Afterburn SF Shut Down
June 26, 2010 by Publisher · 2 Comments
This is a post I had hoped never to write. Sadly, I can no longer put it off. It has become clearer and clearer over that last few months that it is time for me to let go of Afterburn SF as owner and publisher.
Over the last couple of years it has been my pleasure to publish great speculative fiction. However, I have been unable to grow the site in terms of readership and patrons in the manner I had hoped. Afterburn will continue to publish through August 2010. After that I will keep the site online for another month and then I will be shutting it down.
I am actively seeking anyone who might be interested in taking ownership of the site. I am hopeful that it will continue to live on and to publish speculative fiction. Anyone interested in the opportunity can email me at Publisher [at] afterburnsf.com.
We are trying to contact each author that has submitted work to the site to let them know that their submissions are released. I apologize if we miss anyone.
I want to thank Karen Newman, editor extraordinaire, for all of her diligent hard work. Without her effort Afterburn would never have gotten off the ground.
Thank you to all of our loyal readers. Without you there was no Afterburn.
– Nat Thompson
Publisher, Afterburn SF
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June 18th, 2010 Issue
June 18, 2010 by Publisher · Leave a Comment
We are please to present “Ain’t Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore” by A. L. Sirois.
Filed under Afterburn SF Posts · Tagged with A. L. Sirois, Issue
Ain’t Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore
June 18, 2010 by Publisher · Leave a Comment
The tickling woke Mason Protheroe to semi-consciousness. With complete detachment he watched a huge centipede flow across his naked belly. Another worked its way out from beneath his outstretched legs. Rearing up from its midsection, the one on his stomach pointed its head toward his face. Weird, as if it were trying to tell him something. After a moment it dropped back down. Both monsters scuttled away into the further reaches of the darkened cellar where they coiled around one another in some unfathomable arthropod dance.
He had on only his Dockers but they were filthy, stained with dark blotches. What was he doing, semi-naked, barefoot, in the basement? It was unfinished, and he only ever came down to use the washer/dryer. He frowned slightly, trying to remember. It was like he had a cold; there was that same clogged, wooly feeling between his eyes. He wondered if he had fallen on the rickety stairs and hit his head. If he were dazed from falling it would explain why he was unaffected by the sight–and touch–of the huge centipedes.
Grey light filtered in through the dirty windows. Irregular metallic rattling from the propane tanks outside told Mason it was still raining lightly, drizzling. He couldn’t tell what time of day it was, early or late.
Drip drip. The sound jarred something loose in his memory. A slow-moving Caribbean hurricane tracking up the Eastern seaboard had wandered inland and stalled somewhere north of Stroudsburg, up in the Poconos, deluging land already soaked from unseasonably heavy rainfall. The radio warned of flooding “Possibly worse than in 2005,” as the NPR announcer in Philly put it in a tight voice.
Sure enough, for the next two straight days it rained, and rained. Mason, an advertising rep for the Bucks County Herald, drove around collecting ad copy as usual, while the weather worsened. Yesterday—Wednesday, as nearly as he could recall–he hustled to finish early so he could get back to Jersey and keep an eye on his house. Wendy, his live-in girlfriend, was an ER nurse for Hunterdon Medical Center in Flemington. She had worked the midnight to eight shift that day and wasn’t scheduled to go in again until the weekend. She was having breakfast when Mason got home.
They put Mack on a leash and went outside to look around. There was relatively little wind plucking at their umbrellas. Rain poured down heavily, the load of water forcing tree boughs down nearly to the ground. Runoff rushed through the ditches alongside the road, tentatively reaching across the asphalt in places as though testing its bounds.
They nervously watched the river rising as Mack pulled at his leash, eager to get down to the water’s edge where he smelled whatever it was that got dogs excited. Something dead, washed up by the swollen river, no doubt.
Mason hadn’t wanted to evacuate. The house was high enough up the hill, he argued. Wendy didn’t doubt it, but she remained anxious.
They went back in. Around five PM the power flickered then went out.
Not at all abnormal during a storm, in that rural section of western Hunterdon County, smack up against the Delaware. Candles were at hand, and Coleman lanterns. Some householders owned generators that automatically kicked in when the power grid crashed, but Mason couldn’t afford one.
He went downstairs to check the breaker box, more to placate her than because he thought he could do any good. And then–
He sucked in a breath, remembering. Yes, the centipedes! Huge, monstrous things like nothing he’d ever seen. Not normal house crawlers these, but colossal horrors more than two feet long, red and brown, things out of a rotting, Carboniferous rain forest. They roped out from behind the old coal bin before he could react and attacked him, biting with armored jaws shining in the glare of his Maglite. Things went fuzzy and vague. Venom in the bites, perhaps. He must have passed out.
He held up his arms and inspected the punctures. Yes, they’d bitten him, all right; more than once.
The convocation at the far end of the basement broke up and the two ’pedes flowed past like insectile express trains on their way to—wherever. He watched them go up the stairs to the first floor, not finding them at all revolting or horrible. They seemed no more threatening than buttercups.
I must have whacked my head, he thought, feeling in vain for bumps or contusions.
He looked around for the flashlight and spotted it a few yards away on the cindery floor. Rising slowly to his feet he went over to pick it up and thumbed its switch. Nothing. How long would it take those batteries to drain? Three hours? Four? Had he lain here all that time? Longer, surely; it had been night when he came down here.
Mason realized he wasn’t wearing his glasses, yet somehow his vision was perfectly clear. Clear enough to see the spider, poised motionless on the wall next to the breaker box like an obscene, twisted asterisk.
It was nowhere near as big as the centipedes, just a common wolf spider, the sort that usually didn’t head indoors until cooler weather. This one had obviously decided to wait out the unaccustomed wet in the basement. Motionless, it was probably hoping he hadn’t noticed it. Its body was about the size of the first joint on Mason’s thumb, with legs an inch or so beyond that. Big, but no threat.
Terrified, he backed away, scrabbling in the dirt until he fetched painfully up against the stairs. Keeping his eyes fastened on the creature Mason scrambled backwards up the steps. He plopped down on the linoleum tile floor of the kitchen, breathing hard, wondering what the hell was the matter with him. He’d never been afraid of spiders, never; yet here he was panting like a frightened little girl, sweating, even feeling faint.
He took several deep breaths to steady his stomach. Then he smelled the blood.
That coppery scent couldn’t be anything else. Sudden dread wormed through him. Where was Wendy? How long had he been unconscious in the basement?
He scrambled to his knees and, in the brighter light of the kitchen, saw bloody streaks across his midsection. He was coated with dried blood. Now that he saw it, he noticed its faint scent. But the thick, cloying aroma filling his nostrils was different; not fresh, partly spoiled, yet somehow not unpleasant. This odd lack of revulsion made him more uneasy.
Slowly he got to his feet. The stench drifted to him from elsewhere in the house. Every step he took toward it increased both his dread and his vague wonder that the dread was not sharper, more lacerating. What in God’s name is happening? A corner of his mind wondered where the ’pedes had gone. Then he noticed the doggy door he’d put in for Mack slowly swinging back and forth in decreasing arcs.
Mason walked unsteadily past the kitchen island, where he saw the limp remains of salad in a big bowl, and through the door into the hallway beyond. The smell of blood grew stronger. He lowered his head and lifted his eyes, staring at the stairs.
Whatever it was, was up on the second floor.
Mumbling and moaning he made his way slowly, very slowly up the stairs. Tears began leaking from his eyes. When he wiped his hand across them, the fluid looked greenish.
With his gaze cast down on the familiar carpeted steps, he couldn’t help seeing dried brownish stains. The splotches increased in size as he ascended. His eyes came level with the floor of the hallway. On the carpet, more dried blood: a lot more. How long would it take for that much blood to dry? A day? Two?
To his right at the top of the stairs was a bathroom. Directly ahead, a window overlooking the back yard. The hallway hairpinned back from the staircase toward the front of the house. He turned, seeing the trail of bloodstains leading toward the front bedroom. For the first time he heard the buzzing of flies.
It was like being in a dream. Mason knew something bad was in that room but he kept being distracted. Blood on the wall… how’ll I get that off? Can I use OxyClean on the rug?
The combined reek of dust, damp and old gore would, should, have made him ill. Now they almost comforted him as he took the last few reluctant steps into the front room.
Gripping the doorframe, he slowly peered inside.
Wendy was there, most of her. And Mack, but not much of him was left apart from bones. Their remains lay heaped to one side of the bedroom, Everything–the rug, the bed, the TV set, the dresser–was coated with blood. Some of it must have sprayed from torn arteries and veins, because loops and splatters of it laced the walls and had dripped down to dry like spilled wine.
Something had torn Wendy’s very guts from her abdomen. What remained of them lay in the blackened, fly-glutted body cavity like fat purple eels in a dreary underwater cavern. Her face was partially eaten away, but glazed, collapsing eyes staring up at the ceiling. Twisted into the wreckage of her once lovely face was a jagged expression of astonishment and horror.
Mason sagged against the bedroom doorway. The streaks of blood on his hands looked smeared as if they had been hastily wiped. Blackened material had caught under his fingernails and when he sniffed at them with his heightened sense of smell, then he caught the faint stench of rotting blood. Sobbing, he willed himself to remember.
He had done this. After the centipedes’ bites injected their venom, the poison’s hellish hallucinogenic properties had kicked the slats off his sanity and sent him careening upstairs to rend his lover and his dog, to feast on their flesh.
And now? Somehow he had regained his senses. Or some of them, he thought bitterly, turning in revulsion from the evidence of his murderous actions. Enough of them to know what he had done. Enough to torture him for the remainder of his days.
He wished with all his heart that he had remained stuck in his frenzy, unaware of what he’d done. Perhaps someone would have killed him. It would have been a mercy.
He stumbled downstairs in a daze and found himself outside, walking numbly in the drizzle.
Maddened by centipede venom or not, how could he have been driven to kill the love of his life? The shattering fact of it was only beginning to sink in, and Mason hardly comprehended where he was going. He wandered toward town with the vague intent of finding help. Just who he was looking for, or how they could possibly help a damned soul like him, he didn’t know.
He still remembered the day he met Wendy, just a few short miles south of Sherwoods Landing in Stockton, at the Prallsville Mill. He had decided to take a plein air oil painting class given by a local painter. Among the other wannabe Impressionists was a small, dark-haired, dark-eyed woman from Flemington. Before the eight-week class was over, Mason knew two things: one, as a painter he was a good mechanic. Two, he and Wendy had struck some serious sparks that were easily fanned into a blaze of lust and love. He didn’t even care that she was a far better painter than he would ever be. Mack approved of her, and that was that.
That had been two years ago. Since then she sold her condo and had come to live with him in his small house, directly on the river. Everything had been fine until now.
While the day’s light wallowed into a drenching evening mist, Mason caught glimpses of movement in the trees around and above him, and heard rustling. He halted, peering warily upward at several big shapes.
They snaked down the tree trunks like squirrels, head first, dropped to the ground and stood slowly erect, regarding him unblinkingly from sunken, tortured eyes. Human; as human as he was. They slouched out from beneath the trees, slow moving shapes, hair lank in the wet, their clothing streaked with red.
He was, then, not the only damned soul in this ruined town. Cold comfort.
Snake-like, two centipedes squirmed through the underbrush and erupted into the roadway. The shambling survivors came to a semblance of attention as the creatures reared up onto their last few body segments.
Mason watched the ghouls staring intently at the enormous ’pedes. At the same time he felt a sort of mental tickle. It wasn’t until the ’pedes swayed around, facing him for a moment, increasing the odd sensation in his head, that he realized the monsters were communicating with the humans.
Revolted, Mason staggered back a few paces. The “linked in” feeling faded, leaving him enough presence of mind to stumble off into the gathering darkness back to his house. He barricaded himself in, hammering boards up across the windows and doors, even Mack’s doggy door in the kitchen.
He cleaned up in the bathroom as best he could, then sat, bathed in self-loathing, in the living room while darkness cloaked his surroundings. He tried to turn on the TV but the power was still out.
#
By dawn some things had become. Sleep seemed no longer necessary. During the night he had occasionally fallen into a sort of trance state for short while. Now he felt reasonably refreshed and in need of no other sort of rest. Also, he had apparently lost all desire for his usual vices. Prior to being bitten he had smoked about a quarter of a pack of cigarettes a day, sometimes more, sometimes less. The craving for nicotine had vanished.
His new-found fear of spiders probably came from the fact that centipedes and spiders were natural enemies. He went through the house, killing every spider he found, no matter how small or large.
Starving, though, yes–he was growing weaker for lack of sustenance. But the rotting stuff in the fridge didn’t tempt him in the least, nor the canned goods in his cupboards. Instead, he kept thinking about the decaying corpses up in the master bedroom, but he could not bring himself to consciously descend to such a depth of depravity and horror, despite what he had obviously done while deranged. Not yet. Still, he had to find some way of nourishing himself. He wasn’t ready for death. Finally he cleaned himself up as best he could, then yanked a few boards off his front door. The skies had not yet cleared, though the rain had slackened to a dreary drizzle. Just down the road he followed a trail of blood to a wrecked car, a late-model Saturn. It had tilted into a ditch as the driver apparently tried to get round a downed tree. Mason recognized it as belonging to Frank Diamond, a neighbor. Realizing that the blood led away from the car rather than to it, he backtracked and found Frank, cradling a smashed forearm and sitting on his front steps looking hollow-eyed and pale.
“Mason!” Diamond called. He was a hatchet-faced man who worked at a medical advertising agency in Yardley, not far from Trenton, and sang in the church choir.
“’Lo, Frank.” The first words Mason had spoken in three days. Tottering from weakness, he made it up Diamond’s front walk and carefully lowered himself down on the steps next to him. “Hurt yourself there,” he said. The delicious fragrance of Diamond’s fresh blood almost swamped rational thought but he forced himself to remain calm.
“Where’re your shoes?” asked Diamond.
“Hmmm?” Mason looked down at his feet. He’d completely forgotten he was barefoot. “Dunno, lost ‘em somewhere.” His eyes returned to Frank’s injury. “How’d you cut yourself?” He sat quivering while Diamond talked.
“Gashed it on a piece of metal getting out of my goddam car,” Diamond growled. A strange light glowed in his eyes. “Soon’s we saw the river rising I made Susan and the kids get out of here and go to her mom’s place in Bedminster. I figured to stay here and keep an eye on things until they got back, but with the power out, you know, the food has all gone bad so I figured it was time to go. Like an asshole I had Susan take the Jeep four-wheel and I kept the Saturn here. Smart, huh? Well, there’s a tree across the goddam road, and I tried–”
Mason clouted him with a rock. He dragged Diamond’s body to the back of the house and gave in to his hunger.
#
With the fiercest pangs alleviated, Mason crouched over his neighbor’s torn carcass, able to think more clearly. Frank hadn’t seemed aware of the ghouls, so perhaps their appearance wasn’t widely known. At least part of the town was evacuated. Other folks must have fled the rising waters as Frank’s family had done. Maybe there simply weren’t many ghouls around, or perhaps they were only just now emerging from their hidey-holes, as he was. That wouldn’t be the case for long, though, if the ’pedes were building up to infestation levels.
But Mason could apparently pass as a normal human being. The ghouls he had seen in the woods obviously could not, with their ashen complexions and red eyes. Mason let himself into Diamond’s house, where he cleaned up and examined himself in the bathroom mirror. No, aside from some dark circles under his eyes, he looked about the same as ever, a stocky man of somewhat less than middle height with dark wavy hair, a pale complexion and a fleshy face vaguely reminiscent of the comedian Lou Costello.
Feeling relatively clear-headed, Mason set out for the main part of town.
Still mostly a rural township, Sherwoods Landing consisted of little more than a bed and breakfast or two, a gas station with an attached store selling videos, gifts, and the like, a pizza place, a post office, a tavern, and a small boat landing. The 1955 flood drove most of the village’s businesses to higher ground, but by the late 1990s they were back, in time to be flooded in ’04 and ’05, and again now.
A tenth of a mile or so down the road Mason halted. Ahead through the trees he saw the roof of Kip Augustine’s barn, the only blue one in the region and much beloved of plein air painters from Bucks County, just across the river. Something about that barn…
He shook off an uneasy feeling and resumed walking, wiping his face with a rain-dampened rag ripped from Diamond’s clothing. Presently he arrived in town, which seemed deserted. Papers were scattered everywhere. One or two store windows were smashed. A car had T-boned another at an intersection; their doors hung open with blood splashed on the windows. One of the cars, a new BMW, looked vaguely familiar. He knew it wasn’t his or Wendy’s. Just past the crash site a road intersected the main one, leading east. Glancing up its length, Mason saw two forms, a man and a woman, moving slowly toward the Augustine farm. In the grey light it was hard to be sure, but it looked as if they were following a couple of the giant centipedes. Mason wavered for a moment then turned to trail after them.
The pair tottered through the gate at the end of Kip Augustine’s driveway, which was about a hundred feet long and unpaved. By the time Mason arrived at the end of it his feet were thick with mud. Walking a little faster than the man and woman ahead of him, he caught up in time to see them pass through the open doors of Augustine’s barn.
It wasn’t a working farm. Kip, in his early forties now, had been in the first Gulf War, from which he’d returned badly wounded. A long recuperation had left him reclusive and sullen, quite unlike the ballsy high-school track star he had been.
Now he lived on disability and seemed to spend his time watching old science fiction movies on DVD and chatting with other veterans on-line.
Mason entered the barn to find himself standing among a group of ten or fifteen ghouls. Most were adults, but there were two or three children. He thought he recognized eight-year-old Copley Cheyne, but she stood in a deep shadow so he couldn’t be sure. All the ghouls stared at him with dull suspicion. Slowly, they moved away, putting some distance between him and them.
Swaying slightly, Mason said, “What’s the matter? I’m just like you. Those, those monsters.” He gestured at a group of three centipedes to one side. “I was bitten. I’ve done… things. I’m like you,” he finished lamely.
The girl in the shadows stepped forward. Pale and blood-streaked, it was indeed Copley Cheyne. The last time he’d seen her, she’d been riding her bike with friends, laughing and singing. Now she was slack-jawed, with dead eyes. “Not like us,” she murmured as if speaking was a terrible effort. She shook her head. “I mean, you’re like us, but different.” Without turning away from him Copley stepped backward to her place with the others.
“Well, that was helpful,” he muttered. Ignoring them he gave his attention to the insects. He felt the power emanating from them, and recognized it as the same intangible influence he had sensed from them yesterday. They obviously had more effect on the other survivors, who no longer seemed fully capable of independent thought.
Did that mean that the ’pedes were controlling them? If so, he, Mason Protheroe, was immune to some extent. He leaned against an old horse stall in Kip Augustine’s barn and thought about it. Wendy, for example, had never been bothered by poison ivy, whereas he just had to look at the stuff to break out in hives. And there were always people who, for whatever reason, had a natural immunity to disease, even bubonic plague. Apparently he had a partial immunity, at least, to whatever x-factor in centipede venom rendered other victims susceptible to the ghoul-sickness. Ghoul he might be, but the ’pedes could not exert their full thrall over him.
But there were only three here now… how would he fare against the combined influence of five? Ten? Two dozen? Uneasy, Mason decided it was time to go.
A thin, lank-haired man around Mason’s age limped into the barn.
“Hey, Kip,” Mason said. By the circles under Augustine’s eyes, Mason supposed the vet hadn’t been sleeping much lately.
“Hey, Mase.” Augustine approached, halting a bare two feet away. At that distance, Mason could easily see the glaze of servitude in Kip’s eyes. Augustine’s years in the armed forces had turned him surly and simmering, the sort of man who’d beat a dog if he had one.
“Are our friends bivouacking here?” Mason asked, gesturing at the ’pedes and the other ghouls.
Kip managed a cheerless grin. “I’ve got plenty of room,” he said. “You’re welcome, if you’ve a mind to.”
“Thanks, but my place is good,” Mason said. “Got a food supply there.”
Kip shook his head. “Won’t last,” he said. “Sooner or later, someone’ll be by to see what’s what.”
Mason nodded slowly. Kip had a point. You couldn’t go around eating citizens without it causing some concern amongst the survivors.
“We gotta consolidate, Mase,” Kip mumbled. He turned away, and shambled over to the ’pedes. Mason stared after him. Kip seemed a bit more autonomous than the others. Was Kip partially immune to the ’pedes’ venom, or was this something deliberate because the insects needed a human cat’s-paw, someone able to act as a go-between?
If so, the ’pedes were operating on a truly repellant level of intelligence; they could plan. Holy shit.
What was the true goal of these monsters?
Almost without realizing it he found himself backing slowly away, toward the exit.
Maybe there was an antidote. He turned and walked out into the open air, fists clenched. He wasn’t sure he deserved one. What he deserved was death, or lifetime imprisonment. But the regulars, those unaffected by the plague or whatever it was, didn’t. He should warn them. Yes, that was it. They had to be warned. What they’d do to him didn’t matter right now.
With these thoughts whirling through his muddled mind as he regained the main road, he almost walked into Lafferty Hoffman’s Land Rover.
“Hey there, Mase, you okay?” Hoff leaned out of the driver’s window and looked narrowly at him. “You cut yourself or something?”
“Uh, no, my dog got hurt,” Mason said.
“Oh, Mack?” Hoff’s tone turned instantly sympathetic. “He okay?”
“Uh, listen. Hoff–”
“Yeah?”
Dammit, this was the moment to spill it all! And here he was, with his tongue stuck, starting to sweat. “I, look, you seen anything odd going on around here?”
Hoff coughed out a short ironic laugh. “What, you mean apart from the worst flood since ’05 and the power out and the town cut off?” He gestured expansively at the trees, one hand on the steering wheel. The CB radio in the vehicle’s cabin muttered something. “Mase, I’m not a cop anymore, but I still think like one.” He had been shot by a drug dealer from Trenton, and now worked for the New Jersey Parks Department as a ranger. “And I’ll tell you what. We got three kids missing, went camping two nights ago when it started raining. Last night someone killed Bobby Cheyne, and we can’t find his wife and kids. So, yeah, Mase, things are going on. You shouldn’t be walking around alone.”
“Bobby? Oh, God.” Cheyne was one of the township’s two remaining full-time police officers. “Marge missing, too?” The ’pedes; it had to be the ’pedes. That explained Copley Cheyne’s presence in the barn.
Hoff nodded grimly. “We got a serious asshole wandering around, Mase. I was just sort of patrolling. Listen, you want a lift home? I know you own a gun. You oughta make sure it’s loaded and at hand. Where were you headed, anyway?”
Mason took a deep breath. “I think you have more than one asshole to worry about.”
#
Hoff listened to Mason Protheroe’s tale with growing alarm, but he kept his face rigid and expressionless. Ghouls? Cannibalism? Murder? A nest of horrors at the Augustine farm? It was all too much to believe, and Hoff started thinking of ways to get Mason down to the jail so he could restrain him for a few hours until Dr. Saperstein could take a look at him. As a law enforcement officer, he was all too familiar with what prolonged stress and tension could do to people.
Hoff had bigger problems than Mason. Someone had killed Bobby Cheyne, and his wife and kids were among those missing. The river wouldn’t even crest until sometime tomorrow. The town’s troubles were far from over.
And Mason with this crazy talk about man-eating ghouls! The stress had obviously gotten to him. He was filthy and he smelled, but Hoff had seen plenty of other unkempt folks in the past two days. Mason’s manner was distracted and somehow… feral was the only word Hoff could put to it. Mason needed help.
Hoff was stressed himself. All the damp and rain made his gunshot wound ache, and he hated watching the river ruin the peaceful little village that was his home.
Then Mason started talking about Wendy.
Hoff stood it as long as he could. “Look, Mase, why don’t you get in and we’ll go take a look?” he finally asked, struggling to keep calm. His body tightened as Mason walked slowly around the front of the Land Rover and tried to open the passenger door.
Hoff didn’t unlock it. Instead he slid out, saying, “Aah, I forgot; fuckin’ thing’s broken,” he said carelessly. “I gotta use the key. Hang on.” He came around the vehicle and started to reach past Mason with his keys. Instead he grabbed the smaller man and slammed him against the side of the car, handcuffing him. Mason turned slowly, grinning in a strangely nasty way.
“Hoff,” he said quietly. “This won’t do any good, man.”
A cold trickle of sweat wandered down Hoff’s spine but he kept his voice even. “Oh? Why’s that, Mase?”
“It’s just that I’m a lot stronger now.”
“Well, okay, Mase, I’m sure you are, but you know, you sit in the back here and I’ll go take a look around your place.”
Mason shrugged. “Whatever it takes to get you to believe me.”
Hoff drove slowly to Mason’s house. Mason sat quietly in the back seat, staring out at the dripping foliage. The clouds poured by overhead.
Hoff pulled up in front of Mason’s front door and started to get out.
“You’ll want to check Frank Diamond’s place,” said Mason.
“Why? D’ja kill him, too?”
“And ate some of him.”
“All right, then, Mase, just sit quiet for a bit while I have a look around.”
“Sure. Hoff. Uh, front door’s unlocked.”
“Thanks.” Hoff managed to keep the sarcasm out of his voice. He mounted the steps and entered. As soon as he got inside he realized that at least part of Mason’s tale was true; the reek told him that something was dead in here. Perspiring, he carefully searched the first floor, feeling an odd reluctance to venture upstairs.
When at last he did, it was as bad as he could have imagined. Worse. As a cop, Hoff had seen terrible things, including horrific auto accidents and several shotgun victims. But nothing came close to the scene in the front bedroom. He barely made it to Mason’s bathroom before vomiting.
He walked unevenly downstairs and outside. Mason stood by the car, staring abstractedly into the trees across the road. Hoff glanced that way and saw the leaves rustling.
“Whoa, whoa!” he said, doing a double-take. “I left you cuffed in the back seat!”
Mason held up his wrists. They were still cuffed but the chain linking the manacles was snapped. “Told you I was stronger,” he said almost apologetically.
A cold wave of fear sluiced through Lafferty Hoffman. “What’s going on here, Mason?”
“Well, I’ll tell you about it, but we better get inside,” Mason said, nodding toward the trees. “Copley Cheyne is up there and I think she’s got her eye on you.”
“Copley’s eight years old!”
Mason shook his head. “She’s hungry, Hoff.”
Hoff looked at Mason for a moment. He glanced at the broken chains dangling from the man’s wrists, then toward the trees, where a violent disturbance shook the leaves. He thought he caught a flash of pink.
Mason hadn’t bolted after freeing himself. Hoff wasn’t sure if that was good or bad, but one fact stood out: the reporter seemed to know something about what was going on. That put him ahead of former law enforcement officer Lafferty Hoffman, who still felt a responsibility to protect, serve, and defend the people of Sherwoods Landing, New Jersey.
He nodded once, shortly. “Okay, Mase, you win. Let’s go inside.” He pointed his keychain at his car and thumbed the LOCK button, then followed Mason Protheroe, ghoul, into his house of horrors.
Without bothering to ask his host’s leave, Hoff headed straight for the kitchen, since it was the room furthest from the stairs leading to the second floor. But the reek of decay reached even here, and Hoff knew he wouldn’t be able to stand it for long.
He swallowed against his rising gorge, gagged once, and said, “Mason, what the fuck is going on here?” He listened without speaking while Mason laid it out: the power outage, going into the basement, the attack by the centipedes, the awakening many hours later, the discovery that Wendy and Mack were dead. His own guilt.
Mason spoke almost without emotion, and that was what Hoff found most inhuman about him: because he knew Mason Protheroe as a demonstrative, cheerful guy, someone with a grin and a good word for everyone. This dour man looked and sounded like Mason, but all the humanity had been wrung out of him by his experiences, leaving a husk.
A flesh-eating husk.
“These centipedes, with their venomous bites,” Hoff said, after Mason had finished speaking. “Where did they come from?”
Mason shrugged. “All I know is, they’re here and they’re nesting.”
Hoff looked around apprehensively. “What, right here? In the house?”
“No, no. But they’ve found a central… bivouac. Kip’s farm. I was there. They’re using it as a base.”
Hoff stood by the door, staring blankly out at Mason’s drenched backyard. “Mase,” he said, “you have to know how crazy this sounds. Giant poisonous centipedes turning people into ghouls?”
“I can’t help how it sounds,” Mason said from his place at the table. “It’s all true.”
Hoff took a step away from the door. “Well,” he said, “I am starting to believe it.” Across the yard, heading straight for the house like snakes swimming in a pond, came two enormous reddish-brown centipedes.
Mason stood up, a far-away look in his eyes. “Hoff,” he said quietly. “I think I can manage to keep them away from you. Probably.” He motioned toward a door. “Get in the pantry. Keep the door cracked so you can watch. If anything goes wrong, well, you have your gun.” He looked at Hoff through haunted eyes. “It’d probably be best to shoot me in the head. I doubt anywhere else will do much good, though it would certainly slow me down.”
Hoff ducked into the pantry just as he heard the scrabble of claws on the back porch. The dog door banged open and the ’pedes flowed into the room.
Hoff braced the door with his booted foot, watching through a crack he hoped was small enough to keep the monsters out should they try to get at him. He gritted his teeth as he watched the things zip straight for Mason, and crawl up his body and all over his torso. It seemed like more than any human could bear, but Mason’s breathing remained calm and even. Evidently the creatures didn’t bother him one bit.
Yet they obviously had some sort of effect on him, because his eyes closed and he swayed slightly as the ’pedes swarmed over him. Without warning the insects spiraled down off Mason’s body, across the floor and out through the dog door. The entire episode had taken less than thirty seconds.
Mason remained motionless, eyes closed. After another half minute or so Hoff came hesitantly out of the kitchen. Mason’s eyes opened slowly.
“Augustine’s farm,” he said faintly. “We need to go there.”
“Wait a minute,” Hoff said. “You said that’s where your bug buddies are lairing up!”
“Yes, but something going on. We need a closer look.”
Hoff took a deep breath. “Mason, from what you’ve told me, you’re responsible for Wendy’s death. Not to mention your dog. My responsibility is to take you into custody and let due process take its course.”
Mason simply stared at him until Hoff became uncomfortable. “Hoff,” he said at last, very gently. He raised his still manacled hands. “How are you gonna make me do anything I don’t want to do?”
Hoff’s hand drifted down to his gun. Mason shook his head. “I could have killed you already if I’d’ve wanted,” he said. “I want to help, can’t you see that? I didn’t summon these things; I didn’t ask to become whatever it is I am. What I’m saying is, let’s go investigate and see what we can do to stop more of this from happening.”
“All right, Mase,” Hoff said, feeling a cold sense of foreboding.
It was a short drive to the farm, but Mason began reacting almost as soon as they reached the end of the Augustine driveway. “They’re… pulling at me,” he murmured, clasping his head in both hands. “It’s a, a spell or something, broadcast like radio.”
“I don’t feel anything,” Hoff said, parking the car.
“You wouldn’t.”
“They’re just bugs, Mason!”
“Individually, yeah, that’s right. But the more of them there are together, the smarter they get.”
“What, like a beehive or an ant colony?”
Mason shrugged. “Something like that.”
They stood at the foot of the driveway looking up toward the house. “We can’t go this way,” said Mason. “They’ll be waiting. Guards.”
Hoff looked around. “I suppose we can sneak in through the woods, but it’ll be pretty wet going.” Mason shrugged again. Hoff shrugged back and they entered the woods.
Before a minute passed both men were thoroughly soaked. Had it not been a warm muggy August day, they would have been chilled to the bone. Hoff let Mason lead the way; on the one hand, he seemed to know exactly where he was going, and on the other hand Hoff felt more comfortable being able to keep an eye on him.
After a few minutes Mason halted. He remained motionless so long that Hoff finally nudged him.
“Mase?” he whispered. “What is it? You hear something?”
Mason turned slowly and Hoff’s hackles rose. The eyes staring out of the reporter’s face were wide, glazed; hungry.
Mason opened his mouth in a feral growl showing yellowed teeth, and leaped.
“Jesus Christ!” Hoff cried, trying to fight him off, but Mason was incredibly strong. Hoff felt like a child against him. Then Mason’s teeth found his arm, and bit down–hard.
Hoff screamed, struggling against the snarling monstrosity gnawing his arm. With his free hand he reached down between Mason’s legs, grabbed and twisted as hard as he could. The ghoul stumbled back but recovered almost at once and jumped forward again. This time Hoff was ready, and he sprayed Mason full in the face with a can of repellant.
Without waiting to see how effective the strategy was, Hoff whirled around and fled, crashing through the damp foliage. A howl behind him was answered by other, more distant ones, and Hoff realized that Mason’s cries had attracted the other ghouls on the farm.
Terror galvanized Hoff. Ignoring the ache from his old gunshot wound and the new lacerations on his arm, Hoff ran as he had never run in his life.
He burst out of the woods a hundred or so yards from his Land Rover. With the sounds of pursuit growing louder behind him he pounded toward the vehicle.
A pale form materialized ahead of him. Copley Cheyne.
He slowed. He remembered her birth, her christening. He’d even sat through one or two of her school recitals. She raised her hands and yowled to alert the pack.
Hoff drew his gun and shot her in the head. Copley went down in a fountain of blood. He ran past her body without looking, tears mixing with the drizzle on his face.
Fumbling for his key ring he pressed the UNLOCK button. The car’s locks popped up. Hoff grabbed the driver’s door, yanked it open, and scrambled in. Down the road more figures scurried out of the forest. Hoff started the car.
The passenger door flew open. Mason!
Hoff went for his gun.
“No no no!” Mason shouted, backing away. “I’m okay, I’m far enough away to resist them! But get me out of here now!”
Hoff stared at him for a long agonized moment. Mason had shaken off the effects of the mace inhumanly fast. His face was still smeared with it. But Hoff saw the misery and horror in Mason’s eyes. “Get in,” Hoff said.
Mason got in and Hoff slammed the transmission into gear. Twisting the wheel he k-turned, heading back toward town. “Where the hell can we go, Mason?” He glanced at his companion.
Mason gasped. Hoff saw he was looking out the windshield. He turned his head as the car slammed into another vehicle parked across the road.
When he came to he was being dragged along the road by Mason. “We don’t have much time,” Mason muttered. “They blocked the road while we were in the woods, I guess. Come on, Hoff, snap out of it!” He let Hoff slip to the ground, and doused his head in the water rushing through the ditch beside the road. Spluttering, Hoff came up for air.
“They’ll catch us on the road,” said Mason. “They’re as strong and fast as I am, Hoff, probably more so.”
“The woods,” Hoff gasped. “If we can get up over the hills we can make it toward the National Guard armory up on Route 12.”
“That’s nearly five miles from here!”
“I’ll listen to any better idea,” said Hoff. “Maybe you wanna head for the radio station? WCHR?”
“The Christian AM outfit? Why there?”
“Nice strong stone building with a big-ass transmitter we can use to holler for help,” said Hoff. “And it’s only two miles. We can make that.”
Mason pondered it. “All right, all right. You okay to walk?”
“Yeah.”
“Good. Bind up where I bit you. The smell is… kinda distracting.”
They set out over wet rocks and slippery, muddy ground. By now they were both so wet it no longer mattered.
“What put you over the edge back there?” Hoff panted.
“’Pedes,” Mason said. “There’re more of them there now and I couldn’t fight the influence when we got closer to the farm. I’m okay now, though, they aren’t following us. It’s just the ghouls.”
“Oh, that’s a fuckin’ relief, thank you,” said Hoff. “How long they likely to chase us, d’you think?”
“No way to know. Not far, I expect. Too risky for them to show themselves before they’re really consolidated here.”
Hoff puffed on in silence for a few moments, considering Mason’s statement. At last he said, “But by the same token, they won’t want us getting away,” he said. “I mean, I could be written off as a nut if I talk about this, but you… you’re one of them. Incontrovertible evidence. I mean, physiologically… you aren’t the same.”
“That’s true. Well, I dunno, Hoff. You’re probably right.”
“Which means that right now they’re trying like hell to get ahead of us, to get between us and any safe way out of the area.”
“Maybe. Keep your gun ready.”
The land rose sharply from the road along the river. They scrambled through the underbrush, coming out on Warsaw Road. Ahead the road turned sharply left over a culvert through which runoff water gushed noisily. They had just reached the bridge when Hoff spotted movement among the rocks ahead, where the road bent right again and resumed its climb. He grabbed Mason’s arm.
“I see them,” the ghoul murmured.
Slithering down the shiny black rocks, naked, greasy as eels. Five, maybe six people, so coated in mud and filth that they looked like huge snakes.
Hoff’s gun was in his hand before he realized it, and he was firing. He hit one, a man, but the others flashed apart, splitting up. Mason picked up a rock and hurled it with deadly aim, catching a woman in the chest. She fell back gurgling, the rock lodged between her breasts. Then she got back to her feet and came on again.
Hoff fired again, and again, scoring two more head shots, including the woman with the rock in her breastbone. Their foes, reduced to two, a man and another woman, came on more warily. Hoff and Mason fell back, a few yards down Warsaw Road. Hoff glanced behind, down the road. Other pale forms were running toward them.
“We’re cut off,” he said.
Mason started to speak, then gasped.
“What? What?”
Mason could only point at the two advancing ghouls, now creeping over the bridge. “Wendy! It’s Wendy!” He started forward.
“No!” cried Hoff, grasping his arm. Mason shook him off and went to meet her on the bridge.
“Wendy,” he said in a broken voice. “Thank God. I thought I’d killed you.”
The ghouls paused as Mason joined them. The woman stared up at him when he took her hands. “Wendy,” he breathed.
She yanked herself free and slammed her clasped fists into his head. He staggered back and she leaped on him, going for his throat. The other ghoul raced toward Hoff. Hoff aimed and fired. The bullet punched through the man’s head, blowing out the back of his skull in a gush of blood and brains. He staggered to one side and toppled over the railing into the stream.
Without waiting to see more, Hoff ran to where Mason and Wendy rolled around on the road. He seized Wendy’s shoulders, trying to drag her off the barely resisting Mason. She whirled on him, snarling and drooling. Overpoweringly strong, she forced him backward and they staggered into the rocks opposite the bridge. The maddened woman snapped ferociously at him. His arms quivered as he tried to hold her at bay, but she lunged nearer and nearer. Her teeth gleamed. He could not keep his eyes off them.
Hoff heard a thud and she stiffened. Another, and blood splashed his face. She fell limply away, her head a red ruin. Mason stood there with a rock in his hands. Wendy’s blood dripped over the side of the bridge, red threads joining the flow of water. Mason kicked aside some bits of bone and chunks of scalp with hair attached.
“Let’s get out of here,” he said emptily, dropping the rock and not looking down at his girlfriend’s corpse.
Hoff started up the hill toward the top of the ridge.
Mason shook his head. “Not yet,” he said. “My house is over that way a quarter mile,” he said, pointing. “I need to go there. Whoever is upstairs, isn’t Wendy.”
“What about them?” Hoff asked, gesturing down the road.
Mason shrugged. “They’ve got two nice fresh bodies to keep them busy,” he said. “They’ll feed before coming after us. We’ve got an hour, maybe. Besides, Hoff, my motorcycle’s there. We can use it about now.”
Hoff sighed. “Okay, let’s get going.”
Back at Mason’s house they ducked inside. Hoff followed Mason upstairs, covering his mouth against the burgeoning stench of rot.
Mason knelt by the half-eaten corpse. Hoff averted his eyes as best he could from the worst of the damage, and found himself staring at her legs and feet.
“Mase?”
“Yeah.”
“Look at her shoes.”
“What about ‘em?”
“Well–they’re dirty. Caked with mud. Wendy was inside the whole time, right? That night? Whoever this is came from outside, Mase.”
“Yeah, maybe so.” Mason looked doubtfully at the feet. “Wait.” He pointed. “Her ankle. See the little rose tattoo?”
He and Hoff locked eyes. “Wendy’s sister, Sandra. She has a tattoo just like that.” Mason turned his gaze to the corpse’s torn face. “They always did look a lot alike.”
“This is Wendy’s sister, then?”
Mason nodded. “I remember now; I saw a familiar car the first time I left the house… after, you know. A brand-new BMW. I couldn’t place it, being half out of my mind. It was Sandra’s car.”
“What was she doing here?”
“I dunno, she’d stop by now and then to visit. She lives in Philadelphia, she liked to come out here for the day, go antiquing and all that.”
Hoff felt his gorge rise and fought to control himself. “Wendy killed her own sister?”
Mason nodded. “The ’pedes must’ve got Wendy at the same time they got me. Makes sense. My system reacted differently, and I went comatose or whatever, in the basement. But Wendy turned into a full-fledged ghoul. It was Sandra’s bad luck to show up right then for a visit.”
“That being true,” said Hoff, “why didn’t Wendy stay here and finish, you know, eating?”
“She felt the tug. You saw what happened to me out in the woods. I got too close to the epicenter, or whatever, of the ’pedes’ influence. Wendy went under right away. I guess she took Sandra’s car but was too addled to drive and wrecked it. Then she wandered off.” He sighed. “Now I see why I was so hungry when I woke up. I thought I’d eaten Wendy and Mack, but I never did.” He looked up at the lawman. “I’m gonna help you get those fuckers, Hoff. Every last ’pede on Augustine’s farm, and every last goddam ghoul.”
“I appreciate that, Mase, but it’s getting late.”
“Okay, let me find some shoes and we’re outta here like Vladimir.”
Hoff followed him outside to the garage, where a nearly new Kawasaki Vulcan 1600 gleamed in the dimming light. It was black with red trim.
“Here,” he said, grabbing a helmet from the workbench. He tossed it to Hoff. “We better get moving.”
“Isn’t it dangerous driving these things in the rain?”
Mason just looked at him. “Okay, okay,” said Hoff.
Mason turned on the machine’s ignition. “Hey, Hoff; you know what model this is?”
“Hell, no, I don’t know anything about bikes,” Hoff said, settling the helmet on his head.
To his surprise, he saw a slow smile spread across Mason’s pale face. “It’s a Mean Streak,” said the ghoul. “A Kawasaki Mean Streak.”
Hoff threw a leg over the back saddle. He grasped Mason around the middle, trying not to flinch at the ghoul’s faint, nauseating scent of decay and blood. I must be out of my frigging mind, he thought as the machine emerged from the garage.
Mason’s laughter trailed after them as they roared off into the dusk.
Filed under Short Horror Stories · Tagged with A. L. Sirois, Horror
June 4th, 2010 Issue
June 4, 2010 by Publisher · Leave a Comment
We are pleased to present “The Beeper’s Sting” by Timothy Miller.
Filed under Afterburn SF Posts · Tagged with Issue, Timothy Miller
The Beeper’s Sting
June 4, 2010 by Publisher · Leave a Comment
The silver bee zipped through the air, the tiny monofilament blade it carried in place of its stinger slicing through the green fly with a chirping “beep!” The plague fly had been dissected only centimeters from the Concissa’s neck, one of the few of areas skin left exposed by her long-sleeved white dress.
Turning away from the electronic screen of the learning board, the Concissa’s hazel eyes followed the path of the silver bee as it returned to the small curly-haired girl at the back of the classroom.
“Thank you, Andrea,” she said with a radiant smile. “That was well done.”
As the silver bee disappeared within her long curls, thirteen-year-old Andrea Lorynn shyly returned the smile.
“It was no trouble, mistress,” she replied. “Knight gets fidgety if I don’t let him go after the plague flies, anyway.”
The Concissa nodded sagely, causing the dangling golden medallions woven into her silky white hair to tinkle like fairy wings.
“I don’t doubt it, Andrea. Though we can no longer replicate the technology that birthed them, it is what the nivs like Knight were designed for.”
“Yes, mistress,” Andrea replied, both thrilled and embarrassed by the attention. “I am honored by your knowledge.”
It was no exaggeration. Thought to be among the loveliest of the dome’s populace, the Concissa’s beauty was outmatched only by her intellect. Approaching eighty years of age, with the exception of her snowy hair, the woman looked no older than her twenties. As the lead professor at the dome’s School of the Latent Arts, she was afforded every age reduction and maintenance tech the Council could provide.
It had been both an incredible honor for Andrea’s class and their regular instructor, Tamer Morey, that the mistress of the school had chosen to teach them today.
Even as she watched the legendary woman turn back to the learning board to continue the lesson, Andrea could scarcely believe a Tamer as great the Concissa had actually thanked her by name.
Unfortunately, Andrea’s high spirits were brought crashing down by the redheaded boy sitting in the desk to her left with a metallic hawk perched on his shoulder.
“Yeah…Beeper,” he whispered, emphasizing Andrea’s hated nickname with heavy sarcasm. “You’d better keep the plague flies off the Concissa. It’s not like your muse is good for anything else.”
In her hair, Knight beeped angrily, but Andrea quieted her agitated muse with a soft mental nudge.
Be still, little one, she told the cybernetic bee silently. He’s just a stupid boy. You know you’re better than Ryan’s muse, Coelwing, will ever be.
Grinning snidely at the chirping anger of Andrea’s muse, Ryan stroked the glistening beak of the hawk suggestively.
“Better watch out,” he warned. “Coelwing might get the wrong idea. You know the rules; you can’t be a tamer without a muse. Not that you’ll ever be much of one anyway…Beeper.”
Andrea ignored his taunts and the name calling. She was used to it. She knew what the other students, the other tamers in training, thought of her. Ever since the day they had brought her and hundreds of other five-year-olds to the Great Coliseum to discover if any of them had the rare genetic spark of a tamer, she had tolerated their derision.
Andrea had been one of the bare handful shown to possess the dying talent that day, but a tamer’s worth was judged by the strength of their muse. Great tamers like the Concissa bonded with the larger beasts. Her giant steel tiger, Feral, even now crouched in the corner of the classroom, keeping a protective eye on his mistress. Weaker tamers, like Ryan, bonded with the smaller muses, but none were less impressive than Andrea’s.
Sensing her mood, Knight beeped again, and Andrea absently reassured the niv as she issued a soft sigh of regret. Though she loved the niv dearly, the truth was that the pseudo-insect was the smallest muse in the classroom, in the entire dome for that matter.
Although the technology that created them insured that every non-bonded muse congregated within the Great Coliseum once every five years, no one could recall having seeing one of nivs at the gathering until the day Andrea had claimed Knight as her own.
It wasn’t that the nivs were rare, quite the contrary. There were thousands, if not millions of the tiny killers scattered throughout the domed city.
At this very moment, a dozen could be seen zipping about outside the classroom window as they obliterated the often-diseased plague flies that had somehow found their way inside the life dome. Yet, before Andrea, not a single record existed of a tamer having bonded with one of the silver bees.
Of course, no one was able to choose their muse. None, not even the Concissa, really understood how the bonding even worked. Like the manufacture of the radiation-proof shell of hardened crystal that protected them from the mutated creatures beyond the dome, that knowledge had passed from the minds of men long ago. All they had left was the histories.
Every student knew that, when the mongolites had first penetrated the city walls, there had been a terrible slaughter among the dome’s populace. In the aftermath, their forefathers had decided to create the cybernetic protectors for the citizenry. Using science from the golden age of technology, they had biologically engineered the tamer’s ability into the people to give them a chance against the mongolite’s unstoppable fury.
It was said, that in that bygone era everyone had been able to bond a muse, but no more. Centuries later, the descendants of these first tamers had lost much of this wondrous ability, the bonding gene dying away in all but a few of their children’s children.
Abruptly, the Concissa stopped speaking as the chiming tone of the school bell sounded over the intercom. Tapping the board twice to banish the grotesque image of a half-grown mongolite, she turned to face the class.
“Thank you for your attention, students,” the Concissa said. Bowing her head slightly, she added the ritual farewell all tamer instructors gave to their students. “By muse or by blood, you shall protect the innocent.”
Bowing her head along with the other students, Andrea intoned the ancient reply she’d been taught the very first day she’d discovered her talent.
“By muse or by blood, I protect the innocent.”
As the children got up to leave, Andrea watched a dark-haired girl absently run her hand over a large grey-skinned wildcat as she waited for Ryan and a boy with a shiny chimpanzee to exit the room. The girl’s name was Joanna, and like the rest of the eighteen children in her class, she’d found her muse, Powder, the same day Andrea had bonded with Knight.
“Wait, please,” called a lilting voice as Andrea fell into line behind Joanna.
Several students looked back and began to whisper as Feral padded over to interpose its sleek body between the Andrea and the others.
“The rest of you may go,” the Concissa commanded, her clipped tone ending the excited whispers in an instant. “I would like to speak with Andrea alone.”
Andrea’s heart dropped into her stomach, and she felt her knees begin to quake even before she caught Ryan’s superior, “It was bound to happen,” expression.
Oh no.
Knight began to beep furiously within her curls, but Andrea was too distraught to quiet him this time. Everyone knew that the Concissa only granted a private audience to a student she’d decided to dismiss from her school.
Ryan was right. My muse is too small to defend the dome from the mongolites and now they’re not going to let me be a tamer.
“Andrea,” the Concissa began, walking over to the trembling girl. “I wish to tell you that I am sorry. I didn’t-”
Her hair beeping furiously, Andrea didn’t wait for her to finish. She would not give up her place as a tamer without at least trying to plead her case.
“I’ll do better, mistress.”
“Andrea-”
“I know you and the others think Knight is too small to fight, but he can do other things.”
“Andrea-”
“He can do recon work better than any other muse in my class. He’s almost as fast as Ryan’s muse, Coelwing, and ten times as agile. A mongolite would never catch him.”
“Andrea-”
The Concissa was starting to look a bit perturbed now, but Andrea wasn’t going down without a fight.
Outside the classroom window, the circling nivs began to tap against the glass as they echoed Knight’s agitated beeping with angry chirps of their own.
“I can be a tamer, mistress! Knight and I will protect the innocent, I swear it! You can’t send us away! I won’t let you!”
Feral’s deafening roar seemed to shake the very walls of the classroom, shattering Andrea’s anger and silencing her muse’s beeping.
“That will be quite enough, Andrea!” commanded the Concissa. Her hazel eyes blazing, she advanced on the quaking girl with her finger pointed out like a queen’s scepter. “You will be silent, or I will have Feral drag you from the halls of my school and throw you in the communal fountain!”
Dropping to her knees in horror, Andrea bowed her head low before the angry tamer and her growling muse.
“Forgive me, mistress,” she choked. Summoning the last of her courage, she added, “I meant no disrespect. But please, I beg you to give Knight and me one more chance to prove our worth before you dismiss us.”
Above her, the Concissa breathed out a long sigh of what sounded like exasperation.
“You silly fool, I had no intention of dismissing you to begin with,” the Concissa said irritably. “I was only trying to apologize to you for keeping you after class. If you had taken the opportunity to listen as a student should, you would have known that. Now get up.”
Andrea lifted her eyes from the floor and stared at the woman as if afraid to believe what she was saying.
“Oh, for the love of the dome,” the Concissa snapped, “on your feet.”
Knocking over a nearby chair in her haste, Andrea sprang up from the ground like a curly-haired jack-in-the-box.
“You truly are a delight, Andrea,” the Concissa laughed, eyeing the fallen chair with amusement. “Perhaps this will not be so onerous a task as I had at first imagined.”
“I’m afraid I don’t understand, mistress,” Andrea confessed. “If I am not to be ejected from the school, why is it you wished to see me?”
“Well, as to that…”
Pausing for a moment, the Concissa drifted over to the window and tapped at the chirping nivs gathered outside, as if vexed by their noisome presence.
Impatient for an answer, Andrea sent Knight’s irritating cousins away with a thought.
“Mistress?” she pressed.
At the window, the Concissa watched the silver insects scatter with a tiny smile of satisfaction.
“Do you know how the Concissa is chosen?” she asked suddenly. “Do you know how I was groomed for the position?”
Caught off guard by the question, Andrea’s answer was clumsy at best.
“I…I don’t…. I don’t know, mistress. I guess, I never really thought about it before.”
Beckoning the steel tiger to her side with a small wave of her dainty hand, the Concissa nodded as if she’d been expecting Andrea’s reply.
“That’s almost exactly what I said when she asked me,” she said softly. Before Andrea could ask her what she meant, the Concissa went on. “We are chosen by the strength of our muse. It was the day I bonded with Feral that people began to treat me differently than the other students. The Concissa then had a timber wolf muse called North. He was tall enough to look me square in the eye, and he was as deadly against the mongolites as they come, but even a prince among wolves is nothing compared to a tiger. Everyone knew, myself included, that I was the heir apparent. All too soon, I was officially named the Concissa’s handmaiden to prepare me for the role.”
“You must have been very proud, mistress,” Andrea said with genuine sincerity. Although she was still at a loss as to what any of this had to do with her, she admired this women above all others. Indeed, Andrea would have died for her mistress had it been required of her.
“Oh, I was proud, too proud,” the Concissa agreed, “very proud.”
However, instead appearing pleased by the compliment, the woman’s full red lips had curled in a bitter smile of regret.
“But pride does not a champion make, Andrea, no matter what I thought at the time. Though Feral and I outperformed every student in my year, both in class and at our finals, I nearly fainted dead away the first time I faced a mongolite in the flesh.”
The Concissa, afraid? Andrea shifted her feet uncomfortably at the idea. The women’s ferocity in battle was legendary.
“I’m sure you exaggerate, mistress.”
“If only that were true, Andrea, I might have tried to save my mistress before she sacrificed herself to save me.”
The Concissa shook her head sadly.
“Special treatment had made me arrogant to the point of idiocy, and it cost my mentor her life. That day I assumed the white dress of the Concissa, and I vowed over the burial shroud of my fallen teacher not to make the same mistake with my own successor.”
“Mistress, I don’t see-”
Andrea trailed off as the Concissa’s hard eyes met hers.
“I thought the strength of my muse was everything I needed to be a great Concissa, Andrea,” she said. “I was wrong. Strength is nothing without character to teach it restraint. Power is nothing without the fires of experience to temper its mettle. As great as Feral is, I was the weakest of tamers until I discovered that cold truth written in the blood of my teacher. But you aren’t like that, are you Andrea? You have listened to the mocking of your peers for these long years. You have borne the brunt of their scorn, yet still you have the strength to stand before the Concissa herself and demand to be given a chance to earn your rightful place among the tamers of this dome.”
Tilting her beautiful head in a shallow bow, she said, “I salute you, Andrea. You are certainly worthy to be named handmaiden of the Concissa.”
The room spun, and Andrea had to grasp the desk beside her to keep her legs from buckling. This couldn’t be happening. The handmaiden of the Concissa was the heir to the position, chosen by the strength of her muse. She was expected to lead the other tamers in battle if the mongolites invaded the dome. Andrea commanded the weakest muse in her class, in the school. How could the woman standing before her name Andrea as the next Concissa?
“Mistress…I…but.” The very notion was so preposterous that Andrea was at a loss for words. “I can’t be your handmaiden. I would give anything if I could, but I’m tamer to a niv. How I can possibly be the Concissa?”
A loud rumbling purr began to erupt from Feral’s chest as his beautiful mistress smiled mischievously.
“Did I not just tell you that strength isn’t everything?”
“Yes…but, the other tamers…”
The Concissa laughed.
“The other tamers had best do as their told,” she said sternly. Seeing the look of anxiousness her remark brought to Andrea’s face however, she waved her hand as if to brush aside the girl’s concerns. “You worry over nothing, Andrea. Can’t you see that? I have been in this room with you for but a single day, and frankly, I am nearly overwhelmed by your potential.”
What is she talking about? Andrea thought. All I did was keep a plague fly from landing on her neck.
Her disbelief must have shown, because the Concissa rolled her eyes with impatience.
“Do you pay attention when you are in this class, student?” she asked, her voice suddenly crisp and instructive.
“Yes, mistress,” Andrea answered quickly, almost on reflex.
“Tell me then, student, what is first rule of the tamer?”
Pushing all thought of handmaidens and successions from her mind, Andrea felt herself relax as she slipped back into her familiar role as a student answering her instructor.
“No tamer may choose their muse.”
“Good, my student. And the second rule?”
“No tamer can command more than one muse.”
“Why?”
“A tamer’s mind, like that of his muse, adapts itself to a particular frequency on the day of bonding. The talent was designed this way. It prevents one tamer from controlling the muse of another.”
The Concissa clapped her hands together in congratulations.
“Exactly as it is taught in the text, student. Well done,” she said. “Now let me tell you something you won’t learn in class. Some muses, not many, but a few, do not fit into the mold you just described.”
“I don’t understand, mistress,” Andrea said. “Are you saying my bonding with Knight isn’t permanent, that someday I will bond with a more powerful muse?”
In her hair, Knight beeped in irritation and Andrea found herself agreeing with the silver bee.
Don’t worry, Knight, she promised, even if it’s true, I would never give you up.
Even as Andrea made her silent vow to the niv, she saw the Concissa shaking her head.
“The bond is permanent,” the woman said. “What I’m speaking of is not the muse itself, but the singular frequency it shares with its tamer. Most think the bond is exclusive, and in most cases, they are correct. Yet, some few of the dome’s cybernetic inhabitants were designed to operate on the same wavelength, sharing a group consciousness if you will.”
“I still don’t-”
“The window, Andrea,” the Concissa interrupted. “At the window you…what was that?”
Andrea felt it, too, the soft tremor of disturbed earth that seemed to echo within her bones. A second later, the school’s intercom burst to life as it screamed forth a repetitive blare of warning.
“That’s the perimeter alarm!” the Concissa shouted above the noise. Pressing her finger against a particular ivory button located on the sleeve of her dress, she activated the duafiber technology within the garment’s weave. Instantly, the long billows of white fabric collapsed upon itself, tightening and hardening until it had reformed to a stiff carapace of battle armor that was perfectly molded to the Concissa’s slender frame.
Sending Feral ahead to check the hall, she tapped Andrea’s shoulder as she rushed for the door. “Follow me, and stay close! There are mongolites inside the school!”
Mongolites…here?! Andrea struggled to come to grips with the impossibility of what was occurring. The dome’s spherical walls were miles from the academy. How could the mongolites have penetrated this deeply into the city without being detected?
As mind-numbingly terrifying as the proclamation was, Andrea was first and foremost, a tamer in training. Swallowing her terror, she sent Knight speeding into the hall as she followed her mistress from the classroom.
Once in the well-lit marble corridor, the Concissa looked up at the closest globe-shaped communications speaker.
“This is the Concissa,” she shouted over the alarm. “Override perimeter alarm.” As soon as the piercing noise went silent, she called out again to the open air. “Office, this is the Concissa. Report!”
Immediately, a frantic male voice burst out over the intercom.
“Concissa, you’re alive! This is Tamer Entroy in the main office with Tamer Helen. When the main gates went down we feared the worst.”
“What’s our situation, Tamer? Why was the perimeter alarm activated?”
“It’s bad, mistress.” Andrea remembered Entroy as a hard-nosed recon instructor who seemed as tough as his warthog muse. But right now, he sounded both out of breath and afraid. “The main gates were open to allow the students to leave when the mongolites attacked. We tried to hold them in the entryway, but they ran right over us. There must be a hundred of them, at least. Out of the twelve instructors there, I think Helen and I were the only ones to escape. Tamer Jillian was with us for awhile, but when we were barricading the door to the office, his muse went down and he went berserk. He charged right into them. I’m sorry mistress, I couldn’t stop him.”
“It is not your fault, Entroy,” the Concissa said. “Now, where are the rest of the instructors? The perimeter alarm will have notified every tamer in the city, but we must organize a defense against the intruders until help can arrive.”
“Defense?!” Entroy exclaimed incredulously. “There are scores of mongolites, mistress! There can’t be more than thirty tamers in the entire staff, and almost half of those have already been lost! Fighting that many mongolites before reinforcements arrive would be suicide!”
The Concissa’s jaw set.
“Even if what you say is true,” she began coldly, “innocent children, children we have been charged to train and protect, are even now dying within these halls. You are a tamer of this dome, Entroy! What is your purpose?”
There was a brief silence on the other end of the intercom and then, “By muse or by blood, I will protect the innocent.”
“Tamer Entroy,” the Concissa demanded, “will you stand by your oath?”
“Forgive me, mistress,” Entroy said. “Neither I, nor Tamer Helen have forgotten our oaths. We go now to fulfill that vow. We will gather what instructors remain and protect the students, or we will die trying.”
“We are in the east wing, tamer. It yet remains free of the mongolites,” the Concissa told him. “Send the children this way if you can.”
“We will, mistress. By blood or by muse, Concissa.”
“By blood or by muse, tamer,” the Concissa replied solemnly. “Good luck.”
As the intercom went dead, the Concissa pulled a pair of eighteen-inch machblades from twin sheaths strapped to the small of her back.
Unconsciously, Andrea stepped back from the glimmering blue metal. Though she trusted the Concissa with her life, the molecule-thin edge of a machblade had been designed to pierce the rocklike skin of a mongolite. Even brushing against such an insanely-keen weapon had cost more than one unwary individual a limb.
The Concissa noticed the wide berth her student gave the blades and nodded her head in approval.
“I was going to explain why I couldn’t offer you one of my weapons,” she said, “but I see from your expression that you already know the reason. You won’t be instructed in close combat technique until next year, and without training, the machblade is more dangerous to its user than it is to a mongolite.”
Andrea nodded.
“Yes, mistress. I will…” she trailed off as a surge of warning flashed through her brain.
The Concissa took one look at Andrea’s face and spun back towards the hall, weapons poised and ready.
“What is it?”
“Knight,” Andrea explained, trying to get a better impression of what the niv was trying to communicate through their bond. “He must be ahead of Feral…He’s…I think something’s headed this way.”
Not taking her eyes from the corridor, the Concissa’s eyes narrowed.
“Concentrate, Andrea. Is it human or mongolite?”
“I…” Furrowing her brow, Andrea received a brief image of a steel hawk flapping madly down a marble hall. “It’s Coelwing, Ryan’s muse. I think the students are running this way.”
The Concissa nodded.
“The mongolites won’t be far behind,” she said. “I’m calling Feral back. Do the same with your muse, and stay here for a moment.”
Andrea fidgeted nervously in the hall as the white-armored woman ran back into the classroom. A moment after Knight arrived and began to orbit Andrea’s curly head, there came the crashing sound of broken glass from the room, and the Concissa emerged back into the hall.
“Here they come,” the Concissa said.
Andrea swung her head away from the door and saw her mistress was right. Coelwing and Feral in the lead, Ryan and about a dozen of the other students and their muses sprinted toward them.
Only twenty feet behind them…
“Concissa!” Andrea cried, pointing at the half-dozen sleek black bodies that were swiftly closing in on her classmates.
“I see them.”
Behind Ryan and the others, what looked like a pack of huge lizard-headed apes with thick black scales covering their entire bodies, gnashed their fang-filled mouths and howled angrily as they rushed down the corridor. Using their long arms to speed their progress, the ten-foot-tall mongolites rushed forward on all fours, their diamond-hard claws scraping deep grooves into the polished floor as they came.
Andrea saw her mistress measuring the distance between the students and their pursuers with a calculating eye.
“It will be close,” the woman muttered.
“What should I do, mistress?” Andrea asked, her stomach twisting in knots of fear.
“When the children reach us, lead them into the classroom. I’ve already broken out the glass of the window. When you get outside, don’t stop running until you find somewhere safe to hide.” The Concissa readied her blades. “Be quick. Feral and I will hold the mongolites here to buy you some time.”
“But, mistress,” Andrea protested, “there are too many of them. You must come with us.”
Her hazel eyes like chips of green ice, the Concissa shook her head.
“There is no time, Andrea. If I don’t slow the mongolites here, none of us will live to see the dawn.”
Coelwing soared over Andrea’s head before she could say more, and as the rest of the muses and children got close, the Concissa called out to them.
“Students, do not slow! Follow Andrea!” she commanded, pointing one of her blades at Andrea. “She will lead you to safety!”
Weapons held high to avoid the children as she sprinted through their ranks, the Concissa joined Feral as he pivoted to face the monsters.
“Go, Andrea!” the woman shouted, even as she dodged beneath a scaled arm. Leaning back, the Concissa swept two clawed fingers from the mongolite’s hand.
The monster shrieked in pain as its greenish blood spurted out onto the woman’s white armor before Feral crashed into its chest and forced it back.
“Go!”
The insistent cry snapped Andrea from immobility. As her classmates reached her, she spun on her heel and led them into the classroom.
“The window is broken,” she shouted, pointing the way to their escape. “Go!”
A couple of students immediately followed her orders, but the rest seemed too frightened to move. Joanna had gone straight to her desk and was now rocking back and forth as she held her wildcat muse to her chest and cried.
“Are you crazy, Beeper?!” Ryan shouted, while his eyes darted wildly between the window and the door. “I’m not going out there. How do you know those things aren’t outside? Who’s going to protect us then?”
The students at the window hesitated when they heard the red-haired boy.
“I say we close the door and stay right here,” Ryan continued.
“That’s not what the Concissa told me,” Andrea argued. “I’m supposed to get us out of here!”
Ryan barked a contemptuous laugh.
“That’s what you say,” he sneered. Coelwing landed on the boy’s shoulder and snapped its beak threateningly as his master shook an accusing finger at the small girl. “She told us to follow you in here, and we did! Now, why don’t you let a *real* tamer take charge before you get us all killed…Beeper.”
Andrea looked around the room, seeing to her frustration that none of the students were even trying to reach the window. They didn’t believe her. She was supposed to save them, but Ryan was the one they respected. He was the one that would be a real tamer someday. She was just a joke; a tiny girl with an insect for a muse.
What should I do, mistress? Andrea thought in despair. You wanted me to be the next Concissa, and I can’t even convince my class to save themselves.
A human scream echoed from the hall and every student in the room flinched away from the door.
Concissa!
“Somebody shut that door!” Ryan shouted. “We’ll pile our desks against it until help gets here!”
Students and muses hurried to obey the boy’s orders, but halted as Andrea, who stood closest to the door, lifted her hand to bar their way.
“Stop!” Andrea’s cry wasn’t desperate, or frightened. Her voice was as firm and uncompromising as the Concissa’s had been in the hall. “Stay in this room and we will all die. The Concissa cannot hold them for much longer. You must go now, while there is still time!”
“Or what, Beeper?” Ryan dared. “Are you going to set your muse on us? Ignore her everybody; she can run if she wants to. Get the desks.”
Andrea stepped closer to the red-haired boy. Her head barely reached his shoulder, but she showed not an ounce of fear as she stared up at his arrogant face. She was no longer afraid. That emotion had been washed away by her mistress’ scream, as surely as had her indecision and self-doubt. She was the handmaiden of the Concissa, chosen by the most powerful tamer in the dome. These children would follow her lady’s commands…whatever the price.
“What?” Ryan mocked. A split second later, he slapped a hand to the side of his head as Knight zipped into his ear. “Hey, what do you–”
“I wouldn’t do that if I were you,” Andrea warned, as the boy dug his finger into his ear in an attempt to dislodge the intruder. “Knight’s blade is small, but it can cut through solid steel. I know it wouldn’t be much of a loss, but I’d hate to see what he could do to your brain.”
Ryan froze. His eyes wide and terrified, he looked down at Andrea’s menacing smile and swallowed hard.
“The Concissa told you to leave,” she said, “and that is what you are going to do. Isn’t it?”
Ryan’s face scrunched up in pain as Knight beeped loudly next to his sensitive eardrum.
“Okay…okay,” he agreed hoarsely. “I’ll do anything you want. Please, just get him out!”
Inwardly, Andrea winced at the heartfelt terror she heard in his plea, but she let none of her pity show on her face. She couldn’t afford mercy now. Her mistress was in danger.
Snapping her fingers, she called Knight to back to her.
The niv zipped out of Ryan’s ear, and she watched the boy’s nervous gaze follow the silver bee as it began to circle the finger Andrea had raised in warning.
“You lead them, Ryan. You lead them to safety,” she ordered him coldly. “And if you’re thinking about using Coelwing against me, don’t. Knight is too quick for your bird, and your ear is a very tempting target.”
His cheeks pale, Ryan warily watched the niv’s darting movements and nodded.
“Well!” Andrea barked. “What are you standing around for? I said go!”
Though she had been talking only to Ryan, the entire class immediately leapt toward the window. One of the students, a boy named Escher, whose muse was a brass-colored German shepherd, stopped to pull Joanne from her desk and help her to the window.
They hurried, but only one student at a time could fit through the small opening. The sounds of Feral’s growls and the roaring mongolites were perilously close to the room before most of them had gotten outside.
“Hurry!” Andrea urged, as Ryan and Escher were helping Joanna and her wildcat through the opening.
Besides Andrea herself, those three were the last. But before Joanna could follow her muse outside, a tremendous crash erupted as the Concissa, Feral, and three huge mongolites burst through the classroom wall between Andrea and her classmates.
Joanna screamed, and desks and chairs burst to splinters as the combatants tore at one another with blade, tooth and claw.
“Get them out!” Andrea shouted to Ryan as she ducked beneath the instructor’s desk, the only piece of furniture in the room made of durosteel, rather than soft clonewood. “Get them to safety!”
Ducking beneath a flying piece of broken learning board, the redhead nodded quickly and shoved a screeching Joanna through the window.
Confident Ryan would do as he was told; Andrea huddled down beneath the desk and turned her attention to her besieged mistress.
Things were not going well. Spinning and slicing, the Concissa was fighting alongside her tiger muse furiously, but Andrea could see her mistress wouldn’t last much longer. Red blood had joined the acidic green fluid that stained her charred armor, and at some point the woman had lost one of her blades.
As Feral sprang onto one mongolite and forced him back through the shattered wall, the Concissa was left to face the other two monsters alone. One arm hanging limp at her side, her white hair spiraled crazily through the air as she twisted away from one mongolite’s reaching claws.
Kicking away from the creature in a gymnast’s leap, she twisted in the air to bury her machblade into the other’s chin.
The beast immediately collapsed as the blue metal pierced its radiation-soaked brain, but the move was costly. As sharp as the weapon was, the mongolite’s rocklike hide snagged the blade.
While the Concissa wasted precious seconds trying to free her weapon, the second mongolite rose up behind her.
No!
Andrea stifled the cry of warning on her lips. So far the mongolites hadn’t seemed to notice her, and screaming out and distracting her mistress wasn’t going to help free her only weapon. Still, Andrea was far from helpless.
Knight!
The silver bee slipped his razor sting into the mongolite’s black eye with a tiny beep of challenge. The wound was minor, but it gave the Concissa the time she needed to retrieve her machblade and swing around to face the screeching mongolite behind her.
She needn’t have hurried. The last mongolite had forgotten the Concissa for the moment as it swatted its claws angrily at the silver bee that kept darting in to sting its sensitive eyes and lips.
Sparing Knight only a brief glance, the Concissa opened the mongolite’s belly and immediately turned her eyes away from the falling monster to search the room.
“Andrea!” she called. “Andrea! Where are you?!”
“Here!”
The Concissa breathed a sigh of relief as the curly-haired girl emerged from below the desk.
“Come on,” she said, absently sliding her stained blade over a fallen mongolite’s scales to remove the green blood. “We must flee. This attack was too organized, too well executed, for it to have been a simple raid. I fear these wretched beasts did not come alone. Something else directs them.”
“What do mean, mistress?” Andrea asked, even as she hurried toward the window.
The armored woman looked thoughtful.
“I’m not sure, exactly,” she admitted. “But-”
The Concissa was interrupted by the sudden and violent arrival of her muse. Exploding through the classroom like he’d been shot from a cannon, the steel tiger blasted right through the ferrocrete of the school’s outer wall.
“Feral!”
The anguished cry had scarcely left the Concissa’s mouth when a nest of long black tentacles burst from the hallway and seized her by her arms and legs.
“Mistress!” Andrea cried.
“Go!” the Concissa shouted even as she struggled to free herself. “Get out now!”
The tentacles tightened, drawing a groan of pain from the woman and causing the machblade to fall from her nerveless fingers.
“Andrea!” she gasped weakly, as the sickly-looking limbs lifted her off the floor and into the air like some broken white puppet. “Go…Arghh…while there’s…still time.”
“There is no time, fleshy thing,” hissed a voice evilly. “It is far too late for her, you, and all of your pathetic people.”
Andrea’s mouth went dry with terror as a tall, black-scaled man stepped into the room.
“Your soft existence has reached its end,” he said. “You and all your kin will die this day.”
Besides his skin, the man looked almost human. About six and a half feet tall, his barrel chest was covered in a flowing robe of what looked like black mongolite hide. There was nothing human at all about his pupil-less red eyes, however, and Andrea saw to her horror that the long tentacles that had seized her mistress sprung from the intruder’s back.
Strolling into the room, the man was followed by two massive mongolites. Neither roaring nor attacking, the beasts followed behind the robed man like hideous dogs at heel.
“Who…who…” The Concissa’s face was white with effort as she tried to fight through the excruciating pain of the squeezing tentacles.
“Who am I?” the man supplied. “I believe that was what you were trying to say. Am I correct? To answer your question, I am Abbandon. And for lack of a better term, you could say I am the king of the mongolites. I am what you and your soft-skinned kind left to rot in the radiated wastelands outside your precious domes.”
“Impossible…” the Concissa spat, “radiation.”
Grinning in a surprisingly-white smile, the man clasped his arms behind his back and shook his head at the woman.
“Oh yes, it’s still there,” he conceded, “miles and miles of nothing but diseased wastelands and mutated fauna. But, don’t you see? That is the birthright that brings me to your pitiful city. As the mongolites you fear so much, I am born of death and the wars of our fathers. You are the weak. Like worms, your kind must hide beneath the shielded walls or die in the sun.”
The man spread his arms wide to take in the mongolites behind him.
“We are the strong. Immune to very worst of the plagues and weapons of a bygone era, we thrive within the death without the need of protection.”
“What…arghh…” The Concissa grimaced and then steadied her ragged breathing before she spoke again. “What do you want?”
Abbandon laughed. Drawing the Concissa close, he lifted two more tentacles right before her hazel eyes.
“I want you dead, of course,” he said as sharp boney tips slid from the snakelike appendages and crept toward the Concissa’s eyes. “I want you all dead.”
Before the tentacles could find their mark, a tiny silver bee tore across one of the scaled man’s red eyes.
“Arghh!”
The mongolites sprang forward at their king’s cry of pain, but Abbandon hissed something and the monsters froze in place.
Knight darted back toward the man, but with more speed than was humanly possible, Abbandon’s hand blurred up and snatched the niv from the air.
“No!” Andrea hadn’t thought about what she was doing went she sent her muse to attack the scaled man. It had been pure instinct, reflex. Now the horrible king had her mistress and her precious Knight at his mercy. “Let them go!”
The second she spoke, the mongolites howled and started toward her. But placing one of his tentacles in their path, Abbandon halted his bestial guards yet again.
Using another of his slippery limbs to wipe away a drop of green blood from his eye, the king of the mongolites looked from his closed fist and then to Andrea. And suddenly, he started to laugh.
“Oh, how truly feeble you have become,” he chortled. “This insect I hold in my hand is your muse? This shiny bug is your protector?”
“Stop it,” Andrea said as she watched the man’s fist tighten. “Please, just let us go.”
Turning away from her, Abbandon looked back at the Concissa’s pale face.
“Do you see now why you must perish?” Holding his fist before the woman’s eyes, he placed his ear next to his fingers to listen to Knight’s frightened chirps. “With your lives in the hands of such, my kind is doing you a favor.”
“Andrea,” the Concissa called. “Don’t listen to him. Remember the window, you are… arghh!!”
The window? Andrea thought foggily. Her brain felt numbed with horror by Knight’s pained beeping. The mongolites are too close. Even if I get to the window I’ll never make it outside.
“Be still, witch!” Abbandon demanded, tightening his tentacles until the Concissa’s bones creaked. “I have grown tired of your whimpers. It is time for you and your youngling to die.”
As the man’s bone-tipped tentacles approached once more, the Concissa turned her head toward the petrified girl and weakly choked out three words.
“Nivs…One…Mind.”
And suddenly, Andrea understood what her mistress had been trying to tell her. What she’d been trying to tell her ever since she’d named a small girl with a silver bee the handmaiden of the Concissa.
The window! Andrea’s mind suddenly opened, like a waking flower to the light of the morning sun. She wasn’t telling me to run. She was reminding me about the nivs at the window!
“Let her go.”
As Andrea spoke, a humming drone began to build from beyond the shattered hole Feral had left in the wall.
Turning toward the girl curiously, Abbandon stopped his boney tentacles centimeters from the Concissa’s eyes and smiled.
“I nearly forgot you were here,” he said. Shaking his closed fist vigorously, he elicited a chorus of beeps from Andrea’s trapped muse. “You have courage for a fleshling. But, tell me, how shall you fight me without your protector? Perhaps, if you run now, I shall give you a head start before sending my mongolites to devour you.”
Her dark brown eyes unafraid, Andrea met Abbandon’s glare without flinching.
“Let her go now, and leave the dome,” she said emotionlessly. “Or I will kill you.”
The expression of cruel humor disappeared from Abbandon’s face, and he angrily rose to his full height.
“Who do you think you are, fleshling?” Behind him, the mongolites began to creep toward the girl menacingly, and this time their master made no move to stop them. “I have lived in the wastes for three hundred years before you were born. I have fought and clawed my way from the desolation, and using my strength, I have seized kingship from the beasts of the land. Who are you to threaten such as I?”
“Who am I to threaten a king?” Andrea asked. Lowering her head, she touched her mind to the chirping presence of her muse and shouted, “I am Beeper; Queen of the Silver Bees!”
As the mongolites charged forward, a solid wave of nivs burst through the opening in the outer wall. Like a storm of razors, the silver bees bit into the mongolites’ flesh, tearing scales, muscle, and even bone asunder as they viciously attacked their tamer’s enemies.
“No!”
As the mongolite guards fell, the shining cloud swarmed over the shocked face of Abbandon the king, and the scaled man threw the Concissa aside as he desperately attempted to escape into the hall.
He didn’t make it.
As the first of the long tentacles was severed, Andrea turned away from the wildly beeping swarm. She almost pitied Abbandon, but not for a single moment did she consider calling off the nivs until the king of the mongolites had been reduced to a butchered ruin of black flesh and green blood.
A scraped and stained hand touched Andrea’s shoulder.
“That was well done, handmaiden,” the Concissa said gently. “But I think you may have forgotten something.”
Swallowing hard, Andrea called the nivs away as her mistress picked up her machblade and walked over to what was left of Abbandon. Kneeling down, the woman carefully pried at a closed black fist with the tip of her weapon. The grasping fingers opened and a small silver bee sped free of their grip with a happy “beep!” of joy.
“Knight!” Andrea cried happily as the niv darted into her curls. “I’d thought I’d lost you! Oh thank you, mistress! I…”
Stopping suddenly, Andrea looked guiltily at the wide hole Feral had made in the wall.
“Feral?” she asked hesitantly. “Is he…”
The Concissa waved her good arm dismissively and smiled.
“Don’t worry; he’s been better,” she said. “But I can still feel him, and the techs will have him good as new in no time.”
Just then, several tamers and their muses burst into the room, weapons ready.
“Concissa!” Tamer Entroy shouted happily, and then paused with the others as they came upon Abbandon.
As the tamers looked around at the torn bodies and devastated walls, their eyes grew wider and wider.
Noticing the shredded look of the scaled man and his mongolite guards, some of the arrivals nudged one another and pointed to the thick spirals of silver bees circling the small girl in the center of the room.
“What happened here?”
His voice full of horror and awe, Tamer Entroy stared at the swarming nivs as if he expected them to resume their butchery at any moment.
Just then, Ryan poked through the shattered portion of the wall.
“Is it over?”
The Concissa smiled.
“It is, student,” she said, beckoning him with a nod. “You may come inside, if you wish. You should hear this.”
Slowly, and giving the bodies of the mongolites a wide birth, Andrea’s class filed back into the room and walked over to join the ranks of the tamers.
“Tamers and students,” the Concissa proclaimed. “I would like you to meet the tamer-in-training, who saved not only her mistress today, but us all. From this day forward, she is handmaiden to the Concissa! I give you–”
The Concissa paused as Andrea reached up and touched her arm. Standing on her tiptoes, the curly-haired girl surrounded by chirping nivs, whispered something into her mistress’ ear.
After a moment, the Concissa threw back her head and laughed.
“So be it,” she chuckled, giving Andrea’s shoulder an affectionate squeeze. “I give to you Beeper; heir to the Concissa, Tamer of the dome, and Queen of the Silver Bees!”
The beeping noises of the nivs’ laughter echoed Andrea’s own, as Ryan’s eyes rolled back in his head and he fainted dead away.
Filed under Short Science Fiction Stories · Tagged with Science Fiction, SciFi, Timothy Miller



