Midnight Visitor

January 28, 2009 at 4:24 pm (short stories) (, , , , )

From the writing prompt, “Why was it always the curtains?” This story introduces Eugene Bud, Springfield’s accomplished barber, who used to be a CIA agent.

The knife sliced through the air with an utter lack of sound.

Knives never made much noise in real life, until they made contact and it was too late for you to care. Silent knives were wielded by good assassins, who made so little noise themselves that they could actually be said to produce an absence of sound so complete that people actually couldn’t hear it, even if they wanted to.

Still, silent knives (even those wielded by the very best assassins) did sometimes catch a bare sliver of moonlight that glinted from between the gingham curtains a second before they made contact with their target.

Fortunately for Eugene Bud, skilled barber and former CIA agent, this knife was the moonlight-catching type. He moved faster than he’d had to in nearly fifteen years and tumbled rather gracelessly to his bedroom floor, just managing to avoid getting caught in his blankets on the way down. He heard a dull ripping noise as the knife embedded itself in his pillow, where his head had rested a bare two second before.

He’d liked that pillow. It had just flattened to fit his head.

Working on muscle memory entirely, his body flattened momentarily on the floor while his hand reached under the bed for the gun he kept there. Above him, the dark shape of the assassin loomed in the shadowed bedroom, balancing lightly on the balls of its feet in the middle of the dipping mattress. From what little could be seen, he seemed to be wearing a black mask, and he held himself like someone who was so good at what he didn’t that he didn’t need to look like he was good at what he did.

Eugene felt a little flattered, despite the early hour and the creaking joints and the ripped pillow. It was good to know that someone still thought he was dangerous enough to send a real ninja after him.

Even if he’d been retired from the agency for fifteen years, it was hard to take the agency out of the guy. Still, it was a heckuva inconvenience. He’d retired for a whole host of reasons, and a full night of assassin-free sleep had been one of them.

Eugene’s scrabbling fingers came up empty, and he realized too late that the gun was under the other side of the bed. His attacker seemed to realize his helpless state at nearly the same time, and Eugene barely had time to roll sideways and lurch to his feet before the ninja came at him silently, knife glinting again.

It was never wise to attack an armed opponent bare-handed. Especially when you were bare-handed, tired, and very much feeling all sixty eight of your long years. There was only one way to deal with this kind of situation, and it was a tactic that old Mr. B knew well.

When all else fails, he heard his old instructor say clearly, Cheat.

And if there was one thing a ninja couldn’t handle during a late-night ambush attack on a supposedly honorable target, it was dishonorable conduct. So, Eugene gave his biggest smile. “Evening!”

The other man paused in his attack, momentarily stymied by this utter breach of the sacred tradition of silent mortal combat.

“Nice night, isn’t it? You’re a bit late, though. And your entrance needs work; don’t they teach you to blacken your blades any more?” Eugene smiled wider and reached behind him into the gingham curtains, hoping to find something to use as a weapon. His fingers just brushed the end of his old metal ruler, resting where he’d left it on the window seat from sketching earlier that day.

His opponent got over his apparent mental distress and lunged again just as Eugene grabbed the ruler firmly in hand and ducked to avoid the knife’s glittering arc. Above him, he could hear the curtain rip.

Why was it always the curtains? Eugene had been in countless fights for his life over the years, and yet no matter where they were staged: in hotel rooms, parlors, secret lairs, sun rooms, verandas, even pool houses, at some point someone would duck, and the curtain would get ripped.

It was like some kind of universal law of mortal combat. Darkness, blood, only one man walks away, a curtain always gets ripped. Eugene found that he hadn’t missed this kind of thing; not one whit, even though he always told himself that he did.

With the ease of long experience in dirty fighting, he thwapped the other man soundly across the knee cap with his metal ruler. Hardly a debilitating blow (though twenty years ago it would have been), but certainly one painful enough to convince the ninja to take a surprised step backwards, which was all Eugene needed.

He moved with a sudden speed and power that no one in Springfield would imagine possible for Old Mr. B. Before his attacker knew what hit him, Eugene had landed a solid upper cut to his chin, followed by a quick, precise smack of the ruler edge along his hand. The knife dropped from suddenly nerveless fingers to the carpet and lay there, glowing dimly in the moonlight from the now uncovered window.

Eugene knew better than to give his opponent time to regroup, and so his aggressive blows were as quick and accurate as he could make them these days.

Unsurprisingly, he ended up with a fair amount of bruises and a black eye in return. A good ninja (just like a good CIA agent) hated being backed into a corner. Still, it was only a matter of time. With a move that was part judo and part sheer dumb luck, Eugene blocked the other man’s spinning kick, grabbed him by his airborn leg, and used his own momentum to toss the startled ninja right out of his bedroom window.

The sound of breaking glass shattered the silence of the neighborhood with the intensity of a gunshot. Eugene retrieved the discarded knife and hopped out onto the dark lawn, carefully avoiding the broken glass in the window frame, to stand above the defeated and slightly shredded assassin, who was just sitting up in the grass.

“You’re lucky that was a ground floor window,” the old barber told him calmly, spinning the blade in his hand. “Otherwise, you’d have more than some scrapes and bruises to deal with.” He leaned down and pressed the blade very lightly at the junction between shoulder and neck, where it would puncture an artery if anyone moved too quickly.

The other man lay deathly still on the lawn, aware that he was beaten. His breath hissed from behind his mask, the only words that a true ninja was allowed to speak in combat. “Kill me then.”

Eugene looked down into dark eyes that glittered with a vehemence and hardness that he had once felt with his own bones. There was something of himself in this poor assassin, this misguided man who ran about at night killing for what he thought was a better cause.

All at once, Eugene Bud felt very, very tired, and very old…and much wiser than he used to be. Darkness, blood, and a ripped curtain, he thought. But why can’t both men walk away every once in a while?

With creaking joints and a little groan, he stood. “Go,” he said simply. “And may your ancestors be honored by your brave combat.”

The man stared at him incredulously for a brief instant. Then the sound of waking neighbors and the spill of lights onto the lawn chased him off into the darkness with life intact, and Eugene watched him go with a faraway feeling in his bones and a little smile on his face.

He waved at the neighbors popping out of their doors. “Just a break-in! Scared the idiot off. I’m fine! Go back to bed!” Before anyone could respond, he turned and went back into his room through the window.

He’d need new curtains, and a new picture window, and a new alarm system.

That could all wait until the morning. With a slow shake of his head, Mr. B went to get a new pillow to get some ninja-free sleep on the sofa. He looked at the ruined gingham remains on his carpet and heaved a sigh.

Maybe, this time, he’d just get blinds.

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Dinosaurs in the Fridge

January 19, 2009 at 6:34 pm (short stories) (, , , , )

The result of the prompt, “There was a dinosaur in the fridge.” Though Brian and Trudy live in Springfield, neither of them have superpowers. This story takes place several years down the road in their relationship; in most of the stories they aren’t married yet.


There was a dinosaur in the fridge. More accurately, there were sixteen of them, carefully vacuum-sealed and covered in plastic, all shoved into a little cardboard box.

Brian Branch was rather unsettled by this.

To be clear, he wasn’t at all unsettled by the dinosaurs themselves—ever since Trudy had gotten pregnant, there was always a box of the oddly-shaped chicken nuggets to be found in their freezer. It was by far the oddest craving Brian had ever heard about, and it didn’t appear anywhere in his stack of helpful parenting books. But then, when had anything about their lives been normal?

No, the problem was, this wasn’t the freezer. It was the fridge, and didn’t she know that these things could go bad after a couple days if they weren’t properly cooled? Did she want to give their unborn children food poisoning?

He picked up the offending box and opened the freezer, intent on returning it to its proper place next to three other identical boxes which were neatly stacked between the toaster pastries on one side and the gallon of mint chocolate chip ice cream on the other. Brian took a moment to enjoy the utter orderliness of the freezer, if for no other reason than it was the only place in the house where he could find things in the same place he put them anymore.

Except for the renegade box of dinosaur chicken, anyway. There was no room for it in the freezer. Utterly stymied by this failing of his organizational system, he looked down at the cartoony packaging as one would an explosive device.

Brian took a moment to steel himself, taking a deep breath before closing the freezer door, dinosaurs still in hand. For a second he just stood there, staring at the eggshell-white surface with his back to the kitchen, trying to pretend that everything was this nice and clean.

He knew better.

With a sigh, he finally turned and faced the sight of a kitchen so messy it looked more like one of his students’ Algebra binders. Things were strewn all over the place—makings for ice cream sundaes were spread haphazardly across the small table, between piles of papers from his Algebra II class that had once been neatly stacked, and were now skewed and slightly sticky. Dishes were piled in the sink (Brian looked away before he had to battle his insatiable need to scrub them all immediately); the dishwasher was open, revealing rows of color-coordinated sippy cups, pacifiers, and washable play toys. The fact that none of them had been used yet didn’t matter; Brian had read the consumer reports about all the germs that lived in department stores. Those things were getting washed at least twice before any child of his used them.

A muffled thump from the direction of the living room sounded. Hesitantly, Brian moved out of the kitchen, ducking under the drying laundry strung across the doorway. “Trudy?”

He tripped over a stack of new parenting magazines two steps in, the chicken nuggets going flying. As he picked himself up off the floor (they really needed a new vacuum, he could see crumbs in the carpet, for heaven’s sake!), he had a fleeting sense of vertigo as he realized that this was what the house looked like before Trudy gave birth to triplets.

It took him a moment to locate the box of dinosaurs, over by the couch.

Then his gaze fell to what was on the couch, and he suddenly found himself a lot less worried about decomposing chicken nuggets.

Trudy was sound asleep, one side of her face pressed into the arm of the couch, her red hair a complete mess. She’d tipped slightly in her sleep, as she tended to do these days, so that her back was pressed against the couch in a subconscious attempt to straighten out her protesting spine. Her feet, which had started out laying on the ever-present ice packs for her ankles, were now pointing in opposite directions. One was resting on the carpet, and Brian couldn’t help but notice that the sock was inside out.

Their lives really were getting out of control.

Still, she was beautiful. Maybe the most beautiful he’d ever seen her. She never believed him when he told her that; she’d look down at her stomach (which was now approximately the size of a Volkswagen) and bemoan the loss of her figure and her ever increasing waistline. As far as Brian was concerned, he was looking at all four of his favorite people in the same place, and that view was hard to beat.

His gaze drifted back to the floor, and for the first time he noticed that the dinosaurs weren’t alone. A bowl of half-melted ice cream sat within arm’s reach of the couch. Brian realized with horror that there were three scoops in the bowl, which meant that she’d left the empty carton in the freezer. Something inside his chest clenched terribly, and he took a deep breath to calm himself.

Pick your battles, he chanted to himself, taking his therapy to heart. There are more important things. There are bigger messes. There are… it wasn’t working. You’re going to go insane, but it’ll probably be worth it.

He reached out to pick up the bowl, intent on putting it in the sink, washing it along with all the other dishes in the sink, and then putting the freshly washed dishes into their neatly color-coded cupboard homes.

That was when he saw the book. It was splayed open, leaning partly against the couch, its pages getting bent from its own weight. This was the source of the sound he’d heard, then. Trudy must have dropped it when she fell asleep—or, more likely, she’d had it balanced on her stomach and it had just slid off.

If there was one thing Brian hated more than room-temperature chicken nuggets (and to be fair, that ranked high on his list of things he hated), it was a book with bent pages. Without any kind of conscious decision, he scooped up the poor mangled paperback and smoothed out the cover with his hands. It was only then that he read the title.

“Baby names?” he murmured thoughtfully, looking at his sleeping wife’s face. They’d agreed to talk about names next month; apparently, Trudy was getting a head start. Unable to resist, he found the handful of pages marked with bright green sticky notes and opened up to the first one.

Trudy had helpfully highlighted the ones she liked. Though why she liked Bartholomew, he had no idea. Or Barbara. Or Bradley. It sounded like she was casting for a soap opera. Why not name one Blanche and get it over with?

Momentarily forgetting about the chicken (an admittedly big step for him), he settled onto the floor and flipped through her other selections, aware that he’d never get away with this if she was awake to stop him. Her other choices were equally alarming to him. Lance? Lillith? Laurence?

Oh,” he breathed out with horrified understanding. Oh, she was picking triplet names. She wanted them to be those horrible parents who gave all of their children matching names, because apparently having two identical siblings didn’t single you out for enough playground mockery and enforced togetherness already.

Brian was willing to admit that he might have some latent bitterness from his own playground experiences to deal with. Still, Lillith was a really terrible name.

He looked through her other highlighted selections with a quick eye, unable to bear any more psychological trauma. Wendy, Wesley, Willard. He put the book down and stared at it, slightly green around the gills. Then he saw that he’d missed a marked page; he’d only read from six pages, but there were seven sticky notes. With a kind of resignation that can only be achieved by an OCD man who couldn’t leave a sticky note un-looked at, he opened the book again.

There was only one name highlighted on the page. He let his finger trace it. “Oliver,” he said thoughtfully. Then he said it again, as if getting used to the weight of the word on his tongue. “Oliver. Oliver Branch.”

That wasn’t bad. Quite good, actually. Classy. He smiled despite himself. “Oliver Branch,” he proclaimed to the empty air of the messy living room. It was an odd moment of peace in the chaos of married life and expected parenthood. He let himself feel it, a kind of contentment that ran bone-deep. Maybe, he thought, this was something of fatherhood.

Then his eyes focused on the now absolutely uneatable, defrosted, no doubt slightly soggy box of dinosaur chicken nuggets on the floor. His shudder of revulsion shook him out of his pleasant stupor. With a heavy sigh, Brian stood, leaving the book where it had landed. He scooped up the melted ice cream and went to the kitchen to find his trusty rubber gloves. The box was probably contaminated; he’d have to put it in the outside garbage to keep Trudy clear of the impending salmonella outbreak.

Mission in mind, Brian set about his task. Parenthood phantoms would just have to wait. Sometimes, you just had to deal with the dinosaurs in the fridge first.


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Acid Rain

January 2, 2009 at 5:14 pm (short stories) (, )

Acid rain paints the pale sky with dirty streaks, soot on over-taxed, over-worked, over-bleached air that can barely sustain a human breath.

His fingers scrabble for purchase on pock-marked, acid-stripped metal, find no traction, return bloodied to his side. His lungs heave, desperate for clean air and real oxygen and life-giving breath that no longer exists, not anywhere in the world, and especially not here in this dark corrosive capital of poison machinery.

There’s the clash of metal crashing on metal behind him. It’s a rusted sound, old and tired and mean and relentless, and it haunts his head as it has haunted his dreams for years, ever since they realized that it was too late and that they were going to lose against a never-ending army of beeps and clicks and silver arms and acid fumes.

He looks at the blood on his hands and can’t remember which battle, which fight for his life, for the lives of others it’s from, until he remembers that it’s from the wall in front of him that he can’t climb, that’s being eaten away even as he watches by the acid rain drip-dripping down.

The gloves on his hands are all shredded, exposing bloody tender fingertips to stinging acid that pelts against his bio-suit, tap-tap-tapping against his plastic shell over and over again, trying to leak in, sneak past his defenses, dissolve him from the core.

He can’t run any more. The big boots on his feet are heavy and the suit is stuffy and he’s running out of air, out of life, out of will, out of sanity, all taken away by the gray sky and smoking factories and the rusted sound of metal crashing against metal growing louder all the time behind him.

And so he turns and puts his back against the old dissolving wall that won’t let him climb it and sees the big silver-rust-emotionless-pitiless-ruthless spider wobbling towards him on its eight skinny, barely-there metal legs and thinks that out of all the deaths he would have thought about, dreamed about for the human race, this one is too sad and gray and hopeless to really be right.

But nothing’s right anymore anyway, and the acid rain is running down his visor, in streams so thick that everything is distorted and he can already feel it starting to eat away at the tips of his fingers, the edges of his brain, the borders of his soul, and maybe the acid is really just his loneliness, his deep and dark and desperate aloneness that never ever goes away.

Because he’s the last one, he knows it, feels it in his bones like he hasn’t felt anything else since a long time ago, before they made a race of metal servants that consumed and consumed and obliterated and stripped the sky until all the world was just acid and rust and metal and armies of thoughtless metal soldiers and no men or women or children at all any more, except for him.

And now, the metal spider, a scout, not even a soldier, not even meant to kill before everything became a thing that kills, raises one long rusty leg and prepares to send the electric shock that will stop his heart, cease his blood from pumping, finally turn his brain off like a bad circuit in the big machine of the universe.

He closes his eyes once last time, and he thinks of grass, and flowers, and a blue sky and a soft summer rain that healed the earth instead of destroying it. And he thinks of a sweet voice, and a song floating on a waft of lazy summer air, and a smile, and a feeling deep inside his chest, warm, like love.

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28 Things I Learned in 2008

January 1, 2009 at 1:27 pm (reflections) (, )

28 Things I Learned in  200 8

  1. The end of high school is not the end of the world.

  2. The end of high school is not even necessarily the end of high school.

  3. College is not the end-all of life experiences

  4. Friends can be together regardless of physical distance

  5. To really appreciate the people in your life, you have to be able to see what your life would be without them in it.

  6. Travel is a state of mind more than an activity

  7. Forgiveness is sometimes a one-way street

  8. Real love is that which is given when it is least deserved

  9. People-watching can reap many unexpected benefits

  10. The difference between “teacher” and “student” is only whether you are asking the question or answering it

  11. There are few things more enjoyable than being in a room of people that completely disagree with your point of view

  12. God remains faithful through all things. People do not.

  13. God remains faithful through all things. I do not.

  14. Having people that really understand you, even when you’re silent, is a gift not to be taken lightly

  15. Family is not necessarily determined by blood

  16. The value of money is directly related to how said money is being used

  17. Living in the moment is a matter of willingness to sacrifice your own moment in favor of someone else’s

  18. Being eighteen is not the same as being seventeen

  19. Learning is addictive

  20. Truth does not change just because we want it to. In fact, it doesn’t change at all

  21. Unless you are asking questions, you are not really paying attention

  22. In the end, you are defined by no other relationship except that between yourself and God

  23. Listening will often get you twice as far as talking

  24. Real role models are the people who don’t find themselves worthy of being one at all

  25. Sometimes, making a stand means doing your homework

  26. The teacher isn’t always right.

  27. Neither is the student.

  28. A year is only a measure of time. Life is a measure of actual living.

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