Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Shards

Prompt: Lethal | Word Count: 1800 words | Genre: Sci-Fi/Fantasy


Solar rays beat mercilessly on the back of Mvelo. Rich earth turned beneath his hoe, the aroma of humus washing over him. Though the earth appeared parched in this part of South Africa, one turn of the soil revealed a wealth of growing fodder. While not a rich man in terms of rand, nevertheless his father had left him this fertile farm and along with his wife Amahle, he was blessed with two strong sons and a daughter. In this life, a man could ask for little more.


A whine from above, like the wail of 'n gejaagde gees tore through his reverie. What sort of spirit descends from the heavens? Looking up, he shaded his eyes from the sun’s glare. His last thought before the shard tore through his body was for his loved ones as more shards descended upon his home.  


. . .



Shin peered out the window if his flat on the undulating mass below. Hong Kong was a seething roiling sea of people and machines all moving at cacophonous pace. The first shard struck a woman laden with wares from who knew where. In moments, shards rained down in torrents. He never even saw the one that tore through his flat and his body pinning him to the window. His dead eyes gazed at the destruction below.


. . .



Maria slumped over her desk at the Mauna Kea Observatory. It had been a long night of staring at screens with little to no activity. A blip on one of the monitors raised her bleary head. Another blip marked a path on the screen. She adjusted the resolution just as a third blip occurred. What the...? Alarms rang out through the complex. She grabbed the phone and hit the red button she’d been told never to press.

“Report.”

“This is Maria Kameāloha at MK. I have an anomaly on the screen moving very rapidly and heading this way.”

“Confirmed. Stand by and record. PriMaria authority inbound.” The click ending the conversation was drowned out by the whir of rotors from a landing helicopter.

The door to the lab swung open to admit an officious man and a small entourage of assistants who immediately took on the task of selecting certain equipment to crate up for removal. He immediately strode over to Maria’s desk and extended his hand.

“Doctor Allen Parker. And you are Maria Kameāloha?

She took his hand and nodded. “Yes, doctor. Welcome to Mauna Kea.”

“Thank you. Would you mind leading us to the underground lab? We’ll need to set up immediately and we’ll be better protected there.”

“Certainly.” She closed her immediate laptop and snatching it up turned toward the door. “But, if I may ask, how did you arrive so quickly? I only just got off the phone.”

“We’ve actually been monitoring the satellite for some time now. We have teams heading for every Observatory that hasn’t already been destroyed to track and record it.”

Maria spun around on the staircase. “Destroyed!?”

“Right.” He gestured onward. “After you.” She turned and continued her descent. “While we were aware of the asteroid’s approach, we had no idea of its impact. The satellite is spewing off debris like shards of highly dense metallic glass and the effect is a hundreds-of-miles wide swath of lethal rain. South Africa is in ruin. Much of India and southern Asia are devastated. Hong Kong is a shambles. And it’s heading this way.”

“My God,” she breathed aloud.

“Millions of people are dead and that number is likely to be in the billions when it’s all over.”

“Billions?”

“The reason we’re here is that it appears the satellite has been affected by the Earth’s gravity.” Once again she turned an fixed him with a querying eye. “It looks like it’s coming around for another pass.”

Another pass?! “But,” she stammered, “ it shouldn’t be able to do that!”

“That’s where we come in. It’s our job now to determine whether that is, in fact the case and if so, how.”

Maria passed her ID badge over the door sensor and waited for the click. It took no time at all for the team to set up and plug into the underground equipment. Maria opened her laptop and jacked into the LAN port. Once in, she pulled up the SatCom system and went to work. Using telemetry settings and commands from her log program, she ordered two satellites to adjust orbit and train their cameras and sensors on the object. One of the assistants connected her workstation to the large screen monitors. The images dropped their jaws.

Cometary ejecta formed a fuzzy egg that wobbled as it flew through space. The loblolly roll flung thousands of spear-like objects in all directions. Maria made some adjustments and the pictures zoomed in and focused. Through the haze of the ejecta two masses emerged. One of the masses was slightly larger than the other. They twirled around each other as if on an invisible tether.

“It looks like a bola.”

Doctor Parker raised his eyebrow at her observation. “A bola?”

“Yeah. It’s an ancient tribal weapon used primarily for hunting in places like South America. Two or more rocks tied to each other by a length of rope. You swing it around by holding the middle of the rope and then fling it at your target.”

“And then the centrifugal motion opens up the rocks creating a lethal missile!”

She nodded at his understanding. “Yes, and then the rope wraps around the legs of the target, breaking bones and rendering it immobile.” She pointed back to the screen. “You see the ejecta there?”

He nodded as she continued. “Sometimes, if the stones were wet or dirty, flinging them like that would cause the same effect.”

“Of course. That makes sense.”

She saw by his reaction that he understood, but his posture implied he was still puzzling over something. She stared at the images for a while before it came to her. “Notice how one asteroid is larger than the other.”

“Yes, I was wondering about that. Could that be the reason for the course changes?”

“Right. Bolas can often act something like boomerangs when one rock is larger than the other. Not return exactly, but definitely curve.”

“Perhaps mass and velocity have a lot to do with it.”

“Right. Also, coming so close to our greater mass, the Earth’s gravity would definitely have some effect on the trajectory of such a configuration.”

“Like a gyroscope tipped on its side.”

“Exactly!”

He squared off with her and asked the question she dreaded. “So. How do we stop it?”

“Stop it?! There’s no stopping that. About the only defense against such a weapon would be evasion or deflection. And since we can’t move the Earth, evasion is out of the question.”

“How would one deflect a thrown bola?”

“Well, I suppose if you happened to have a stick you were already carrying around, and were quick enough, you could use that to catch the bola before it wrapped around your legs.”

“Or in this case, a graviton bomb” He pulled out his phone and clicked a number. “This is Doctor Allen Parker. Get me the Defense Secretary.”


. . .




Maria marked the shard-fall at only a few hundred miles out when the monitors displayed workers mounting a warhead to a missile in North Dakota. Steam was already billowing through the vent ports of the silo as the workers finished their tasks and hurried off the gangway. The countdown began.

“Four…Three…Two…One…Liftoff!”

The missile rose from the silo with explosive force. In minutes, it angled it’s trajectory and turned toward the oncoming asteroid cluster. Cameras mounted into the rocket displayed the stage one separation as the missile rose into the outer troposphere.

Maria called out the shard-fall location, “Approximately fifty minutes out.”

The rocket broke orbit and sped for the cluster. The team watched as the asteroids came into view of the onboard cameras. The hurtling mass grew on the displays before them.

Maria broke the silence of the watchers. “Thirty minutes out.”

Shards flew all around the missile as it sped toward its target. Exclamations rang out as several struck the sides of the rocket. But, the missile flew true, the onboard navigation computer compensating for the debris strikes.

“Ten minutes out,” she almost whispered.

The rocket flew into the event horizon of the cluster. A moment later, a flash lit up the SatCom monitors. The resultant implosion pulled the smaller asteroid directly into the path of the larger one. The egg-shaped structure collapsed and wobbled. The newly merged rock tumbled wildly breaking the orbital loop it was on.

Shards struck the island with devastating result. Beaches sprouted ten to twenty foot spikes. Halfway up the mountain, the shard-fall ended. The tumbling mass of the newly merged asteroid whizzed past the Earth on a fresh course. Cheers erupted in the lab.


. . .


Relief efforts, already underway in shard struck areas, were bolstered by support from countries disaffected by the destruction. Death toll counts reached  estimates at more than one and a half billion people. Shard-fall claimed millions of acres of land. Restoration costs reached into the trillions in terms of the U.S. dollar.


Maria stood on a rock bluff overlooking the shard field. The forest of crystalized fragments vibrated in the breeze; resonating tones like cosmic music. The reverberations tingled her nerves. Uneasiness crept into her subconscious. Did that shard move? A shadow from the interior of the crystal writhed like a snake in a pit or a fish in a hold box.

She pulled her phone from her pocket and tapped in a number. “Doctor Parker? I think you should come and see what’s going on with the shards.”

“What’s happening?”

“They are resonating like a field of tuning forks. And one of them appears to have something writhing around inside it.”

Cracks emerged on the face of the crystal. She dove for cover as the shard bulged and subsequently shattered. An ear-splitting scream erupted from something in the middle of the rubble. A shadow rose amidst a flurry of wings. Something passed over her head causing her to shield her eyes to view it.

A creature out of myth flew by. A nightmare of the Jurassic period. Long nosed. Scaled body. Bat-like wings. Something impossible and yet there it was. Flying for all it was worth. Exploring its new environment. Likely looking for prey. Something to feed upon.

More cracking broke the stillness drawing her attention back to the field. One by one, the shards shattered to reveal their cargo. Showers of the glassy material rained all over the area. Each shard-break forced Maria to cover her head for protection. Grateful for the copse in which she hid, she watched as each shard broke and another dragon rose to meet the world.


# # #



Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Cicada Summer

Prompt: Cutthroat| Word Count: 750 words | Genre: Fantasy/Horror


Waves rose off my sweat-dampened body as I tossed in my bed. Sleep was impossible in such swelter. Rufus, at my feet, panted heavily in a vain attempt to shed heat. Worst of all, cicadas drove me mad with their incessant “chee”. I clutched a pillow over my head, but their chirping droned through. Eventually, I tossed it onto the heap of blankets laying useless on the floor. Rufus, obviously tired of my flopping around, uttered a moan and leapt down to curl up under the open window.


Morning found me hunched over the kitchen table, face mashed against my forearms. Mom breezed into the room and ruffled my curly hair.

“Whatcha doing up so early, hon?”

How could she be so cheerful? “Couldn’t sleep in all this heat and the cicadas kept me up all night.”

“Oh, my! Let me look at you.” She fussed over my swollen eyes and pallid cheeks for a few minutes. “I know just the thing.” She pulled some milk from the fridge and poured it into a small saucepan, adding a pinch of nutmeg. “You know, locusts only come out in droves every thirteen or seventeen years. The last time there were this many was the year you were born.” She handed me a steaming cup. “Here. Drink up and I’ll tell you a story my grandmother told me when I was little.”

The buzzing in my head lessened more with each sip of the warm milk. Satisfied that her concoction was working, she continued her story.

“One year, when Gran was young, the summer was so hot, she said, ‘you could fry eggs on the front stoop.’” I laughed at that. Great Gran had a funny way with words. Visibly relieved at my mirth, Mom continued. “That was the year of the cicada children.” She raised her hand at my puzzled look. “At night, the cicadas would chitter so loudly, it was believed they were possessed by demons. Their droning chirps kept the villagers up all night. The kids most of all. It was like they were calling the children. Not long into the summer, a shout rand out and people came running. Someone or something had killed a dog near Gran’s house. Its throat was torn out as though hacked by a saw.”

“That’s horrible! Who did it?”

“Patience.” Her stern look didn’t fool me one bit. She reveled in telling old tales.

“The constable was called in to investigate. He brought in a local tracking hound to follow the scent trail. Oddly, it led right to the door of the dead dog’s owner. Inside, the owner’s wife was weeping and trying to shake sense into her daughter. The constable found the girl rocking back and forth, eyes rolled up in her head and humming a strange buzzing noise. The girl was still dressed in her night clothes which were stained brownish-red. This was the first of the cicada children.”

“Gross! The little girl did it?”

“Yes. And she wasn’t the only one. Every other morning or so, screams could be heard all through the village as townsfolk discovered pets and people with their throats cut. Worse yet, were the children in each home, rocking back and forth in blood-soaked night shifts holding bloody knives and mumbling and buzzing like the locusts outside.”

“What did they do?”

“They rounded up all of the children and tied them to hospital beds.”

“Did it help?”

“Not a bit. Somehow, the children all became infected by the eerie chirping of the locusts. The townsfolk were up-in-arms. Nobody knew what to do. They turned to the parson, but his prayers seemed to go unanswered. They turned to the local doctor, but he had no solution either. Finally, they called on the constable once again.”

“What could he do?”

“Well, as it turned out, his great aunt was some sort of local witch doctor. Some of the older men and women of the village went to her for homemade cure-alls and such. She told him a most unbelievable story of how every thirteen years, when a certain breed of cicadas rose, the town children would act in such a way. The constable asked her what they did. And when she told him, he brought the recipe straight to the hospital. Within the hour, every child was cured with no memory of what had happened.”

“Really? What was the cure?”

Mom put on a sly grin as though she were pulling my leg. “Warm milk and nutmeg.”



# # #

 

Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Sightbearer


Prompt: Tag | Word Count: 2500 words | Genre: Paranormal



Shivers ran the length of my body as the M.E. led me into the morgue. God, how I hate that place! After consulting her clipboard, she walked over to the wall of drawers and pulled hard on 23B. The smooth slide of the drawer unnerved me as the movement of its exit from the cabinet blew a corner of the sheet over the body’s right foot exposing the tag hanging from the big toe.

“NJ4379-00-10-2387, Jane Doe, Female, Hispanic/Asian, approx. 30 years of age.”

I cleared my throat before addressing the doctor. “Cause of death?”

“Undetermined at this time. Her heart seems to have just given out. There are no signs of trauma. ‘Tox’ screens show no abnormalities in the blood. She was in reasonably good shape and there appear to be no apparent health issues. Quite frankly, we’re a little stumped at the moment.”

This is why they brought me in. I reached for the corner of the covering nearest the wall. “May I?”

“Of course.”

I pulled back the cover just far enough to expose her head. The sheet had disheveled her hair. As gently as I could, I brushed it away from her face. What happened to you? My silent query left unanswered, I opened my bag for the tools I would need.


. . .
 
Gran was my closest companion growing up. With Mom and Dad away all the time working for Doctors Without Borders, I spent nearly all of my childhood in her care. She told many stories and from her, I learned a great deal about our family legacy, the Sight. Dad had not been born with the gift, but early on, I learned it had been passed down to me.

“Hold your posture just so.” Gran was a patient teacher and I quickly learned the art behind the gift. “Don’t forget the talisman. And set your candles around your subject. Above all, you must treat your subject with respect.”

I was an eager student. “Now what do I do?”

“Close your eyes and reach for the veil. You’ll know it when you feel it.”

“I feel it!”

“Calm, child. Now, rub your hands together with the talisman between them to warm them up and open a channel to the veil.”

“I can see it!” Of course, as quickly as it had come, it dissipated. “What did I do wrong?”

“You broke your concentration child. You must maintain that if you wish to pierce the veil and speak with the spirits who live there. That’s one of the reasons for the candles. To help you focus your concentration.”

“I’ll never get this!” Frustration ground my teeth together and sloughed off me in waves.

“Hush child. You are Romano. It is in your blood. You merely need to practice and eventually, it’ll come to you as naturally as breathing.”


. . .
 
Not long after finally breaking through the veil for the first time, I learned that candles were a mere concentration tool. For the sake of expedience, calling stones work just as well and are easier to carry around. I placed them one-by-one carefully around the head of Jane Doe. Onyx on the pillow above her. Jade on her right shoulder. Agate on her left. The final stone, white quartz, I placed just above her heart. The cross-section of the autopsy scar unnerved me for just a moment. I pushed it away and focused on the stones.

I closed my eyes and reached for the veil. There! The viscous air hung invisibly just within my reach. I rubbed the talisman between my hands. The warmth of the stone heated them as my concentration deepened. Taking the medallion in my left hand, I reached out and touched her forehead with my right. Then, reaching out with my mind, I “pushed”.  

Fog enveloped me as I pierced the curtain between the living and the spirit world. Figures, gray and amorphous, surrounded me and, just as quickly, moved away. I searched for a soul that shone more brightly than the others. Such is the way of the Sight. The object of the gift-bearer’s focus glows with more intensity than all the rest. This time, however, I found no glowing figure. The deeper into the spirit realm I went, the more mundane graylings I found. Each touch from one of these, sent shivers through my soul, sapping my strength and concentration. Could she really be gone?! This had never happened to me before. I gathered my thoughts together and prepared to release the veil. Turning to exit, I found the way barred by a coal-black figure. Its crimson eyes burned like the forges of Hell and it reeked of sulfur and brimstone.

This was new! Instinctively, I drew upon the stones and formed a shield around me. A low, rasping scrape resolved into a mirthless laugh. A chorus of many voices speaking as one, tore at my mind, clawing away at my psyche. “That shield will not protect you here!”

In all my years of Seeing, I had never encountered such malevolence. “Who are you?”

Fog swirled anxiously as the temperature dropped around me. The shield tightened, threatening to crush me inside. Instinctively I knew, if I let it go, this creature would have me. Drawing deeper on the stones, I willed more energy into it.

“Impressive!” The Cybil-voiced figure grew darker before me. “You clearly have more iron than the others.”

“Others?” I tried to draw it out. Keep it talking. I needed answers. I needed time to think. “What others?”

“Others like you.”

“Romani?”

“Romani!” The figure spat. “Gypsy filth! No. Sightbearers.”

My mind reeled with the idea that there were others out there like me. I had never encountered any other people with the Sight. This was definitely something to follow up on when I got back. If I get back! “What happened to the others? The ones like me.?

The creature uttered a garbled hiss I took to be a laugh. “I ate their souls.”


. . .
 
Gran rocked in her chair out on the porch. “Fetch us some tea, child.”

“Yes, Gran.”

After handing her a tall glass of sweet iced tea, she waved at me to sit on the chair beside her. Always open and gregarious, she was more pensive this evening than I had known her to be. We had just finished up a grueling two-hour Seeing, bolstering my confidence with its success.

“The Sight is a gift, child. But it also comes with danger.” I had learned to wait out her pauses. “Always remember the candles. They have significance. They represent your ancestors. From them, you can draw strength.”

“Yes, Gran.” She took a sip of her tea before continuing.

“Do you remember the stories I told you as a child?”

“The stories of the early Roma?”

“Yes, child.” Silence met her pause. As though the whole world shared my expectation of the tale to come. “In the old days, a necromancer approached the Romani offering a great magic. The ability to speak with the dead. Our people were quite superstitious and decided, in their fear, to reject the necromancer’s offer.”

“I remember. He was very angry and decided to raise an army of undead to destroy the Romani people. That is why they became nomadic. Traveling in caravans and never setting down roots.”

“Yes. What you don’t know is that two brothers, Nikolai and Tomas, decided to stay and fight for their land. For three days they met the undead and killed them by beheading or with wooden spears blessed in holy water.” Gran paused as if to gather her thoughts, taking another sip of her tea. “But they were sorely outnumbered, and Tomas was gravely wounded. The necromancer approached them as Nikolai was fighting to get back his brother’s side. He took Tomas by the throat and sucked the life right out of him. The way we sit here and sip at our tea. Nikolai screamed in anguish and threw his last spear. By the grace of the Great Angel, the spear struck the heart of the beast who burst into flames knocking Nikolai to the ground.”

“What happened next?”

“Without the necromancer, the undead fell to the ground and turned to ash. But, with his dying breath, he cursed the young man with the ability to speak to the dead. It near drove the Nikolai mad. Each day after, he only wore black. And there are stories of him talking to someone who was nowhere to be found.” I waited, knowing the story wasn’t yet over. “Eventually, he recovered and married his brother’s wife. They had eight children together and all of them were born with the Sight. Thus, it has been, with our family, generation after generation, until you.”

“So, the black candle represents Nikolai!”

“Yes. And the white one, the Great Angel herself.”

“What about the others?”

“Green is for your grandfather who fought in the great war. Such a tall and handsome man he was! And such a fine figure in his green uniform.” Gran drifted away for a moment. “Not long after I got the news of his passing in the war, I went in search of his spirit. In those days, I only had the power of the three candles. I wandered the spirit world for weeks and still could not find him. I became convinced they were wrong about his death. That somehow, he had survived. One night, as I was about to leave the veil, a dark spirit blocked my way. It was a Souleater. I had been warned of this creature by my mother, but never encountered it before. And never since.”

“What happened?”

“You’re grandpa. At the moment I needed him most, he came. He shone his spirit light so brightly, the Souleater was forced to retreat. Oh, it was a bittersweet reunion! But I knew I would have him with me all the rest of my days. So long as I had the Sight. Afterward, I fashioned a new candle in his memory. A spirit that strong is a worthy ally.”

“And the multi-colored candle?”

“Ah, yes. That one represents the Roma people in all their diversity and glory. A nation without a land.” She reached out and took my arm. There was an intensity in her eyes I had not seen before. “From these four sources, you can draw the strength you need to face the dangers of the spirit world. There is light, and there are the graylings which, though basically harmless, can sap your strength. But darkness lurks there too. Beware of the Souleater!”

. . .
 
Crimson orbs bore holes through my shield threatening to break down my barrier. The Souleater’s will, like the hammer of Vulcan to the anvil of the world, beat down upon me. I staggered against the force of its malevolence.

“Why do you resist me, boy? I can see the chaos raging in your mind. You have no strength against my will. Let me ease your burden of life. In me, your spirit will live forever!”

I called upon the stones. I called upon the spirits of Nikolai and my grandfather. Of the Great Angel herself and of my people. Give me the strength to overcome! My shield strengthened and expanded. It held firm and gave me the strength to stand. I knew I had not enough power to overcome this creature, but I hoped at least to have enough to escape.

I railed at the monster. “Who are you to go about eating souls?!”

“Do you not know, boy? I see the glimmer in your mind. I know your grandmother well, for I nearly ate her soul. Surely, she told you of me!”

I didn’t want to believe. It couldn’t be possible, could it? Could this creature be the one who started it all? “You are the necromancer. The creature of old who cursed my people so long ago.”

His rasping laughter scratched across the void. “So! You are a bright one. You will make a worthy adversary. I will grant you three answers, though it will warrant you nothing. Your soul will be mine before the night is through. Ask your questions.”

They say, “Knowledge is power.” And right then, I needed all the power I could find. First, the reason I was here. “Who is the young woman whose body lays before me and whose soul you consumed?”

The creature drew back a moment as if in consultation with another. “Her name was Vivien Li. Like yourself, she was a Sightbearer.”

I reached out once more for my grandfather, whose spirit I had not yet tried to find. “What do you want of me, Souleater?” I reached out to the spirit of Nikolai as I awaited the devil’s answer.

“You have strength. It has been many centuries since I encountered such. I wish to leave this realm and once again walk the green fields of the living. I will eat your soul and use you body as my vessel.” He drilled his eyes more fiercely at me. “What us your last question boy?”

I called upon the Great Angel and the collective spirit of my people. Pulling together all of that power, I radiated it out to my shield. “How is it you cannot stand in the light?!” and then, I glowed. Light burst from my shield in great pulses of energy. The Souleater was forced back. Its amorphous arms flailed about. It shrieked in the glare and shrank away fleeing the brilliance of the light. Nearly exhausted, I opened the veil and departed.

Back in the world of the living, I staggered and nearly fell to the ground. The M.E. steadied me until I could stand on my own. “Thank you.” I flashed her a wan smile.

“Are you alright?” Concern wrinkled her otherwise smooth brow. Her glossy hair brushed my arm and for the first time, I took notice of her. Black eyes framed by wire-rimmed glasses and full red lips.

“I will be. I just need to rest a bit.”

“What did you learn?”

“Her name was Vivien Li. She was a Sightbearer like me. Her life was taken by a Souleater. Without a soul, the heart has no reason to continue beating.”

She let go of my arm, pulled back her hair into a ponytail and drew a pen from her pocket. Picking up the tag attached to Vivien’s foot, she scratched out the name of “Jane Doe” and wrote “Vivien Li” above it. “Cause of death, heart failure.”

Turning back to me she asked, “Are you sure you’re alright?”

My heart fluttered a bit at her concern. She really is very pretty! “Yeah, I’ll be okay. This was a pretty tough case.”

“Let me buy you a cup of coffee and you can tell me about it.” She covered up the body of Vivien Li and slid the drawer back into place. The tag slipped out past the drawer as she shut it. A reminder that there was more work ahead.

# # #