of our language, but F’tach just means person, and F’tach Kirik means hornless person. The word kirik, though, also means unclean, foul, cursed. A hornless person, by law, cannot marry or mate. So those who failed to horn were banished.”

“No doubt a recessive trait,” Steph said, “and since they would only encounter others who were banished, their children would be hornless as well. But what about the magic? Every one of you I’ve met has been far more powerful than any Illiran.”

“It’s a matter of practice.” Gail smiled. “You wouldn’t expect a person who lives in a city, works in an office, and drives everywhere to be able to run as fast and as far as someone who lives a hunter-gatherer lifestyle, right? Same thing.

“Your cities are like these human cities. Permanent structures protect you; your food is grown in cultivated fields; you travel using technologies that take the burden for you. Our shelter is made of magic; our food is gathered from the forest using magic; we travel by foot or fly by magic. Where you use electricity to send messages and make light, we use magic. When that starts from early childhood, it grows strong.” Gail crossed the room and sat in front of Steph. “You are the same as us,” she said, “and capable of the same things. When the rules about hornless ones were written, it was more to do with ending child marriages. It got twisted over the millennia into something else.”

Steph looked at Gail, her eyes boring a question into the other woman’s. “What about hornless F’tach born now? Do they still get banished? Why haven’t we heard of it?”

“Twenty-two hundred years ago, the High Magician created a stone that ‘fixed’ them. Anyone whose horns haven’t begun to sprout by nineteen is left to spend a week in the stone’s aura.” Gail sighed. “I was one of those. The field changes the DNA, the recessive trait is overwritten, and your body begins pumping out hormones. It’s torture.”

“If you know it’s a recessive gene, why do you still do it?”

“The primary poisoner of society,” Gail said, “religion. Our laws are so old they have turned into dogma and the initial writers of those laws into gods. The same reason so many humans have a problem with the transgendered, or homosexual. That’s why we always assumed the Illiran attacked after Baldan returned with our history. The fact that for six thousand years we had labeled you unclean, cursed, less than; then banished you to starve alone on the plains.”

“Baldan never shared what he learned in the library,” Steph said, “except to say, ‘Some things are best left in the past.’ After his children’s horns came in, they crossed the veil. They’ve been in hiding here for at least as long as you have.”

“My aunt is here?” Gail asked. She slouched, an invisible weight bearing down on her shoulders. “What are we going to do about the F’tach already here? If the humans think we’re demons, they’ll start hunting us, too.”

“Is there some way we could get the F’tach elders and Illiran Counsel to the bargaining table?” Steph asked. “Maybe show them the truth that Baldan knew?”

“How do you think the Illiran Counsel would react to knowing that their entire society came from the banishment of F’tach who were deemed unclean?” Gail shook her head. “The elders would kill me before I got the first word out, anyway. If my aunt had stayed, she planned on revising the laws, and destroying the hornstone. She wanted to start talks with the Illiran, too. That’s the only reason she afforded Baldan the access she did.”

“There has to be something we could do.” Steph grabbed Gail’s hand. “If we could convince them that we are the same–,”

“How do we do that?” Gail asked. “Maybe we should focus on convincing the humans that Iliran and F’tach are the same. Might at least give us a little safety.”

“I don’t know,” Steph said, “but whatever we decide to do, I think we should do it together.”

Trunk Stories

Family Is Forever

prompt: Write about someone who discovers the only family member they have left has just betrayed them….

available at Reedsy

There’s something not quite human in me. When I should be grieving a loss, I find myself oddly serene. In the moments when others panic, I’m met with a calm that makes it easy to weigh my options and choose a course of action.

I was warned, of course. The more implants I collected, the greater the impact on my humanity. After the corporate wars divvied up the planet between the victors it seemed I had little reason to care any longer. I knew my family was gone. By the time my little sister found me, and I found out she was still alive, it was too late. Still, for her sake, I had to try.

At least, that’s what I told myself. The truth of the matter is that I felt empty. There had to be some bit of my old self left, somewhere. And I had no one I could trust, save her.

“Nika,” I told her, “you should come stay with me in Seattle.”

“Why,” she asked, “don’t you come stay with me in Columbus?”

We argued whether the A-Zed Corp rule was better or worse than OxanCorp. I tried to play the big brother/little sister card; unsuccessfully of course. Finally, it was the proximity to the ocean, and the fact that I lived in an apartment rather than a shack, that won her over; either that or I’m just more stubborn than she is.


“Grey,” she asked over our first breakfast together since I left home at eighteen, “what were you doing in the war? Drafted by A-Zed?”

“Private data courier service,” I answered. “A-Zed felt it was safe enough to let me continue, as I was useful for moving messages and data to other Corps, both allied and not. I know you were too young to be involved.”

“Not even. When Oxan took Columbus, they recruited soldiers starting at age sixteen, and scouts starting at age twelve.” She pushed her eggs around the plate. “When QualCorp glassed the city and Mom and Dad—” She fell silent.

“If it’s too hard to talk about, you don’t have to,” I said. “I just want you to know I’m here for you, any time.”

“Are you, really?” she asked. “You don’t seem here at all. All that shit in your brain has you messed up. I just hope you’re still in there somewhere.”

“I am.”

Nika set her fork down and looked at me with a question in her eyes. “Friends may come and go; acquaintances show up never; work may ebb and flow…”

“…but family is forever,” I added. “So, this is the way things are, the only way things must…”

“…if family ever fails, there’s no one left to trust,” she finished. “Do you trust me?” She reached across the small table to take my hand in hers. If the jack ports on my wrist bothered her, she didn’t show it.

“I do,” I answered. “You’re the only person in the world I trust. You didn’t have to break out dad’s poem for that.”

“Thank you.” Her eyes grew misty. She rose and began picking up the plates. “I have to go find a job. Mooching off your ill-gotten gains is fun, but hardly sustainable.”

“Why would you assume that?” I asked.

“No one has those kinds of enhancements unless they’re a hacker.” She waved a dismissive hand. “I don’t want to know who you’re working for or anything, as long as you stay safe.”

“Always.”

“I’m off to find an honest job,” she said. “Wish me luck.”

“Good luck.” I felt I should say more, something positive and uplifting, but nothing came to me.

While she was out, it was time for me to earn some more of those “ill-gotten gains.” I made my money selling information; information that I stole from others. A-Zed looked the other way, as long as I and others like me weren’t stealing the info from them, and as long as they got a chance to bid on it, and a cut of whatever sold elsewhere.

Since I didn’t have a definitive target, I thought I’d do some snooping to see who might be able to offer a job to Nika. Perhaps I could find her something she’d excel at. I sent half a dozen listings to her, already resigned to the complaints she’d have when she got back to the apartment.

I happened across a nice little bit of information about one of A-Zed’s allied corporations: their capital position was severely compromised. After shopping it around for the highest bidder, I offered it to A-Zed. As usual, they offered a reasonable, but not quite as high bid. I was free to sell it to someone else and cut them in, but A-Zed was just as free to decide I couldn’t live in their territory any longer.

Fresh credits in my account, I took a walk through the city. My cybernetic eyes watched the city around me in colors I never saw when I was still totally human. The data that poured in via my enhancements floated in front of me in a virtual heads-up display. The skyscrapers stood proud above the damp, grey squalor beneath them. Shacks of wood and tin interspersed with tents showing their inhabitants in infrared formed the majority of the housing in the city. There used to be more land here, but as the sea rose, a quarter of the city fell into the sound.

I stopped at the corner mart on the way home to pick up some dinner. Most days I lived on sludge packs; all the nutrients I need without thinking about flavor or texture. It meant no cooking or washing dishes, too. I figured, however, Nika might like some actual food.


“Rice wine or beer?” I asked when she came in.

“Have anything stronger?”

“With dinner?”

“I thought I’d drink my dinner,” Nika said.

I served up instant dinners with beer. “How about we save that for after you get some food in you?”

She didn’t respond, but she did wolf down the microwave beef and broccoli after draining the beer.

“Didn’t go well today?”

“No.” She threw the container in the trash and began rummaging through the cupboards.

“Glasses are in the left top cupboard, whiskey’s in there too.”

She grabbed two large glasses and the whiskey and crossed the room to the seating area. “You joining me?”

I took the bottle from her and poured us both two fingers. As I sat in the broken-down chair in front of the tele-screen, she doubled her pour.

“I have the sense that I should be concerned,” I said, “but I’ll leave it to you to decide whether to tell me.”

She downed the drink and poured another. “It’s just been a rough day.”

“Did you check the listings I sent you?”

She shook her head. “I wanted to do it on my own, but I’ll check those tomorrow.”

I took my time with my drink. Not because I wanted to savor it, but because I didn’t feel like getting drunk.

“I missed you. I still miss you,” she said. “I’m sorry.”

“For what?”

“It took me so long to find you again. I thought you might be dead.” She took a slug of whiskey. “By the time I found you, you were already…” she waved her hand at me.

“I thought you were dead,” I said. “After the nuke in Columbus, I mean.”

Nika downed her fourth or fifth and gave me a curious look. “You’re an asshole, did you know that?”

“I wasn’t aware of that, no.” I thought about what she might be referring to. “Is it about the listings?”

“No,” she said, “just in general.” She laughed and stopped short. Her eyes bored into mine. “God, you really are messed up, aren’t you?”

“Messed up how?”

“Forget it.” She poured another round for both of us and turned on the tele-screen. We watched the A-Zed news for a while before she called it a night and tucked herself into the spare cot.

I lay down in my cot and set myself to breathing evenly. Nika’s breathing became erratic, and she began to cry. Not knowing how to respond I pretended to be out and listened until she cried herself to sleep.

I heated up breakfast, ignoring the tear stains on her cheeks when she woke. “Shower’s free, breakfast in five.”

Nika nodded and carried a change of clothes into the small bathroom. The shower ran for the allotted three minutes of hot water, and she emerged shortly after in fresh clothes. The circles under her eyes betrayed her lack of sleep.

I pointed to her plate as I dug into my own breakfast. She sat and began eating. “You have any coffee?” she asked.

“Nope, don’t drink it,” I said. “I can pick some up this afternoon, though.”

“I need some this morning.” She finished her eggs and stood. “You’re coming with me today.”

“Why is that?”

“I need my big brother for moral support,” she said. “Plus, you need to show me where to get a good cup of coffee.”


We walked past the corner mart and she stopped me. “They have coffee here, don’t they?”

“I thought you wanted good coffee?”

“Have you had the coffee here?”

“No,” I said, “but it always smells burnt.”

She looked as though she was holding back tears. “Do you trust me?”

“I do.”

“Do you think I would ever do anything to hurt you?”

“Of course not,” I said. “What’s the matter?”

She pulled me into the little store and ordered a large coffee, and kept adding on to her order: cream, sugar, vanilla, a sprinkle of cocoa, whipped cream. When she ran out of things to add on, she talked to the cashier. Even before my enhancements I wasn’t one for small talk, but she seemed to have a gift for it. She glanced at the clock on the wall and looked surprised.

“I’m sorry, I’ve been rattling on,” she said. “I should let you get back to work.”

We walked out of the mart and I found myself being bundled into a van by two large men with weapons. “Run, Nika!” I yelled. There was no panic, just the calm observation that doing anything else contrary to their demands would result in a negative outcome.

The logo on the men’s holsters was that of OxanCorp. If they were caught kidnapping civilians in A-Zed territory it could turn nasty. “What’s this about?” I asked.

The men cuffed me to a rail in the van and shackled my feet together. If they thought I was dangerous, I might be able to work out an escape plan. They hadn’t grabbed Nika as they were focused solely on me. The front door opened, and I couldn’t see who else got in, but then we started moving toward the free zone.

“Huh, I only saw two of you,” I said. “Well played.”

“Grey, I’m sorry,” Nika said from the front seat, “but it’s for your own good.”

“Nika?” The calm broke; the formerly placid surface of my mind rippled as all my constructs of reality crumbled. “Why?”

“We’re taking you to an Oxan clinic in Reno,” she said. “They’ll pull all that shit out of your head and get you healed up again. I want my brother back.”

I felt fear for the first time in years. With it came a pain I couldn’t name or point to. My sister, my last hope for feeling human again, had sold me out. Tears burned as they ran down my cheeks. “I trusted you! You can’t do this to me. It will kill me!” The panic in my voice surprised me. “The nano-structures are well into my brain stem by this point.”

“No!” Nika’s voice was sharp. “They’ve got the best nano-surgeons and tools. I signed a life contract with them to pay for it.”

“And if I refuse?”

“I’m sorry, Grey, that’s not an option.” Nika’s voice broke. “As soon as I saw how far gone you were, I got a power of attorney from an Oxan judge. You’re not of fit mind to maintain your own health. Until you are, I’m making the decisions.”

That’s what you were doing yesterday. Did you ever love me,” I asked, “or just the idea of a big brother?”

“I did and I do, but you’re too messed up to see it now.” Nika grabbed the rearview mirror and adjusted so she could see me. Her tears flowed without hesitation. “A-Zed’s been using you. You’re not a free agent or consultant or whatever. If you were, you’d be living in the free zone, instead of an apartment owned by them.”

“I thought you didn’t know or care to know who I worked for?”

“I can put two and two together,” she said. “You live in a corporate apartment, you work for the corporation, even if they let you think you don’t.”

I looked away from her, no longer able to see my sister in the reflection. I pulled my legs in under me and curled up into a ball. “There’s no one left to trust.”

Trunk Stories

Pulling Threads

In the farthest corner of the twenty-four-hour diner sat a small woman typing away at her laptop. A mass of unruly medium-brown hair formed a halo around her pale golden face, while a scattering of brown freckles played across her straight nose beneath bright hazel eyes. She was connected to the dark web, adding “classified” information under her alias as “Vassily,” a former covert Russian operative, on the run after uncovering a dangerous secret.

Two weeks ago, the Premier of Transmontia had a series of phone calls which kept her occupied for the entire day. My sources say those calls included the Russian President, the Chinese President, the British Prime Minister, and the United States President. Yesterday afternoon, the Premier of Transmontia sacked her entire cabinet, replacing them with “reformers,” even as tens of billions of dollars of national debt disappeared off their books. Those same reformers wasted no time cutting deals for: Russian oil, tech trade with China, and open borders to several NATO countries. This smells like a back-door NATO invasion into Eastern Europe while trying to keep Russia and China in the dark with their own deals.

She read over her posting and submitted it. Except for the bit about the phone calls and the over-the-top likening it to an invasion, it was, more or less, factually accurate. The disappearance of the national debt was easily explained; it was artificial debt created by members of the cabinet to their privately held companies. Cleaning up the cabinet opened the country up for previously stalled trade deals, and the open borders agreements were with the EU and the EAEU. Still, a little easily verified truth makes the rest seem plausible.

“What’s the new conspiracy?”

Eris looked up from her laptop. The woman who stood across from her had warm, olive skin, hazel eyes, and long, straight black hair. She was dressed in a bespoke suit, custom-made Louboutins, and oversized sunglasses. Eris felt a small pang comparing the woman’s too-perfect appearance to her own. She tugged at the hem of her hoodie, trying to straighten it out. “Why are you here, Laverna?”

“I just wanted to check on you.” Laverna sat opposite Eris and pushed her laptop closed. She made a point of looking over Eris’ outfit, torn jeans, a t-shirt that said, “Underestimate me, I dare you”, a black hoodie, and ratty sneakers. “You really don’t seem to be doing so well these days.”

“Why, because I like to blend in?”

“Because you look a mess.” Laverna laughed. “Let me take you in for a few days, I’ll have you looking like a goddess again.”

Eris snorted. “You don’t look like a goddess. You look like a cross between a failed actress, a banker, a pimp, and a mob boss.”

Laverna smiled, but there was no warmth behind it, her dark-brown eyes icy. “I have been some of those things,” she said. “Never tried acting, but never needed to.”

That stung. “I didn’t act in the silents because I needed to, it was just something to do.”

“How long have you been living on the investments you made with your movie money?” Laverna’s smile turned to a smirk. “Investments that I helped you make?”

Eris frowned. “Fine, I needed to then, but I don’t need to now.”

“So instead, you what? Start conspiracy theories?”

“That, and deep fakes. It keeps me amused.” Eris put her elbows on the table and leaned her chin on her hands. “And it works very well. Have you noticed the state of the world lately?”

“I have,” she said, motioning the waitress over. “Coffee, black, and whatever fresh fruit you have.” As the waitress turned to go, she added, “Fresh fruit, nothing from a can.”

“Now, if you’re done being rude, I’ll go,” Eris said. She stuffed her laptop into the backpack on the seat next to her.

“Please, stay.” The set of Laverna’s face told Eris she didn’t have a choice. “I helped you invest, and you owe me one.”

“So, you need my help.”

“I didn’t say that.” Laverna shifted, turning away from Eris toward the window. “I just said you owe me.”

“If you can’t say you need my help, you won’t get it.” Eris reached for her backpack and began to stand.

“Okay, fine. I need your help.”

“Better.” Eris settled into the booth. “Tell me what you need.”

“I assume you know what happened in Transmontia.”

“Of course. Crooked politicians got busted.”

The waitress returned with a cup of coffee and a salad plate filled with apple and pear slices, berries, grapes, and chunks of cantaloupe. Laverna smiled at her and turned back to Eris. “That happens when you get stupid.”

“They got greedy.”

“Greed,” Laverna said, “is a fine motivator, but I have no respect for anyone stupid enough to get caught.”

“Okay, fine.” Eris stole a grape off the plate. “What’s that got to do with me?”

Laverna took a sip of her coffee, frowned at it, and set it down. “The current Premier is opening things up. This is aligned with my interests.”

“And?” Eris watched with raised eyebrows while Laverna quietly ate a few pieces of her fruit. “Why must I drag everything out of you? If you don’t tell me what you need help with, I’m leaving, and considering this annoying conversation as payment in full.”

“The current Premier is well liked, by a little more than half the population.” Laverna poured sugar into her coffee and tried another sip. “The rest, though, hate her with a passion.”

“Sounds like a riot in the making.”

“All I’m asking for is that you don’t poke around in Transmontia until after the next election.”

Eris frowned, her eyes squinting. “I don’t think you’re going to like me very much, then.”

“What have you done?”

“I may have played a little amusement in Transmontia… just seconds before you came in here.”

“Undo it. Now.” Laverna leaned forward, staring into Eris’ eyes. “You owe me, I’m calling in my debt.”

“Oh, Laverna, you know I don’t work that way,” Eris took Laverna’s hand in her own and patted it. “I just pull threads and see what happens.”

Laverna jerked her hand back. “You will undo it, or I will turn one of my lower-level organizations loose in your beloved little neighborhood.”

“That’s not a threat, dear.” Eris smiled. “I love all my neighbors, but the neighborhood does get a little… predictable after a while.”

“Eris, how many times have I stayed your hand over the last 100 years?” Laverna asked.

“Too many.”

“Do this for me, and it is debt paid in full.”

“You seem desperate, cousin.” Eris took Laverna’s hand again. “I will try, and my debt will be released.”

Laverna grabbed Eris’ hand in a bone-crushing grip. “You will do, or your debt is doubled.”

Eris considered a flippant response but knew there was no way to get through to Laverna when she was like this. “Fine, cousin.” She looked around the diner. “How far we’ve come, huh?”

“What do you mean?”

“You used to have a temple, a grove, and a gate named after you in Rome. While I,” Eris said, shaking her head in mock dismay, “never had any of those. But I’ve got my own cult now.” Her eyes lit up in a broad smile.

“It’s a fucking parody, not even a real cult,” Laverna snapped.

“Works for me. They don’t take me seriously, and I don’t take anything seriously.” Eris stood. “You, dear cousin, take everything too seriously. Now, if I’m to quell the chaos, as sickeningly boring as that sounds, I really must be leaving.” She motioned the waitress over and handed her a twenty-dollar bill which she put into her apron pocket.

Laverna rose and shook the waitress’ hand, apologizing for being rude, and presented what she thought was the twenty from the waitress’ apron. Instead, it was a slip of paper with the words “Nice try.” Laverna raised an eyebrow, then noticed her keys dangling from the waitress’ finger. She held her hand out for her keys to be returned. “You’re good.”

The waitress stared into Laverna’s piercing gaze and dropped the keys into her waiting hand. “You’re not so bad yourself.”

Laverna handed a business card and a hundred-dollar bill to the woman. “If you want a job, give me a call.”

Eris returned to her one-room apartment in Little Athens. Being surrounded by Greek neighbors was comforting, even if they butchered the language and acted just like all the other Americans.

She removed her laptop from her backpack to check on her amusements. By logging in to alternate accounts she was able to keep up with her growing conspiracies. The flat-earthers were getting more sincere, even holding international conferences while their idiocy was debunked as soon as it was released. The one about conservatives being part of a world-wide Nazi conspiracy to destroy governments so that Hitler’s secret grandchildren could take them over by proxy was growing again, but still quite slow. Her more recent conspiracy about a world-wide, Satanic, child-killing cult of liberals and elites, however, was spreading like wildfire. Some of its adherents were even being elected to major party positions.

How to stop the Transmontia game was top of her mind. One of the Russian state-run news sites was already running it as a story, it was picking up in social media, and it wouldn’t be long before the videos started showing up. She sighed. Laverna spoiled her amusement for a hundred-year-old debt. She closed her eyes, visualizing the situations as threads in a weave. It was a simple matter to find the thread to pull to make the whole thing chaotic but once that was pulled, figuring out how to reverse it was impossible.

The best Laverna could hope for, and the absolute worst as far as Eris was concerned, was that some other shiny thing would take the focus off her little game long enough for the truth to overcome the narrative. Sure, there would be people who would cling to it forever, bless their tiny little minds, but it might still be possible to save the Premier and her new agreements.

It was time for “R,” her former NSA agent alias to produce a video. She couldn’t upload it to social media herself but posting it on the dark web and on one of the -chan sites would see it hit the major social media within a matter of hours.

Eris wrote a script and memorized it. In one corner of her apartment, a sheet hung over the wall, bright lights behind it. In front of it sat a camera and microphone. She stuffed her hair into her hoodie and put a baseball cap over it. She added a jacket with padded shoulders to change her profile, and a long, full, false beard to be captured in profile. With the backlights on full and the camera running she sat down and recited her lines.

“Several hours ago, I received word from ‘Vassily,’ a former FSB agent and long-time source, that his family was captured by criminal elements in Transmontia. Those same criminals that the Premier ousted for the billions of fraudulent charges to their companies. That message was composed by the ousted cabinet. The truth is that all the debt that ‘disappeared’ was the fraudulent debt to those cabinet member’s pockets. The trade deals were already in the works but stalled by the corruption in the politburo. In regard to the open borders, NATO has nothing to do with it. It’s open borders with both the EU and EAEU. By the time you hear this, our operatives, working in concert with Vassily’s, will have freed his family and he will be out of Transmontia, headed to a safe-house somewhere else.”

Eris logged in to five different Twitter accounts, one logged in from Brazil, one from the UK, and three from Transmontia. Over the course of the next hour, she posted just a few tweets.

IamR: Op status go #savevassily

R-naught: On the ground #savevassily

Ribocop: In place #savevassily

R-naught: ten on mark #savevassily

Lil’bro: tango down #savevassily

R-naught: success #savevassily

Ribocop: en route #savevassily #howwedo

VassilyActual: with family en route to safehouse much thanks @IamR

She edited the video, darkening her image to a silhouette, and altering her voice to be unidentifiable. After editing she posted it on the dark web, and as “R” to starchan.

After she waited another two hours, she posted another Tweet from “VassilyActual” saying that he and his family were safe, and to ignore his earlier post. She watched as #savevassily trended briefly then trailed off. Finally, she posted a follow-up message on the dark web from “Vassily.”

Family safe, thanks to assist from R-anon and others. Former cabinet members Varislov, Lebedev, Kuznetsov, and Oblonsky directly involved in kidnapping of my family. They stand to gain the most by keeping Transmontia closed off from EU and EAEU. Premier Yeltsina is watching out for her country, these crooks are watching out for their wallets.

By morning her new conspiracy was growing more quickly in Eastern Europe than any other she had started and was gaining support in the US as well. It was a simple matter of time before it turned into protests against the former cabinet members, and possibly their arrest, if the mob didn’t get to them first.

As evening rolled around Eris returned to the diner to troll social media, right-wing and left-wing specialized media, and major news sites. Her “usual,” a random selection from the menu made by the waitress shuffling and drawing cards, arrived: a salad with olive oil, tater tots, a pork chop and unsweetened iced tea today. This time she heard the clack of Laverna’s heels as she approached.

“Twice in two days,” she said. “I’d think you’re starting to like me.”

Laverna said something to the waitress as she passed her and sat down. “You really can’t help yourself, can you?”

Eris popped a tater-tot in her mouth and raised an eyebrow in question.

“I told you I didn’t want you fucking around in Transmontia!”

Eris shrugged. “And then you told me to undo what I’d already done before you said that. Make up your mind, would you?”

“I told you to undo it.” Laverna’s cheeks flushed with contained rage. “I did not tell you to start a protest and send an angry mob into the streets.”

“It was already going to happen,” Eris said, biting into another tater-tot. “Best I could do was change the target.”

The waitress set down a plate of fruit and a glass of sweet tea for Laverna, giving her a wink as she did so.

“Looks like you made a friend,” Eris said.

“And you are trying to make me an enemy.”

“If you want to calm the mob, give them what they want.” Eris sipped her iced tea. “Help the Premier arrest the former cabinet members and they’ll calm down.”

“I don’t… that’s not…,” Laverna sighed. “I guess it’s no different than trying to get you to bring order to chaos.”

“It’s not,” Eris said, “but if I know you, you’ll figure out a way to make money on it anyway.”

Laverna thought for a moment and nodded, a small smile crawling across her face. “I think I will at that.”

They ate in silence, only speaking again once their plates were empty. “I miss her,” Eris said.

“Who?”

“Tacita. She never said much, or anything, really, but she was always so calming.”

Laverna nodded. “She did make it easier for the two of us to get along. Where has she gone?”

“Last I heard she was a monk in Tibet.” Eris finished off her iced tea. “But that was, what, fifty-odd years ago?”

“Same.” Laverna stared at her drink as if searching for answers. “Hey, did you hear about the anti-Greek protests in Russia? Or did you start that, too?”

“No, I was too busy trying to fix things for you in Transmontia.”

“A Russian Orthodox priest was killed while visiting Greece. It’s getting ugly.”

“Not the way I do things,” Eris said. “I prefer to dangle half-truths and whole lies and watch what kind of insanity rolls out of the little minds of the humans. I don’t do assassination. Well, except for character assassination.”

Laverna grunted a non-reply.

“I may just have to sit back and see how well the humans spin this one out of control on their own,” Eris said. “After all, I shouldn’t be forced to make all my own entertainment.”

“I gave up on entertainment long ago.”

“But you run the largest international criminal organization in history. That’s got to account for something.”

Laverna sighed. “Even the few in the company that do pray, they’re praying to St. Dismas, not me. At least you have a cult, even if it’s a parody. Th—that’s not the point! I’m flying out to Transmontia tonight, so I won’t be around for a week or so.”

Eris was about to ask what, exactly, was the point when she was interrupted by sirens passing by the diner. “They’re playing my song,” she said. “Sounds like they’re heading to Little Athens.” She grabbed her backpack and handed a twenty to the waitress as she ran out the door to follow the noise.

Eris ran toward her neighborhood, her backpack slapping against her shoulder blades with every footfall. She turned the corner and saw it. Angry mobs facing off in the middle of the street, Greeks and Russians. Slurs and epithets were flying in a mishmash of English, Russian, and Greek. Those were quickly followed with fists, then stones, then Molotov cocktails. Her building was on fire.

Eris strode through the fracas to get to the other side. She threw her hood back and laughed. “This. Is. GLORIOUS!”

A rioter ran up to her from behind and hit her in the head with a baseball bat at full swing. He faltered when she laughed. Eris turned to him, smiled, and whispered in his ear. He wet himself, dropped the bat, and fell to the ground, curled in a fetal position. She could do the same to everyone there if she wished, but the chaos was just too beautiful to stop.

The fire trucks and ambulances were prevented from entering by the mob, and the police were doing their best not to get overwhelmed while they waited for SWAT to arrive. A late police car pulled in behind her, stopping at the gibbering man in the road. One officer checked on him while the other questioned Eris.

“Ma’am, it’s not safe here, you should probably go home.”

Eris pointed at the building, flames now licking up the outside to the top floor. “That’s where I live.” She did her best to hide her glee.

“I see,” she said. “What’s your name?”

“Eris Dichonoia,” she held out her hand. “Pleased to meet you, Officer…”

“Blake.” The officer shook her hand. “Do you have any ID?”

Eris pointed at the building. “In there. Didn’t think I’d need it.”

“What’s in the backpack?”

“Laptop, phone, a notebook and some pens,” she said. “I was just out doing some writing.”

“Do you know what happened to him?” she asked, pointing at the man paramedics were loading on to a stretcher.

“No,” Eris replied. She made a sweeping gesture toward the tumult in the street. “It was all probably just too much for him.”

“You don’t seem too concerned by it.”

“I grew up in the middle of a war,” she said, “this is nothing. When your entire life is unpredictable, you learn to roll with anything.”

SWAT troops poured past them, lobbing smoke grenades and firing pepper bullets. The crowds were quickly driven back enough for the fire trucks to get in, although the fire had well and truly taken hold of the building by that point.

“I’ll need to get a witness statement from you. We can do it now, or… do you have somewhere to go?” Blake asked.

“Not really,” she replied.

“In that case, would you mind coming to the station to give your witness statement while it’s fresh in your mind? We’ll help you find a room for tonight.”

“In the jail?” she asked. “I’ve never been to one.”

Blake laughed. “No, I meant we’d find you a motel room.”

#

The motel room was an extended stay suite with a small living room and kitchenette. It was similar in size to the apartment she’d lost in the fire, so Eris stayed. Two days after a phone call to the lawyer Laverna insisted she keep on retainer, she had a new ID and passport, and had changed her permanent address to the motel. Her lawyer also drew up a contract that gave her three years residency in exchange for payment up-front at ten percent below the current rate.

The rioting in Little Athens and elsewhere died down as the story came out. The priest wasn’t killed, he died of a previously unknown allergy to peanuts after having a candy bar containing the legume for the first time in his life.

Eris read the news articles about the incident and the subsequent calls for forgiveness and unity. “Boring.” She trolled the -chan boards to see what new sorts of mischief were afoot. When nothing caught her interest, she returned to the diner.

She was just about to sit down when two police officers approached. “Ms. Dichonoia, you’re under arrest for the assault and battery of Sergei Kozmelov.” One officer grabbed her backpack while the other cuffed her hands behind her back.

“Excuse, me, officer,” she said, “I have a twenty-dollar bill in my hoodie pocket that was for dinner. Could you please give it to the waitress for her trouble?” She smiled at the waitress who was standing dumbfounded, holding her order.

The officer pulled the twenty out of her pocket, examined it, and handed it to the waitress. “Your money, if you wanna throw it away,” he said. He patted her down, and content that her pockets were empty, led her out to their car.

When she entered the station, she saw Blake walking by with a cup of coffee. “Hi, Blake!”

“Oh, hi,” she said. “I forgot your name.”

“Eris,” she called over her shoulder as they marched her to an interrogation room. Once they were in the room one of the officers removed her cuffs and told her to sit in the chair at the table. “Can I get you something to drink? Coffee? Soda?”

“Water would be fine, thanks,” she said.

Blake entered with a plain-clothes officer and they sat in the chairs opposite her. “I’m officer Blake, this is detective Adamson. He’ll be asking the questions, I’ll be observing.”

Adamson read from his clipboard. “You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law. You have the right to an attorney. If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided for you. Do you understand the rights I have just read to you?”

“Sure, I guess,” Eris said.

“With these rights in mind, do you wish to speak to me?”

“I don’t know. Are you a good conversationalist?” Turning to face Blake she smiled openly and asked, “Does this mean I’ll get to see what a jail looks like?”

Blake raised an eyebrow and looked at Adamson. “See?”

Adamson cleared his throat. “Ms. Dichonoia,” he started before she cut him off.

“Please, Eris.”

“Eris, my colleague thinks you’ve got a screw loose. But I’ve got a guy in the hospital with brain damage, and the only thing he can say is ‘Eris Dichonoia did this.’”

“How odd.” Eris tilted her head. “How did he get brain damaged? Or was he born that way? And what does he say I did?”

“Why don’t you tell me about what happened the night of the riot in Little Athens?”

“Well, I was having dinner with my cousin at the diner over on Lake and 115th when I heard the sirens heading toward Little Athens.” Eris leaned forward. “I ran home as fast as I could, but by the time I got there my building was on fire.”

“We have reports that you were laughing and yelling about it being glorious.”

“Look, Adamson, I was born in a war-zone. I grew up in war. If you don’t have a sense of humor everything will tear you down. When you can’t control what’s going on you have to decide whether to enjoy the chaos or suffer it. Either way, the only thing you can control is how you react.” Eris sat up straighter. “I choose to enjoy chaos. There’s already too much suffering in the world.”

He slid a photo across the table. “Do you recognize this man?” It was the man who had hit her with a bat.

“I’ve seen him around the bodega on 119th,” she said. “I don’t remember his name, but he was always hitting on me. Not my type, though.”

Blake held up a hand to stop Adamson. “Listen, Ms. Dichonoia… Eris. I have witnesses that say he hit you with a bat and you didn’t flinch. Instead, you whispered in his ear and he collapsed.”

“That sounds a little loony to me,” Eris said. Leaning over the table she whispered, “Are you feeling okay, Blake?”

“Enough of the crazy talk.” Adamson pointed at the photo. “What did you do to him?”

“I explained how rushing into a mob with a bat was a bad idea,” she said.

“You didn’t tell me you talked to him,” Blake said.

“No,” Eris said. “You didn’t ask. You asked what was wrong with him, and I told you that it was all probably a bit too much for him.”

“What did you say to him?” Adamson had the practiced look of cool indifference.

“I just explained how big and chaotic the universe is and how tiny he was in comparison.” Eris shrugged.

“And that gave him brain damage?”

“How could that give anyone brain damage?” Eris asked.

“When did he collapse?” Blake asked.

“Right after I talked to him.”

“And you didn’t try to administer any assistance?” Adamson asked.

“No,” Eris said. “I’m not a doctor and I’m not getting sued for trying to be helpful. Besides, I was busy watching my apartment go up in flames.”

Someone knocked on the door and Adamson got up and slipped outside. A moment later he came back in. “We’re done for now; your attorney is here.” He and Blake left, and the attorney Eris had on retainer but had never seen entered.

“Hello, Eris,” she said. “I’m your attorney, and you are not to answer any more questions without my approval.”

Eris scowled. “Themis, how did you get here? Or are you calling yourself Justitia again?”

“Actually, my current name is Julia,” she said. “Besides, none of the current effigies of me are flattering, are they?”

“Well, Julia, since it seems our cousin has saddled me with you, what are you doing here?”

“You’re in a bad spot, cousin.” Julia pulled out her cell phone and showed the video to Eris.

“Decent deep fake, but not great,” she said. “What’s that supposed to be in my hand?”

“Supposedly some sort of poison you administered.”

“Let me guess, Transmontia is safe for Laverna now, and she needs new leverage.”

“You never were stupid.” Julia switched to another video. This one showed the man swinging the bat at her, Eris turning and talking to him, and the man nodding and then slowly lying down on the road.

“So, I get back on the hook with Laverna and she releases the second video. I decide to go it alone and she releases the first.”

“That’s about the size of it.”

“I’d never make it to prison, you know.” Eris smiled. “If I wanted to, I could walk out of here right now.”

“But your face would be plastered all over. You wouldn’t find a place to blend in, for at least a generation.” Julia put up her phone and shrugged. “If that’s what you want to do, that’s your call.”

“I’m no good with this kind of decision,” Eris said. “Not enough variables visible to find the right thread to pull. Have you got a coin?”

Julia pulled a quarter out of her pocket. “Planning on making a call?”

“No,” Eris said, “you are.” She flipped the coin high overhead. “Call it.”

“Heads,” Julia said.

They watched the coin clatter to the table. It landed tails. “I guess I’m not playing this round. Tell Laverna to release her weak deep fake and we’ll see where it leads.”

Julia narrowed her eyes. “You’ve already seen where it will lead, and you’re ready to pull at the threads.”

“You and your foresight,” Eris sighed. “You always were a spoil-sport. I thought I’d get the chance for her to owe me a debt for a century.”

Julia texted Laverna and waited for a response. When it showed up, she knocked on the door. “Bring the officers back in.”

The officers entered and Julia showed them the second video. “Do you see any attack here, other than the man barely missing her with the bat?” she asked.

“Where did you get this?” Blake asked.

“I’ll send you the link. It’s spreading on social media,” Julia said.

Adamson sighed. “The video seems to match your story, but why didn’t you say anything about Mr. Kozmelov trying to hit you with a bat?”

Eris looked Julia, who nodded. “Because,” Eris said, “it seemed like he was in a bad enough place already without me getting him in trouble.”

“Do you want to press charges?”

“No,” she replied, then turned to Julia. “Sorry, spoke without your okay.”

“Quite all right, Eris.” Julia looked at Adamson. “So, is my client free to go?”

“Yes,” Adamson said. “Just don’t leave town any time soon. We may need more information from you.”

“Thank you.” Julia rose and led Eris out of the interrogation room.

“Laverna’s pissed, huh?” Eris asked.

“No,” Julia said, “but she is disappointed, I’m sure.”

#

Eris and Laverna sat at the diner, eating a quiet supper. Laverna looked at Eris, opened her mouth to say something, then stopped. Finally, she caved. “I feel ashamed. It’s not something I’m used to. You caught me and I can’t fathom how to feel about that.”

“Never mind that. Good try anyway, cousin,” Eris said, “but deep fakes are not your strong suit.”

Laverna pushed her plate aside. “I worry when you’re not in my debt. You’re too unhinged for my tastes to be running wild. It’s discomforting to know I have no way to rein you in.”

“Life is unpredictable,” Eris said, “or at least I work to keep it that way. I’m sure you’ll find something else to hold over my head one day. Not that it’s ever slowed me down before.”

Read More

Trunk Stories

Wild Things

prompt: Write about someone who keeps an unusual animal as a pet….

available at Reedsy

Every job has at least one task that separates work from not-work; that task that one wishes could be ignored. For Corinna this was the task she was faced with. Separating people from their animal companions is easy when those people are abusive; but painful when it breaks a heart. There was no sign of abuse here, in fact, given the animal in question it was impossible, but the law is the law.

She knocked at the door, taking in its large size. She smoothed her straight silver hair behind her pointed ears, making it frame her coal-black face. When she didn’t hear a response, she tried the bell near the door.

An excited, chirping, “chee-ka-ka-chee” came from within the house, followed by a muffled voice. The large door opened, and her violet eyes reflected the morning light that poured through the back of the house and washed over her.

“Is Marcus Tybalt here?” she asked.

“I am,” he answered.

Her eyebrows drew together, and she looked at the data on her tablet. “I may have the wrong Marcus Tybalt,” she said. “I was looking for a troll, not a dwarf.”

He laughed. “Thanks! Can I get a photo of your documents there?” he asked. “I’m getting a refund from the company that ‘fixed’ my records after I was hacked.”

“Ah.” Corinna held her tablet where he could take a photo with his phone. “I suppose you know why I’m here.”

“That says I have an illegal pet.” Marcus pointed at the tablet. “I don’t have any pets.”

“We have eyewitness reports—”

“Damn nosy neighbors.” He sighed. “Come on in. Would you like a cup of tea? Coffee? Something stronger?”

“Tea would be lovely.” She stepped into the house and held out her hand. “Corinna Dastone, Animal Law Enforcement.”

Marcus shook her hand. “You already know who I am,” he said. “Nice to meet you, Corinna.” He led her through the kitchen to the breakfast nook where warm morning light poured in through the large sliding-glass door.

“This is a lovely home,” she said. Plants grew on shelves, bathed in the morning sunlight. A pet flap was installed in the wall near the sliding-glass doors. The yard beyond had a small patch of grass that bordered a downward slope to ever-thickening woods.

“I can’t take any credit for that,” he said, pouring tea. “I haven’t changed anything since I bought it two years ago.”

“The pet flap?”

“That was here, yup.” He brightened. “Oh! I put in those shelves there. Where the morning light is perfect for my plants.”

She continued to scan the house. With the open plan she could see the kitchen, dining area, living room, entry, and a hallway leading to the rest of the house. A heavily used scratching post at the far end of the living room caught her eye.

Marcus continued to drink his tea, and watched her, a hint of a smile touching his deep brown eyes. “Well? What did you want to ask?”

“Mr. Tybalt, you have an illegal pet, and it’s my job to collect it. It’s an endangered species.” Corinna sighed. “If it can be rehabilitated and released in the wild, that’s what we’ll do. If not, it will likely have to go to a zoo for a breeding program. Just because it’s the smallest of its kind doesn’t mean it’s a fit pet.”

“As I said, I have no pets.” He carried his cup and saucer to the kitchen and dropped them noisily in the sink. “There’s a wild animal that visits, but I’d never presume to call him a pet; a friend, maybe.”

“Why don’t you tell me how you came by getting this . . . friend?”

“Right after I moved in, I heard this pitiful noise outside.” He pointed out toward the yard. “There was frost on the grass, and this small, crying animal out there.

“I called Animal Control and they said they couldn’t do anything about it. Rather than let the poor thing suffer I brought him in to warm up and check for injuries.”

“So, he’s a rescue, you’re saying?”

“I’m getting there,” he said. “When I brought him in, I realized his eyes weren’t even open yet. I jumped online and found out how to make formula for him and fed him with an eye dropper. Ten, twelve times a day at first.

“I read up on how to wean him and what he needed to eat and worked on getting him weaned as soon as he was strong enough.”

“Sounds like a pet to me.”

“No. Never. As soon as he was weaned, I started leaving him outside to see if he’d figure it out. And he did, quick-like. When he flew off, I thought that would be the last time I saw him.”

“Where is he now?”

“He’s pretty shy.” Marcus pulled a bag of nuts out of the cupboard. “When it’s just me here he runs around like a mad thing. Sometimes he nibbles on the plants, climbs the drapes; had to get him a scratcher to keep him from shredding the sofa. There’s something about that corner that makes him want to claw over there. But he also eats every bug he can find. I haven’t had a spider in the house since he weaned.”

Marcus shook the bag of nuts and a quiet chirp sounded from beneath the sofa. He shook the bag again. “Come on, Cheeka! It’s okay.” He handed Corinna a few nuts. “Hold these out for him.”

Corinna held her hand an inch above the floor, the nuts in her palm. A pair of bright yellow eyes shone beneath the couch. Marcus shook the bag again. A small, grey shape, no larger than a kitten, streaked out from beneath the couch. Before Corinna could react, it had grabbed the nuts from her palm and took to the air, landing on the back of the sofa it had been hiding under. It chirped two short barks and began stuffing the nuts in its cheeks.

“Catching this guy is going to be hard. Especially with their power.” Corinna sighed.

“Their power?” Marcus asked. “Oh, you mean ‘nemesis’ . . . the power to automatically counter any attack. Don’t attack. Even if he doesn’t give you a mean bite I might.” He winked.

“It’s obvious you love the little guy, but the law is clear on wild, not to mention endangered, animals as pets.”

“And what defines a pet? Is that clear?” he asked.

“What do you mean?” Corinna asked. “Any tamed or domesticated animal kept for pleasure or companionship.”

“There’s nothing but his own desires keeping him here.” Marcus grabbed the bag of nuts and headed out the sliding-glass door. “Follow me.”

She did, and he closed the door behind her. “You have a point, I’m sure,” she said.

Marcus took a handful of nuts and scattered them across the yard, shaking the bag as he did. Cheeka came out the pet flap at full speed, running around the grass chirping excitedly as he gathered as many nuts as he could. Birds flew in to challenge him, each grabbing a nut then flying off to eat it in peace. Once Cheeka’s cheeks were stuffed, he took to the air too, landing in a nest in the nearest large pine.

“Is it illegal to feed wild animals in this manner?” he asked. “If so, half the city should be arrested for either having bird feeders or dropping crumbs.”

“No, there’s nothing illegal about that,” she said. “But if you keep Cheeka in—”

“That’s just it.” Marcus pointed to the nest where Cheeka was chirping away happily. “That’s where Cheeka lives. He built that nest, and he lives there. He comes into my house via the old pet flap to visit in the morning, then spends the rest of his time out there.”

“And you don’t entice him in any way?”

“Not unless my snoring counts,” he said. “Most mornings he comes in and wakes me up. That’s how I named him. He always does that ‘chee-ka’ sound when he’s excited. And trust me, it’ll wake you up when it’s right in your ear.”

Finished with his nuts, Cheeka took to wing and began flying slow circles above the yard. His bat-like wings acted like a glider as he caught the rising warm air off the roof of the house. His fluffy tail provided balance and steering but his flight was slow and cumbersome. He barked short chirps at the birds that swooped around him.

A flock of sparrows began dive-bombing him, trying to drive him away. On their second go-round he tucked his wings, dropped a few yards, then spread them back out, swooping up between them and disturbing their assault.

“I didn’t know they could fly like that,” she said.

“Nemesis,” he said. “They usually can’t. The question is: are you going to charge me for feeding a wild animal that nests on my property and likes to come in my house occasionally?”

“Have you tried blocking the flap?”

“I did,” he said, “and the little guy made my life a living hell. He’d show up outside whatever window I was closest to and scream his little head off. Any time I tried to leave the house he’d zoom in the open door, tear around for a bit, then panic when he couldn’t get back out the flap. So, are you going to charge me?”

“No.” Corinna marked the case as closed. “It seems I owe you an apology.”

“It’s good to know someone’s looking out for the little guys.” Marcus watched Cheeka swooping to pick a moth out of the air.

Cheeka began a loud barking chirp that repeated in a complex pattern; “Chee-chee-ka ka-chee-ka! Chee-chee-ka ka-chee-ka!”

“That’s a new one,” Marcus said.

An answering chirp came from within the woods. “No way. Another one?” Corinna began recording video with her tablet. Cheeka shouted out his barks again and an answer came from a small form hopping out from the trees. It took to the sky. Its fluffy gray tail had a dark band half-way down its length. “It’s a female!”

They watched the two animals swirl about each other in the sky before they alit on the grass, their dance transforming into a bouncing game of tag. Marcus nudged Corinna. “I think maybe we should slip inside quietly and let those two be. He’s used to me; I don’t want to scare her away.”

Corinna nodded and followed him in. Marcus set about pouring them both more tea. “I feel he may have other things to do than to visit me any longer,” he said.

“This is good, though.” Corinna called up the map on her tablet. “I should catalogue this. Possible breeding pair, that’s a big deal. There’s less than six hundred of the little guys left in the wild.”

“Fewer than,” Marcus said.

“Sorry, what?”

“There are fewer than six hundred left in the wild. Less is for uncountable things, like there is less tea in the pot now than earlier.” Marcus smirked. “Sorry, retired English teacher, but it still comes out on occasion.”

“That’s all right. I know I butcher the language.” Corinna looked at her tea. “Did you hear, last week, that Kumandrapoor refused to stop hunting fire dragons? They’re being moved to the critically endangered list.”

“I did.” Marcus shook his head. “It’s a shame what people have done to the planet.”

“There are twelve in captivity,” she said, “but that’s not enough for a stable breeding pop—”

“Shhh!” Marcus held up a hand and pointed at the pet flap.

Cheeka poked his head through the flap, and the female chittered at him. Cheeka barked once and jumped through. When the female failed to follow him in, he stuck his head out of the flap and chirped softly at her.

She approached in a low crouch, ready to jump away at a moment’s notice. Cheeka offered some more encouraging chirps and she made her way through the flap.

Once they were inside, Cheeka chirped and jumped into Marcus’ lap. Marcus began stroking between his ears and he made contented little cheeps before rolling over on his back for belly-rubs. The female eyed the scene warily, then jumped into Corinna’s lap, shaking.

Corinna let the little creature sniff at her fingers, then lightly stroked between her ears. The shaking calmed down and the little female chirped softly at first, then with more confidence. She rolled onto her back and let her wings spread out, her soft belly upturned. Corinna hesitated until the little female barked at her, and she began to stroke her belly. The wings, although they looked like skin from a distance, were covered with a silky, fine fur.

“She’s so soft,” Corinna said. “I don’t think you’ll have to worry about him not coming to visit.”

Marcus chuckled. “Will you need to investigate this wild animal in my house as well?”

“No,” she replied. “I just can’t believe I’m scratching the belly of a real, live, tree dragon!”

Trunk Stories

Stubborn

prompt: Set your story in a remote winter cabin with no electricity, internet, or phone service….

available at Reedsy

What good is it being stubborn if you don’t keep trying? Alik stared at the cabin in the center of the clearing, her snowshoe tracks trailing back three miles through the sparse alpine forest to the road. She knew how this would probably end, but she had to try. She checked the device on her wrist, and watched it count down the seconds before she began moving again.

The sky was darkening with clouds as she crossed to the cabin. It always seemed larger from the outside. The deep covered porch welcomed her, and she removed the snowshoes and let herself into the mud room. It wasn’t much warmer than outside, but it was dry. She shucked her boots and gloves and parka, putting them neatly in the spaces provided.

“It looks like you forgot something.”

Alik jumped. “Gods, Neery, I didn’t hear you come out.” She turned to give the smaller woman a hug. “What do you mean I forgot something?”

“Mail? I don’t see any.” Neery searched through the hanging parka and made exaggerated searching movements around the mud room. “Nope, no mail here. I fully expect you’ll forget to bring something you need for your own funeral.”

“I didn’t forget it.” Alik’s mouth grew tight. “I— can’t bring it anymore.”

“What does that mean?”

“They shut down your box. Something about being four months behind on your box rent. You’ll have to go in personally to pick up any mail, but I paid your overdue bill.”

“Assholes. World’s full of them.” Neery hugged Alik again. “Now you know why I live here. Come inside and get warm and dry, dinner’s on the stove.”

“What’s dinner?” Alik asked

“It’s that meal that comes in the evening.”

“See, I think you’re the asshole.” Alik stuck her tongue out. “You know I meant, ‘What, dear sister, have you prepared for our dinner?’”

“Mystery soup.” Neery winked. “I’m running low on spuds, otherwise it would be mystery stew.”

Inside, the cabin was lit by oil lamps. A wood stove provided heat and a cooking surface. A meticulous stack of firewood stood near the rear door, while glassware lined the open-front cupboards like soldiers on parade. Everything in the cabin was placed just so, making straight lines and right angles, nothing out of place.

They ate in silence, Neery casting curious glances at Alik. When they had finished, Alik collected the bowls and spoons and washed them in the basin to one side of the cabin, full of cold soapy water.

“Alik, what are you doing here?”

“I would say that I’m just here to see my sister,” Alik said, “but that would be a lie.”

“No shit.” Neery took the bowl Alik was drying. “What happened?”

“I want you to come stay with me.” Alik raised a hand to stop Neery’s response. “You don’t want to, I know. But I miss you, and I worry about you.”

“Gods you’re stubborn. You don’t stop, do you? I won’t ever go back. Especially while—”

“Mom died,” Alik said. “Last month. I sent you a letter, but you haven’t picked up your mail in six months.”

“Shit.”

“Exactly.” Alik took the bowl back from Neery and placed it in the stack in the open cupboard. She took the time to ensure the rims of the bowls were exactly one finger-width back from the edge of the shelf and perfectly centered, the way Neery liked.

“I feel like I should be happy finally, or relieved.” Neery sat heavily in the chair nearest the stove. “Truth is, though, I don’t really feel anything.”

“Will you at least consider staying with me over the winter?”

“Considered it, don’t want to.”

“Neery, I mean it. Take some time to think it over.” Alik sank into the overstuffed sofa. “Mom’s gone. You’re all I have left in the world.”

“Aren’t you supposed to be my support?” Neery asked. “You’re the big sister here.”

“Nee-nee—”

“Okay, I’ll consider it. Sheesh, you’d think I ran away from you.”

“You kind of did,” Alik said, “but I understand why you had to leave. I still don’t understand why you had to go to the ends of the Earth to do it, but you had to leave; I get that.”

“While you’re getting things, there’s a bottle and shot glasses in the cupboard nearest the wall,” Neery hinted.

Alik brought the bottle and glasses and set them on the low table. “I know you thought about getting a dog,” she said. “I’ve got enough space for one and a fenced yard.”

“What’s stopping you from getting one?”

“There’s no one to watch it while I’m traveling for work.”

Neery laughed and poured shots. “That’s why you want me to come back; to be a dog-sitter.”

“That’s not true,” Alik said, “but if you wanted to get one, you could.”

“This is just like the time you convinced me to buy the Molly doll with my birthday money instead of the roller-skates I wanted.” They drank their shots.

“How so?”

“You said it would be fun to have the matched set with your Millie doll and we’d have tea parties every afternoon.” Neery poured another round. “Instead, you played with it almost all the time and I’d have to beg to even see the doll.”

“I was six, give me a break.” Alik swallowed the second shot, feeling its warmth spread through her. “If you really want skates, I’ll get you some high-end roller-blades.”

“You’re such a bitch,” Neery said.

“And that’s why you love me.”

“Cheers to that.”

They drank in relative silence, Neery adding the occasional log to the fire, for what seemed like hours.

“I’ve had enough. I need to sleep,” Neery said. “Same as usual, I sleep near the wall.”

Alik nodded and waited until Neery had climbed to the sleeping loft before clearing up the bottle and glasses. They’d gone through half of it. That was probably too much, but at least she’s calm. She checked the device, saw the time, and smiled.

When Alik lay down her sister was already snoring. She had no sooner gotten settled than Neery snuggled up close to her. Sleep overtook her in minutes.

Alik was awakened by the sound of metallic scraping. Faint morning light showed in the windows, the bed was empty next to her, and the unmistakable aroma of coffee enticed her out of the warm blankets. Climbing down from the loft, she saw Neery scooping ash out of the wood stove into a pail.

“Morning.”

“About time you woke up,” Neery said. “Thought the coffee would do it, but since it didn’t, I figured I’d just get on with my day.”

“Don’t change your routine for me,” Alik said. “If I’m in your way just say so.”

Neery held the pail and fireplace shovel out to her. “Could you put these in the mud room? And bring in the small dust brush and dustpan on your way back in?”

Alik took the tools and walked out to the mud room. The door clicked behind her and she turned, expecting Neery to be there but she was alone. She set the bucket down on the stone paver it had been sitting on when she arrived.

She began to look for the dustpan, knowing that Neery would put it away in such a manner that it would be plainly visible. It wasn’t in the mud room. She tried to step back inside but the door was locked.

“Neery! Don’t do this!” she cried. “We can work it out! I’m here for—”

The shot rang out and echoed in the cabin, scaring the ravens out of the surrounding trees. Alik kicked at the door until it opened. Her sister lay still in a growing puddle of blood in the middle of the otherwise spotless room, the revolver still in her hand.

Alik closed the door and donned her parka, gloves, and boots. She stepped out of the mud room and put on her snowshoes. It took only a few minutes to reach her tracks at the edge of the clearing. Positioning her snowshoes into the earlier tracks she took a deep breath and pressed a button on the side of the device.

Alik spoke into the device. “Neery died at 8:04 am; she shot herself. Beginning attempt eighteen.” She touched a control on the device and found herself in the same position, again, on the previous day. What good is it being stubborn if you don’t keep trying?

Trunk Stories

Take What You Can Get

prompt: Write about a character who is incapable of telling even the smallest lie or half-truth….

available at Reedsy

Jenn stood in the hall, the smell of disinfectant sharp in her nose, the constant beeps and sounds of the hospital distracting. After being told for days to wait, the doctor had finally cleared her husband for a visit. This was to be the first time in months she would see him awake after the accident.

The nurse stopped her, his hand on her shoulder. “I should warn you; he may not seem the same as you remember him. Doctor Vishal says that after an injury like that, he may be someone else, someone new. Every experience shapes our personality, especially traumatic ones.”

Jenn nodded. “Yes, he made that clear to me. He said Carl was emotionally stunted and a bit . . . blunt right now. I can handle it.” She entered the room.

Carl raised his head and laid back down with an, “Oh, it’s you.”

“Are you not happy to see me?” she asked. “I can leave and come back later if you’re not up to it.”

“I like that you’re here,” Carl said, “but I knew you’d be coming anyway. I’m curious to see who else will turn up though.”

“Do you know how long you were out?”

“The doctor told me, but I can’t remember.” He shrugged and scratched at his head. “I guess it just wasn’t important enough to remember.”

“You were out for three months,” she said. “Everyone’s come and gone, and most won’t be able to come back for at least another week or two.”

“Makes sense. I’d probably wait a while to see if I’m really okay before I visit.” He struggled to sit up. “It’s not uncommon for patients to seem to be doing better right before they die. Why visit the hospital when you can wait for the funeral to make an appearance?”

“Why would you say that?” Jenn helped him sit up. “You’re going to do some physical therapy and walk out of here in no time.”

“That’s far outside the realm of probability,” he said. “I’ll most likely leave in a wheelchair and it’ll take a few months before I can do much walking, if ever.”

Jenn took his hand in hers. “I refuse to believe that. You’re a fighter, you’ve always fought through.”

“I’ve always faked it,” he said. “I can’t anymore. The facts are there and I’m not in a position to dispute them.”

“So what, you’re not even going to try to get better?”

“Of course I will. Whatever the science says. If it’s likely to be beneficial to my physical recovery, yes.” He pursed his lips. “If it’s just to make me feel better emotionally or mentally then no. It’s a waste of my time and energy, both of which are limited.”

“How can you say that?”

“The truth is the truth. Whatever you might feel doesn’t change that.”

“And what about your feelings?”

“I have none. I don’t think I’ve had any real emotions since I woke up. Curiosity, sure. Happy, sad, up, down, love, hate, any of that? None.”

“I love you, Carl.”

“I know,” he said. He pursed his lips.

“What are you thinking?”

“I’d rather not tell you,” he said. “I may not feel anything, but I don’t want to hurt your feelings.”

“Please,” she said, her eyes brimming with tears. “Just tell me.”

“You should divorce me. I know what it takes to make you happy, but I’m no longer capable of that.”

Tears drew tracks down her face. “You don’t know that it’ll be like that forever,” she said. “You might recover.”

“From what the doctor said, the chances of that are slim. Even if it happens it could take years. During that time, you should find someone that makes you happy.”

“If you don’t have any feelings then why do you care whether I’m happy?”

He laid back down. “It seems like the fair thing. I’m pretty sure I loved you, and you made me happy. I remember that. I also remember the times you annoyed me, pissed me off, or just got on my nerves, and how often I did the same to you.

“But on the whole, I think you made me more happy than unhappy. I don’t think it’s fair of me to expect you to stay miserable and stick around hoping for a miracle.”

Jenn kissed his forehead. “You may not be able to feel right now, but you don’t get to decide my life for me. I’ll stay with you for as long as it takes.”

“That’s your decision. It will make it easier to get to and from therapy to have a built-in ride. In all fairness, though, you should know that I still require assistance to get on and off the toilet, or into the shower chair. The therapist says with some work I should be able to do all that myself in six to eight weeks.”

“Yeah,” she patted his hand, “you will, and more.”

“I probably won’t be able to hold a job,” he said. “I’m too abnormal at this point. The nurses talk, and not always quietly enough. Some of them are uncomfortable around me. That wouldn’t translate well to the work world.”

“What about me?” Jenn asked. “How am I feeling right now?”

He studied her face. “I don’t know. I can’t tell. I see tears, but I don’t know if they’re sad or happy or pain tears. Your face is just . . . you. I’m damaged goods. Before you get any older you should leave me and find someone else; take what you can get out of this life.”

“You have no idea how much I missed you, and in how many ways.”

“Physically too, I would guess?” Carl asked. “If you stick around until the next nurse’s shift, she helps me shower. I overheard her talking about picking up couples. Something about no worries about commitment. I would find pleasure in sex with her and you at the same time.”

“You . . . have no filter, do you?”

“Maybe? I wasn’t going to tell you to divorce me until you asked.” He sighed. “There’s no time for playing coy, I may still drop dead from an aneurysm tonight. The doctor said that was a risk.”

“Carl, I want you to do something for me.” Jenn leaned in close and looked into his eyes, her hands holding his face in a soft embrace. “Tell me everything’s going to be okay.”

“I can’t. There’s no way I could know that.”

“Just lie to me,” she said, “and tell me it’s going to be okay.”

“Why?”

“Please.” Tears once again ran down her cheeks. “Say the words, ‘Everything will be okay.’ Can you do that for me?”

“Everything,” he began, then faltered.

“Try again, baby, try again. ‘Everything will be okay.’ Say the words.”

“Everything will be what it is. Weird, I can’t say it.”

“Can’t, or won’t?”

“Can’t. Hold something up.”

Jenn held up a cup.

“That’s a cup.” His eyebrows knotted. “I wanted to call it a dolphin, but I couldn’t. I knew the words I wanted to say in my head, but that’s not what came out.”

She held up a pen. “Let’s try smaller. Tell me this is a pencil.”

“That’s not a pencil. Wait . . . that’s a pen. I mean, it’s a pen.” Carl pursed his lips. “That’s odd. I need to tell Doctor Vishal about this.”

“So, you can’t lie even to make me feel better?”

“While it would come in handy, it seems that I’m unable to do so.”

“What do you think of my hair?”

“Makes you look older. Your old style was better.”

“Ashley thought it was cute. You remember her: the neighbor you hated?”

“I didn’t hate her. She’s hot and I didn’t want to be tempted like that to cheat on you. It was easier to pretend we didn’t get along than to be left alone with her. She kept hitting on me whenever you weren’t there.”

“Why didn’t you tell me?”

“Didn’t want to bruise your ego.” Carl shrugged. “We both know she’s hotter than you, but I wasn’t with you just for your looks. Bringing that up would have triggered your insecurities and I didn’t want to deal with that, so I took the easy way.”

“And what about bruising my ego now?” she asked. “Did you think about how I would feel when you told me that Ashley is hotter than me?”

“No,” he said, “I didn’t. I apologize for my oversight.”

“So, did you ever cheat on me with Ashley?”

“No. Not with anyone. I didn’t cheat with your cousin either, even though she offered, and I was tempted. I thought about it and fantasized about it some, but never acted on it.”

“My cousin is gorgeous. I guess that helps my ego some.”

“I’m getting tired. Maybe you should go now and come back when I’m more rested.”

Jenn leaned down and gave him a soft kiss. “I’ll do that.”

“Oh, you should call James. You like hanging out with him. I know you still love him and maybe you’ll realize he can make you happy and you’ll divorce me for him.”

Jenn’s eyebrows shot up. “You what?”

“Huh, I meant to stop at you like hanging out with him.”

“At least I’ll always know your motives.”

“I could only fool you sometimes before, anyway.” Carl slammed his fist down on his thigh. “Ugh! I wanted to say, ‘I could never fool you, anyway,’ but that’s not what came out.”

“I love you,” she said.

“I find your company a welcome distraction,” he replied, “but tell your brother and his wife I’d rather not be bothered with theirs.”

Jenn smiled. “I’ll take what I can get.”

Writings

Coming Soon

Just a short post to say “Hooray!” – Dragon Soul Press will be including my short story “Running Away” in their Spirit anthology, coming in April of 2021!

Sarah Goode left the Northern Paiute reservation for Seattle in order to get away. She ran away from crushing expectations, the loss of her mother, and the dreams. After all, that’s what she’s good at: running away. In Seattle she meets Song, a young Asian woman with whom Sarah shares more than she could ever guess. When Song’s life is in danger will Sarah run away, or will she fight her instincts to save her?