Ceramic DM Winter 07 (Final Judgment Posted)

Piratecat

Sesquipedalian
tadk, he has a book of poetry out that you might really like.

Anyways, I think you should play to your strengths and write stories that are designed to be read aloud. I may be prejudiced, but I love those.

Gulla, thank you for the comments! Some responses to you and Berandor:
[sblock]Berandor:

It's funny. I wrote my whole story hour in the present tense, and it worked really well - but I'm out of the habit! I had to go back and make lots of corrections, and I still missed a few tense errors. I think it works for this story, though. I wanted the feel of a correspondent reporting live.

The two questions you had -- the 30% off picture? The child in that advertisement was one of the messiah children, and his parents got him into child modeling because they recognized his charisma. The dinosaur egg didn't have any hidden symbolism; they just happened to be at Ogden's Dinosaur Park, because that seemed like a good place to have a giant egg. :)

Parker apparently drugged Mike, probably with a lethal sedative, while he was walking through the park. My throwaway line about a kid slapping a bug is referencing Mike noticing the dart but thinking it was a bee sting.

I didn't think there was room in the story for the fundamentalist troops you mention, although that's a cool idea; presumably Parker operates below the radar so as to avoid that sort of recognition.

Gulla:

Sorry this didn't work for you as well! I haven't seen this plot before, so I was surprised that it was so well-worn for you. It's worth noting that most of the aspects you didn't like as much were by design, and not accidental mistakes on my part; we may just have different taste in stories.

I very much appreciate the analysis and kind words, because there's no other way to improve.
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Berandor

lunatic
20 hours to go for the judges to clean their desks :D

Actually, I'm really looking forward to the next stories – I've been checking in several times tonight because I had messed up the deadline by 12 hours.
 


mythago

Hero
Sorry, guys, I know how lame this is, but I've had about two hours' sleep and I'm not likely to get much more before tomorrow. I probably should have sat this Ceramic DM out entirely.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Stepchildren

This is not the story of Jackal’s first marriage, where his bride trapped his skin under a boulder and left him to shrivel up in the sun; or his second marriage, when he bragged about his beautiful long tail until Crocodile bit it off and left him too ashamed of the bushy stump to come to his own wedding; or even his third marriage, where his mother-in-law put a curse on his wusuu so that he had to beg all the other animals until Rabbit let Jackal borrow his own wusuu for his wedding night. No, this is the story of his sixth marriage, after which he ended up left with nothing but a sore nose and a packet of excellent cigarettes. Jackal slunk away from the marriage-hall but left some mischief in his path, as he always does. Listen:

The Meintje Wax Museum and House of Horror accumulated a slow layer of dead flies and dust. In its heyday, its owners charged teenagers to wander through and giggle and poke the displays while they groped each other in the dim purple-and-red light. Both the owners and the museum had seen better days. It made a good place for Jackal to get drunk undisturbed, and when he was good and liquored up he wandered around the museum, dog-laughing at the garish scenes of violence and torture. He stopped at a display showing a man wincing from deep shark bites. [1] Jackal liked this one, perhaps because it made him hungry. He blew four puffs of smoke at the wax man, dropped the butt of his cigarette on the no-slip floor and loped outside into the tall grass.

#

The wax man stood up and stretched. His half-zipped pants slid down around and he snatched at them. The air smelled of dog hair and cigarettes. He noticed the wounds on his arm and side and tentatively poked at them. There was no pain, no blood. They felt smooth. He hunted around until he found a shirt, striped with long sleeves from a horror-movie display. He pulled it over his head to hide the strange wounds; he didn’t want to frighten anyone. Confused and aimless, he wandered around the dusty warehouse until he found a corrugated steel door. He pushed it open and blinked in the sunlight. Tufts of long grass pushed through stone pathways that led to and past the warehouse. He picked one at random and began to walk.

The stone paths wound through small farms and houses. Somehow the wax man knew he must stay out of the sun, and kept to shade as much as he could, darting from overhang to tree like a strange animal.

He stopped at a farmhouse when a voice called to him. He turned to see a disheveled young man perched atop an odd puppet. [2] “Come on, he won’t hurt you,” the boy said, and then he realized it was the puppet that had spoken to him first. He came closer and squatted on the lawn, in the shade of an overturned wheelbarrow.

“He’s never spoken to a stranger before,” the young man explained.

“I’ve never seen another one like me,” the puppet said. Its voice made the wax man think of whiskey and needles. “Other than you, Rik, my friend, none really worth talking to. Ah, you, the wax man, are you one of Jackal’s bastard children?”

The wax man shrugged. The word was strange, but it resonated as true. He remembered the smell of dog and the cigarette smoke, and absently mimed bringing a cigarette to his lips.

The puppet laughed. “I do not think you want fire near you, brother. Jackal gets up to things when he’s on his own for too long without a woman, and he tries to make his own children. You need to go to him and demand your birthright if you want to be free to walk the land, not a mindless puppet. You can never marry or farm or raise children until your father claims you.”

The wax man nodded. This, he knew, was so: without a mother he had only his father to give him a place, and it seemed Jackal would not come to him; therefore, he needed to corner his father and demand the blessing due to any son.

Rik gave him a parasol to keep off the sun, a pair of sturdy shoes and a warning. “Jackal is cruel and unfair. I don’t need to tell you that, but you might forget, seeing him as your father. He’s a god, after all. Mind your step.”

There was little to say after that, and the wax man left the farm and headed for the tall yellow grass.

#

He traveled by night and curled up in the shade by day. The wax man didn’t sleep, or eat, although in the heat of the day sometimes beads of moisture would appear on his skin, turning milky and flat again in the cool of the evening. He wandered through the savannah, following the strange trail of tobacco and dirty fur that he imagined rather than smelled. It looped and meandered through piles of dung and around the territory of large, fierce animals, and wherever the wax men actually met something living it seemed to be either angry or afraid. The sturdy shoes sprouted holes, then wore through until he discarded them entirely.

He met his father’s enemies face-to-face one night when he trudged through a flooded field near an abandoned farmhouse. There was a scurrying off past his field of vision and two shiny metal figures waved to him cheerfully. [3]

“Wax man!” one of them shrieked. “You smell delightful! Won’t you help us? We were out in this muddy field looking for food and we got stuck.” Something about the tin-can-and-foil person’s voice frightened the wax man, but he couldn’t think why.

“We can tell you the way to your father,” the other called. Its voice, too, alarmed the wax man, but the promise of help was too great to resist. He waded through the wet slime of the field. Then he looked at the outstretched hand and saw that it was a monkey’s paw.

Monkey and his wife saw that the wax man had seen through their disguises. They howled with simian rage and struggled after him, but his slippery feet went in and out of the mud while their broad, flat-toed feet, made for gripping and climbing, bogged them down. They tore off their tinfoil costumes and crumpled it into balls that they hurled at him as he fled. The wax man ran until the sun started to nudge up over the horizon. He curled up under the shade of a tea bush until the sun finished its trip across the sky and went to sleep for another evening.

The wax man had no way to measure time, or how long his wanderings went, but he tracked his father’s scent until the toes were worn off his feet. He was ready to lay down and let the sun take him when he saw an unusual tree, wrapped in a cloth headdress like a woman ready to pound mealie for the evening meal. The tree would make shade when the sun went down, he thought, and went to sit beneath the tree. Its cloth stirred.

The dead branches shook as if the tree were laughing. "No! I am not one of your father's by-blows," the tree said with a woman's voice. "I am too wise to let Jackal make children with me, either. I am Auntie Rooibos, a tree of the people who live across the river, and even when I had leaves I could see your father's children for what they are. You want help, hm?"

The wax man nodded. Even in the shade, heat-tears puddled under his eyes.

"I will tell you how to find Jackal. You will never catch him on foot; he has many years of hiding from anyone who wishes to find him. Do as I say: Strip off your clothes, and step into the sun."

The wax man obeyed. The hot noonday sun beat down on him, and he moved as if to step away, but Auntie Rooibos shook her branches at him in warning. He stood, and the wax of his naked body dripped, then ran, and by the time the sun plodded off to a well-earned rest he was no more than a flat disc of wax.

Aunt Rooibos shook her branches in satisfaction. The people of the village would come to hang garlands of mealie stalks on her trunk, and they would see the fine, clear wax, and they would use it to make candles in honor of the gods. And the wax man's spirit would find itself on the very doorstep of his father, Jackal, who would no doubt be expecting to steal the other gods' tasty gifts of food, and not to find an angry, demanding spirit sun on his doorstep.

It would be a while before the festival, though, and just at that moment Jackal was trying to escape from his seventh marriage, which he had been foolish enough to do in a big city where the white men's gods tried to drop their heavy machines on him, and were getting angrier when they missed. [5]

[1] http://www.enworld.org/attachment.php?attachmentid=27871
[2] http://www.enworld.org/attachment.php?attachmentid=27868
[3] http://www.enworld.org/attachment.php?attachmentid=27870
[4] http://www.enworld.org/attachment.php?attachmentid=27869
[5] http://www.enworld.org/attachment.php?attachmentid=27872
 

carpedavid

First Post
Three, Two, One, Go

As with the first round, this turned out a bit long, so I'm attaching a pdf to the post:

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Ceramic DM – Winter 2007: Round 2, Match 1
carpedavid vs. BardStephenFox

Three, Two, One, Go

Shoji checked his watch; he didn’t want to be late for his first shakedown. As he hurried down the crowded streets of Tokyo III, passing businessmen in suits and housewives in smart skirts, people gave him a wide berth. The pompadour haircut; black, leather pants; black shirt; and black, leather gloves made him look like a gangster – which, of course, he was.

After passing the Spaceport, where the whine of antigravity engines filled the air, Shoji cut through Yamamoto Square. He hurried past the hundreds of robotic solicitors that continually beamed holographic advertisements into the air in front of the thousands of tourists that passed through the center of the city each day. Finally, he dodged between the wood-paneled family sedans, growling hoverbikes, and hopped-up hot rods that sat, stopped, in the daily rush hour traffic jams, before emerging onto the sidewalk in front of Tanaka Park.

He could feel his heart pounding in his chest, so he took a deep breath and tried to calm himself. Although Ichiro, his mentor in the Green Dragon Clan, had informed him the day before that this would be an easy mark – a street performer – he wanted to make a good impression. Think tough, Shoji, he thought to himself. Keep cool. Don’t be a spaz.

Shoji dashed past the ice cream stand, tilt-a-whirl, and merry-go-round before seeing his counterpart sitting slouched on a park bench. He was watching what Shoji presumed to be their mark: a woman dressed in a heavy kimono and a noh mask who was reciting her lines in time to a walking bass line that emanated from a speaker off to one side. At her feet was a golden bowl, which passers-by occasionally dropped a few newyen into.

“Hi Ichiro,” Shoji said as he crouched down next to the bench.

“What’s buzzin’, cousin?” Ichiro said with a slight nod. He cocked his head to one side and frowned. “Bad news, Clyde, you look like an Ivy Leaguer.”

“I’m sorry?”

“Un-tuck your shirt, man.”

Shoji grimaced inwardly, and then hurriedly rearranged his clothes.

“You’ve got to look cool to be in this business,” Ichiro drew out the word “cool” for several more syllables than it actually possessed. “This business is all about intimidation. You’ve got to make the squares believe that you’re going to go ape if they don’t get with it. For example, you see this nest?” he pointed to his head.

Shoji had indeed noticed Ichiro’s hair – it was also a pompadour, but was easily a foot tall. He nodded. [Image 1]

“You know what this nest says to the squares we deal with every day?”

“No, not really,” Shoji said, more than a little puzzled.

“It says, ‘I don’t care that you have to pay the rent.’”

“How does it say that?”

“Because it says that I’m too cool to care about their problems,” Ichiro replied with a snort.

“What if they don’t think it’s cool?”

“They don’t have to think it’s cool. Only I have to think it’s cool. They just have to know that I know that they know that I think it’s cool.” He looked sidelong at Shoji, “Why? Don’t you think it’s cool?”

“Oh, it’s cool!” Shoji replied nervously, “Very cool. Really.”

“That’s what I thought,” Ichiro replied as he examined his own image in a small mirror that he produced from his back pocket. “You know, I can give you some pointers on getting yours to look like this. Not that it’ll be as cool as mine.”

“That would be great,” Shoji said as he forced a smile. “I…uh…don’t know if I can get mine to grow that long, though.”

“Implants.”

“Oh. Right.”

“I know a place where you can get a deal.”

“I’ll keep that in mind.”

“Here’s the word from the bird, man: you’ve got to get noticed if you want to move up in the organization,” Ichiro produced a small comb from the same pocket that he had produced the mirror, and smoothed a single stray hair back into place. “You do want to move up in the organization, don’t you?”

“Well, I’m really just doing this to save up money for college,” said Shoji, “I’d like to study hyperspace and become a jump gate engineer.”

“Ah, so you really are an Ivy Leaguer,” Ichiro frowned. “I dunno, daddy-o, Boss Takashi was hip with that, but Boss Oda’s a lot more demanding.”

Shoji grimaced. He had joined the Green Dragon Clan four months earlier, just before Boss Takashi had a heart attack. Under the fat man’s rule, the worst transgression was showing up late with his double bento-box lunch. Once Oda took over, though, he demanded tribute, and failure resulted in sacrifice. More than a few members of the clan had lost their little fingers in the past three months. Shoji was now worried that he wouldn’t be able to get out.

“Besides, who wants to be a square?”

“Well, my dad’s a square. That’s why I’m on Mars. He’s a terraforming engineer for the Colonial government.”

“Man, that’s not a square, that’s a cube. A square squared.”

“Actually, a square squared is…”

“Hey, cut the gas, man, the girl’s done.”

Shoji looked up to see the woman take a bow and then turn around to switch off the music. She removed her heavy kimono, revealing a silk blouse and a pink poodle skirt, and then took off her mask and glanced over at the two of them.

She got a puzzled look on her face. “Shoji?”

“Mei?” Shoji groaned. Mei was Shoji’s lab partner in Quantum Physics class, and they got along well enough that they had gone out for ice cream after school the previous week.

“What do you two want?”

“We’re here for the Green Dragon Clan’s payment,” Ichiro said, stretching out his hand expectantly.

“This isn’t Clan territory, this is Triad territory,” said Mei as she pulled a handful of multi-hued bills out of the golden bowl.

“Well, now that Boss Oda is in charge, we’re expanding our territory,” Ichiro said nervously.

“Great, now I have two groups who want my money. Why don’t you go out and find a real job, huh?” she said as she counted the money. “Here, ten percent,” she stuck out her tongue as she handed over the newyen.

“Actually, it’s fifteen percent, now,” said Ichiro.

“You’ll take ten and you’ll be happy,” Mei spat. “Besides, you should be ashamed, shaking down your little sister.”

“Little sister?” Shoji gasped as he looked back and forth between Mei and Ichiro. If he ignored the hair, the resemblance was certainly there.

“Ok, baby,” Ichiro laughed uncomfortably, “don’t have a cow. We’re cool.”

“We’re cool? We’re cool?” she crossed her arms and glared at Ichiro. “Only one of us is in any way, shape, or form cool, Ichiro, and it’s certainly not you.”

“Oh, I see, so you’re the cool one?” Ichiro said as he turned his head to the side and slid his hand along the top of his hair.

“Yeah, and maybe if you spent a little more time studying and a little less time preening, you might actually get into college and do something with your life.”

“Oh. Oh. Oh. Okay, right.” His head began to bob in anger, and with the giant hair, all Shoji could think of was a rooster strutting around. “Come on Shoji, let’s blow this place,” he said as he turned and began walking away.

“Ok,” he turned to Mei, “I should go.”

Mei winked at him, “See you later, alligator.”

Caught by surprise, Shoji smiled, “After a while, crocodile.”

***

Shoji rode on the back of Ichiro’s hoverbike as they returned to the noodle house that served as the Green Dragon Clan’s headquarters. Located in a primarily residential district of Tokyo III, the noodle house saw significant foot traffic, but far less car traffic than the busy city center. Ichiro parked at the curb, and the two walked inside.

Patrons packed the restaurant, most wearing the same type of outfit that Ichiro and Shoji wore. They walked past the sea of pompadours and black leather pants to a room in the back where a black and white cat was curled up on the cushion of a gilded, baroque chair.

Shoji looked around, and was about to bow and introduce himself when Ichiro motioned to him to be silent. He pointed to a curtain on the other side of the room, which rippled with activity. A dun-colored pit bull emerged from behind the curtain, carrying a tray of sushi in its jaws. It walked over to the chair and set the tray down in front of the cat, then sat and wagged its tail expectantly.

The cat sniffed at the sushi and then nibbled off a corner. After a second, he began growling at the dog. The dog whimpered but sat obediently at the foot of the chair as the cat rose from the seat and stretched.

“This is maguro!” the cat said in a deep, gravelly voice as he climbed down from the chair. “I said toro! Toro is the fatty tuna, you imbecile!”

The cat swiped at the dog with its front paw, opening a gash on its nose. The dog whimpered. It swiped again, and the dog let out a cry of pain, but still sat motionless. Then, the cat jumped into the air, twisted its body, and slammed its back paw into the side of the dog’s face, sending a spray of blood and saliva into the air. [Image 4]

Oda had been Boss Takashi’s robotic cat, handed down from Boss to Boss since the inception of the Clan. He had spent over a hundred years lying in the laps of the Green Dragon’s leaders as they cut deals, ordered hits, paid bribes, and ate lunch. In addition to learning nearly everything possible about being an underworld boss, Oda had become accustomed to eating the finest raw tuna.

“Dogs really are as stupid as they look,” Oda hissed as the robotic pit bull ran out of the room. He briefly glanced at Shoji and Ichiro before hopping back up into his chair, where he curled up and lay his head on his paws. “What?”

Ichiro stepped forward, “Boss Oda, sir, we came to turn in our tribute.”

“Good, good,” the cat said as he motioned with his tail toward a giant golden urn. “You know where to put it.”

Ichiro walked across the room and dropped in the newyen. The urn hummed for a second before announcing in a pleasant, female voice, “three hundred.”

“Three hundred?” Oda lifted his head. “That’s it? Pathetic.”

“I’m sorry sir, it was our first day in the new territory,” Ichiro said as he bowed deeply.

Oda narrowed his eyes at Ichiro, “Fine – you get off easy this time. Next week it better be three thousand.”

“Yes, sir. Thank you, sir,” Ichiro said, bowing with each syllable – his hair frantically bobbing to and fro.

“You leave.” He then pointed to Shoji with his tail, “You stay.”

Ichiro stared at Shoji with wide eyes. “Sorry, daddy-o, you’re on your own,” he whispered as he dashed past him toward the main restaurant.

“I heard that you went out on your first shakedown today, Shoji.”

“Yes, sir,” Shoji said as he bowed deeply.

“Please, sit.” Oda motioned to the floor in front of him with his paw.

“Thank you sir,” Shoji replied nervously as he knelt down and then sat back on his feet.

“How long have you been with the clan, Shoji?”

“Um, four months, sir.”

“Ah, just before Takashi left us.”

“Yes, that’s correct, sir.”

“How do you feel about having a new Boss, Shoji?”

“You seem to be very,” he paused for a moment as he searched for the least offensive word possible, “effective.”

Oda smiled. “This operation became a bit loose under Takashi’s leadership. I’m just returning it to its former glory.”

“Yes, sir.”

Oda shifted his position, flopping over on his back and hanging his head over the edge of the cushion. He looked at Shoji upside-down. “You want to move up in the organization, don’t you, Shoji?”

“Actually, sir,” Shoji shifted his position, sitting back and putting more weight on his feet, “I’d like to become an engineer, like my father. I joined the Clan in order to earn money for college.”

Oda licked his paw and then flipped back over and frowned at Shoji. “Your father, hmm? You know, I’m aware that my predecessor was inclined to look favorably upon these mixed allegiances, but I’m not my predecessor.”

“Sir?”

“I demand total allegiance from my clan members, Shoji. It’s the only way we’re going to win this war.”

“I didn’t know we were at war, sir.”

“We’re not yet, but we will be,” Oda began to purr.

“With who, sir?”

The tip of Oda’s tail began to flick back and forth. “With the Capitoline Triad, my boy.”

“With the Triad?” Shoji began to sweat.

“Indeed. It will be a war to end all wars, and I’m going to need every soldier I can get.” Oda twisted his head and stared at the wall to his right.

Shoji looked over but saw nothing. He couldn’t get comfortable for some reason, so he shifted his position again, leaning forward on his knees this time. After half a minute, he said quietly, “Sir?”

“Mmm? Oh.” Oda turned his gaze back to Shoji, “That’s why I’m trying to weed out the weak now. You don’t want to be one of the weak, do you?”

“No sir.”

“Good,” Oda said before yawning. He curled up on the cushion, placed his tail over his head and said nothing more.

A minute later, Shoji stood up, bowed, and left.

***

The next day, Shoji stood in front of the library, trying not to sweat. The heat of the Martian sun made the summers unbearably hot, and he was glad that he decided not to wear the leather pants today; instead, he wore jeans and a white t-shirt.

He was watching for Mei. They had planned to go to the park to get ice cream again after school, but he had to drop books off at the library, so Mei had agreed to pick him up. From what he knew of Mei, he was expecting something normal: a Europa maybe, or a little Shockwave coup. He was extremely surprised, then, to see a ’35 Inferno pull up to the curb.

The car was painted jet black with orange and yellow flames running along the side. Its blunt front end stood in contrast to a set of foot high fins on either side of the trunk. To complete the hot-rod image, it floated less than three inches off the ground. The passenger side window rolled down and Mei’s voice drifted across from the driver’s seat, “Hop in, Shoji.”

“Wow, Mei, this is unreal!” he said as he opened the door and climbed in.

“Thanks,” she tilted her head and smiled, “I modified it myself. Hopped up the engine and lowered it about three inches.”

“That’s amazing.”

“Plenty of room for back-seat-bingo, too,” she said with a wink.

“At least let me buy you some ice cream first,” Shoji said with a laugh.

“I didn’t mean you, goof,” Mei giggled as she hit the gas and blasted into traffic; Shoji was thrown back in his seat. The volume of the radio increased as the low thrum of the antigrav engine rose to a high-pitched whine; Mei tapped her hand on the steering wheel in time to the walking bass line of the of the rockabilly as she deftly dodged the tanks, rag-tops, and hot-rods that crowded Tokyo III’s streets.

Less than three minutes later, Mei swerved, cut off a truck, and skidded expertly into a free parking space. “We’re here,” she said excitedly as she jumped out of the car. Shoji sat in silence for nearly half a minute before Mei tapped on his window. “Hey, you coming?”

Shoji nodded slowly and reached gingerly for the door handle, afraid of doing anything to spook the car. Oh, thank you ancestors, he thought as he stepped out onto solid earth.

Mei cocked her head and frowned at him. “Don’t you like my driving, Shoji?”

“No, it’s fine. You’re very good at it.” Shoji replied with a smile. Just very fast.

“Good, let’s get ice cream!” she said as she grabbed his hand and led him into the park. Shoji took the time to notice that she was wearing the same pink poodle skirt that she had been wearing in the park the other day, but had accompanied it with a low-cut kimono top.

“You look great, Mei.”

“Thanks,” she replied with a coy smile.

After buying ice cream cones, Shoji and Mei strolled through the park. Mei was uncharacteristically chatty, which Shoji was thankful for. He was having trouble concentrating on anything for very long since his meeting with the Boss.

They had passed the tilt-a-whirl and were headed for the merry-go-round when Mei turned to Shoji. “So what’s your story, morning glory?”

“Huh?”

“You haven’t been talking this whole time. Did my driving really rattle your cage that bad?”

“Oh, no, I’m sorry,” Shoji laughed. “No, I just had a meeting with Boss Oda yesterday.”

“Ah, I see. I’m guessing it didn’t go that well,” she said in between licks of her cone.

“No, not really. I told him that I’m trying to save money for college.”

“What did he say?”

“He said that I had ‘mixed allegiances.’”

“Hmm,” Mei caught a drip of ice cream that was about to fall from her hand.

“Yeah. He also said that there was going to be a war with the Capitoline Triad.”

“A war?”

“Yeah. I guess he’s intent on taking over the whole city for himself.”

“Wow. That’s heavy.”

“I really don’t want to be in the Clan if that’s where this is headed.”

“So what can you do?”

“I don’t know. That’s the problem.”

“You could just tell them that you quit.”

“No. Boss Oda would never let that slide. Besides, I wouldn’t want to get Ichiro in trouble.”

“Ah, don’t worry about that drag,” Mei smiled, “he needs a little trouble to get his ass in gear.”

“Yeah, I guess.”

As they passed the merry-go-round, a familiar voice sounded loudly from behind them, “Think fast!”

Shoji turned around just in time to get an ice cream cone in the face. “Agh! Man, why do you have to be such a nosebleed?”

“Ichiro, that is so uncool!” Mei fumed.

“Heh, only to a square,” he said as he smoothed back his hair. Shoji noticed that Ichiro’s pompadour was significantly shorter than the last time he saw him.

“What happened to your nest, man?”

“Huh? Oh, well, I realized that I was spending too much time looking cool and not enough time actually being cool.”

“My mom made him cut it,” Mei said with a snort.

“Hey, Mei. Why don’t you go drop dead twice.”

“What, and look like you?”

Ichiro rolled his eyes. “Anyway, I’ve got good news, Clyde. This is like crazy, man. The ancestors want to see you.”

“What? Really? The ancestors? I didn’t think my meeting with Boss Oda went that well.”

“I guess you were on the stick man. If the ancestors want to see you, you’re made in the shade.”

“Shoji, that’s great!” Mei exclaimed as she grabbed his arm and pulled herself close to him.

“Shoji, that’s great!” Ichiro exclaimed in a high pitched voice, as he clapped his hands together and batted his eyelids.

“Get lost, you spaz!” Mei yelled as she threw her ice cream cone at Ichiro’s head.

“Easy, baby!” Ichiro yelped as he barely ducked the flying creamy confection, “It’s deadsville here anyway – I’m going to split.” He smoothed the hair that had fallen out of place and then strutted off.

“Ugh, I hate him.” Mei said as she watched her brother disappear around the merry-go-round.

“He’s ok,” Shoji said as he put his arm around Mei’s waist. “He just tries too hard.”

“Well, he needs to try harder, ‘cause whatever he’s doing isn’t working.” She turned to him and pressed herself close. “Anyway, it sounds like you don’t have to worry – things are working out.”

“Yeah, I guess. Cool, huh?”

“What do you say we get out of here?” Mei said as she grabbed his hand and pulled him along. They made their way through the park and then climbed back into her ’35 Inferno.

“Oh, I have to show you the coolest thing about this car,” Mei smiled as she hit a button on the console. Shoji held his breath expecting to be rocketed into space, but the only thing that happened was that the windows turned an opaque black, leaving the orange glow of the dashboard the only illumination.

“Oh?” Shoji said, puzzled.

“That’s not what’s cool,” Mei smiled, before nodding to the backseat. “That’s what’s cool.”

“Oh!”

***

Shoji took a deep breath before entering the ancestor’s shrine. He wasn’t quite sure why they wanted to see him, and he hoped that the bottle of sake he had brought would be a good enough offering for them. It’s now or never, he thought to himself as he opened the door and stepped inside.

With the advent of neural imaging, death was no longer necessarily the end of one’s existence. After death, the brain could be scanned, and a perfect replica of one’s memories and personality reconstructed. The replica could be interfaced with via computer system, loaded into a robotic head, or, for the very wealthy, even loaded into an entirely new body.

While this didn’t actually resurrect the deceased, it provided his survivors with easy access to years of experience and information, and in many cases, the comfort of hanging on to a small part of a loved one.

The robotic heads of Goro, Zenko, and Nobu, the Green Dragon Clan’s former leaders, sat on top of an altar. In front of them were incense bowls, cups full of sake, and elaborate jade dragon statues – each gifts from clan members, politicians, businessmen, and anyone else who wanted to stay on the Clan’s good side. [Image 3] Shoji was a bit surprised that Boss Takashi hadn’t joined them yet, but nonetheless crossed the room and knelt down in front of them.

“Greetings, ancestors,” Shoji said as he opened the bottle of sake, poured out three cups, and then placed one under each of the heads. “I bring you an offering.”

“More sake?” Goro, the first head, asked incredulously as he opened his eyes and stared at Shoji.

“What good does sake do any of us?” said Zenko, the second head, as he too opened his eyes and regarded the young gang member.

Nobu, the third ancestor, looked over at Shoji and shook his head in dismay.

“It’s not like any of us can drink any more,” said Goro.

“Now, a cigar I could probably manage,” added Zenko.

Nobu licked his lips.

“Ah, I haven’t had a cigar in three years,” Goro murmured.

“Do you have any cigars?” asked Zenko.

“No,” Shoji stammered, “but I have some cigarettes.” He reached into his pocket and pulled out a crumpled, half-full pack.

“Ah, that’ll do!” exclaimed Zenko.

“Yes, give one here!” demanded Goro.

Nobu looked at the cigarettes greedily.

Shoji pulled a cigarette from the pack, lit it, and then passed it from mouth to mouth.

“Excellent!” roared Goro.

“Tremendous,” sighed Zenko.

Nobu simply smiled.

“So what can we do for you?” asked Goro.

“Don’t you mean, ‘What can I do for you?’” Shoji said as he ground the cigarette out in an incense bowl. “You asked to see me.”

“Did we?” asked Goro.

“Oh yes, so we did,” replied Zenko.

Nobu nodded in agreement.

“That’s right,” said Goro. “You made an impression on Oda.”

“Yes, but not the kind you were probably hoping for,” said Zenko.

“Indeed, he was quite displeased. He mentioned that he was collecting little fingers, and that yours would be next.”

Shoji gulped, “I’m sorry ancestors.” He prostrated himself on the floor in front of their altar.

“Ha! Get up Shoji,” said Goro.

“Indeed, that’s precisely the kind of impression that we were hoping to hear about,” said Zenko.

“I’m sorry?”

“You see, we are very displeased with Oda.”

“Yes, very displeased.”

“The Green Dragon Clan was founded to bring peace to Tokyo III, not war.”

“That’s why we’ve maintained a truce with the Capitoline Triad for the past one hundred years.”

“Yes, everyone is happy that way.”

Nobu nodded in agreement.

“So why did you want to see me?” asked Shoji.

“We need you to overthrow Oda for us.”

“What? Why me? I’m not even that high up in the Clan,” asked Shoji.

“Ah, but that’s exactly why. You haven’t been indoctrinated yet,” said Goro.

“Those with a longer history might resist,” added Zenko.

“Ok,” said Shoji, now feeling a bit nauseous.

“Not by yourself, of course.”

“No, you’ll have assistance.”

“Ichiro?” Shoji asked, afraid of the answer.

Nobu giggled.

“No, Shoji,” Goro said as he shook his head in dismay.

“You will bring Takashi back.”

“Boss Takashi?”

“Indeed. You may have noticed that he is not with us yet.”

Shoji nodded.

“We have made arrangements for his return.”

“You must talk to Boss Juno; she is assisting us.”

Shoji was quiet for a moment as he tried to process everything: overthrowing Oda, talking to Boss Juno, and brining Takashi back. He could feel his stomach tighten and felt a bit light headed. “Ok. What if Boss Oda asks what we talked about?”

“Tell him that we told you to shape up and do everything he says,” Goro said with a laugh.

“Indeed, he’s pompous enough to believe it,” Zenko said wistfully.

“Thank you ancestors,” Shoji said as he bowed deeply.

“Make us proud, boy,” Goro growled.

“We’re counting on you,” Zenko added.

Shoji stood up, bowed again and walked to the door. As he placed his hand on the handle, Nobu finally spoke in a deep baritone voice, “Good luck, Shoji.”

***

Juno looked into the mirror and smiled. She liked the image that stared back at her: young and beautiful, with flaxen hair and green eyes. Her cheeks were rosy and pleasantly plump, and her smile shone a brilliant white.

“Holography off,” she instructed, and the image in the mirror transformed. Instead of the beautiful visage of a young woman, she now peered into the eyes of an old and wrinkled crone. The longevity treatments had taken their toll: now her skin stretched over her skeleton like canvas over a wooden frame; the hollows around her eyes had sunken; her skin had turned a mottled grey; and she had lost every hair on her body. [Image 5]

She sighed, one hundred and thirty years, and yet I’m still can’t bear the thought of it ending. I wonder, though, am I getting soft in my old age?

“Holography on,” she said sadly, and the image of a young, vibrant woman replaced the crone. She slipped on a silk kimono and hobbled out into the hall. One hundred years ago she had founded the Capitoline Triad, and had quickly formed a truce with the Green Dragon Clan’s first leader, Goro. She had renewed the truce with each successor, but now that the diabolical Oda was threatening war – well, she didn’t know what to do.

I never should have agreed to let that cat succeed Takashi, she thought, but he seemed so…sleepy.

A man wearing a pompadour and black, leather pants ran up to her and bowed. “Boss Juno?”

“Yes?”

“The man the ancestors have sent is here.”

“Very good,” Juno replied with a nod. “I’ll meet him in the drawing room.”

At least the ancestors agree with me that Oda needs to be removed, she thought as she slowly made her way down the hallway. Outside the drawing room, she readjusted her kimono, tightened her belt, and then entered.

“Greetings, Boss Juno,” Shoji said as he bowed deeply.

“Please, don’t remain standing on my account,” Juno said as she settled down in a chair. “So, the ancestors have sent you to me.”

“Yes, that’s correct. They…”

She interrupted him, “I know what they want, and I happen to agree with them.” She leaned forward slightly, and then continued, “Oda needs to be replaced.”

“Yes.”

“Yes, and we need to bring back Takashi in order to lead the Clan.”

“Right, but how do we do that?”

“Ah, technology is a marvelous thing, Shoji.” Juno half-smiled. “You only have to be willing to spend the money on it.”

Shoji looked puzzled, “I don’t understand.”

“You’ll understand quickly enough once you see him. He’s at one of my warehouses, being…prepared.”

“So I need to go get him?”

“Quite,” Juno smiled. “I’ll have my assistant give you the address. You should tell no one about this, by the way.”

“Of course,” Shoji said as he stood and bowed.

“Oh, and Shoji,” Juno said just as Shoji was about to leave.

“Yes?”

“Be careful. We’re all counting on you.”

***

The Triad warehouse was located near the eastern edge of the city, and it took Shoji nearly two hours to make it there by subway and on foot. The sun had long set, and, as he looked at his watch, he realized that it was nearly midnight. He looked around uncomfortably – if Triad members found him out here, would they believe that he was working for Boss Juno?

He stopped under each streetlight to check the directions that Juno’s assistant had given him. When he finally found the steel-sided building, he was unimpressed. A single, rusted door opened directly onto the sidewalk. He tugged on the handle, and, to his surprise, it was unlocked.

Inside, the warehouse was filled with robotics parts: barrels of pistons, titanium rods, and gears were crammed against the walls, while boxes of wires, cables, microprocessors, and circuit boards were stacked in giant piles. Shoji wound his way through the mess toward a single light bulb that hung over a work bench near the middle of the floor.

A bespectacled, middle-aged man in a white lab coat was sitting at the work bench; he appeared to be soldering together a pile of wires and gears. “Doctor Nakamura?” Shoji asked.

The man startled and looked around frantically, “Yes, who’s there?”

“My name is Shoji. I’m here to pick up Boss Takashi.”

“Oh, right,” the man said with an air of relief, “Boss Juno told me you’d be coming.” He stood up from the work bench and motioned Shoji to follow, “This way.”

Shoji stared at the various cables, wires, and actuators as the doctor led him through the warehouse. “I have to tell you,” said Nakamura, “I was a bit dismayed that you were coming so soon. He’s not exactly complete, yet.”

“Not complete?”

“You’ll see,” the doctor said. “By the way, did you bring any food?”

“I didn’t know I was supposed to. Can he eat?”

“Not technically, no, but that hasn’t stopped him from trying.”

“This is a new model, by the way. Much more advanced than the previous ancestors. Better funding.”

“Oh?”

Nakamura stopped in front of a cylindrical, stainless steal chamber, which stood a foot taller than he and was about twice as wide. A tangle of tubes and wires emerged from the top and sides, and a section of the front had a handle on it – clearly designed to be a door.

“Ready?” asked the doctor.

“Sure,” Shoji shrugged.

“Ok then,” he said as he grabbed the handle and pulled.

The creaking of steel hinges echoed throughout the warehouse as the door opened, letting light stream into the interior of the cylinder. Shoji’s eyes widened with surprise as Boss Takashi’s voice echoed from inside. “Shoji, my boy. It’s good to see you!”

***

Shoji stood outside the warehouse in the cold Martian night. He pulled out his phone and dialed Mei’s number, hoping that she was still awake.

“Hello?” Mei’s voice answered groggily.

“Mei, it’s Shoji. Can you pick me up?”

“Don’t be a goof, Shoji, it’s nearly midnight.”

“Come on, Mei. Please?”

“Shoji, I’m not coming all the way out there in the middle of the night so that you can get me in the backseat again,” she paused for a moment. “You should have called around ten.”

“No, I’m serious. I need your help.”

She sighed. “Ok. What’s going on?”

“I’ve got to deliver something, but it’s a bit…bigger…than I thought it would be.”

“What is it?”

“I can’t tell you over the phone.”

“This isn’t going to get the heat after me, is it?”

“No. Well. Not the heat at any rate.”

Mei sighed. “Ok. Where should I meet you?”

Shoji sighed in relief when, less than fifteen minutes later, a ’35 Inferno screamed to a halt in front of the curb. The driver’s side door opened and Mei stepped out. “Lay it on me,” she said with a frown, “why did you drag me all the way out to nowhereseville in the middle of the night?”

Shoji opened the warehouse door and looked inside, “Boss?”

Out stepped a figure that was covered from head to toe in a silken robe. In the soft glow of the streetlights, even its face was shrouded in shadow.

Mei stared as the man pulled back the hood of the robe before removing it altogether. After a minute, she let out a low whistle, “Like crazy, man.” In front of her stood a life-size, titanium skeleton – completely devoid of muscle and flesh.

Ichiro emerged from the car and stared in amazement, “Woah. That’s the most.”

Shoji looked sidelong at Mei. “What’s he doing here?”

“You said it was something big. I thought we might need the help.”

“I kind of like the new look,” the skeleton said as he patted his ribs.

“Mei, Ichiro, this is Boss Takashi,” said Shoji.

“Boss Takashi?” Ichiro said, stunned.

“Well, a copy of me, at any rate,” Takashi said, “the ancestors decided that since things went so well under my leadership, I deserved more than just a head.”

“This is so radioactive!” Ichiro said excitedly. “Wait ‘till I tell everyone about this.”

“No!” Shoji barked, “You can’t tell anyone until…” He looked at Takashi for approval.

“Go ahead – it’ll be front page news by tomorrow.”

“…until Oda is removed from power.”

“Woah – heavy,” said Ichiro.

“The ancestors wanted me to pick up Takashi, so that he could go reclaim his position as head of the Clan.”

“So,” Mei said pensively, “where are we supposed to deliver him?”

“Back to the noodle house,” Shoji replied, “That’s where Oda is.” He looked over at the former leader of the Clan, who was staring at his metallic, skeletal hands, clenching and unclenching them, and chuckling.

“Do any of you have some food? I’m starving,” Takashi said as he looked at three teenagers.

“Oh. Oh. Oh. I’ve got this,” Ichiro said as he fished a candy bar out of his pocket.

“That’ll do.” Takashi took the proffered candy and stuffed it between his skeletal jaws. He chewed for a few moments, but only succeeded in smearing chocolate all over his face. “Hmm, as much as I like this look, I’ll have to get the process finished soon if I ever want to eat anything,” he said with a grumble.

“Shall we go, Boss?” Shoji offered.

“Yes, indeed. Let’s get this over with.”

Mei looked fearfully at Shoji, who just shrugged. “You don’t have to come, if you don’t want. You can just drop us off.”

She frowned and crossed her arms, “Not if you’re going to be there, goof.”

“Oh!” Takashi exclaimed, “I almost forgot.” He disappeared into the warehouse and then reappeared a moment later carrying a four-foot long, black metal case. “I’m going to need this,” he said as he patted the case lovingly.

***

As the ’35 Inferno pulled up to the curb in front of the Green Dragon Clan’s headquarters, Shoji began to feel nauseous. He wasn’t sure what was going to happen, and the life-size metal skeleton sitting beside him in the back seat wasn’t helping to calm his nerves.

After every one piled out of the car, Takashi pulled out the black metal case and set it on the ground. He flipped open the latches, kicked back the lid, and pulled out a massive, automatic machine gun. [Image 2] He looked over at Shoji, “I always bring this with me to negotiations.”

Shoji nodded nervously, but followed the skeleton’s lead and walked toward the door of the noodle house. He turned to motion to Mei to stay in the car, but wasn’t surprised to find out that she was already right behind him.

As they stepped through the door into the empty restaurant, Takashi opened fire. Shoji pushed Mei to the ground and covered her with his body as tables, chairs, and noodle bowls exploded around them. The titanium skeleton kept the trigger pressed for a full minute as even the support columns of the building were chewed to shreds by the hail of bullets.

“What was that?” Shoji exclaimed once the bullets stopped. He lifted his head up to see the extent of the damage.

“I find that it always helps to set the terms of the negotiation right up front.”

Ichiro stumbled in from the street. “What’s going on?” he yelled.

Takashi waved to him to be quiet, and Shoji looked at him and shrugged.

“Are you ok, Mei?” Shoji asked the girl who was lying under him.

She was quiet for a moment, and then smiled. “Yeah. I’m on cloud nine.”

Shoji gasped and quickly rolled off of Mei. Then he looked up to see a black and white cat wander out of the back room. It jumped up onto a broken table, sat, licked its paw, and then looked at the group assembled in front of it. It cocked its head and stared at Takashi for a full minute before glancing at Ichiro and then settling its gaze on Shoji.

“Why, Shoji?” Oda hissed.

“I told you, I’m only doing this to save up money for college.”

“I should have collected your finger while I had a chance.”

Shoji shuddered, but then Takashi lowered the gun and stepped forward. “I’m taking the clan back, Oda.”

“I see that.”

“You’re not going to make any trouble, are you?”

Oda licked his front paw and ran it over his face. “Can I still sit on your lap?”

“Of course.”

Oda turned his head and nipped at his fur for a second, then looked back at Takashi. “Will you still feed me toro?”

“Absolutely!”

“Even for breakfast?”

Takashi laughed, “Yes, even for breakfast.”

“Fine then,” Oda said with a sniff, and then turned and jumped down off the table. “I’m going back to sleep.”

After the cat disappeared into the back room, Takashi leaned down and helped Shoji and Mei to their feet. “You make a cute couple,” he smiled.

Shoji blushed, but then put his arm around her waist. She leaned against his chest and smiled. “Thank you, Boss Takashi.”

“What? A couple?” Ichiro exclaimed from near the front door.

Takashi shook his titanium skull and laughed. “I should go talk to the ancestors and thank them for sending you. Is there anything I can do for you?”

“Well, I do want to study hyperspace – is there any chance you could put in a good word at Tokyo University?”

“Tokyo University? That’s in Triad territory. How about Mars Polytechnic?”

“Don’t you start,” interjected Mei, “wasn’t the whole point of this to maintain the truce?”

“Indeed it was,” Takashi shook his head. “I’ll talk to Boss Juno. I believe her son is the Dean of Engineering at the University.”

“Thank you sir,” Shoji said as he bowed deeply.

“You know what we need?” said Takashi, “some music.” He turned, “Ichiro, find the jukebox.”

Ichiro looked around at the debris filled room; dust was beginning to settle upon the wreckage. He picked up a splintered table leg and tossed it out the door, then turned back to see Shoji and Mei locked in a kiss. He groaned. Man, what a bunch of squares.
 

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Miles Pilitus

First Post
I find myself unable to complete a story for this round of competition. I have been busy with class work for the last three days, and I still have more to do.
 

Piratecat

Sesquipedalian
You make baby Piratecat cry. Damn. And I was really looking forward to reading yours.

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BSF

Explorer
CarpeDavid vs BSF


Vodou Justice

(Picture 2_1_5)
Dame Madelyn Roberts leaned over the sink and stared into the mirror.

“As you can see Mr. Heath, the scoundrel has cursed me! This simply will not do.”

I looked across the room, at her reflection in the mirror. The polyester sweat suit was bad. But the reflection in the mirror was worse. I shook my head slightly in distaste.

“Yes ma'am. Now you say he is trying to blackmail you?”

I had been summoned up to Dame Roberts' house to help her with a little problem. Apparently the problem was blackmail.

“He is demanding that I pay him an exorbitant sum of money to remove the curse. Look at me, I look like a shriveled, old, monster.” She was almost shrieking again, that always gets on my nerves.

I looked up from my notes and winced at the image in the mirror once again. Grayish skin, bald head, it was a doozy of a curse. I silently wished that Dame Roberts would step away from the mirror. Whatever glamour was cast on her to cover the wretched form she had become was preferable to the brutally accurate reflection from the mirror. There was no sense encouraging her indignation though. I grunted noncommittally.

“Do you mind telling me how much blackmail he requested?”

She turned from the mirror and glared at me. Her eyes flashed dangerously and her posture told me that she was annoyed.

“Is that really necessary Mr. Heath? The dollar amount isn't important to me. I will not be blackmailed.”

I avoided rolling my eyes. “Yes ma'am, it would be helpful. You see, depending on how big the sum is, he will probably have different plans for it. My job, as a private investigator is to track him down for you. So if I know how much he is looking to score, I might be able to do my job better.

She harrumphed me. “Well, he is asking for a million dollars. It's not that I can't afford it, I can. It's the principle of the matter.” Her tone had shifted to plaintive, but I wasn't buying it. Old money, like Dame Roberts' family, hated losing money in any form. She continued, “He used a camera. He was pretending to take a picture of me at the time, but the camera delivered the curse instead. I am assured that if you can recover the camera, and the film that was in it at the time, the curse can be reversed. The sooner it is recovered, the better the odds are that damage will not be done.” She had more to say, but nothing that was important. She wanted to recover the magical camera that had cursed her, and she was willing to pay well for it. I spent some time getting descriptions from the few staff that allegedly saw the blackmailer at work.

(Picture 2_1_3)
Seventy-four hours later, I was standing outside a nearby face shop. The magic to replace your face with another face is difficult to manage, but the few warlocks able to manage it often made a decent, if somewhat unscrupulous, living. The thing is, face shops weren't illegal and a warlock able to run a face shop was difficult to intimidate. Looking through the window, I could the face of my quarry sitting on display. He had apparently changed his face for somebody else's face.

I went inside with the promise of cash and a checkbook to prove it. As I said, most warlocks willing to change your face for somebody else's face are unscrupulous. It turns out that I was able to pay better than the client. I finally had a name to work with: Michael Ibaraki. It turns out he was a freelance photographer. A few hours of research didn't indicate that he had any magical skill or any predisposition to engage in blackmail. The friends I could locate had lost track of him a few weeks earlier.

Still, there was nothing saying he couldn't have had a camera enchanted to curse it's target. As well, a lack of prior history didn't mean he couldn't blackmail Dame Roberts. I would keep an open mind, but in the back of my mind, I began to feel some suspicion that Dame Roberts hadn't been entirely honest and forthcoming with me.

(Picture 2_1_1)
It turns out that Michael Ibaraki had gone back to his roots to hide out. It was Obon week and using the warlock's description, I was on the lookout for a man with a mohawk. Michael was photographing one of the bon odori, and Obon dance, for the ancestors when I found him. My first thought was that he had a really bad comb over that the wind had picked up and stood straight on end.

I followed him for the better part of an hour, watching him to discern what I could about this man that was allegedly blackmailing Dame Roberts. He seemed nervous, but not like a man that was expecting a million dollars. More like a man that felt hunted. Something was definitely up and I resolved that I would pull Mr. Ibaraki aside and see if he could shed some light on everything. I made my way through the crowd toward Michael Ibaraki.

Before I could reach him though, my suspicions were abruptly and violently confirmed. I must have seen something out of the corner of my eye, or something. In any case, I felt the hair on my neck stand up. That is always a bad sign. It means my body has senses some sort of problem before my brain has processed what it is. When that happens, I don't think, I let my body act and my brain just follows along until it can process the information. With a twist and a leap I was mostly out of the way before a bullet grazed my leg. I was still pushing off that leg and the bullet spun me around in an uncomfortable direction. Pain flooded my brain as my ears registered the sound of an M60 unleashing an entire belt of bullets into the crowd around us, and specifically into Michael Ibaraki.

A child fell on top of me, pinning me to the ground for the moment. I twisted my head to see where Michael was, only to be greeted by a harrowing sight. A skeleton, over six feet tall, carrying an M60, walked up to Michael Ibaraki as he lay there, gasping at the last moments of his life. Face changing isn't outlawed, but all forms of necromancy are. Yet here was an animated skeleton, carrying an automatic weapon, making a brazen attack in the middle of the day. The skeleton put it's bony foot to Michael's head and with unnatural force crushed his skull. It then reached down and picked up his camera bag. It appeared to scan the crowd for a moment, then it made it's way back to a pickup across the square.

(Picture 2_1_2)
I twisted and turned until I edged my way out from under the girl that had fallen on me. I limped to where I could see the walking skeleton better. I climbed into the back of a pickup truck and turned to be sure nobody in the crowd was standing. A man groaned and started to sit up. The M60 opened up again and the man fell down in a splash of blood. Reaching down to the truck bed, the skeleton picked up something and lobbed it into the middle of the square. It was another one of those situations where my body recognized the danger before my brain did. Pain streaked across my body once more as I leaped for cover. The square erupted in white light for a moment as the white phosphorus exploded. I was already rolling into a gutter and closing my eyes, my body's natural reflexes taking over despite everything that had happened. But not before my brain had memorized the license plate of the truck as it drove off, skeleton standing in the back, gun poised to destroy any pursuers.

I was awakened by water running into the sewer and on top of me. Somehow I had rolled down a storm grate and avoided the conflagration that the firefighters above were bravely fighting. Water, blood, and ash. I limped up the sewer for a few miles before I crawled out to the streets above. It took a while longer to flag down a cabbie that would help me. Paranoia got the better of me and I didn't go back to my office.

As it turns out, that was a good idea. The next day I was nursing my wounded leg and reading the paper. The attack on Michael Ibaraki had resulted in the deaths of 36 other people. Anger burned deep inside me as I remembered the little girl that had been gunned down next to me. Three pages further into the paper, I saw the article about my office burning to the ground. Arson was suspected and it was noted that the nobody had seen Peter Heath, Private Investigator since the previous day. There were vague implications that maybe I had burned my office to avoid creditors and then skipped town. I was beginning to think that maybe Dame Roberts wasn't entirely honest with me.

It took a few days to recover and backtrack everything. It was sloppy work and they couldn't have made it much easier for me. The truck was registered to a company owned by Dame Roberts. Some time looking through old newspapers pieced together a bit more of the puzzle. Nobody had ever gotten a picture of Dame Roberts. Paintings and sketches existed, but pictures were nowhere to be found. I stopped by an occult bookstore whose manager, Towanda, owed me a favor.

My office was destroyed, my bank accounts monitored, but I had a score to settle. The thought of a dead little girl pushed me on, perhaps foolishly. I snuck back onto Dame Roberts' estate in the evening. There were security cameras, but those are easy to deal with. I was more worried about guards, living and unliving. Quite frankly, I was hoping to encounter more of the living guards rather the animated dead.

(Picture 2_1_4)
I was lucky and got my wish. I had been sneaking around one of the sheds at the edge of the estate and had found an illegal crate of white phosphorus grenades. I didn't need to be a private investigator to notice that a few grenades were missing from the crate. It was then that I heard the growled challenge. There aren't many people like me. But I was relatively lucky. Most sentient animals are treated as little more than circus freaks. I had parlayed my unique advantages and curiosity into a career. The dog bearing down on me obviously worked as private security for Dame Roberts. I'll spare you the profanity laced tirade he was spewing as he offered to break my neck and torture me. I crouched in what I hoped would look like a fearful pose. Then as the dog reached me, I jumped straight up and kicked him in the head. I managed to catch him in that spot near the ear that would rattle his brain around in his skull enough to knock him out. It was a lucky shot, even for me.

It took a bit to tie some of the grenades to the unconscious dog. At the back of my mind, my conscience was beginning to nag at me. Sure, Dame Roberts needed some payback. Sure I didn't much care for dogs. But did that give me the right to use this dog to take Dame Roberts out? Fortunately I had a possible solution. Towanda had given me a magical infusion that would allow me to influence the minds of 'those whose souls are heavy in sin.' It couldn't affect the unliving since they didn't truly have souls. I don't like drugs, even magical ones. Towanda told me this one would be ill tasting and had wrapped it in catnip to make it more palatable.

With a sigh, I bit into the infusion. The euphoric smell of catnip filled my nostrils and for a moment I rolled over onto my back in bliss. Then the world swam before my eyes and I could 'sense' how despicable the dog was. He truly would have enjoyed torturing me and hearing me plead for my life. Suddenly, everything snapped into perfect clarity.

I was riding Butch the guard dog like some vodou spirit. We were rushing through the hallways of Dame Roberts' mansion, seeking her out. In some corner of my mind, I was noticing the lack of mirrors. The mirror shows the truth of the soul. Seeing Dame Roberts in a mirror just showed her true self. Cameras use mirrors. Michael Ibaraki simply had the misfortune to snap a picture of Dame Roberts. For that, he had to die. Because the unliving were outlawed, and if anybody knew what Dame Roberts was, she would be destroyed.

Butch careened around a corner and into a sitting room. Dame Roberts was sitting there, reading the paper. Her skeletal assassin was in the corner. Even as he raised his gun toward Butch, I nudged the dog's brain a bit to the left, toward the window. I was holding the pin of the grenade in my mouth. Dame Roberts' beautiful, glamoured face was twisted in anger. I jumped for the window just as Butch exploded under the hail of gunfire. I tumbled through the glass, closing my eyes as the room erupted in white light.

As I rolled on the ground, I could feel glass cut through my fur. I could see the Michael Ibaraki's face in the face changer's window and his skull beneath the heal of a skeleton. I rolled into some bushes and felt something fall atop me, pinning me to the ground. I thought of the little girl, gunned down. All of these people dead to protect the vanity of a woman that had long ago sold her soul so she could go on living.

Was it revenge, or justice? Did it matter?
 

BSF

Explorer
Another beast of a story to write. I caught a catnap in the middle of the night, but that is pretty much all the sleep I had. I hope there aren't too many errors.

Whew!
 

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