March 31st: Holcomb

Holcomb

Happy Easter!


The naked man walked across the broken asphalt with his bare feet. A beast followed. It stared at him intently, its excess limbs dragged behind it as it went. It had no hair except a tuft of ginger by its mouth.

    The thin man paid no attention to the creature and did not change pace or course except to avoid a crack in the road or a burning car. His eyes were fixed forward and he wore a thin smile. His red hair and mustache bobbed slightly as he walked

    He walked for miles with no sign of weakness until he reached a town. He stopped at a crude barricade that was drenched in blood. The creature got low to the ground, staring at him with large black eyes. 

    “Hmm,” He said, eyeing up the mass of junk and finding a place in the middle that was only one car wide. He gently pushed it out of the way with one hand and continued.

    A thick haze of smoke covered the town. He squinted as he visited each building, frowning at each one that was burned down. He eventually came to a market.

    To no surprise, the inside was completely ransacked. Several of the aisles were knocked over and none of them seemed to have anything of value. The naked man wanted to give it a chance. He stepped over the shattered glass of the front doors. The beast entered shortly afterward and began exploring the aisles, keeping one of its eyes focused on the man.

    He found jeans but no underwear and had a hard time finding a shirt, eventually deciding on a t-shirt that hung loose on his thin body. It had a few bloodstains but he liked the color.

    “Now for some food,” He said to himself.

    Most of the food was gone but he managed to find a tube of raw beef in a fridge in the back. Contentedly, he ate as he left the store. 

    The beast followed him more closely, sniffing with its small nose. It nearly got close enough to lick the tube of meat and the man moved it away. It growled deeply.

    For the first time, the man turned to look at it, “No, get your own food.”

    The monster challenged the man, howling with rage. It raised one of its huge arms and brought it down on the man. With the crackle of bones breaking the beast’s arm fell limp beside the man succeeding only in knocking the meat out of his hand.

    Before its arm could heal, the man moved to the beast’s side with the broken arm and grabbed its shoulder. Its other limbs attempted to fight him off but could only cut his jeans. He placed a foot on the monster’s side and pulled, tearing its arm off. Now drenched in blood, he continued to rip arms and legs off, leaving them to squirm on the ground behind him. Finally, a hole with rows of teeth appeared in his palm.

    As new limbs sprouted from the beast, he placed his hand on its back.

    “I would have left you be,” He said, “I know you’re not as smart as the others, but now there’s dirt in my meat.”

    The monster howled in pain as its flesh submitted to the man, swelling around his hand. It became small and frail as its last cry died in its throat. 

    When the last of it shrank into his hand, he closed his palm. With the burst of energy from the beast’s flesh, he remembered who he was. His name was Bernard Holcomb, one of the most famous scientists in the world. And he was hungry.

January 7th: The War Machine

The War Machine

The man approached the door and gently set down his briefcase with a sigh. With a gloved hand, he used the brass knocker three times. He polished his glasses as he waited. The man sensed movement inside. A small white dog came barking to the door, becoming warped by the window. He hated those kinds of dogs, as most decent people should.

A younger man with a red beard answered the door, pushing the white terror out of the way with his foot.

“Dr. Grimsley?” He said and glanced down at the briefcase, “You’ve got them already?”

“Ah yes,” He said with a satisfied smile, “Five of them.”

The younger man’s wife wandered into view of the door, looking equally curious and suspicious.

“I’m not even going to ask this time.” She said, “Just don’t kill my husband, please.”

“I would do no such thing, Lindsey,” He said politely, “David’s good at keeping things safe, anyway.”

The red-bearded man chuckled, “I do my best.”

“Well,” Dr. Grimsley said, “where are you keeping it?”

David led the man around the house into the backyard, where a tennis court sat.

“Lindsey didn’t want me to keep it here,” He said as he unlocked the fence, “but I told her it’s the only place it would fit.”

“I’m surprised she let you,” Dr. Grimsley said, “tennis was always big for her.”

“Well she didn’t,” David said, “technically.”

The gate opened to reveal a large metal man crouching in the center of the court. It had a large chest carrying two weapons; a claw on the left arm, more for intimidation than anything, and a pointed weapon that resembled the head of a salt shaker on the right. David got some yellow suits from the table at the edge of the court and handed one to Dr. Grimsley.

“This will be absolutely stunning,” He said as he set his coat and hat down, “to see a Metal Man from the Great War walk again.”

“If it doesn’t kill us first,” David said nervously as he pulled his suit on.

“Well, you changed out the discs, haven’t you?” Dr. Grimsley said, frowning at how the suit made his belly show.

“Yes, but,” David put his mask on and helped him finish putting on the suit, ”Tennochian engineering is very complex. We can’t be sure which behaviors might be… Instinctual.”

“I don’t think it should be a concern,” Dr. Grimley said as he set the briefcase on the table and opened it, revealing five metal rods, “Such behaviors should be reactionary.”

“I will always wonder how you managed to sneak five plutonium rods from your university, Doctor.”

“And wonder still,” He said, gently picking one up, “I don’t give out such information freely, even to my favorite student.”

“Oh use the tongs for Pete’s sake,” David said, tossing them at him, “You don’t want to burn yourself.”

“You know this is no less dangerous with them than without,” he said, slowly moving toward the step stool behind the metal man, “Are our connections good?”

“They should be,” David said, closing the briefcase and turning on a Geiger counter, which started clicking away, “I double-checked.”

Standing on the stool, Dr. Grimsley put the rod in the tongs, “Are we ready to fire this up?”

David nodded, holding the Geiger counter out. Dr. Grimsley slowly moved the rod toward the hole in the metal man’s hunched back. As he slid it in, the Geiger counter went crazy.

“Pull it back out,” David said, “Shielding’s not holding up.”

As Dr. Grimsley attempted to pull it out, the tongs slipped and the rod slid down. He ducked behind the metal giant as it convulsed, sparking as blue light flashed from its back. The Geiger counter screamed with it. David stepped backward before the metal man-made one final movement and shot the rod out. The rod landed in the grass outside of the tennis court, sparking and glowing bright red. The grass around it was charred black.

“David?” Dr. Grimsley said, “Are you all right?”

“I’ll let you know if I make it to 40.” He said, helping him to his feet.

Dr. Grimsley sighed, “Let’s hope these suits do their work.”

They went around the fence to check in the rod. David held the Geiger counter to it. It was no more radioactive than the grass around it.

“Depleted,” Dr. Grimsley said, “There must be a short in the system.”

“It’s truly a marvel of engineering to extract 24 thousand years of energy in a few seconds,” David said, looking at the steaming rod, “We’re lucky the failsafe shot it out before it melted.”

“And the fact the machine could handle a short of such power is astonishing,” Dr.Grimsley said, picking it up with the tongs, “The thing should’ve blown the whole countryside to bits.”

After dunking the rod in a bucket of water, they set it back in the briefcase and examined the Metal Man. No damage could be seen.

“Let’s see how we screwed this up,” Dr. Grimsley said, gently touching the housing for the rod. It was already cool to the touch. He twisted it and pulled it up, revealing an intricate system of thin pipes rather than wires. He examined the pipes carefully. “Well, no wonder it went haywire. This is a complete mess.”

“What did I do wrong?” David asked, a little hurt.

“Well first off,” He said, “The channels are intersecting in the wrong places, causing the proton stream to get backed up all the way to the fuel source. The backup forced the machine to put all of its resources into keeping the reaction under control, ultimately failing and ejecting the rod.”

“How do you know so much about this?” David asked.

“Well,” He responded slowly, “I’ve known people who were in charge of dismantling the Metal Men after the war.”

“And they just told you how they work?” David asked, “You know things like that would be highly classified.”

“Well you seem to know almost as much as I do,” Dr. Grimsley said as removed a section of pipe with a small tool.

“I can assume how things work by their function and the transfer of energy,” He said, “That’s different from what you do. You KNOW things.”

Dr. Grimsley grunted, “Let’s just get this bastard working.”

“Dr. Grimsley,” He said, stepping closer, “ I won’t help until you tell me what you aren’t telling me.”

He sighed, set his tool down, and sat on the stool, suddenly aware of how sweaty it was in his suit, “Look, David, what I’m about to tell you is something I’m sworn under oath not to say.” He took a deep breath, “I am a native Tennochian. I served with them in the war until I came here to Pestaria after I met my wife. I helped the King defeat the Tennochians with my knowledge of their weapons in exchange for living here in peace with my wife. Believe me when I say I bear no loyalty to Tennoch and I have no ill intentions in giving life to this machine.”

David wearily sat on a bench across from him, “You defected from your own country…”

“To live with my wife, yes,” He said, “She was a spy, the first to ever successfully infiltrate Tennoch. Most people were too focused on their own affairs to notice her, but I could immediately tell she was not like any Tennochian I had ever seen. Her beauty and grace seemed to make her glow with life.”

“But Tennoch is the most prosperous country on the continent,” David said, “Their technology is like magic to us. Why leave it?”

Dr. Grimsley chuckled, “As powerful as Tennoch is, living in such a place is hardly a pleasure. That country was built long ago on the passions of a broken man who looked at people only as machines to make more machines. We were trained only to make things that helped the government, we had no art, no love, no marriage. Our food was made into a nutritious gruel used solely to fuel us. We were allowed to own only what we needed. It was a nation focused only on output and never its people.”

“Then why are you working on this machine?” David asked, “Doesn’t this risk everything you came here for?”

Dr. Grimsley rested his face in his hands, looking more defeated than before, “My wife passed away weeks ago. I tried every coping mechanism in the book and nothing has worked. I am not used to having time to grieve. In Tennoch our lives were our work. There was no ‘therapy’ or ‘mental health’ or ‘coping mechanisms,’” He looked up and David saw tears in his eyes, “and I don’t even know what this is. Crying, they call it, but they don’t tell me what it does or why I do it.” He bumped his mask trying to wipe the tears away, “I suppose that’s the price I pay for coming here. I feel every good thing but I also feel every bad thing. I didn’t even know how bad Tennoch was until I met Julie. To me, it was just life. And my life belonged to the state. I did not know I could have my own life. Until I met her. Now working is the only thing I know to do.” He remained silent for several minutes.

Unable to know what to do, but knowing he needed to do something, David stood up and hugged him. Confused but gracious, Dr. Grimsley accepted the hug.

After he gathered himself, Dr. Grimsley looked up at the Metal Man, “I suppose I should find a less dangerous way to grieve, but I know our work should not be for nothing. I will teach everything I know about Tennochian engineering,” He grinned, “Without the threat of capital punishment.”

“I would like that, sir,” David said, hiding his excitement.

“Good,” He said, closing the briefcase, “Once we pack this up, would you like to do something? What’s that thing that’s popular here, golf?”

David nodded, “It happens to be my favorite hobby.”

“Ah, perhaps you could teach me.”

“I would love to,” David said. The men left the machine and took the rods back up to the house, chatting as they went. The machine would not be activated again.

December 10th: The Striped Man

The Striped Man

This story contains a lot of gore, violence, and self-harm. Discretion is advised.


My name is Lucas Harper and this is my personal account and testimony to the United States military regarding the events of the 2024 war against China and the unsanctioned use of a deadly biological and chemical agent known as the Scourge. 

Due to how I was affected by the agent, much of my memory is a bit foggy, but the doctors and soldiers here can help me fill in the gaps.

I don’t remember how I was initially infected, but they tell me it was likely after they gassed Portland, the city I had been living in for work. Almost all of the coastal cities on the west had been gassed and their method was pretty straightforward. They fitted bombers with aquarium-sized tanks full of a substrate to keep the virus alive and sprayed it over the entire city. The fine droplets blanketed everything and within minutes, most of the city had been infected. From there, they say I must have fled into the countryside.

The earliest moment I could remember was seeing through the haze of blood in my eyes as I sat on top of the rancher’s corpse, chewing into the soft flesh of his arm. His face was brutalized. Nothing more than meat and bone left. With a distant sensation, I was aware that my stomach was full, yet my body continued to eat as if it would never eat again. Blood was smeared over my face and the remaining tatters of my shirt.

A scream pulled my attention away from my meal. It was a girl, no older than five, with an expression of terror I had never seen on a child before. 

A Pavlovian response made my mouth drool and pleasure washed over my aching body. Instinctively, I lunged toward the girl in a mad frenzy. Instead of running, she crumpled into a ball as I got close. Don’t you touch her, a part of my mind said and for a moment, I was able to think for myself again.

Despite the unnatural hunger, fever chills, and pain, I stopped before the girl. I began to process what I had done. I killed a man, ate part of him, and then I wanted to eat a five-year-old girl. I remembered thinking she looked a lot like my niece. Hot tears of blood ran down my face as I felt my lucidity slip. I knew I needed to resist with everything I had to keep myself from hurting this child, so I directed my animalistic rage towards a rock. Limbs flailing, my body threw itself at it like a rabid dog. I grabbed it and began slamming it against my other arm. With every strike, the pain cleared my mind a little more.

After the rock shattered in my hand, I looked for the girl. Thankfully, she was gone. My conscious mind cherished the success while my body agonized over the escaped prey. A guttural howl tore through my throat. I liked to think it was my way of cheering for another life spared.

I wandered in the rancher’s field, passing several corpses of horses with their guts torn out. I didn’t remember if I had done that, but my body seemed to only care for mobile prey.

I found myself stumbling toward the barn. I believe it was because, in my mental haze, I thought I could escape the fever chills in there.

I attempted to rest, but the restlessness in my legs kept them moving on their own. As I paced the length of the barn, I kept my mind awake. I cried again. It came out as a prolonged, incoherent howl. I was aware of what I had become and I hated myself for it. I found a nail gun in the barn with the air still attached and blasted a nail into my finger. More clarity came with the pain. I wrenched my finger out of the softwood and noticed that it looked like a claw.

That’s when I was lucid enough to make a decision. I could’ve put a nail in my head and prevented myself from hurting anyone ever again but I knew I had a responsibility. I knew that for every person who could resist like me, there would be a thousand that couldn’t. I needed to make sure no other girl had to watch a family member get torn apart by some monster.

I went ahead and nailed the rest of my fingers, enjoying every bit of it. I felt like I wasn’t nailing my own hand, but the hand of the monster I had turned into. I found some work gloves and put them on over my nails, keeping them firmly lodged into my fingers. As I left the barn, I vowed to myself that I would kill myself if I ever lost control.

I wandered the countryside, constantly fighting for consciousness. Every inch felt like a mile, but I never stopped fighting. Much of this was left in a haze, but I remember the agony clearly.

I eventually ended up in a city where small groups of the infected wandered. They never attacked me, even if I touched them. I even remember howling at one in the face but it stared past me with thoughtless eyes.

As I wandered the streets, I heard a scream followed by the growls of the infected. I did not have to force myself to charge in that direction. 

When I got there, I saw a kid climbing a fence in an alley with a woman and a man on the other side. The kid was panicking, kicking at the infected that was clawing at his feet. My brain was focused on the kid but at the last second, I redirected my attention toward the infected. I picked it up by the waist and it flailed its arms as I threw it to the ground. With all the hate I could muster, I clawed at its face with the nails in my fingers. When it continued to struggle, I resorted to beating its head against the concrete with my fists. I was never strong enough to do that before, but I guess the virus can do strange things to your body.

After it stopped moving, I stood up to face the family, resisting every urge to attack. The boy had made it over.

“Are you a survivor?” The woman asked.

I made the mistake of looking at her face. Primal anger rose in me but before I could attack, I clawed at my forearm and howled into the sky. That seemed like enough of an answer so they left. I suppose that’s when I became the Striped Man, because every time I lost control, I cut myself, leaving stripes of red over my arms. 

People started to remember me, even cheering when I came to help. One time, a man asked me how I stay in control. Of course, I was never lucid enough to speak, but If I could’ve answered him, I would say that it’s like balancing on a knife’s edge. No, like doing yoga on a knife’s edge. I suppose what kept me going was understanding what was at stake. Knowing that letting myself slip even a little bit could mean countless deaths stayed in the back of my mind, coming up only when I needed to resist.

I’m happy to say I never hurt anyone who wasn’t already infected. Despite how hard it was, I was always able to resist at the last moment. I was always brutal to the infected, though. I suppose it’s because I projected the disgust and hate I had toward what I had become onto them.

Anyway, I more or less bounced from rescuing one survivor group to another, never seeking them out but always willing to help. I’m not sure how long that was, but I’m sure you could do the math.

One day, I remember hearing a helicopter landing in the city. It was loud enough that most of the infected had run toward it. I fell in line for a bit before I gained enough control to kill a few. As I got closer, I saw several survivors being loaded onto the helicopter. With my failing vision, I saw that the last one was the girl I saw at the ranch. 

The memory made me more lucid than ever and I made my second decision since being infected. I decided that I would kill all of the infected before they could even get close to the girl. In a howling rage, I tore through the horde, soaking my body in blood. I moved faster than I had ever before. I felt my tendons snapping in spasms as I strained my body to the breaking point. 

At some point, I found a piece of rebar and was cracking skulls with it. Gradually, I began to slow the horde as they fell.

One of them was ahead of the rest and I charged after it. I pushed it away from the helicopter and to my surprise, it turned toward me.

Despite being clearly infected, the soldier stared down at me with the same frenzy I had seen many times before. I lunged at it but it forced me to the ground with a blood-stained glove. I clawed at it relentlessly but its bulletproof vest was too tough and tore out some of my nails. The soldier started to hit my head against the ground until everything became fuzzy. The soldier raised its fists for one last hit before a bullet split its head open. 

I would’ve been happy if I had died right there, but maybe God had other plans. From that point, I was told that someone from the helicopter picked me up, thinking I was a survivor. I’m glad we have the cure now because otherwise, I would’ve infected everyone on that helicopter.

I hope that this information can be used in some meaningful way because I don’t think I will live much longer. I’ve taken the cure and they’ve treated me for most of the wounds on my body, but being infected for as long as I have has put a toll on my body.

I’m not sure how I’ll be honored for this but I hope I am not awarded as some kind of hero, I feel like that would be ignoring the man I killed. But I hope I’ve redeemed myself in some way.

August 31st: The Meadow

The Meadow

The man left through the back door of his house. He picked up a folding chair that was resting on the porch railing and carried it off toward the forest. He held a camera in his other hand. This time he was going to prove that he wasn’t crazy.

For the past year after he bought the house, he visited a certain meadow every day and sat facing it for hours. Sometimes he would see something incredible, impossible, and strange. Other times he would see nothing at all.

He held tight onto his camera as if it would suddenly disappear if he weren’t careful. The path he followed, worn by his frequent trips, wound upward through the dense trees. Eventually, the slope leveled off into a clearing with tall grass and berry bushes. The sound of cicadas rang in his ears, almost drowning out the sound of the small creek that ran through the meadow.

He remembered the first time he found the meadow. It was after a long week of work and he had felt bored with life, so he went for a hike through the forest behind his new place. It was more of a wandering than a hike as he stumbled through the trees, thinking about his troubles. He was never sure of what to make of life. It seemed like whatever he did with it, it never seemed right. Not that he was unhappy with the life he was given, he was just generally unsatisfied.

In his thoughts, he crossed over the meadow. As he gazed at the ground, a movement entered his vision. It took a second to focus on it, but he could see it was a bubble, drifting lightly in the wind. He looked around, trying to find who made it, but he was completely alone. He grumbled to himself, assuming it was some phenomenon that had to do with the creek and kept walking.

A minute later, another bubble passed his line of sight. This time it was big enough that its form wobbled as it moved. He stopped and several smaller bubbles followed it. He looked in the direction they came and saw a massive wave of bubbles, weaving in between trees and rising with every gust of wind. He suddenly forgot whatever he was thinking about as the bubbles became a thick cloud around him.

He knew he had to figure out what had created the bubbles, and for the rest of the day, he sat in the meadow, trying to decipher what had happened. It scared him to realize that the world didn’t work the way he thought it did. But it also fascinated him.

He went into the forest every day since, and nearly every time he saw something different.

He set his camera bag at his side and waited, watching. For a moment he was worried that nothing would happen. It seemed to make sense that the day he brought the camera would be the day the meadow stayed quiet.

He remained patient, however, and after nearly an hour something finally happened.

A deer bounded into the meadow without noticing him and started tugging on the grass facing away from him. He reached for the camera, thinking that if he couldn’t get a picture of something weird, he would at least get a picture of a deer.

As he brought the camera to his eye, the deer stiffened and in a slow, robotic movement, lifted its head and started to turn towards him. As he saw more of the deer’s face, he noticed that it was packed with so many teeth that it couldn’t properly close its mouth.

Poor thing, He thought, thinking it had some kind of tumor or deformity that caused its teeth to grow out of control.

The deer pointed its teeth directly at him and the man saw its lips start to curl back, revealing more teeth. A chill went down his spine as the deer’s mouth started folding over its face, pulling endless rows of teeth out of its mouth. The deer must have been about 30 yards away, but he suddenly felt like he was getting closer and eventually it seemed like the teeth took up his entire vision. Panic gripped him and it seemed like a crushing weight came over him, squeezing around every muscle in his body. It felt almost like…

Like teeth.

A small glimmer of reason reached through the fear and he remembered the camera in his hands. He pressed down hard on the shutter button and with a flash, it all went away. The deer, with a normal set of teeth, bounded away.

Without looking at the picture he took, he shoved the camera back in its bag. He swiped the cold sweat away from his forehead. The whole experience was a grim reminder that not everything that happens in the meadow is pleasant. He started back toward his house, trying to shake the image from his mind and remind himself that he was safe.

As soon as he got home, he felt calm again. As if it never happened. He sat on the couch and pulled the camera out. With a deep breath, he opened the picture. Just as he feared, the image only showed a normal deer.

So that settles it. I am crazy. He thought.

But it still didn’t make sense. He never saw anything weird outside of the meadow and always behaved rationally.

Gas, He thought with a sudden revelation. There must’ve been some kind of ancient underground gas pocket that was leaking into the meadow and causing him to hallucinate. Even the bubbles he saw before could have bubbled up from the releasing gas.

The idea brought him relief. He figured out what the deal with the meadow was and he proved he wasn’t crazy all in one day.

His eyes settled on a painting on the wall which depicted a large squid hovering above the ground in a forest clearing. He stood up and looked closer. He couldn’t believe it, the previous owner of his house must have been to the meadow too and painted it.

Maybe I could paint it, too. Some part of him said. He wasn’t much of an artist and he hadn’t done any kind of painting since he was a child, but the urge was overwhelming.

The next day, he went to a crafts store. Rows of supplies towered over him as he searched in vain for some paints. Racks were filled with colored tubes that reminded him of toothpaste while others held watercolor kits and large canvases. It was all overwhelming.

“Can I help you with anything?” a young man asked as he came down the aisle, he had brown curly hair and looked to be in high school.

“Uh yeah,” He said, “I’m looking for something for a beginner, Any ideas?”

The kid grinned, “Right this way.”

He led him down the aisle a little further and handed him a watercolor kit, “This is what I used when I started. You just gotta have a cup of water to mix with the paint.”

“You’re a painter?” The man asked,

“I paint animals,” He said, “what are you thinking of painting?”

He thought for a moment, “Surrealism I suppose.”

He left the store with an easel, cheap canvas, and the kit, still wondering why he even bothered. He figured out the mystery of the meadow but still wanted to capture it somehow.

Arriving home, he went straight through the house, stopping only to fill a plastic cup of water and grab a baseball hat. He hauled himself up the hill with the easel on his shoulder, the canvas in his right hand, and the watercolor kit in his teeth. He held the cup in his hand above the easel and had to move carefully to not spill on his head.

When he made it to the meadow, he set his stuff haphazardly on the ground by the folding chair and sat. He took a moment to regain his breath and watched the god rays shine through the trees before setting up the easel. He put up the canvas and opened the watercolor kit, making sure he could see the meadow past the canvas. 

Then he waited. He realized that he rarely gets the chance to do nothing in his regular life, and the silence seemed strange to him. To have no deadline or burden other than to watch the meadow allowed him to be alone with his thoughts. Bugs danced above the tall grass as he wet his brush again, anticipating when something would appear.

But nothing did. The blank canvas stared back at him from under his view of the meadow, beaconing for some muse to wander into the meadow so it could validate its existence. The man was patient because that’s what he knew about the meadow. It seemed to want to break the observer’s spirit by only revealing its wonders at the very last moment.

As the day waned, the beaconing of the canvas grew too strong. He had to paint something. He dipped the brush into the blue paint slot in the watercolor kit and began.

Watching the sun’s rays through the trees reminded him of how it looks under the ocean when the sun breaks through the surface cutting into the deep and fading into darkness. He remembered seeing it when he would visit his family in Florida. They were big into scuba diving and were the first to teach him. He loved watching fish swarm through the pillars of light as they rose to the surface. His family would make the trip every spring and he always anticipated it.

As he was lost in his thoughts, his painting took on life. He painted schools of fish surrounding a whale as it aimed upward, about to breach past the treetops. Bubbles and a blue haze covered the scene, but it all remained in the meadow.

When his attention returned, he stepped back from the painting, knocking over his chair.

It was better than anything he ever created with his own two hands, despite not painting for most of his life. He achieved lighting and depth using techniques he never learned.

He smiled, looking back at the meadow before packing up his things again. The only time the meadow never showed was the only time he was ever satisfied.

As he started to go back to the house, he heard a strange sound behind him.

There in the middle of the meadow, a large yellow squid appeared. Its tentacles reached out, grabbing nearby trees as it floated to the sky. Then he remembered the painting in the house, the one that inspired him to do this. It was the same squid.

He finally understood what the meadow was, but he needed to prove his theory.

Over the next few weeks, he visited the meadow, recording what he saw. One day, after he returned from work, he arrived at the meadow later than usual. Just like before, light beams pierced through the trees and lit up the tall grass.

As he waited, the stream gradually became louder and water spilled over its grassy banks. He resisted panicking as he watched the water rise, fearing it would be a flood. But the water rose much higher than a flood, rising above both him and his chair. He trusted the meadow, however, and did not tread water as it rose to the treetops. In the deep blue water, schools of fish swarmed past him and bubbles rose from the grasses below. He floated several feet above the ground but felt no urge to gasp for air.

Then he heard a loud groan and squeal that shook his chest and he knew his theory was correct.

The whale swooped into the meadow and breached the surface above, crashing into the water again with a boom.

He never learned the true secret of the meadow, if anything, what he learned made the meadow make even less sense. But now he was satisfied.

August 12th: The Light, Part II

This is the continuation of an older story, you can read the old one here: July 21: The Light

The Light, Part II

It was mid-May before the land showed signs of spring and the sun brought warmth again. Nature seemed to take a sigh of relief as the snow melted. The Tótason family felt that life was getting easier again since they had survived the winter. Nóri had picked up the habit of going on long walks into the forest with her bow after her chores were done. Her father hated the idea of it, but he knew it was important for her to understand how to live in the forest alone. One afternoon she left after helping Marísa make lunch for the kids. 

“Nóri, you need to keep your Moose from wrecking his fence,” Morgan said as she walked by, attempting to repair it.

“He can’t help it,” she said, “his antlers are growing in and he feels them itch.”

“Whatever the case is,” he said, taking his tools inside, “you’re fixing it next time.”

“I promise,” she said, “I’ll see you tonight.”

Nóri turned north into the forest, sticking close to the trees to stay out of the wet snow. She had an arrow notched in her bow already, just in case. She hadn’t seen anything of the creatures she fought last winter, which she and her family now call the Myrkur. 

She wandered through a small wooded valley before taking a break to gather some small brown mushrooms which grew at the base of a nearby tree. It was a rare find, especially for how early it was in the season. 

The sound of a branch snapping alerted her, but she did not move. She notched her arrow again, determining how far away the noise was before bolting upright and aiming her bow.

Out from behind a tree; a little girl peeked.

Noomi?” Nóri said to her little sister, “What are you doing out here?”

“I wanted to see where you go every day,” she said as Nóri put her bow down, “are you practicing your magic?

She said that word with all the wonder a kid can have. Nóri’s siblings weren’t supposed to know she had her abilities, but it’s hard to hide a secret from your family when you live in a small cabin in the woods together.

“Don’t call it that,” Nóri said, “and it’s not safe for you to be out here.”

Noomi hugged her knees, “can I see just a little please?”

Nóri sighed, realizing that she hardly ever spends time with her siblings one-on-one.

“Okay, I’ll show you a little bit but I’m taking you straight home after, okay?” She said, “Before Mother starts to worry.”

“Okay.”

Nóri led her up a hill that offered a view of the valley. A small column of smoke pinpointed the cabin and the glint of the town’s church steeple could be seen in the valley beyond. In the clearing, a large stone stood. Lichen covered all but the front, where it was chipped.

“Alright, stay behind me, Noomi.” She said, raising her hand out towards the boulder, using her other arm to stabilize it.

She took a deep breath and focused on the rock’s bare patch, imagining she was holding a bow instead. Every detail of the stone grew and the world around her melted away.

Release… 

A flash of light, barely visible in the daytime, shot out from her hand and struck the boulder. When the snow cleared another piece had been chipped.

Noomi squealed in excitement, “Again! Again!”

“No, Noomi, we have to get you home,” Nóri said.

When they got to the cabin, the sun was beginning to set.

The doors burst open before they could knock.

Noomi,” Marísa said, jumping out to hug her, “where did you go?”

“We’re sorry, Mother,” Nóri said, “She came out to join me for my hike.”

“You could have at least left a note, you wretched child,” She said with only love and relief, still hugging her.

When they got inside, the table was already set, with Morgan sitting silently at the end and a pile of fish in the center. Her other siblings were already fighting over who gets the biggest. 

Nóri and Noomi sat together as their mother joined them. One of the boys turned to Noomi.

“Did you run off again, Noomi?” He said, “Did one of your imaginary friends get lost?”

“Shut up, Elias,” she said with all the fury she could muster.

“He’s just jealous you got to skip out on sweeping,” the older boy said, peeling the skin off his fish, “So he had to instead.”

“Well I didn’t see you do any chores,” Elias mumbled, “Just going off into the woods with Dad.”

“Liam’s starting to learn how to hunt, just like Nóri,” Marísa said, “You should be careful what you say because pretty soon he’ll be filling your plate.”

“I wanna hunt,” Elias said, toying with his food.

“You’ll get your chance, Elias,” a girl with glittering eyes said.

After dinner, the kids got in their night clothes.

“Nóri, can I have the one by the window?” Noomi asked as they chose their bunks.

“Sure, if your brothers are okay with it.”

Elias shrugged, “That one gets too cold anyway.”

Nóri chose the bed across from Noomi and pulled the furs over her head. After the candles were put out and the kids began to fall asleep, Noomi looked over to see Nóri was still awake.

“Thanks for letting me see your magic,” She whispered.

“Shhh,” Nóri said, “that’s going to be our little secret, you and me okay?”

Noomi smiled, “You and me.”

Nóri woke to several sounds at once. Sounds of crashing, screaming, and slithering filled the once-quiet cabin as she tried to get up and understand what was happening. When she looked up, she saw the remains of the window spread across the floor with Morgan standing above Noomi’s empty bed with a blood-soaked hatchet, breathing heavily. 

“Dad?” She asked.

He took a deep breath and shuddered, “Get me my damn shotgun.”

He sprang into action, storming to the front and loading his bags. All the kids stood frozen as Marísa approached Morgan and gently whispered to him.

Like a beast being tamed, Morgan relaxed. He seemed smaller.

“Nóri,” he said, kneeling in front of her, “I don’t want you to come, but–”

“I’ll get her, Dad,” Nóri said, “I’ll bring her home.”

He nodded and smiled with thick tears in his eyes.

Liam stepped up, “Me too, Dad.”

“No Liam,” he said, “you’re not ready. You must stay here and hunt for your siblings.”

“But–”

“Son,” He said, grabbing his shoulders, “a man helps where he is needed. Not for glory or heroism, but for the joy of protecting those he loves. Do you understand?”

“Yes, Father.”

“Let’s go, Nóri,” He said, standing up, “and take your moose, maybe he’ll come in handy.”

They packed tents, snowshoes, and some food. They fashioned a simple saddle for the moose and attached the extra bags. He snorted and groaned.

“I know, Buddy,” Nóri said, “It’ll take some getting used to.”

They led Buddy out of the corral.

“It was Myrkur, wasn’t it?” she asked.

“I don’t know. It was big, and I cut one of its… “ he paused, thinking of a proper word, “limbs I think.”

“It must have a blood trail, then.” She said, “Let’s find it.”

They led the moose to the other side of the house and found large drag marks coming from the window. Thick, tar-like blood made steaming holes in the snow. In the early morning light, they could see the trail wander beyond the next hill.

“It’s going into the mountains in the north,” Morgan said and looked back at the broken window, “we better get moving.”

They followed the trail into the forest. It didn’t take long before Nóri had passed the furthest point she had traveled on her own and the sun had risen far into the sky. She sensed Buddy’s anxiety as he pushed through the snow on a sudden journey longer than anything he’d been on since he was born. The woods became thicker as the slope grew steeper.

They kept their path under the trees to keep out of the snow as much as possible. Nóri began to sweat under her jacket as Morgan pushed forward, still carrying his shotgun.

“Dad,” Nóri said, adjusting the strap on her quiver, “we should take a quick break. We’ll burn out if we keep going at this pace.”

He remained silent as he trudged on.

He sighed, “Let’s at least make it to the top.”

Before long, the forest opened up into a large, flat meadow. It was empty except for a small shack and a few boulders. Morgan sighed and set his shotgun in the holster attached to Buddy. 

“I’ll get the food out for us,” He said, “find some grass for Buddy, but don’t go too far.”

As he rummaged through the bags, Nóri went for the shack. By some of the boulders, blades of long, yellow grass stuck out.

As she collected them, she neared the shed, wondering what it had been used for. Perhaps it was storage for long hunting trips or a prospector’s cabin, but it looked largely abandoned. Holes in the roof from past storms allowed snow to pile in and rot it from the inside. She pushed open the door which barely hung onto its hinges. At the movement, snow sprinkled from the gaps in the roof.

She notched an arrow and kept it taught as she crept in. The room was full of old saddles, broken farm tools, and rusted traps. Most of what had been useful was already taken.

A floorboard creaked in the corner and she drew her bow, feeling the adrenaline snap her into focus. All she saw was a large wooden mannequin with rusted joints sitting against the far wall. She stepped closer, still convinced she heard something.

The mannequin jerked suddenly and a strange dark substance wrapped itself around its head. With a gurgle, the substance split open and revealed a row of human teeth. The mouth coughed and cackled as the mannequin stood up with a creak.

“Nooori,” It said, stumbling forward, each garbled word becoming more clear, “What a beautiful name. Nóri.”

She let the arrow fly, cracking the wood of the mannequin’s chest.

It cackled, “Why didn’t you use your power, Nóri? You must be getting stronger; why use human weapons?”

“Shut up,” She said, shooting another arrow, this time forcing it to take a step back.

“Come play in the mountains with me, Nóri,” It said, its mouth creased into a grin, “I can’t wait to show you what I can do. I’ve gotten so much stronger.”

“I said shut up.” She said, and with a flash of light, the mannequin crashed through the shed’s wall, scattering wood and dust across the snow.

Her vision wobbled as she struggled to stay upright, reeling from using her power. 

“Nóri?” Morgan said as he pushed through the door and steadied her, “What happened?”

“It was a Myrkur,” she said, looking at the mannequin, “I think.”

They went out to examine it as black liquid oozed out of its mouth and its mouth seemed to melt away from the wood.

“It looks like it wanted to send you a message,” He said, “What did it say?”

“Nothing important.”

“Well we should get moving,” He said, looking uneasily at the clouds, “A storm’s coming soon.”

They found some horse cakes in the shed and fed them to Buddy. They continued following the trail that continued winding into the mountains. The meadow was in a small valley that ended in a mountain pass.

But it started to snow.

It started as a flurry of large snowflakes, then the wind began to pick up.

“We’d better hurry,” Morgan said, “we don’t want to lose the trail.”

They got some thicker clothes and snowshoes from Buddy’s saddle, but the snowshoes did little to help since the snow was too soft. 

When the blizzard was at full force, Morgan growled, “We should find some tree cover soon, before we get buried.”

Buddy walked on Nóri’s other side, upwind from her to block the onslaught of snow.

“Thanks, Buddy,” She said, patting him on the neck, “We’ll get you back home soon.”

“I see something up ahead,” Morgan said, staring into the white haze. He pulled out his shotgun.

“I can’t see anything,” Nóri said but began to see a distant glow.

“Is someone there?” A muffled voice ahead said.

“Shh” Morgan said, crouching down and motioning for Nóri to do the same.

The glow became brighter and a silhouette of a man came into view.

“Morgan is that you?” He said, “Why in hell are you out here with a shotgun and a moose?”

“Einar?” Morgan said, “I figured I’d run into you at some point.”

The old man chuckled, stepping into view, “You know me, I’m always around.”

The man had a beard caked in snow and a fur hat that covered his eyes. He held an ancient lantern, the source of the glow. On his back was a large bag with a hunting rifle sticking out.

“Well as much as I would love to stand and chit-chat in the snow,” He said, “We should head back to my cabin and warm up.”

Morgan hesitated for a moment, but it was clear that they would only risk being lost in the blizzard. Einar led them through the snow and before long, trees began to emerge from the white.

Nóri wasn’t sure how he was able to navigate without being able to see much of anything but didn’t question it.

The cabin came into view, the warm glow from the porch lighting up the snow.

“Well here you have it,” He said, “Morgan, you go on in and warm yourself. I’ll take your kid and show the moose where the barn is.”

“Thanks, Einar.” He said.

As the man lead Nóri and Buddy behind the cabin, she wondered who the man is. It’s clear that her father trusts him enough to leave her alone with him.

“What’s your name, kid?” He said.

“Nóri,” She said.

“Now why’s a young girl like you got a moose following you around?” He said, “ I can tell he likes ya.”

“His name is Buddy and we found him while we were hunting.”

He nodded, “He thinks you’re his momma.”

They got to the barn and he opened the door. A horse snorted a greeting and Nóri led Buddy into the stall next to it.

“Looks like they’re friends already,” He said, “His name is Vindur.”

Nóri gave a hay cake to each of them. She heard a whine from the corner and looked to see a husky with a face peppered with gray hair approaching her.

“Ah, and that’s Fenrir,” He said as Nóri knelt, “He may be as old as I am.”

“It’s been a while since I’ve met a dog,” she said, holding his chin and rubbing his head. His tail shook lightly.

They went back to the cabin and Nóri shook the snow off her furs on the porch but Einar went straight through the door. She followed and inside there was a large living room with animal heads littering the walls and furs covering the ground. It looked messy yet cozy. Morgan sat in a cushioned chair, leaning forward and staring into the fire, across from him Einar sat, taking off his coat and spilling snow onto the chair. Nóri came and sat on the couch across from the fire.

“Morgan?” Einar said, lighting a pipe, “You wanna tell me why the blazes you’re all the way out here?”

“Hunting.” 

“Bullshit,” He said, “You would never take one of your kids so far past your territory in the dead of night.”

“How do you two know each other?” Nóri asked, attempting to de-escalate.

“I’ve run into him a couple times while hunting,” Morgan said.

Einar took off his hat, revealing a head of thin gray hair and pale eyes, “Yeah, he’s bought some of my best furs.” 

“Are you… blind?” Nori asked.

“Hehe aye,” He said, grinning with an incomplete set of teeth. “I can see just fine, though. Even better than most.”

“Einar’s a mystic of sorts,” Morgan sighed, “like a medicine man. Nothing he does makes sense.”

“Something tells me you’re something of the sort too, Nori,” He said, winking.

Morgan glared at Einar.

“Hey, who do you think I would tell?” He said, raising his hands defensively, “The birds? Hehehe.”

“You know what I am?” Nóri asked excitedly.

“No,” he said, “I just know you got the gift.”

Morgan sighed, “She’s what you’d call a Sun Child, born under an eclipse.”

Einar’s eyes widened, “By Odin’s beard!”

“Yes, and the Moon Child, who we call the Myrkur, took one of my kids,” Morgan said, looking old and tired, “We came to track it down.”

“My! I understand your haste now,” Einar said, leaning back and stroking his beard, “I hope I can help in some way.”

“You’ve done enough already,” Morgan said, “We’ll go out and kill it tomorrow morning.”

“Oh, I don’t think that’s such a good idea,” Einar said.

“Why not?” Morgan said, “I’ve wounded it already.”

“From what I know,” He said, “It’s likely that killing the Moon Child will also kill the Sun Child.”

“How do you know this?” Morgan said, “How can you be sure?”

He shrugged, “I’ve picked up a lot of reading material over time and much of the older stuff mentions this. Old civilizations known to put special significance over the sun and moon write prophecies about children born during an eclipse. Some are similar enough for me to find consistency across many accounts. One consistency mentions that the moon and sun child are bound to die together. Can’t be totally sure, but I don’t think you’d want to risk it.”

“Did you say prophecy?” Nóri asked, “I thought what I had was a curse.”

Einar nodded, “Prophecies can look like curses, kid, but a curse has to be cast by someone and can be broken. Prophecies are only recordings of future events. Sadly, what’s happened to you is just a supernatural occurrence.”

“Could the prophecy be a recording of a curse?”

“Well I suppose it could,” He said, “But in your case, it would have to have been done a long time ago by someone very powerful.”

“We’re losing track,” Morgan said, “If we can’t kill it, what do we do?”

Einar grinned, “Follow me.”

He led them to a room in the back of the cabin. The walls were lined with bookshelves and the large table in the center was piled with maps, scrolls, and other items. He knelt before a chest in the corner and opened it.

“I apologize for the mess,” He said, rifling through the items in the chest, “I don’t usually show folks this part of the house.”

After a few minutes of searching through jars, daggers, and scrolls, he pulled out a leather pouch. From it, he handed Nóri a white, glassy stone. 

“These are Solites,” He said, “They’re known for having mystical properties.”

In Nóri’s hand, it felt as light as air, and when she held it up to the light, it shone brightly.

“They should harm the Moon Child,” Einar said, “But they won’t kill.”

Morgan picked one up and frowned, “You want us to fight a monster with rocks?”

“How do we use them?” Nóri asked.

“Hehe, the same way you use any rock I suppose,” Einar said, “You can throw them or swing them. Even the sight of one should hurt the moon child. I know it lacks the elegance of any weapon, but they seem to work just as you would need them.”

“Thanks, Einar,” Morgan said, “Anything helps.”

“Anyhow,” He said, shutting the chest and handing Nóri the sack, “I bet you’re hungry, I’ll make a quick stew and get your beds ready.”

Einar didn’t have a guest bedroom, so Morgan insisted on giving Nóri the couch while he would sleep on the floor. Einar gave him as many furs and pelts as he needed,

“I’m okay, really,” He said, “I’m used to sleeping on the ground.”

After eating, Nóri lay on the couch, setting her bow and quiver on the ground below her. She slept in her boots and jacket, too tired and anxious to take them off. Sleep did not find her until late at night because she was afraid of tomorrow.

The next day, they woke up before sunrise. Morgan got their stuff together while Nóri went out to feed Buddy and pet Fenrir one more time. He greeted her with one tired lick before returning to his kennel. Buddy seemed to be in a better mood since yesterday. Groaning in greeting as she led him out.

On the front porch, Einar stood talking to Morgan.

“Are you ready?” He said to Nóri.

“I suppose.”

“Nóri,” Einar said, walking down the steps and looking her in the eyes, “Your abilities are a part of something much greater than you realize and the Moon Child will be a part of you until the end. It will get stronger as you get stronger. You need to find a way to live with that.”

They left as the sun began to rise, heading toward the mountains. Finding the trail was much harder since the snowstorm covered the monster’s tracks. Morgan squinted up at the trees, searching for broken branches or other signs. There were still small pits in the snow where the creature bled. 

“It should have stopped bleeding ages ago,” He said, “It wants us to follow.”

Fog began to cover their path while the sun was still low. Trees became less frequent. Rocks and boulders began to stick out from the snow.

“I’ve heard stories,” Morgan began, “Of places where witches went to the mountains to practice their magic.”

Some boulders looked like pillars and spikes as they emerged from the fog.

“Hunters nearby would hear the howls of wolves,” He said, “only they didn’t sound right, they were pitchy and kept people awake at night. Sometimes they didn’t sound like wolves at all.”

“Dad,” Nóri said, “why are you telling me this?”

“I visited one once and the feeling it gave me,” He said, “Was very similar to this.”

The trail led them down into a small valley. Buddy began pulling on the reigns, groaning.

“Shh,” She said, notching an arrow, “I think we’re close.”

“Leave Buddy here,” Morgan said, “he’ll find you once we get back.”

Nóri dropped the reigns and went down toward the valley, Buddy snorted and bucked a little in protest.

As they descended, the fog became unnaturally thick. Morgan loaded extra shells and tied an axe to his waist.

A scream echoed through the valley and Nóri darted deeper into the fog.

“Nóri, wait,” Morgan called before she disappeared from sight. He ran to follow her before something knocked him to the ground.

“Noomi,” Nóri called. The shadow of the mountain blocked the sun and the fog grew more threatening.

In the clearing, eight pillars of stone surrounded the body of a young girl, and beyond a large figure loomed.

“Noomi!” she said, running to her. Noomi was lying on a large stone, staring into the sky with ink-filled eyes. Her veins were thick black cords and her breath shuddered.

“FAMILY,” A wheezing voice boomed, and Nóri was hit with a dark limb, knocking her and her bow away, “FAMILY FAMILY FAMILY.”

The cackling monster stepped into view with large spiny pillars for legs. From its neck, large tentacles dragged through the snow, hanging beneath fierce mandibles that snapped as it spoke.

“When will Nóri learn?” It said, and with a stomp, crushed her bow, “When will she learn what I learned?”

As Nóri scrambled away, it reached out with a tentacle that extended a claw, dripping with black ink.

Before it could touch her, many of its tentacles exploded. It shrieked and stumbled back, snapping its jaw in anger.

“Get away,” Morgan said, stumbling toward it with his shotgun held limply in his hands. His veins were dark streaks and a hole pierced his coat, “Get…”

He coughed and dropped to his knees, “Nóri…”

The monster stalked toward him with pleasure and malice.

“Leave him alone!” Nóri took one of the stones and threw it at the monster. The rock flashed as soon as it left the bag and burned as it touched its skin. 

When her vision returned, the monster was gone.

“Nóri’s family is hurt,” It said with a quiver of anger, “But she still uses her rocks and arrows. When will she use her power? She should play with her brother for real.”

Runes on the pillars appeared and blue fire ignited the top of each.

“Soon Nóri will HAVE to play.” It said, charging out of the fog, seizing her by the neck, and pinning her against a boulder. Tendrils tightened around her neck and she felt pressure in her head, “PLAY PLAY PLAY–”

“Why?” She said, “Why do you have to hurt my family?”

It paused, glaring at her with dark eyes before choking her more.

As her vision began to fade, she was suddenly plunged into the snow, when she got up, she saw Buddy with black blood on his antlers. The monster lay on a pile of stones from a collapsed pillar. The blue fire was extinguished with a spray of sparks.

“No no,” It said standing up, “We play ALONE.”

Buddy ran towards Nóri and scooped her up with his antlers. She clung to the saddle. He picked up speed as soon as she was on. He charged to the valley’s exit.

“No, Buddy,” she said, “ We have to save them.”

He groaned and circled around, charging back into the fog. Nóri steadied herself on his back, grabbing another solite.

Buddy bolted past the monster as Nóri threw the stone at its jaw.

“No fair,” It growled, “Nóri’s not playing fair.”

As she pulled out the last stone, she fired a bolt of light with her other hand that exploded against its back. She felt herself grow dizzy before she touched the stone and regained her focus.

As Buddy came back around, she jumped off and walked toward the monster, firing light with one hand and holding the stone in the other. Chunks of the monster were blasted away as it cried. The sun finally rose above the mountain and the fog started to lift.

She stopped, still holding the stone as the creature whimpered, crawling away. The monster now looked like a boy about her age.

“What kind of trick is this?” Nóri said, “Why do you look like that?”

“You drained my power,” The boy said, “I can’t look any other way.”

He looked down at his black-stained hands, “But I’ve never had this form before.”

“You’re lying.”

“No,” He said, standing up, “I’ve never felt so awake.”

He walked towards Noomi. 

“Take another step and I’ll kill you,” Nóri said, light blossomed in her hand, “I won’t care if it kills me too.”

“Relax,” He said, crouching down and touching her chest, “I’m withdrawing the poison, but it should take her some time to recover. The sun should help.”

“Why?” Nóri said, putting her arm down.

“I don’t know,” He said, moving over to Morgan, “I think I’ve been a monster for a long time and my mind was twisted, but now I understand. I’m your twin brother. We were born at the same time but I know that you can never call me family again. Not after what I’ve done.

“I hope someday you can forgive me,” He grabbed a coat from Buddy’s saddle, “But until then I’m going far away so I never hurt your family again. Maybe I’ll find a new purpose there.”

He wandered barefoot out of the valley as Nóri helped Morgan and Noomi recover.

“What happened?” Morgan said as he sat on a warm rock, holding Noomi.

“I’ll explain later,” She said, looking into the sun, “I don’t think I fully understand yet.”

“Where did it go?” He asked, “I see a lot of blood, but no trail.”

“I’m not sure,” she said, turning to him, “But It won’t hunt us anymore.”

Noomi began to open her eyes, “Dad?”

“Good morning, sunshine,” He said, “let’s get you home.”

August 1st: The Asset

I have begun writing continuations to some of my stories. However, since The Asset was so short the first time around, I decided to add the original to this one so you don’t have to worry about missing a thing.

The Asset

The agent pulled up to the massive gate and pressed the buzzer. He drummed his fingers on the steering wheel as he waited for a response. The clock was ticking and every delay added to the pressure in his mind.

“Bently estate, who are you, and what’s your business here?” The distorted voice said from the buzzer.

The agent shoved his badge into the camera’s lens. “An old friend.”

The voice paused before cutting out and the gate opened with a groan. The agent quickly found a parking spot and headed for the door.

A butler opened it as he came, “Is there a problem sir?”

“Of course, there’s a problem, why else would I be here?” The Agent growled, pushing past the butler. “Where is he?”

“Out in his garden, I’m sure.” The butler said, gesturing vaguely towards the back of the house, “He prefers not to be bothered when he’s there, however.”

The Agent stormed down the hall. He always hated mansions, they seemed too complex and showy for one person. He doubted Bently had even been to every room. 

He almost got lost several times before he got to the large glass doors at the far end of the building, leading to an expansive backyard lined with an intricate stone wall. He walked through the light fog to the small bridge leading to the garden. 

Packed with plants, the garden only had a small path leading through it. To the agent, it felt more like a jungle than a garden.

He came to Mr. Bently as he trimmed a hedge next to a stone bench. He provided no reaction to the Agent’s presence.

“It’s a surprise to see one of you here.” He said without looking away from the hedge.

“These are desperate times.” The agent said.

Bently chuckled, “Must be, I could hear you breathing since you came in the door.”

“Look, I don’t have a whole lot of time here.”

“Oh just relax, you have all the time you need.” He said, finally looking up with his gray eyes, “Sit down, you’re too tense.”

After seeing that Bently wouldn’t go on unless he was seated, he obeyed.

“We need you back, Mr. Bently.” He said.

“Oh, do you now? I can’t say I’ll be much help, I’m nearly 57 now.” He said, returning to trimming, “and please, call me Lance.”

“We don’t need you to fight, we just need your mind.”

“Even so, why should I help?” He said, setting his trimmers down and looking up, “Your people said I was free to go, that I never had to do a thing for you again.”

“That’s why we’re asking.” The agent said.

He let out a dry laugh. “You know, I’ve learned how to paint. I’ve gotten quite good at it, in fact. We weren’t allowed to paint at the Academy, they said it interfered without training and was a waste of money.”

“You were given full compensation.” The agent said.

“As yes,” Lance said, looking back at the mansion, “Nothing like great wealth to fix a broken childhood. What else did they tell you about me? Did they tell you my first kill was when I was six?”

“I’m sorry sir.”

“Bah, don’t be sorry,” He said, “Sorry doesn’t really mean anything.”

The agent remained silent for a while, “It’s been bad, sir, the Alumni have been active recently, and we believe they’re planning something big.”

“They’re always planning something big,” Lance said, putting the trimmings into a bucket.

“They took one of the others.” The Agent said. “One from your team.”

Lance froze. “Who?”

“She went by Sydney,” he said.

“These are desperate times indeed.” Lance said, standing up straight and briefly looking at the garden one last time, “I hope you saved my locker for me.”

Lance watched the large screens that covered the wall, one showed footage from agent bodycams, another showed flight tracking data and the largest one showed news coverage.

“This is by far the most ambitious attack from the terrorist group known as the Alumni.” the reporter said as the footage showed a line of masked men in naval uniforms surrounding a tall investment bank. There were policemen in riot gear, but none of them dared to touch the men who stood stock still. Each with an arm crossed over their chest and the other on the hilts of their swords. “They claim to have been a part of a secret branch of the military.”

“We’ve already routed their broadcast directly to our servers and blocked it everywhere else,” The young agent said, “They won’t know it but to the world, they never went live.”

“That’ll be a waste of time, they’ve gone public and the world is gonna know it,” Lance said, “I just need to know why they’re doing it now.”

One of the agents in the bodycam footage turned on his radio. “I’ve got eyes on the leader,” his screen showed an awkward angle of the edge of a rooftop. “I have a clear shot.”

“Hold your fire,” another agent said, clearly irritated, “Our mission is reconnaissance only.”

“What do you see?” Lance said, stepping closer to the monitor.

“It looks like they’re working on the computers,” the first agent said, “They haven’t even touched the vault.”

Lance grinned, “No, they have bigger things in mind.”

“They’ve also dumped a bunch of these around the surrounding area.” the young agent said, showing him a picture of a flier that showed an event schedule:

Opening Ceremony

Come to our opening ceremony and

 see the start of a new world at 60 Wall St. New York, NY

10:00 AM – First remarks

10:15 AM – Special guest

10:30 AM – Special announcement

10:45 AM – Closing statements

“Any idea who this ‘special guest’ is?” He said.

“Yeah,” Lance said grimly, “Yeah I think I do.”

To the Alumni, everything was a game. That’s what the Academy overlooked; when you train people from birth using games, they’ll never believe the game really ends. That’s what Lance thought. The Alumni are nothing more than a group of people turned into machines, operating without a factory to keep them in check.

Although not every member of the Alumni is coming from the Academy, he thought, looking at the large ring of white-coated men. There was no way to tell if they were actual alumni, recruits, or hostages.

One of the large glass windows, about a sixth of the way up the building, burst into shards which rained down on the uniformed men, who hardly even flinched.

They’re definitely hostages. He thought, They probably have bomb vests on.

The room shook with panicked chatter as the agents on the screen crouched and took aim. 

Where the window was, large speakers were pushed near the edge and a man in a uniform and a black mask stepped into view.

“We’ve got eyes on Alpha target.” One of the agents on the screen said with a touch of urgency.

The young agent took out a radio. “Hold your fire, Mongoose.”

“Greetings citizens,“ the Alumni leader said, his voice booming around the tall buildings, “Your superiors may have told you that this area is unsafe and you need to evacuate immediately. Do not listen to them because you can be assured that we are good hosts as long as our guests remain respectful.” His black mask turned to directly face Mongoose’s camera.

“Shit, he knows we’re here,” Mongoose said.

Lance chuckled at the idea that they didn’t assume he knew.

The leader continued, “Yes, you are free to go about your menial chores that keep this country running, or you can become a part of history as a founder of a new world. ‘Why?’ some may say, ‘Why fix what isn’t broken?’ People who ask that haven’t seen what we have seen. 

“Your government has become a ball of self-serving secrecy that is destructive to the American people,” His voice gained a hiss of rage as he continued, “Its poison has grown to infect every institution of the modern world, and we have the proof.

“In this building, we have located documents that can prove that your ruling administration has given millions of dollars to this company. Why? Well, we all know that government money never comes without its strings. And soon, every major news outlet will have it in their hands.”

“So that’s their game,” The young agent said, “exposure.”

“Yep,” Lance said, “Likely blackmail too.”

“What are we supposed to do?”

Lance sighed, “We can’t attack them out in the open. Not only would it risk potential hostages, but it would only strengthen their cause. I imagine their supporters are growing by the minute so from now on this will be a war with the hearts of the people as the trophy.”

“You can’t be serious.” Another agent said.

“I am,” he said, “the Alumni’s goals have always been far-reaching, but you haven’t taken them seriously enough. Now I believe we could be at risk of civil war. Don’t believe me? Most of the people in this country have problems with the way things are run but don’t believe they have the power to enact change. The Alumni are presenting themselves as an embodiment of that power.

“Right now, all we can do is play the long game and hope people are not so eager to pick sides yet.”

The agent went silent and their attention went back to the screen.

“And that is why the money that funds this building is stained with blood,” The leader said, more intense than ever, “this money is your money, and I intend to get it back to your hands. They can take away your vote, but throughout all of history, true power has always been held by the many, the common people, and the workers. You’ll hear them call us terrorists and extremists, but you will know that the only people I intend to frighten are those who are powerful and comfortable. For you, I hope to inspire you to refuse. Refuse to wait for justice, but take it for yourself.

“Now I apologize for the segue, but it’s time for our meeting to resolve some personal matters,” This time, the leader stared at Mongoose’s camera several seconds longer, “Because now it is time to our a word from our special guest, former special agent Sidney Hopkins.”

That was no surprise, but when she stepped out, Lance was aghast.

She stepped into the light, waving as she took the microphone from the leader.

She was wearing a uniform.

And she was smiling.

Lance turned away from the screen, not because he was upset, but because he had to think. This changes everything. If Sidney joined them willingly, then that means the Alumni know everything he knows.

That means we’ve already lost.

He noticed a sound, faint enough that he could’ve imagined it, but distinct enough that he knew exactly what it was.

“There’s a van, about three blocks away, full of people,” he said, slowly turning to the young agent, “They knew we were here the whole time.”

The young agent looked at him dumbly, “What?”

“They’re here,” Lance hissed, “and if you don’t get your ass in gear we’re going to be dead in a few minutes.”

An agent in the back of the room glanced out the window, “he’s right, boss, someone’s here.”

The young agent pulled out his gun as people filed out the door, weapons raised.

“You stay here,” he said, “get your vest on and start destroying these computers. We’ll call for an extraction.”

Before he could finish his sentence, the lights shut down.

As the last of the agents left the room, Lance went to the break room and grabbed the coffee pot which was still hot enough to scald, and began pouring it into each of the computers through the vents at the top. 

The coffee trickled down beautifully through the inside and the plastic crackled as it warped. It would take a miracle for them to retrieve any data.

He heard gunshots several floors down accompanied by the grotesque sound of swords against flesh. He knew then that The Alumni had sent all of their enhanced there. In fact, it was likely that there wasn’t a single one but Sidney in the building on the news.

Sidney, why did she join them? She didn’t seem radical to Lance and she always had a heart for good. Of course, good is always based on perspective.

Whatever mess the Alumni got her wrapped up in, he was going to fix it.

Refuse to wait for justice, but take it for yourself.

He looked up at the door and listened to the sounds of the chaos below. He felt his heartbeat slow as his focus grew; a pavlovian reaction calling him to battle.

Let’s see what this old man can do.

He went into the hallway, feeling his eyes adjust as an animalistic giddiness went over him. He became more aware of his surroundings, every step, the movement of every civilian in the building, and most of all, his targets.

He silently made his way down the stairwell, carefully sensing the movement of everyone so he wouldn’t run into any of them.

When he made it to the edge of the action where the gunshots reverberated through the walls, he entered the floor above it so he could make his way around and come to a place the Alumni had already gone through.

It was a massacre.

Blood splatter covered the wallpaper in huge slashes and the bodies of agents littered the floor. Some still gasped as blood filled their lungs.

He felt around one nearby, searching for a weapon.

It amazed him how little it mattered to him and in his retirement he had forgotten how much his instincts made him a machine focused on nothing but the mission.

He pulled a tactical knife from the body and a flash grenade, which he was particularly excited about because he knew that it would use the alumni’s enhanced senses against them.

He disappeared down a hallway, ducked behind a corner, and listened. The Alumni had spread out, perhaps knowing that they’d have little resistance and also so they could find the safehouse faster. Most of them paired up but some strolled on their own at the edge of the building, whistling to themselves. They’re overconfident, lazy, and perfect for a warm-up.

He moved quickly, but not so much as to make any noise. He made his way behind the movement of the whistling person. From looking around the corner, Lance saw a man in a blood-stained uniform with his sword perched on his shoulder walking with a strut.

He stalked the man, ducking behind doorways whenever he had the chance.

When he got closer, the man stopped in his tracks, and from his reflection in the window, Lance could see a grin grow on his face.

He can smell me, He thought, grabbing the ring on the grenade, It’s now or never.

In a swift movement, he tossed the grenade at the man’s feet and ran away with his ears covered. He heard a bang that made his ears ring despite having them covered and a pressure wave gave him a light push.

“Asshole, do you know how many times I’ve been flash banged today?” the man said, tearing off his mask and squinting down the hall, “You’re gonna die for that.”

Lance gripped his knife and charged him. Despite the assault on his senses, the man lazily dodged the attack.

“It’s funny you think that’s going to make a difference,” he said, swinging his sword down, nicking Lance’s leg as he rolled out of the way. The fresh cut throbbed and Lance felt the adrenaline enhance his awareness further. He sensed the way the air moved around him, currents trailing over his skin as he moved.

The knife became a part of him, swiftly redirecting each of the man’s swings as they came together in a dance of blades.

The man was young and brutal and boldly charged forward with unrelenting aggression, but his swings were heavy and unfocused, allowing Lance to make a deep cut on the man’s side.

The man kicked him aside, but the damage was done.

“I think I know who you are now,” he said, gripping his side. His voice twinged with a touch of vulnerability, “And I must say, I’m honored to have fought with you, old man.”

Lance quickly kicked the man’s wound and grabbed his sword arm, making another cut to force him to drop it.

He drifted around the man, held his neck in his arm, and squeezed. He could feel the man’s brittle bones against his sleeve. His instincts told him he would only have to hold a little tighter and they would break. His mind told him to do it or more people would die. His heart told him that he shouldn’t be the weapon he was made to be, and his senses told him it was no use because the other Alumni had come for him.

He felt the man finally relax and he let go.

“Bently, what a sight for sore eyes,” a black-masked Alumni said as he came down the hall with the others, “I’ve got a lot of people who are just dying to meet you.”

Lance pushed the man away and stood up, “you came here for me?”

“Bingo,” he said with a snap of his gloved fingers, “You’re the man of the hour.”

“Then why did you kill all of these people?” Lance said, “They had no part in this.”

The black-masked man punched him swiftly in the gut. “You and I both know why we killed them, Lab Rat.”

One of the others pushed him over and started dragging him by the feet.

“Let’s get something straight,” The black-masked man said as they moved, “I am required to bring you in alive, and the boss said she prefers that I bring you back in one piece, but by the looks of it you hurt one of my men, and that has to be repaid one way or another.”

“Are we taking the elevator, boss?” The Alumni carrying the injured man asked.

“Oh, I don’t know, what do you say, Bently?” He glared down at Lance and pressed his thumb into the cut on his leg, forcing him to scream, “Well said, Old man, the stairs would be better for the exercise.”

Lance managed to make it to the third flight of stairs before falling unconscious. He awoke later in the back of a van, naked and with paper towels fused to the back of his head. With blurry vision and a spinning head, he tried to move into a steady position on the cold, smooth metal. He managed to get himself propped up against the side before getting thrown to the front with the screech of brakes.

The torture isn’t over yet, he thought, barely conscious. He blacked out again.

He woke to the sound of berating from another room. A gentle breeze blew over his face from a small fan by his bed.

He reached up and touched the gauze wrapped tightly around his head.

Like a white summer dress. He thought.

As he climbed out of his subconscious, he could understand the berating voice more and more.

“I don’t care that he beat up one of your guys,” it said, “It was your responsibility to bring him here. You should be teaching your men to be more aware of their surroundings anyway.”

He sat up and spots clouded his vision. Through a gap in the spots, he could see a glass of water on the nightstand.

As he drank and the spots started to clear, he heard the door open.

“Sorry about that, John always acts like he’s part of the KGB or Mafia or something.” Sidney said, sitting on a chair in front of the bed, “I knew I should’ve had someone else get you.”

“It’s okay, It just reminds me of all of our missions overseas,” he said, “I’m getting nostalgic, really.”

She chuckled, “How has it been since retirement?”

“Peaceful,” Lance said with a smile, “I’ve learned how to play the piano, too.”

“Really?” She asked, “Are you good at it?”

“Not much yet,” he said, “at least I don’t scare everyone out of the house anymore.”

Her smile disappeared, “I don’t understand how you do it.”

“How do I do what?”

She looked down and a deep fury rose in her eyes, “How you can live a normal life after what they did to you? Work with them, even? They deserve nothing more than to watch as everything they built burns to the ground.”

Lance chuckled gently, “Can’t say I disagree.”

“Then why do you help them? Why won’t you work with us?” Her voice tinged with hurt.

“Because I wanted you back.”

She got up from her chair and turned away, eyes red, “Why? You know I can take care of myself.”

“Sidney,” he said, “you were always the most innocent out of all of us. You seemed to preserve the best of your humanity despite everything we were put through.” he stood up and stepped toward the window. Through a gap in the blinds, he could just see the corner of a billboard.

“And now you’re working for terrorists,” he said,

“We’re not terrorists,” She said, still looking away, “We’re revolutionaries. Only our enemies would think we’re terrorists.”

As her back was turned, Lance pressed a button on a keychain trinket in his pocket.

“Even if that were the case,” he said, “a major commonality between most revolutions is that the regime that comes after is often just as bad as the first, if not worse.”

She laughed dryly and turned around to glare at him, “Do you think we’re fools who don’t understand how people work? We can rule better than any human that has ever lived. We will make this country the greatest empire in history. Rome would look like a disjointed village compared to us.”

“But your plan is missing a crucial detail,” He said, sitting back down in his chair, “You’re still human. You will still be corrupted with power. More so, you would feel superior to them because of your abilities and you would not just crave power but feel entitled to it. Leading is more than being smarter than your constituents.”

The room went silent for a long moment.

“You’re wrong,” She said, “I love the people in this country and I will do anything to make sure their voice is heard.”

“That’s good,” He said as he heard a different kind of engine outside, a familiar one, “But what happens when someone else wants control? What happens when the people don’t agree with you?”

“Well, I suppose we’ll deal with those problems as they come.” She said,

“And that’s why we fight on two different sides.” He said.

A gunshot echoed from several stories down.

She smiled, “I was wondering when they’d arrive.”

“You knew about the tracker in my pocket?”

“Of course, we did,” she said, “and again, you keep taking us for fools. I wanted to lure them here so we could take them out.”

“You’re not a fool,” He said with a grin, “just cocky.”

She picked up her mask from the bed, “You stay here, alright?”

“No promises.”

He heard her ordering John to guard in the hallway outside. He listened for several minutes to John’s movements as the chaos on the bottom floor accelerated. It didn’t take long before John’s movements became repetitive as he paced around the hallway. 

Lance looked around the room. He knew that the building was in the historic district because he recognized the billboard outside and if he were lucky, this hotel would be old enough to have a dumbwaiter. He scanned the layout of the room and found an area where the wall juts out where it shouldn’t. 

He knocked on it, making a hollow sound. If it weren’t a former dumbwaiter, it would be some kind of ventilation system.

Then came the hard part, he would have to find a way to break through the drywall that covered the entrance to the dumbwaiter without alerting John. He went into the restroom and turned on the shower, hoping that the white noise would distract from any other sounds. He returned to the dumbwaiter, gently knocking on each side with one hand and feeling the vibration with the other. Luckily, it seemed that the shaft was almost entirely intact except for the lift itself, which had been removed.

The entrance had been sealed with a panel of drywall, so he ran his thumbnail along the edge and found the seam. With a butter knife he found in the minibar, he scraped through the paint covering it until he could clearly see the edge where the drywall met the dumbwaiter. He quietly shoved the knife into the crack and tried to pry the drywall off the screws. It didn’t budge, but he knew if he broke up the drywall near the screws he could tear the panel off.

He went to the small desk and unplugged the phone and used the hard edge to tap firmly against the drywall. It took plenty of risky thumps before the drywall began to break up. Eventually, with a firm grasp and a gentle tug, the chunk of drywall came off, spilling white dust on the ground. He tore open the bundle of insulation and climbed inside. It was just as stuffy as he expected and the smell of sawdust and old insulation followed him as he climbed down. He held tight to the framing studs, hoping they would hold his weight.  

As he made his way down, sounds of chaos filled the room above.

“Bently!” John’s enraged voice called from above, “I’ll kill you, sneaky bastard.”

Lance held himself tight against the side of the shaft as bullets splintered studs around him. Insulation rained down the shaft.

“C’mon,” John said to another, “let’s catch him on another floor and blast him.”

Lance shambled his way as fast as possible, risking a fall with every step. As he passed each floor, the sounds of chaos rose. Muffled cries of pain and gunshots rang through the structure of the shaft.

Halfway down, he heard whispers in the floor above him before a dozen shots cut through the shaft. He wiped the sawdust mixed with sweat off his head before continuing. His hands were cramped from hanging onto thin boards after so many floors. He cursed himself for not maintaining his fitness better.

The sounds of John pursuing him disappeared. undoubtedly because he got preoccupied with another battle.

Eventually, the shaft came to an end and he pushed himself against the wall with his feet against the other side. He had to push three times before the wall began to creak but on the fifth, it split along the edge and smoke bled in.

After he made it through, he fell onto a couch in the main lobby. Pieces of drywall scattered around him. 

Through the smoke, a dozen flashlights were trained on him. Radio chatter echoed between them. He raised his hands innocently as an agent came up and grabbed him by the arm, cuffing him and leading him toward the door.

Outside was equally chaotic. SWAT vehicles and police cars lined the streets as curious onlookers gathered on top of a parking garage a block away. A helicopter overhead hovered around the motel.

“You won the battle but lost the war,” A grumbling Alumni with a bloodied mask said as he got stuffed into a police car, “America will be remade.”

One agent came up to Lance and spoke on his radio, “he fits the description, we have alpha priority in our custody.”

“Alpha priority?” Lance said, “I’m flattered.”

“Well if we have a war on our hands,” He said, “We’re going to need you.”

“That’s him, all right,” The Young agent said, running to him, “We’ve got a lot to discuss.”

“What’s this all about?” Lance asked, taking off his cuffs.

“It’s official,” he said, “the Alumni have declared war on the United States of America.”

September 1st: A Message from the Government

In response to recent events, NATO and its partners have voted to outlaw the research and production of any medication or treatment that aids in rapid cellular regeneration. While no retaliation is expected, any country or independent territory that does not adopt this law will be considered an enemy of all NATO allies.

The World Health Organization (WHO) agrees that while cellular regeneration has been shown to have promising results in curing a majority of illnesses, including cancer, dementia, and any bodily injury without the need for hospital treatment, it does not justify the significant loss of life that could result. “We were on the brink of having the last drug we would ever need; a true magic bullet.” Theodore White, a spokesperson for WHO wrote, “But WHO is supposed to focus on preserving life, so we believe we should take any measure necessary to keep this from happening again. And if something like this did happen again, I don’t believe anyone could stop it.” (World Health Organization, 2026)

The United States will also be granted temporary immunity from all foreign conflict until August 2028 for recovery after the CBRN Incident known as the Bernard Holcomb event. All CBRN hazards have been neutralized but have since been added to a high-priority watchlist.

We understand that everyone is anxious, but we would encourage everyone to look ahead toward a long age of recovery. This is a time when we can come together for a long-awaited period of peace and rest.

“And the God of all grace, who called you unto his eternal glory in Christ, after that ye have suffered a little while, shall himself perfect, establish, strengthen you.”

– 1 Peter 5:10

July 20th: Crossover: Bone Wraiths

Crossover: Bone Wraiths

The first thing Deputy Cain heard was the soft weeping from the holding cell. He lifted his head from the desk and groaned, he didn’t remember putting anyone in there. In fact, he only ever had to use it for the occasional drunkard who decides to cause trouble. Before he could even stand up, the phone on his desk rang. He frowned in confusion. Normally someone taking the late shift in dispatch would’ve already taken it. He figured whoever it was was just on a break, so he answered it as any good cop would.

“911 what’s your emergency?” He said through a groggy voice.

The response was a couple of seconds of ruffling and a panicked whisper. “Um, hello, I’m seeing these figures outside my house.”

“Can you see what they are doing?” Cain said, imagining a bunch of misplaced drunk kids.

“I don’t know, they’re just standing there, staring at the moon.” The caller said. “And they’re tall, taller than any person I’ve ever seen.” He paused, more ruffling, “And I think they’re wearing robes. Oh God, is there a cult gathering in my backyard?” 

One of the lights on Cain’s phone flashed. Another call was coming through. “Hold on.” He said, trying to hide the panic of having to juggle two emergency calls. “Just keep your lights off, don’t engage with them, and find a closet to hide in. I’ll send help.”

“Okay, I’m at 221 Langston St.” He said, ruffling some more before hanging up.

Cain put the next call through, “911 what’s your emer–”

“Someone’s at the door.” The woman on the other side said. Her voice was distressed but clear. Cain thought she sounded strained as if it took physical effort to say it.

He looked at the phone and felt a chill as two more calls came on hold. His mind started running laps. This clearly wasn’t a coincidence, but every call seemed completely different. Was it some sort of coordinated terrorist attack? Whatever it was, he thought it would be good to be paranoid. “Ignore it, find somewhere to hide, and don’t leave until we get you.”

“I-I can’t,” She said, “the knocking, it’s so loud. I can hear it in my head, it’s coming from everywhere.” 

He heard her start to cry, “Okay, just relax and take a deep breath.”

“Okay,” she said with a heavy sigh, “thank you, I was probably freaking out over nothing. There’s someone at the door, I need to let them in.”

“Wait–” he said as he heard her open the door.

“Oh,” she said to no one in particular. “It’s so quiet out here, I think I might go for a little walk.”

She hung up, leaving Cain with his phone humming like a flatline. He froze, watching the pending calls stack up. He would never be able to help all of these people, but he would try.

He picked up his cell and called Anthony Morris, the other deputy. “Anthony, I need your help, something bad is happening.”

“I’ll be over in just a sec.” He said without a groan of protest, but Cain could tell he just woke up.

“No, don’t, that would take too much time.” He said. “Check on your neighbors, make sure they’re okay, then gather up anyone with a gun and go through the town and get anyone you can to safety.”

“What’s going on?” he said, wide awake now.

“I don’t know, I’ve been getting constant reports, all from different parts of town.”

“I’ll do what I can here, but make sure you call the state police.”

“Okay, I’ll do that,” he said, surprised he hadn’t thought of the state police sooner. “Stay safe out there okay?”

Matthew Cain stood by the door outside the gym with a shotgun as dozens of people filed through. The sheriff was out of town and he was in contact with only one other deputy. The line was cut from state police so for the time being, the town would have to fend for itself. He tapped the space above the safety anxiously. It seemed like any decision he made was the wrong one, like at any moment everything could collapse.

“Officer, we found food in the concession stand,” A man said, pushing his way towards him through the crowd, “I got a couple of guys to start handing it out.”

“Good,” Matthew said, he knew they trusted him and looked to him for leadership, but what would happen if he failed? “Give them some for now but keep the rest in storage, we don’t know how long we have to stay here.” 

“Yes sir.” The man said. Matthew could see his eyes light up as if he was given purpose.

Matthew looked up at his town. Everything seemed so quiet, but the silence carried weight. Once everyone was in, he closed the door and bolted it shut. In the basketball court, people gathered into groups in silence, setting up blankets and looking through the few items they had. He paced a bit, thinking of what he might have to do next.

“Geez, could you sit down for a minute? You’re starting to make me tense.” 

Matthew looked down at the strange man that had appeared in his holding cell earlier that day. He wore a black suit and he had his wrists bound together in ancient gold handcuffs. He sat cross-legged in front of a boat of nachos.

“And would you mind taking these off? It’s kinda hard to eat like this.” He said with a grin. He looked to Matthew like some kind of politician.

“Yeah, no way in hell.” He said, holding his shotgun a little tighter.

The man laughed, “I’m just messing with you, stop being such a hard-ass.”

“Sir, we got the phone set up in the teacher’s office,” Another man said, “It’s been ringing since we plugged it in.”

“Great, I’ll check it out and you can stay here and make sure no one goes out of your sight,” Matthew said and looked down at the man, “Especially this one.”

He smiled, “Call me Leonard King.”

Matthew left the court and followed the sound of ringing down a hallway into the office. He set his shotgun by the desk and picked up the phone.

“Uh, hello? I’m the one who called earlier and I think the cult who was gathering in my yard left, are you guys still on the way?” The voice said, “I don’t know what to do and I’m afraid to go outside.”

Matthew sighed, every kind of protocol had to go out the window in a situation like this, “Alright, stay calm, do you have a gun?”

He heard a fearful pause.

“Why do I need my gun?” The voice said, “How many of them are there?”

“Look, we don’t fully understand what’s happening but I can give you two choices,” He said, “You can either get your gun and your food and lock yourself in the basement and I can come to get you once we have everything under control or you can come to the arena on Park street, the one by the Safeway.”

There was another pause.

“I hate to put this pressure on you, “ Matthew said, “But you need to make a decision quickly.”

“Okay,” The voice said, the fear in his voice was nothing but a quiver, “I’ll call you back when I’m close.”

“Good luck,” He said, hanging up the phone. He picked up his shotgun and started towards the court. The hallway was lit with every third set of lights because the building ran on backup generators. He was alone, and the silence put an eerie weight over him.

The silence was broken by a loud, drawn-out scream, echoing through the hall. Matthew shoved the stock into his shoulder and charged forward. When he got to the court, most people were grouped in fearful clusters while others stalked toward the scream in curiosity. He pushed past them, keeping the barrel pointed towards the ground. 

The scream continued as a long drone of pain that made Matthew sick. Some people picked up random items as makeshift weapons.

When he got to the source of the scream in another hall, a group of stunned people stood around the screaming woman.

Matthew saw a bloodstained creature perched on her back, digging its claws into her shoulder. At first, he thought the creature had an exposed skeleton, but he quickly realized that it was made of the interlocked bones of other animals, with an elk skull for a head. It grinned soullessly as it dug deeper into the woman’s shoulder, pulling at the inside of her arm as if it were trying to wrench her bones out of it. Its other hand scratched the back of her head gently as if it got pleasure from her pain.

With a cry, the man named Leonard swung an aluminum bat at the creature’s head. With a crack, the creature stumbled off the woman and several people pulled her away. The creature looked at Matthew with empty sockets.

With a sudden burst of liveliness, the creature shrieked with an amalgamation of every sound the animals of the forest could make. Birds, wolves, deer, and several others called out in pain and rage.

As he raised his gun, he thought he saw patches of fur still attached to its skull with half-dead eyes in its sockets.

With a bang that shook the walls, its skull shattered to pieces and the creature collapsed into a pile of bones. Many pieces remained locked together in clumps. With how quickly it died, a part of him wondered if it had ever been alive. 

He looked down the dark hallway and saw the half-imagined eyeshine of a dozen creatures stalking toward him. They moved silently except for the soft clack of bones touching the hard floor.

“Everyone get back into the gym.” He yelled as he chambered another shell.

As another one stepped into the light, he shot it in the chest, scattering bone fragments across the floor. He shot it in the head before it could get back up. Another one lunged at him from the left and he had just enough time to turn around and shoot it.

He stepped back to recollect himself. The air was already hazy with smoke and his ears were ringing from the sound. A part of his brain absently worried if he’d have much hearing left afterward.

He looked ahead at the creatures stalking toward him. He knew he had only three shells left in the shotgun, and there were at least five more of the creature left. He chambered another round, hoping he would scare them off before he runs out. He is supposed to be a leader, he thought, leaders make sacrifices.

As another creature dashed towards him, he saw a hand come up from the corner of his eye. With a bang that made everything go silent for several seconds, an unseen bullet punched a hole through its skull. The creature stiffened and fell backward in a way that would seem almost comical to Matthew in hindsight.

As his hearing returned, he saw a man with a short, white beard step up beside him firmly holding a shining Desert Eagle in both hands. He had remembered seeing him help out some of the other people in the court. They both pushed forward and with several deafening bangs, the creatures became piles of bloodstained bones.

They waited for their hearing to return. Matthew was panting, heaving in breaths of smoky air. He realized that his exhaustion came more from fear than exercise. It reminded him of the anxiety attacks he had as a kid.

“I hope you know I spent 9 bucks worth of ammo saving your ass,” The man said with a chuckle, “This shit ain’t cheap.”

“Where did you get that?” Matthew said.

“Gun shop,” He said, “I’m a collector.”

“We should make sure everyone’s okay.” Matthew said, straightening his back before walking back down the hallway, “I’m sure you know but my name’s Matthew Cain.”

“Nice to know you, I’m Jim,” He said, shaking Matthew’s hand as they walked.

When they got back, everyone seemed to be accounted for and the woman who was attacked was already in a makeshift splint. 

She worried Matthew, he knew it would take a lot more than a splint to heal her. A brief thought of amputation crossed his mind, but he shut it down. He would make sure that it won’t come to that. 

He walked over to the group gathered around her.

“I gave her some of my painkillers, but it doesn’t seem to make much of a difference.” One of them said when she noticed him.

“I’m just glad you got it wrapped up already,” He said, “We’ll try to get to a hospital as soon as we can.”

Matthew left them there and started walking towards the door, but the glint of Leonard’s restraints caught his eye.

The strange man, who was an outcast less than an hour ago, now had a small crowd sitting around him. The laughter from that group stood out in contrast to the heavy weight of fear and shock that hung in the room. Normally, it would’ve been heartwarming to see, but Matthew couldn’t help but feel uneasy.

No one slept that night. Even if someone had the peace of mind to sleep, the howls of pain from the woman would keep them up. Matthew, Jim, and several other men patrolled the hallways of the gym, barricading entrances and looking for any signs of the creatures people now called Bone Wraiths.

When the gym was more or less secure, Matthew brought the men back to his office where the phone now sat in silence. He stood behind the desk and leaned over it, propped up by his arms.

“Gentlemen, this has been a rough day for everyone but I want to thank you for standing with your neighbors and helping me realize that I don’t have to lead these people alone,” he said, unable to hide the tiredness from his voice, “Which is why, as one of the last remaining figures of authority in this town, I’m setting up an unofficial neighborhood watch, and I want you all to be a part of it.”

The men were silent. Some seemed confused.

“Obviously, this’ll be far from a normal neighborhood watch. It’ll be dangerous and you’ll be working on the front lines of whatever it is we’re dealing with, but right now I need people I can trust. I won’t blame you if you turn this down, but if you do accept you’ll be doing everyone a favor. You don’t even have to say anything, just raise your hand.”

All men except two raised their hands.

“I’m sorry man,” One of the two said, “But ever since I moved here I’ve been doing nothing but working and after everything happened, I realize that I need to spend time with my family before it’s too late.”

Matthew nodded respectfully as they left.

“I know you’re all tired, but none of us will be able to sleep until we have a plan.” He said, “First, we need to find a hospital and gather as much as we need. Then we should see if we can find a more permanent shelter. I’m not sure if we should stay here or find something else, so if anyone knows of a place that’s more secure, please speak up.”

“We could try the subway tunnels,” One of them said, “Can’t get much more secure when you’re underground. Plus it would make it easier to travel to other parts of town.”

“I disagree,” another said, “It would be too hard to secure it since they’re so long and we couldn’t just secure a section of it because we’d end up having to build large barricades and monitor them constantly.”

“I have another option,” Matthew said, “I called another deputy and he said they have a camp set up uptown. But the only issue is that there’s a large group of somethings that have overtaken a part of town between us.”

“Maybe it’s better to try and get them over to our side,” Jim said with the desert eagle held firmly at his side, “They’re completely cut off.”

“I agree,” He said with a nod, “I’ll keep in contact with them and we’ll make a decision after we find a hospital. As for tonight, we should set up a schedule so someone’s awake at all times. I’ll let you sort that out yourselves.”

He dismissed them and sat with the now-silent phone, replacing the shells in his shotgun. It felt good to have a team, as if a weight has been lifted from his back. Now, it felt like he had things under control.

His mind went to the man named Leonard King. To Matthew, he was the wild card, the loose end that could never be tied unless he was freed. This disturbed him.

He thought about how the man was the first to act in the hallway when the Bone Wraiths attacked. Why didn’t he trust him? It’s because of the gold cuffs, He thought, Why would he be bound if he were harmless?

He opened a drawer in his desk, revealing a golden key. He thought about the people gathered around the man in the court as he put it in his pocket. He was bringing people to his side. People who would trust him. What would happen if they decided the man should be free?

Maybe I’m overthinking, He thought as he picked up his shotgun and left the office, maybe everything is going to be alright.

February 25th: The Door

I don’t write poems often, especially ones that rhyme, so I thought I’d get a little practice in. I hope you like it.


The Door

I hope you don’t resent me after I chose to go through

Things have been hard, living after the chaos grew

When the things we knew became strange and uncertain

When we found the door, it was a chance to pull back the curtain

To find the truth, see the other side

After multitudes of us had died

I don’t regret what I did

Even after you saw me and hid 

I am my true self now, You can’t deny it

You kept us away by the fear you emit

The door is the answer but you said we were done

Now I’m changed, now everything is fun

I no longer walk but I slither and dash

All who threaten me I come to thrash

What my face has become is beautiful and horrid 

My old form is now stretched and distorted

Strangely, it feels like I am now what I’m meant to be

My soul is brought to the surface like foam in the sea

All who are still afraid and shaken to the core

Who still fight like we had before

Whose lives seem like just a bore

Remember that it all started with the door

December 13th: Rise of the Lacertilians

Rise of the Lacertilians

The creature came into consciousness while it moved, darting past trees and leaping over streams. Instinct had led it from the second it arrived in this world and now the only thing driving it was hunger and fear. It sensed others of its kind stalking in the trees around it. The creature acknowledged them but did not attack them or try to communicate with them. Its amber eyes darted back and forth, searching for prey. It used its thick claws to push itself through the trees faster, embedding its claws deep into the wood and wrenching them back. Its eyes dilated in excitement as it saw a building appear behind the trees. It charged faster, slamming its thick leather feet against the forest floor. When it pushed through the last row of trees, the creature found itself in the middle of a suburban neighborhood filled with screams and fire. It turned and charged into the wood fence of one of the properties, cutting it down with sharp claws. It wedged its claws into the side of the house and climbed into the broken window. The glass scraped against its thick hide but could not cut into it. The creature stalked over the hardwood floor, clacking its claws against it. It could smell meat. It hunted throughout the house, tearing down doors and tossing beds onto their sides. It followed the smell until it heard the sound of something falling in the kitchen below. The creature charged down the stairs to the front door where random furniture was piled to make a barricade. It stalked closer to the ground listening. Breathing. It heard a volley of short, panicked breaths. The fear hung like a vapor in the kitchen. The creature crawled up to the kitchen’s island, where the breathing was louder. The human leaped up from behind it and the creature briefly sensed a shotgun being aimed at its face before an instinct took over, forcing it to open its jaw and spray liquid from a gland in its mouth. The spray covered the human in a thick cloud before igniting and engulfing it in flames. The creature feasted on its charred flesh as it burned, instinctively knowing that its skin would be unfazed by the flames.

The creature dragged the corpse out of the burning house and continued eating. The flesh was delicious. The creature felt energy wash over it and strength fill its muscles and clarity came to its mind. The meat was addicting, but the creature left a portion of the corpse untouched. It didn’t know why, but it felt it was necessary, vital even. The creature took the corpse to a shed deeper in the neighborhood, where hordes of its kind swarmed. The creature felt instinctively drawn to the shed and it was filled with meat like the corpse it carried. It tossed the body in and closed the door. 

With the creature’s newfound clarity, it looked around at the chaos surrounding it. It saw a group of humans with guns gathering together and barricading a group of houses. A couple of its kind tried to attack them but got shot down immediately. The creature remembered the taste and power of meat and desperately wanted in the barricade. It called out to the creatures around it and they turned their attention to it, instinctively drawn to the sound. The creature gestured to the barricade and charged forward. It heard the others of its kind swarm behind it. The creature felt power in the crowd and became excited. The humans fired down on them from behind a makeshift wall made from an overturned flatbed trailer. The creatures thundered against it, climbing it before getting shot at the top. They tried to move around it but it was wedged tightly between two buildings. The creature grew angry and sprayed more of the flammable liquid onto the wall. The flames climbed up quickly and the wood became blackened. The wood became weak enough that they were able to break through. The humans backed away quickly and continued to shoot, but the creatures were too numerous. At this point, more creatures were starting to break through all around the barricaded area.

The rest of the battle was short-lived, the humans were quickly outnumbered and killed. However, many of the creatures had been killed as well. As the fires were contained, the creatures ate and dragged off the remains to the shed. Even the bodies of the fallen creatures were eaten and stored.

Afterward, the others gathered around the creature who led the attack and looked at it expectantly. It understood that this was important and accepted it. It decided to see what the humans were guarding and found a large library. The creature thought it was a peculiar building but understood its importance as it looked at the small letters printed in each book. It did not know what they were but understood that they contained information, and that was vital.

The creature went back out to the expectant crowd. It picked up a bent signpost and wedged it into the handle of the library doors and clicked at them. The creature didn’t have any language, but the click was an indicator that communication was being attempted. The others understood and began to barricade and guard the library. The creature went back to the shed. It could see that many humans made it out of the area the creatures controlled and were making a new wall. The creature thought that was okay, they didn’t have enough numbers to take all of them and after the recent victory, the humans wouldn’t be making any attacks anytime soon. The creature opened the shed, where piles of meat lay, and began to eat. It understood that the food was for it now.

 It ate all that was in the shed, gnawing down even the bones. The meat gave it more energy than ever. Now, it was stronger, faster, tougher, and smarter than it ever had been. It even felt taller, too. When It left the shed, the creatures looked at it with strong respect. The creatures would do whatever it could ask now.

The creature ordered that the meat would now be put in a small brick building near the library and the area around it would be barricaded again. The creature knew there could be more threats other than the humans, so being prepared was vital. It looked at the library with purpose. It was knowledge that allowed them to win the battle, so it would be knowledge that would make them stronger. From then on, the creature would stay in the library, deciphering the humans’ texts and gaining strength. One day, they would conquer the humans with newfound strength. 

Eventually, they grew into a small kingdom, expanding the border closer to the human’s village. The humans retaliated sooner than the King expected, so the border did not advance much further. He began sending out hunting parties into the forest where they brought back deer carcasses that were fat and sweet. However, some parties were attacked by strange monsters and some came under unusual illnesses. Some never came back at all.

 Eventually, they were able to find an entrance into the human camp where they could go undetected. He remembered when a hunting party came back with some human tools. This was a golden opportunity, but the King chose not to attack them yet because he was envious of the humans’ language. It made them far more efficient than the creatures. So, the king ordered a select group that was smaller and swifter than the rest and trained them to be stealthy and intelligent. He sent them out to observe the humans in hopes of understanding their language. They studied their mannerisms and extracted meaning from them. Eventually, they learned the meaning of certain words. Gun was the word they used for their weapons. They learned Guard was the verb for when something is protected. Eventually, some of the words were used in the creature’s village.

The King was proud of the progress, but he thought it was far too slow. So he made a risky decision. He ordered the group in charge of learning to kidnap one of them. It was a dangerous operation since the area they had access to was heavily guarded. But in their time of observing them, they had a good understanding of the humans’ routines. So it was easy to get one of them on their own.

All of the creatures came out of their dens when the human was dragged through the gates, kicking and screaming.

“Let go of me you damn Lacertilians,” He yelled, twisting in their grip as he was handed off to a couple of larger ones. “I’ll kill every last one of you.”

They didn’t react but watched him get dragged off into the King’s tent, which was draped onto the entrance of the library.

The man fell onto the concrete steps of the library. The iron grip of the Lacertilians was released and he was free, as long as he didn’t leave through the front. He looked up at the entrance of the library, he remembered going there after school with his friends to study, sometimes he would sneak into the fantasy section to get the next book of his favorite series. Now the entire entrance is torn down, making it into a pile of mangled aluminum and broken glass. Quietly, he walked up the steps and into the library, pulling out his knife and stalking down an aisle.

Many of the books were torn from the shelves and piled by the edge, whoever’s here is a very heavy reader. In the middle of the computer lab sat a pile of crude maps. The man carefully snuck up to one. He recognized much of the country, the Lacertilians seemed to have drawn rivers and mountains, even the human camp was marked in red. The man could tell it wasn’t ink or paint. There was a small dotted line going into the side of the camp. 

So that’s how the bastards got in. He thought. Then why haven’t they attacked?

He heard footsteps. They were large, heavy footsteps, like a giant wearing slippers. The man disappeared into the aisle and quickly snuck toward the back of the building. He caught sight of the exit and moved faster. He would return to camp and tell them everything about the other entrance. Finally, he would feel useful. With what sounded like a bark, the creature that he heard earlier charged toward him. He sprinted without so much as a glance back. He was almost at the exit when he was sideswiped by a thick tail. He hit the bookcase so hard that he saw spots. He felt his body get lifted and moved and the next time he could think clearly, he was back at the tent, staring at the largest Lacertilian he had ever seen.

The King was upset that he had been disturbed while he was studying. Without a spoken language, it’s hard to tell his hunters to notify him when the human was kidnapped. He had been eating for a while now and he was nearly ten feet tall. Any taller it would be hard for him to fit in the library. He kept his claws short so he could properly study. Most of his nutrients went toward his mind and his fire glands.

He did not grow any horns, many of his subjects loved making them as long as possible, but he thought the advantage was minimal. The only issue was that he was given less respect than if he had. Now he was staring at a small and frail human as it spoke.

“Why am I here?” The man yelled, “Why haven’t you killed me yet?” 

He looked up at the silent creature as it crouched on the glass shards. With a growl, it walked to a corner of the tent and tossed a fridge at him. It clattered at his feet and the doors fell open and a pile of candy bars, leftover pizza, and other food items. Some were spoiled.

“Food?” It said in a deep voice. The man could barely make out the word, but he understood. He didn’t want to trust it, but he hadn’t eaten his rations that day. Slowly, he picked a cup of dry ramen and began to eat. The Lacertilian nodded and pulled a deer leg from the same corner and chewed on it, studying the man with amber eyes.

“So now that I know you can speak, can you tell me why I’m here?” The man said.

It extended the leg, flinging chunks of flesh everywhere. “This?”

“Uh, no thank you.” He said.

It shook its head. “This?”

“Oh, that’s meat.” He said.

“Meat?” It said.

“Yes, meat.”

The creature nodded and continued to eat. The man understood then, he was taken to teach them English. No one knew if the Lacertilians had a spoken language and no one had seen them speak. But now it was clear that was the case. And now he’s in charge of teaching them how to communicate.

The man was pulled from his thoughts by the crunch of bone as the Lacertilian bit through the bone of the leg. That explains why no bodies had been recovered. He started on one of the snack bars. He needed to figure out if he wanted to escape or help teach them. If he escaped and told everyone about the other entrance, then they could seal it and keep the Lacertilians out. If he taught them, they would become stronger, but that could allow the humans to communicate with them too and potentially make a truce.

Either option was risky, but he decided that it would be better to teach them, because if they can speak, then they’ll be less like animals, they could be reasoned with. Even if he did manage to escape alive, closing the other entrance wouldn’t stop them and the humans wouldn’t be able to wipe them out completely. He nodded, satisfied by his decision, and stood up. 

The King ate contemplatively, considering this human. It could teach them, but to learn requires a visual reference. He had already tested this hypothesis and learned the word meat. This is good for learning nouns, but it would be harder to form sentences and words that are harder to show visually, like verbs.

Still, just knowing nouns is immensely powerful in communication. Now the human was standing, looking braver than usual. The King looked at it with curiosity.

“Fridge.” The man said, slapping it. 

“Food?” The Lacertilian said.

The man shook his head and tapped it again. “Fridge.”

The Lacertilian walked closer and picked it up, dumping the contents out and setting it to the side. It pointed at it “Fridge?”

“Yes, fridge.” the man said, nodding for clarity, then pointed at the pile of food. “Food.”

“Meat?” The Lacertilian said.

“No, food.” 

The Lacertilian walked over to the corner and, to the man’s disgust, pulled out a human arm, “Food?”

The man thought, how would he tell it that it’s both food and meat? He decided that he would tell them when they can understand more than one-syllable words. “No, meat.”

The king nodded, satisfied by the answer. He realized then that the human chose to teach him that time. Its cooperation was entirely unexpected but welcome. He grew suspicious, it seemed highly unlikely that a human would choose to help them gain power unless they had ulterior motives. He would watch it closely, but for now, he’d accept the cooperation.

The human pointed at itself. “Alex.”

The King narrowed his eyes in confusion and pointed at the man. “Human?”

“Human, yes, Alex, yes.” The human said, and the King thought for a moment and nodded. He understood that the man was both a human and Alex. Alex must have been a title. The King reached into a pile of books and pulled out a children’s book, holding it gently in his massive hands, and opened to a specific page. On it, a cartoon showed a king with a glittering crown standing above all his subjects, small arms outstretched.

“This?” The King asked, pointing at the page.

“King.” The man said.

He nodded and pointed at himself. “King.”

The King had difficulties accommodating the human called Alex. It seemed that the man was unable to eat raw meat like the rest of his subjects. The food he gave the man at first was mostly edible but much harder to find. He was almost about to give up when Alex tried to speak to him.

“Give.” He said, gesturing to the pile of meat in the corner. “Meat.”

“Meat, yes?” The King said pointing to one of the deer legs.

Alex nodded. “Yes.”

The King tossed it over to him, curious.

He fumbled with the leg, tearing whatever skin he could off. He used to hunt, but since the forest became filled with far more dangers than just bears and mountain lions, he preferred to just stick close to camp. But much of the skill remained, such as cleaning a carcass. He arranged a couple of sticks in a pile. He assumed they were remains from building the tent. He pulled out a flint striker from his pocket and began to spay sparks down at the wood.

The King stepped closer, intrigued. Humans didn’t have any kind of fire glands, so it seemed that they had to use rocks instead. He picked up a small branch and faced away from Alex, sprayed a small stream of fire at it, and tossed it in the small pile of wood.

“Thanks,” Alex said, leaning back as the flames lept up unexpectedly.

The King continued to watch as the human started to burn the meat. Causing it to drip in the fire. He thought about stopping him, but he thought it was unlikely that he would try to destroy their food supply in front of him.

Alex sat for a while until he was sure it was good to eat. He looked up at the King and took a bite out of it.

The King immediately understood. The man’s digestive system is too simple to process raw meat, so it had to be slightly burned. He made a mental note to set up his rations.

For the first week, Alex had to sleep on the ground in the tent, where it stank of raw meat. He tried to go into the library, but that made the King angry. It was clear that the library was sacred to them in some way. 

Maybe they were more intelligent than the Watch, the group set up by the deputy to protect the town, was willing to admit. And in teaching them English, he would be opening pandora’s box. But still, he knew it was the only way to stop them from killing more people.

Eventually, they gave him a house with crudely boarded-up windows and a bloodstain on the floor. It was the house that was the most intact and close to the library, so he could tell that they valued him greatly, but trusted him very little.

Sleeping there was just as difficult as sleeping in the tent, if not more. In the bedroom he slept in, there was a row of photographs lined up on the dresser. Photos of a happy family vacationing at various places across the world. Two parents and a little girl with a big smile stood on a beach. The same girl wrestled a fluffy dog on the green grass of their yard. A yard that was now covered in scorch marks. Their smiles haunted him and fed the shame he had in helping monsters.

He made the right choice, he told himself. He owed them to make a final decision. The only decision that could stop the killing. Still, the image of a happy, oblivious family coming to a violent and unexpected end kept his eyes wide open at night.

Instead of sleeping, he found the office in the house and started working on a method of teaching. It seemed that showing them objects and defining them worked the best, similar to how children would learn using flashcards. He wrote up a list of words he wanted to teach, specifically choosing ones that would increase communication without giving tactical advantages. Words like sun, dirt, house, and water were some of the only ones he could think of that couldn’t be used in some way.

Alex worked hard, forming lesson plans on paper lit by the light of a flashlight. Eventually, he seamlessly drifted to sleep, continuing to think of how he could teach from the ground up. Those dreams turned into nightmares of torture and oppression. He saw hundreds of humans being ruthlessly enslaved by supersized reptiles in a dark future. He saw them spread like wildfire across all of civilization.

He woke to the sound of heavy slamming at the front door. A million thoughts went through his head at once. Had they come to kill me? Was it the Watch here to save me? He quickly grabbed his notes and ran for the door and opened it. A large Lacertilian with horns glared down at him. Alex noticed that it held a rake in its hands. They were starting to learn how to use weapons.

The Lacertilian silently led him to the library. In the yard of one of the houses, a group of smaller ones chased a rabbit, caught it, and released it again. They would occasionally break out into a violently playful wrestling match. Alex’s amazement nearly stopped him in his tracks. They were playing. He could even tell that their game had some complexity by the fact that they would space themselves out from where the rabbit is released in an organized way. It seemed that their placement somewhat depended on which caught the rabbit last. 

Eventually, they noticed him and stopped the game, watching with curious eyes. Alex saw all of this as a good sign. If they were curious about humans, that means they want to learn more, and when they learn more, it’ll be easier for them to sympathize. However, the horrific warning from his dreams still hung in his mind.

The Lacertilian with the rake led him into the library, where the King kneeled by a table with several other horned Lacertilians. It growled a greeting and kneeled at an empty spot at the table as the King stood up.

“Alex.” He said, leading him away from the table. He shivered before following. It was terrifying to see such an inhuman creature call him by name. He briefly caught a glimpse of the table, which was piled with maps. 

The King led him to a small table in a secluded area and crouched. On the table sat piles of children’s books. With large, leathery hands, he opened the one on top and showed it to him. 

He pointed to the short line of large text at the bottom. “This?” He said.

“Those are words,” Alex said.

The King paused. “Teach words?”

Alex nodded, teaching them how to read would help them be able to empathize. He walked away from the table, turning back to see if the King would allow him to explore the library. His hulking form slowly stood up and followed him. 

Alex looked through the rows of bookshelves, trying to remember how the Dewey decimal system worked. Thankfully, he was able to find what he was looking for. Down one aisle by the floor, he found a thick textbook based on phonics. 

He looked through it briefly before closing it and taking it back to the kids’ section as the King looked down on him with curiosity. That book would be his lesson plan, he thought. Teaching would be a breeze with it.

Teaching the King was hard at first. Especially since he was having difficulties understanding that Alex needed him to repeat sounds for each letter. Eventually, he was able to sound out whole sentences after he read them to him. 

The King sat with him for most of the day, patiently listening to the sounds of each letter and connecting each word with an image on the page. Alex found it strangely funny, reading children’s stories to a ten-foot-tall lizard monster. 

Over the next few weeks, he spent most of his time teaching the King in the library. The others woke him up earlier and earlier each day. He started seeing them with more makeshift weapons and armor. He saw one wearing football pads and a helmet with the facemask torn out so its head could fit. The games the younger ones played got more sophisticated, and far more brutal. Luckily, they seemed to have become more comfortable around him. The one in charge of waking him up would slouch and lumber toward the library instead of escorting him. The younger ones wouldn’t so much as look up from their game as he passed as if he was just another one of them or the hunt of the day being brought into camp.

The King could almost carry a conversation by then, and his excitement was apparent.

“We hunt today.” He said, gesturing to a large pile of fresh meat. Alex was sure that he didn’t need to know that, It was clear the King said that just because he could. 

Because he was the only other one who could speak, the King grew closer to him. He found it strange, being able to relate to a monster. That’s when he knew his plan was starting to work. Even as the photos in his room continue to haunt him. 

Eventually, Alex started to see the King teach the other horned Lacertilians that frequented the map table much in the same way he had. He saw the words spread across the camp and soon even the younger ones were using some as they played. It was strange to see them speak and it made them seem oddly human. It also made him worried that his usefulness was going to expire.

He thought of plans to escape. It wouldn’t be hard to sneak out a window of his house, since it’s on the edge of the camp by the border wall, but it’s also on the side opposite from the rest of town. He would have to travel around the entire border to get back. He could go into the woods, but he couldn’t imagine the horrors that could lie there. Even if he somehow made it into the forest without being killed horribly by some bizarre entity, it wouldn’t take long for the Lacertilians to track him down.

No, there was only one way out. He would have to stick to his original plan and negotiate. On his walk to the library, he couldn’t help the thought of everything going horribly wrong.

When he opened the flap in the tent, the King stood in the entrance to the library, looking down at the book in his hands.

“Uh, King? Could I speak with you?” Alex said.

“You may call me Basileus now.” He said without looking up. “Basileus is my name.”

Alex was a little surprised by the sudden name change. “Why did you choose that name?”

Basileus closed the book and he could see that it was a Latin dictionary. “Humans use this old language to name creatures. Basileus means king. I will be the first of many kings.”

“Oh,” Alex said, thinking about how he was already learning other languages.

He walked deeper into the library and Alex followed. 

“You wanted to speak with me?” Basileus said, stopping behind a bookshelf away from the other horned Lacertilians.

“I want to make an offer.” He said. Thinking about how Basileus said that he would be the first of many. How he sounded like he would be the start of a long dynasty. He looked up at his large amber eyes, full of curiosity. “I would like to initiate a treaty between you and the humans.”

Basileus stood up straighter, looking larger than ever. 

“A treaty?” He said, tilting his head slightly.

“It’s an agreement where both sides choose to be peaceful under certain conditions.” He said, seeing a hint of anger in Basileus’s face as he blinked with his inner eyelids.

“I’ve had many hunting parties shot down by your humans. They use their guns on us whenever we get close to their walls.” It was clear he was trying to hold his anger back, “Our hunting parties are fewer. There isn’t enough meat to go around.” He stepped closer to Alex, glaring down at him “I have been forced to cannibalize the weaker ones many times.” He calmed himself slightly. “Humans deserve no peace.”

Alex was shocked, somehow he did not realize how much the humans have retaliated. He couldn’t think of what to say to that, he even felt himself sympathizing with them. He was suddenly reminded of the owners of the house he stayed in, how they were an ordinary family before everything happened. He had to make this work.

“But if we make a treaty, we could stop them from shooting you,” Alex said softly. “We could even share food with you.”

“They won’t keep their word.” He spat. “They only shoot.”

“They shoot because they’re scared,” Alex said. “Trust me, I know how they work. Once they see that you’re just as intelligent as they are, they’ll see you as a potential ally, not a threat.”

Basileus closed his eyes for a long moment, fighting back his anger.

“I have been planning this fight for a long time.” He said. “Even if I agree to this, my soldiers will want blood.”

“Then direct their anger somewhere else,” Alex said, thinking about everything the Watch has to deal with. “There are many things in the forest that are even more threatening than you or the humans.”

“And why,” He said. “Do the humans deserve peace more than them?”

“Because we only kill if we have to,” Alex said. “I’ve seen things in the forest that kill as if it’s as normal as breathing. The humans think you’re one of those creatures, but since I’ve been here, I can see that you’re anything but. I’ve even seen your children play just like ours do.”

The king sighed and stood silent for a moment, “Fine, I’ll try to convince my people to do it, but it will be hard to keep the peace.” He started to walk down the aisle. “And if your people go back on their word, there will be no peace.”

“That’s the nature of a treaty,” Alex said, trying to contain his relief.

Over the next few days, the war planning continued, and Basileus started to gradually introduce the idea of a treaty to the rest of the horned Lacertilians. Alex noticed how strategic he was about it, how he would tell a trusted member to spread rumors to the others and keep the conversations about it in private until enough were curious about it. Some pushed back from the beginning with a burning hatred of humans. He told Alex that this group would likely keep resisting until the end, they’d just have to change enough of their minds so they wouldn’t have enough influence to affect the decision.

“When I became king.” He said. “My people chose me to be king because I was smarter than the rest. But some others thought they should be king, so they gained their own followers.” He said spitefully. “They’ll always cave to the majority. They are not brave enough to make their own kingdom.”

A few days later, they had a trial to decide whether or not to attack the humans. They set up several chairs in an open area of the library in the shape of a semicircle, all facing a large, torn-up loveseat, where Basileus sat. Alex sat in a small kid’s chair next to him with his knees almost touching his chin.

Once all were seated, Basileus nodded. “It’s time to decide, will we conquer the humans or make peace with them?”

“King Basileus, we’re wasting our time.” One of the horned lacertilians said, wearing crude armor made of animal bones and wood. “The entrance to the human camp won’t be open forever. If they find out where it is, they won’t want a treaty.”

“Agree, King.” A large one next to him said quickly. “Must strike now.”

“But we don’t know what the humans are capable of if we provoke them.” Another on a different table said. “It’ll be safer if we make a treaty.”

The armored one cackled. “We know exactly what they’re capable of, Robert, their weak bones and squealing won’t stop us. If they could kill us they would’ve already.”

“Let’s look at this strategically,” A scarred one said. “They have guns. We have a secret entrance. What if they’ve known about the entrance for months? Maybe they wait for us.”

“Maybe we should ask the human over there.” The armored one said, looking right at Alex. “he’s taught us a lot so far. King Basileus, have you considered squeezing the truth out of him? He could tell us everything we need to know if we make him fear.”

The rest of the group looked at him differently, with less curiosity and more opportunity.

“If we torture him, we lose the possibility of a treaty,” Basileus said.

The armored one shrugged. “That’s a risk we’ll be willing to make right? How dangerous could they be? Do you remember how we slaughtered them on the first night?”

“They were more vulnerable then.” The scarred one said. “Humans are known to adapt quickly.”

“They are quite dangerous when they hit our hunting parties.” The one called Robert said. “Especially with their guns.”

“Which is why we should attack soon.” The armored one said. “If we hit fast enough and hard enough, we can cripple them before they can organize themselves.”

“We should let the human speak.” The scarred one said, nodding to Alex. “I want to hear his perspective.”

“Very well,” Basileus said and gestured to Alex. “You may speak now.”

“As many of you know,” Alex said, standing up. “I’ve been with you a long time now, and I’ve learned just as much from you as you learned from me. I can tell you that the other humans don’t know about you as much as I do. To them, you’re the same as any other monster from the forest. I think they’ve been trying to ignore you as much as possible.” He saw some of them exchange surprised looks, “But instead of gauging how dangerous they are, you should look at how helpful they could be as allies. They attack you because they’re like any other creature, they adapt to things they’re scared of. But if you show them how you can be peaceful, they’ll respect you, and see you as a potential ally and not a threat. Humans are normally a peaceful race, but they turn distrustful when they’re threatened.”

Alex sat down and the court remained silent for a moment. 

“That’s a very compelling point,” The scarred one said, “And it got me thinking, on the first night, we slaughtered the humans because we didn’t know anything and we were scared.” He looked at the armored one. “And we’ve been blaming the humans for all the problems we have, but can you imagine the fear and pain the humans must feel from that massacre? At this point, I think we’ve killed far more of them compared to what they’ve done.”

“But Maps? So many maps!” The big one blurted out.

“What he means to say.” The armored one said after seeing the looks of confusion from the court, “We’ve been planning this raid for months. Do we want to throw it away?”

“We could still use them,” Robert said. “If the humans refuse our treaty.”

The armored one sank lower into his chair.

“Any objections?” Basileus said and let the silence hang for a moment, then nodded. “We’ll let Alex speak with the humans to set up a meeting.”

“911 what’s your emergency?” It was the first time he heard the voice of another human being in almost three months.

After taking it in a moment, he responded. “Who is this?”

“This is deputy Cain.” The voice said. “Are you in a safe position?”

“Yes sir,” Alex said. “You aren’t gonna believe where I’ve been.”

“What are you talking about?” He could imagine him leaning closer to the phone on his desk.

“You know those lizard creatures that attacked the south part of town?”

“Yes, we call them the Lacertilians.” Deputy Cain said. “Have you been taken by them?”

“I have.” He said. “I’ve been with them for several months now and I’ve taught them English.” He looked up at Basileus, who nodded. “And they would like to make a treaty.”

The line went silent for a while. Alex wondered for a moment if he had hung up.

“Well shit, that changes my plans for today.”