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Born Killers: Part 2

07 Sunday Sep 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Odds and Ends

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Born Killers, part 2

Zack shrugged Amber up onto her feet. He could feel her fighting her way back to consciousness as he did so, muttering something that Zach could barely hear. He addressed Daven first, mentally walking through his map of the layout.

“Only way out of this place is straight through the thick of it all. We’re lucky this was a secluded room, but I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s a pair of guards sitting just outside the door there. ST hardly goes anywhere without his crew.”

Daven nodded, eyeing up the closed door. “Yeah, the Doctor was always a cautious one. That’s only the second time I’ve seen the man since I took the hit. You must have impressed him a lot that he came in alone.”

Zack smiled, “That part was easy, I just tried to do you proud. Took some high risk gigs, told them you killed my parents and I wanted revenge… He never suspected I knew he put out the hit on them.”

“Well lets see if I can do you proud then.” Daven said, “Which way to the loading bay?” Zack pointed out a direction as Daven kicked open the door, deftly putting two bullets into the mooks outside and one in the overhead light. In the half-light that followed, Zack could just see him take off in the indicated direction. He half dragged, half carried Amber along, following behind the footsteps of his foster father.

“Get down!” Daven hissed, harshly pulling Zack to the floor as a bullet whizzed through the shelves overhead.

“I did not bring enough bullets to get into a shoot out.” Zack muttered as Daven fired off another shot down the corridor of the shipping room. It pinged off the shelving, sending another guy darting away.

“Should have thought of that sooner.” Amber said sluggishly, reaching up to gingerly touch her forehead. Zack gave her a worried look, trying to see the gash beneath the blood, but Daven just smiled.

“Hey girl, if you’re good enough to snark, you’re good enough to run.” He winked at Zack, “Get her onto a truck on my count.”

“NOW!”

As Daven shouted, Zack took off running with Amber down the rows of boxes, heedless of the gunfire in the background.

The loading bay was empty save for one small truck, thankfully also empty. Amber slid into the passenger seat, and started poking the growing lump on her forehead while Zack sat behind the steering wheel. Luckily the keys had been left in the ignition as he nervously drummed his fingers on the leather wheel.

“Pass me the gun.” Amber said casually, brushing dried blood off her face. Zack looked at her swollen eye and hesitated momentarily. Noticing the pause, Amber turned to fix a steely gaze on him.

“Even with one eye, I can still shoot better than you.” she said. Zack passed her the weapon unquestioningly. “Thank you. I swear, first time they take a loved one and you get all protective like I’m not the one who taught you how to shoot in the first place. Just keep watching for that lump of a man to get out here.”

She went back to fussing and Zack was struck by how young she looked. It’d been 4 years since he last saw her, she should be just under 50, but then, he was hardly a child himself any more. He realized more and more what Daven had told him all those years ago. They’d just been a pair of stupid kids when they took out his parents, all hopped up on lies about dangerous weapons dealers. Not that they’d been terribly far off the mark.

It felt like an eternity before Daven came whooping his way out of the warehouse, grabbing onto the carriage of the truck. Zack gunned the ignition, heading straight out of the complex. They’d try to pull the gates across the road, but the headquarters was designed to keep people out, not in. Zack had no fear as he manoeuvred the truck through the chain link fence, heading towards the road as Daven slipped into the cab behind him.

“So then, kid, what’s next on the list?” he asked, squinting into the setting sun out the front window.

“I dunno,” Zack said, “I had some money saved up from that last gig, I was thinking retirement in Bora Bora sounded like a fine idea.”

Born Killers

04 Thursday Sep 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Odds and Ends, Stories

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part 1

The room in the warehouse was pitch black when Zack slipped into it. He barely needed the flashlight to confirm what he already knew was inside, but he used it anyway. The two people sitting before him, tied to a pair of wooden chairs, were as familiar to him as his own parents. More familiar, perhaps. They were the ones who had killed his parents, Deadly Daven and Avenging Amber, and set him down the path he was on today. They were the reason he’d become a hitman

He could remember the day if he thought back hard enough. His parents, huddled in the back of the sloppily built house, his father begging the pair to spare him for the sake of his son and wife. Of course, the pair had no intention of leaving his wife alive either as they shot her immediately afterwards. Zack had tried to keep silent, and obey his father’s last command.  But there was only so much that could be expected of a 6 year old, hiding behind the curtains while his mother’s blood stained his shoes. Amber and Daven certainly hadn’t expected the small ball of fury that flew at them out of the hiding spot.

Suddenly, the warehouse flooded with light, and from behind Zack he heard the footfalls of Dr. Sean Trenton. The name Dr. ST was well known in the underground world where Zack had found a home. It was said that no on survived a run in with his type of gang. It had taken Zack 4 years to work his way into Dr. ST’s inner circle, and now the fruits of his labour were about to come about. He’d never laid eyes on the man, but he recognized his voice immediately.

“Well well, Zachary, how’s that for a coming home present?” Dr. ST chuckled, gesturing at the two trained killers tied to the chairs. “I’ll admit, the pair was tricky to hunt down, but after that job in Japan, I figured I could go the extra mile. It’s not everyone who manages to whack off an ambassador and get away clean.”

Zack smiled to himself as he inspected the pair in front of him. Tied to chairs and gagged, they hardly looked like the menacing pair of his childhood. Beaten and swollen, they both looked rather pathetic. Daven gave him a pleading look over the dirty gag, imploring him with his eyes. Zack wondered if that was a similar expression to what his father had worn, 27 years ago. Amber looked barely conscious, her head rolling at an awkward angle with blood crusting over half her lovely face. Dr. ST walked over to her, lifting her head with one hand to stared into her one barely opened eye.

“So what are you thinking, Zack?” the Doctor moved behind her as he spoke, running big, filthy hands through her gritty, auburn hair. “Shoot them quickly and be done with it? Torture them slowly for their crimes against your parents? This is your big moment.”

Zack hemmed as he pulled his gun out of it’s hidden holster. It was a good gun, it had served him well over his years. Hitman was hardly a typical career path, but his had hardly been a typical life. It was a small handgun, not nearly as useful in the long range kills he specialized in now, but at this range, he could hardly miss the shot.

“I’ve always been a believer in making it quick.” Zack said, raising the gun. It let out a quick bark that echoed in the warehouse, as Dr Sean Trenton fell to the ground, a bullet hole through his forehead.

Zack moved quickly to untie Daven, slicing through the ropes that bound his wrists before moving over to Amber. Daven pulled the gag from his mouth before working on the tight ropes that bound his ankles.

“I really thought for a moment there you were going to shoot her,” Daven said quietly as Zack pulled Amber’s limp form up from the chair, draping her arm around his neck.

Zack scoffed, “Shoot you guys for one more scumbag weapon’s dealer? Come on, Dad, you know me better than that. You’re the one who taught me to lie when I was barely 8 years old.”

Daven gave him a wry smile as he rummaged the crime lord’s body, coming away with a spare gun.

“I suppose I did, Kid. So then, what’s our best path out of this wasp’s nest?”

The Lake

26 Tuesday Aug 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Odds and Ends, Stories

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Creative Writing, fiction

“You dropped the soap? What do you mean you dropped the soap?”

She floated in the lake water as she asked the question, her perfectly level head at odds with the long white legs and arms treading beneath surface of the water. I shrugged sheepishly from the over-inflated toy.

“It just shot out of my hands! I’m sorry, I wasn’t expecting it to be so slippery!”

“Well of course it’s slippery! It’s a bar of soap! What were you expecting?”

“Alright, alright, I get it.” I said, my cheeks heating up. “So now what?”

She shrugged, the water making an odd ripple as her legs and arms continued to churn. “We get another bar of soap, I guess. The lake is 25 feet deep, it’s long gone.”

“All the way up the hill?”

“Well, you dropped it,” she said, sticking out her tongue. “Only fair.”

“I have a better idea.” I pushed myself up onto the floatable and out of the cold lake waters.

“Oh?”

“Yeah.” I lay back just as the sun poked out from behind the clouds, beaming down rays of warmth to chase away the chill. “Let’s just swim. You can take a shower later.”

A sharp splash in the water and a spray of cold water droplets answered my question. Oh well, can’t win them all.

Nightfall

22 Friday Aug 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Stories, water

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Creative Writing, elements, fantasy, fiction

The monster would come at nightfall, they told her. At the moment when the sun just touched the ocean outside, and the horizon turned green. It wouldn’t be long now, Katrina knew. The sun filtered into the observatory at a harsh angle, barely a hand’s width away from the edge of the water and turning her hair as red as the dress they’d put her in. Not much longer now.

The flat stone floor was still wet from the morning’s high waves, but she ignored it, sinking to her knees as the cold seeped through the thin dress. Bowing her head, she started to pray.

Not to the old gods, they’d already failed. Praying to them had been the first thing her people had tried, and look where it had brought them. To the point of human sacrifices every new moon. No, they would get no more prayers from her, and no more tears.

To new gods then. To gods who would bring back the happiness and joy. To gods that would stop the drought, stop the fires and bring back the rains. To gods who would reassure her parents that her death wasn’t in vain, reassure her sisters that they wouldn’t be next. And maybe, just maybe, gods that would save her. She was so deep in prayer she barely noticed the sun slipping past the edge of the world, or the darkness that engulfed her.

The footsteps on the stone steps however, those broke her out of her trance. She whipped around to see a young man climbing the steps to the room, silhouetted against the dying light of the sunset.

“You aren’t a monster,” she blurted out before quickly covering her mouth with her hand. The man chuckled as he approached.

“Are you certain about that?” he asked as he reached the top step. It was then that she noticed his long, scaled tail as it flicked over the steps, wrapping around one of the pillars. She lowered her hand in horror.

“What are you?” She whispered. The man just laughed more as he crossed the floor towards her, holding out a hand towards her. She placed her hand in his and he pulled her to her feet.

“I suppose,” he said as he guided her towards the ocean, “You could say I’m a new god, looking to find a disciple.”

The Day of the Password Lock out

17 Sunday Aug 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Stories

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It was Tuesday. John hated Tuesdays. Sure, Monday was the more traditional day, but he’d gotten used to them, knowing that no matter how long the weekend was, there would always be a “first day after the weekend.” Tuesdays, on the other hand, were just evidence that the week was far too long in corporate America, and the weekend far too short.

And so by the time he dragged his grey-suited ass into his cubicle and plunked down in front of the sleek, black computer screen, he was already in foul mood. He stared at the chipper blue login page blankly for a moment. Then for a second moment.

After a third moment had passed, he decided he was clearly too tired and went to get a coffee.

After he had stared at the blue screen for a full minute, coffee still steaming in his hand, John knew there was no denying the truth any longer. He’d forgotten his password.

Sighing in frustration, he put his coffee down hard, getting up from his desk. Luckily, there weren’t many people in the office yet as he made his walk of shame over to the IT department. He passed by the rows of blue screens before finally approaching Dave’s desk. Dave was cool; he wouldn’t tell anyone.

Dave was just sitting down at his desk when John got there. John was always envious that IT could wear jeans and a t-shirt into the office. Dave broke into a smile when he saw John walk in, a fresh cup of coffee in his hands.

“Hey John! What’s up today?”

John passed him the coffee, giving him a sheepish grin. “I know it’s early in the morning, but I need your help. Seems I forgot my login password.”

Dave laughed, taking the coffee. “And I suppose this is a bribe? No worries, let me just reset that for you.”

He sat down heavily into the leather chair, swivelling into the desk. John watched his fingers tap over the keyboard until he was at the blue screen himself. Then stop.

“Huh…” He stared at his screen uncomfortably. “I think… I think I’ve forgotten mine too.”

The day was a blur after that. John watched as one by one, employees started to trickle into the small IT department, crowding up the floor to complain about forgotten passwords. Dave spent the first hour in conference with the other IT members, then the next 3 on the phone. Jogn was even locked out of his smartphone, staring down at the keypad in confusion. He knew it was a simple password… But now he couldn’t remember it. Couldn’t remember any of his passwords, for anything.

Finally, the boss had come downstairs himself. Said this had happened across the country, no one could remember any passwords. Not just passwords but secrets had been forgotten, mostly recipes. The receptionist, a pretty blonde girl who said she’d never bothered to lock her phone in the first place, even found one article saying it was happening worldwide. After another hour passed with no progress, the boss announced they could all go home.

Flopping onto his couch back home, John flipped on the TV as he loosened his tie. The news reporter was just getting on the air when the home phone rang. He picked it up curiously.

“Johnny! There you are, sweetheart!” His mother’s voice rang clearly through the headset. He winced slightly, holding the phone an inch from his ear.

“Yeah, they sent us home early. How’d you know I’d be here, Mom?”

“Well I was trying to call your desk but you weren’t picking up and I know you’re normally in the office. I thought you might have been home sick.”

“Oh…”

“Anyways, honey, I was just calling to ask if you’d gotten a chance to read my email yet.”

John sighed. “Mom, you know you don’t have to call me every time you send an email. That’s like…. I don’t know, knocking on someone’s door to see if they checked their voicemail yet.”

“Oh I know dearie, I just never trust these new-fangled things anyways.”

“And no,” he continued, “No one in the office could remember their passwords. They say it’s worldwide or something.” He was about to go on a rant when a thought snuck into his head. “Wait, how did YOU remember your email password? You never remember it!”

“Oh you know darling, I just got so tired of forgetting it, I wrote them all out on a post-it note and stuck it to the side of the monitor. Now then, about Aunt Edda’s potluck dinner….”

A Short Romance

08 Friday Aug 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Stories

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The First time he saw him
His smile caught his eye,
Thin lips and a crooked grin.
In that classroom filled with grim.

From the back of the hall
Filled with students and books
The smile pierced the distance
Like the red of his car in a grey winter rain.

But it vanished in the lecture
Behind numbers and letters.
And he lost it somewhere
Behind the waves of other people.


 

The Second occasion
Was a time for celebrating.
He was at a birthday party,
With no expectations.

When he sighted the boy
Across the fuss and the glitter,
His heart took a dive,
As he posted to Twitter.

He begged his friend
For a quick introduction,
But the ways to romance
Fell flat to talk of the weather.


 

The Third time was better
Though the boy wasn’t there
Just two girls talking
About the shine of his hair.

He was just barely listening
Dreaming of the slopes
But the words that they said
Raised a glimmer of hope.

“He’s gay.” she whispered,
Crushing her friend.
But his heart went awhirl
With thoughts of the future.


 

The fourth time they met
Was his favourite time yet.
A chance interaction
At a soccer ball tournament.

His team scored the goal,
straight in for the win
In the chaos that followed
He just caught that grin.

He pushed through the crowd
Heedless of the cheer
Until he stood by the boy
His face flushed to the ears.


“I heard a rumour.”
He heard himself say.
“I heard one too.”
Came the wanted reply.

“Perhaps after this scene,
We might get a drink?”
The crowd parted, it seemed
As if afraid to invade.

“I’d like that, I think.”
Said the boy with the grin
“Now go celebrate, dink,
You just won the game!”

The Winter Witch

06 Wednesday Aug 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Stories

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Image by Eran Fowler

The great white owl wove a path through the dense birch trees, the black slashs in the tree’s bark the only thing that set them apart from the snow that carpeted the forest floor. In a spray of snow, the owl settled onto the shoulder of a figure cloaked in layers of thick grey wool, cooing gently. A withered finger snaked it’s way through the layers, stroking the soft feathers.

“A girl, you say.” The figure spoke softly. “What would bring a child of summer so far?”

The owl cocked it’s head, peering at the woman’s wrinkled face and greying hairs beneath her ash-coloured hood. Sabine chuckled softly.

“Yes yes Meridia, I suppose I should go ask her myself.” She set off with a slow, halting walk, leaning heavily on her twisted walking stick.


Sabine stood at the edge of the clearing, blue eyes scrutinizing the scene carefully. The snow lay thick on the ground all about her, except for this perfect circle of green grass, dotted with small pink flowers. Though snow fell lightly about the circle, any flakes that entered the dome quickly melted, falling like a soft rain on the girl who lay in the center of the circle.

She looked young to Sabine’s eyes, no older than 16 and far too skinny beneath her thin sweater, with pale blonde hair, cut short around her ears. She lay curled up on her side, so still that Sabine worried she might be dead until she saw the gentle rise and fall of her chest. Asleep then, despite the fussing of the large red and blue bird that sat atop her, plucking at her hair with a long, black beak.

Hesitantly, Sabine came a step closer. The bird whirled around at her with fire in its eyes, its head lowered and wings extended. Its wingspan was impressive, covering the girl from head to toe, revealing red and gold wings, patterned with blue designs. Long tail feathers of red and blue wrapped about the girl protectively. Sabine felt the hairs on the back of her neck stand up as she read the message clearly. Back off, this girl is mine.

“I don’t mean any harm.” Sabine said softly, coming to a halt. The bird didn’t budge, watching her closely. Sabine continued to talk, keeping her voice soothing. “I just mean to help. Is the girl alright?”

The bird ruffled his feathers at her more, but she thought she saw a glimmer of hesitation in his dark eyes. She edged her way closer still and the bird didn’t move, still glowering at her over the form of the unmoving girl, until Sabine stood at the edge of the circle, careful not to cross the line where the snow made way for grass. A cold wind blew past the old woman, washing over the sleeping girl and the wary bird. The girl shivered violently as the cold reached her bare legs, sending ripples up through the bird’s wings. The bird broke eye contact, peering down at his charge.

“Please let me help.” Sabine whispered. “You can’t hold this spell forever.”

With a look of defeat, the bird folded his wings to his side, stepping off the girl. Sabine bustled her way to the girl’s side. The inside of the circle was warm, like a little pocket of spring, but when she picked up the girl’s hand it was wet and cold as ice. The girl stared up at her face with blank eyes, as green as the grass around her. Sabine smiled calmly at her.

“Hello, my dear. Let’s get you warmed up.”

After a bit of fuss, Sabine had the girl bundled up under her robes, one thin arm over her hunched shoulders. As slowly as the witch arrived, the pair left the springtime glade, following the path of the red bird chasing the white owl.

Good Morning

01 Friday Aug 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Stories

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The man walked through the kitchen lit only by the pale light of dawn, humming a gentle tune as he ran a hand over his balding head. The thin light bounced off the grey cabinets, revealing a spattering of black mold, but he seemed oblivious enough to the filth beneath his slippers as he poured the black grinds into the small coffee machine. It gurgled to life as he flipped the switch, the red light illuminating a newspaper bearing yesterday’s date. Peter swept the paper off the table, leaning up against a rotting countertop to better read the headlines in the grey light.

“PRISON BREAK AT MAXIMUM SECURITY PRISON!”

The headline screamed at him, bold capitals prioritizing the front page. The image below showed the the jail behind chain link fences. On the cover, hapless guards tried to cover up their incompetence, but Peter didn’t waste his time on that article. He’d heard enough of the snivelling guards already. He had flipped to page three, where the local journalist had covered a charity project at the local college. There, sandwiched between information on bus cancellations and a model airplane meet, three girls stood proudly behind a table covered of cookies and muffins. The middle one beamed a smile that looked like she had been practicing it since birth, shoulders back with straight blonde hair pulled back by a pink headband. The caption happily bore her name.

“Melissa Jenkins, Penny Andrews, and Heather Delours, all students here at Uppertown College and members of the Nu Rho Delta Sorority, proudly display their bake sale to raise money for breast cancer.”

Peter ran a dirty fingernail along the image of Penny’s cheek. It had been 7 years since he’d seen her last, he wondered if she would still remember him. The coffee maker clicked off and the man casually pulled the chipped blue coffee cup out from beneath it, sipping at the brown liquid. The stale beans had made for musty coffee, but the drink still tasted like freedom to him. The sun had flooded into the kitchen as Peter sat down at the small table, flipping over to the crossword on the last page. He still had time, Penny had classes until 8.

Temporary Hiatus

18 Friday Jul 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Ramblings

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Camp NaNoWriMo, NaNoWriMo, Novel writing

So, I’ve been bad about posting new content here lately, thought it was worth it to post a reason. I’ve been busy doing Camp NaNoWriMo this month. NaNoWriMo, for those who don’t know, is a yearly event that happens in November, where writers try to write 50k words in a month. Camp NaNoWriMo is a less serious version of that, where you set your own goal and get cabin mates to help cheer you along.

Which means this month, I’ve been writing stories for a novel! Which is cool, but doesn’t lead itself well to posting it up here. Next month, when I start editing some of these stories, I’ll be sure to start posting them up here!

The Paladin

30 Monday Jun 2014

Posted by lexilogical in Stories

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

art, fantasy, Kim Sokol, Paladin, Story

Image

Art by Kim Sokol

A failure. That’s what she was, Arianna knew. Yesterday, everything had seemed so clear to her as she lined up with the other volunteers. It hadn’t seemed to matter that her armour was crude and her sword a hand-me-down from her father, their mission was clear and simple. Protect the town from the army that was coming across the land. But now that same army streamed past Arianna as she dragged her broken body into the safety of the church.

The first report had come in a few days ago, carried by the Mackenzie boys on a nearly dead horse. They talked about a great wave of black crashing over the countryside, leaving flames in their wake. The youngest boy even talked about goblins and demons in their midst. It sounded like bedtime stories to Arianna at the time, and she’d completely dismissed it as such. Her father had told stories of armies passing before, and the destruction they could cause while looking for food and supplies. Discourage them, he urged, but don’t give them cause to attack. The mayor had called for a volunteer army to defend the town, and come they had, armed with family heirlooms and farm equipment. They just need to look intimidating, and with much luck, the army would leave. Arianna regretted that she had ignored the boy now as she stared at the red glow filtering in through the broken church windows.

The reports had changed as more refugees came in, more talk of demons with small, twisted bodies. Some people had run, fearing the rumours, but the Captain of the guard was confident as he walked up and down the lines of his new army. He told them they were strong, and army was weak. They would soon leave to easier conquests, leaving the town intact. But now Arianna watched the town burn through the church window as she dragged her broken leg to a bench, blood streaming from her arm. A failure, through and through.

She could hear screams behind her as the the demons hauled another person into the streets. Was that Ms Grayson from the schoolhouse? She wasn’t sure any more, the screams were all starting to sound the same. She pulled her broken sword into her lap and stared up at the church’s ceiling.

“Well God, now what?” she asked plainly, watching bright spots swim past her eyes. The church air hung silently in response, at odds with the screams from outside.

“NOW WHAT?!” She yelled into the heavy air, clenching her fist around the hilt of her shattered sword, hastily shoved back in it’s scabbard. “You’re supposed to be good. You’re supposed to love us! Is this how you show love, with an army of demons?” Her cries echoed off the altar, bouncing back to her as twisted as the army.

“An army of demons,” the echo said mockingly. A scream from outside pierced the echo, and Arianna’s vision blurred beneath tears. Her head throbbed as she broke down, her anger fading to a whisper.

“They’re killing my family, and here I am. A failure to the end. I’m sorry.” She hung her head as the bright spots swam in her vision, growing wings as they danced through the dust motes. She watched the bright doves frolic through the empty church, struggling to make sense of them through a haze of pain. Their glow slowly faded as their message became clear, and the three doves flew out the church door just as the first goblin came in.

Arianna stood up to meet them. Gone was the pain of her leg, gone was the uncertainty. She walked forward to meet the demons proudly, drawing her whole and glowing sword from its scabbard. Now they would taste her fury.

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