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Wednesday, 13 October 2010

NIGHT GAMES by Dorothy Davies

BERJAYA
BERJAYA
Night Games

"The streets are too dangerous, too dangerous for thee, sweet Tera, stay here, bolted and barred, let no one in. No one, do you understand?"

"All I understand, damn thine eyes to eternal Shadow, is that thou art going without me!"

"And why shouldn’t I? Am I not a free person, able to do as I wish?"

"Going out to play thy night games, thinkest thou I don’t know that? Thinkest thou I don’t know what thou would do for the price of a Dream?"

"Dream? Tera, Gallillya, what art thou talking about? I must go. Bolt the door after me."

He’s gone. Gerick’s gone. All his talk of doing what he wants, of course he’s gone Dream hunting, there’s no other reason for him to go out on the streets at night.

I want a pleasure stick. If he has gone hunting I’m going to indulge myself. Where are the eternally shadowed things?

No pleasure sticks. Damn Gerick, he’s used them all! Perhaps there’s some in his compartment over there -

No. No pleasure sticks.

Then I’ll go and get some.

Out?

Why not out?

Because Gerick said it's dangerous.

And what does Gerick know about it? He’s out there right now, walking the streets, playing night games, and he comes home safe in the mornings, doesn’t he, when the first light touches - The dead and the dying.

But that’s only now and then, when the Light goes.

What goes on out there at night? He’s never said, is it too unspeakable? Or too delightful? 

The epitome of sensuality and joy? Or the epitome of evil?

Why not find out?

Why not go play my own night games?

What about the Condains?

What about the Condains?

Well, they’re -

Everyone says they are, but do they know for sure?

No. So let’s go, what are you waiting for?

A little bit of courage.

I wonder what Gerick pays for his Dreams? And does he pay in golds or rapames? And what 

if he has no currency Does he then sell his -

Stop thinking. Come on. Let’s go join in the games. Is the door locked? Yes good and tight. 

Then let us go. Softly now, softly as I go.

It’s dark.

Of course it’s dark, it's night.

But I didn’t expect it to be this dark. How can anyone see?

Now can I see a little better. What was that? Oh Eternal Light, that dog faced Thene has just clawed that poor Wontan - and now it’s robbing it!

Out, out on the street, from doorway to corner they come, look everywhere, the clawing Thenes!

"LIGHT OF LIGHT!!!"

See how they run! As long as the Light stays with me, I think I’ll make it.

Who would have the pleasure sticks? Lightforsaken Wontans, Kerbers, Condains? If it’s the Condains I’m renouncing pleasure sticks right now! I always meant to find out if the story of the Condain massacre of the helpless Dreamers was true. Now I don’t think I want to know.
I heard the Wontans orally mate with the Kerbers. The idea is - almost - unthinkable. Wonder if I’ll see any tonight?

Walk tall, Tera, walk tall, and they will think you are one of the night children and will leave you alone.

How do I know these things?

Question not. Accept.

Rays of the Light, I’m scared!

But it’s not too late to turn back. And I’m not sure that I want to anyway. Fear is almost as exciting as pleasure, and almost as stimulating.


"Who - who are you?"

And where did you come from? One moment there was nothing but darkness and now there is the silvery shine of your moss and mask, Zandorian.

"What seekest thou, child of the night?"

"Pleasure sticks."

Bold I am to reply without salutations to a Zandorian, but being a night child makes you bold, makes you do things that you would never have done had you been in the compartment, safe, barred against the world.

"Pleasure sticks."

"Yes."

"Not a Dreamer, then?"

"No, I don’t Dream."

"A night child with some sense, thou art unusual, child."

"Am I so unusual?"

"Thou knowest of course what people do for Dreams."

"No, but since I came out tonight and saw some of the things on the streets, I’m beginning to find out."

"Death and destruction. Life is cheap when Dreams are at stake. And whether that death comes from a Condain boot or a Kerber sacar is immaterial, for the ultimate darkness awaits those who dare Dream."

Gerick, art thou listening?

"Why should it matter to thee, Zandorian?"

"Bold, art thou not?"

"The streets make me bold."

"I suppose that could be true. It matters because I care deeply for the children of the night who waste their lives in frivolous Dreams. Thou only seekest pleasure of the body and I will supply that for thee."

"There is nothing I can give thee in return, Zandorian."

"There is nothing I want in return, child of the night."

"It is dark."

"I will give thee light. Come."

Is there no end to this journey? Is there no end to the passages we have walked? We must be deep in the Zandor sector by now and it is forbidden for me to be here. He must know that surely!

"Art thou afraid?"

"Only of the Condains."

"In some ways thou art more a child than a night child."

"Why sayest thou this?"

"There are more things in life to fear than the Condains."

"What knowest thou, Zandorian?"

"There is nothing I do not know about the night games, but I will not tell thee, child, for fear of alarming thee further."

"These are the pleasure sticks."

"They are indeed. My light will take thee safely back."

"I don’t remember the way."

"Thou will remember. Go in the Light thou believest in."

"I give thee thanks."

He’s gone. One moment there was a soft moss shining the coldness of the night, the gleaming mask, and then - Nothing. My saviour is gone. Time to get back. I have my pleasure sticks, I have a light, I must go.

"What goest thou, night child?"

"I-I seek my compartment, nothing more."

Kerbers! Light protect me, I see Kerbers, with sacars!

"What holdest thou, night child?"

"Pl- pleasure sticks."

"What, no Dreams?"

"I’m not a Dreamer."

The sacars are honed and pointed, they shine in the cold night as his silver mask did.

"Leave me I have nothing for you."

"No games, night child?"

"Thou seekest pleasure sticks on the streets, thou must play the night games."

"I seek not the night games, only solitary pleasure."

"Thou knowest thou art in the Zandor Sector."

"Thou knowest, Kerber, that thou too are in the Zandor Sector."

Is that supposed to be laughter?

"The Zandor Sector is more interesting than the Kerber Sector, night child."

"Leave me, I must go."

"The Kerbers seek games, night child, and the Kerbers have found thee."

"NO!"

It burns, it pours, it hurts I hurt and I cannot see what they have done. They have stolen my light. The pain fills my head, in my body, in my heart, they have cut me, they have stolen my pleasure sticks. Again and again I feel pain, deep cutting pouring pain. If I cry out, no one will heed me. I am alone and I should not be here.

Someone is screaming.

Let me go home, Eternal Light, I give you all my light I will never stray on the streets at night again. I cannot move, to move means pain and I cannot stand the pain. Light of Light, help me, bring me the day, someone must find me and help me! Gerick, the light of the day has come and it is raining. Blood red rain pours from the skies, Gerick, and mingles with my blood soaking into Zandorian soil.

I have just discovered who it is screaming.

It is I. And the Condains are coming. 


--
Dorothy Davies, author of: Death Be Pardoner To Me


Amor Vincit Omnia
www.oneinspecyal.com
www.circle-of-light.co.uk

Saturday, 9 October 2010

FRIENEMIES By Jim Harrington

BERJAYA
Frienemies

Crouched, two hands on my weapon, I scurried across the gravel path to where Cory waited. I rushed past him to a spot on the opposite end of the brick wall and stumbled into position. "Ouch."

"Hey, new kid. Quiet. They'll find us." Cory retrieved a small boring tool from his pouch and quickly rotated the handle, drilling a spy hole in the mortar. "Idiot," he mumbled.

"Sorry," I said, speaking in a loud whisper. "Some asshole left pieces of a broken beer bottle." I didn't normally use words like asshole, but Cory wasn't normal, or so I was told--after I agreed to be his partner. I pulled the shard from my palm and used my tongue for a pressure bandage.

We sat in silence. Listening. An awning of thick branches dammed most of the sun's rays from reaching us. The humid air thick with the scents of pine and decay assaulted my nose. I looked at Cory. His face was cloaked in anger. I didn't know much about him. Only what my friend, Frankie, had learned from Cory's brother. And a few rumors.

"Didn't you and Zach used to be friends?"

"Yeah." Cory's body was hard, stiff. His breathing shallow. He swallowed, and his Adam's Apple bounced in response.

"Frankie told me you two used to do everything together," I said to break the silence. "That he taught you how to do this."

"Yeah."

"I also heard he asked Becky out." I look at the ground. "Is that why you're pissed at him?"

"Hey. Either shut your mouth the fuck up, or I'll shut it the fuck up for you." He turned, and his eyes nailed me to the wall. "Clear?"

I began to understand why no one else would be his partner.

Snapping twigs and furtive voices sounded the alert. Cory waved. I took his position at the hole.

He lay prone, legs spread, and readied his gun. "Let me know when he's in range."

I watched Zach approach. He motioned to his left and right. His partners spread out. I thought we were supposed to work in pairs. Zach crept forward, bent over, moving his head from side to side. I couldn't see the others. I gripped my gun harder to stop my hands from shaking. It didn't help.

Three more paces, and he would be in range. I waited. Waited.

As Zach crossed the imaginary line, I tapped Cory on the leg. He sidled sideways until his gun and head emerged from behind the wall. He raised the barrel and sighted his target.

I jumped when the gun went off. Cory sneered and rose to his knees, unconcerned about the others. I peered through the hole and saw the blob of paint over Zach's heart. Yellow tentacles slithered down his shirt.

Cory raised his weapon over his head and laughed as paint exploded on his chest. Losing the game didn't matter to him. He'd accomplished his goal.

I pulled the gold cross from its hiding place under my shirt, rubbed it between my thumb and finger, and stared at Cory. What I saw frightened me. His clenched fist. The menacing black streaks across his cheeks. His smile, rigid, unforgiving. His eyes displayed a message--a message that said next time the gun would be real.

END

BIO:
Jim discovered flash fiction in 2007, and he’s read, written, studied, and agonized over the form since. His recent stories have appeared in A Twist of Noir, Mysterical-E, Thrillers, Killers 'N' Chillers, Weirdyear, MicroHorror, Flashshot and others. Jim's Six Questions For blog (http://sixquestionsfor.blogspot.com/)
provides editors and publishers a place to “tell it like it is.”

Thursday, 7 October 2010

STARS by Ian Ayris

BERJAYATime for more crime...

Stars

'Lift up my head,' he says, quiet, blood slidin out the side of his mouth. 'Let me gaze at the stars one last time.'

Gaze at the stars? Who does he think he fuckin is? But I'm a bit of a softy, me. All heart, you know. And this one is a bit different. So I bend down to him, slip me left hand under his head and lift it up a bit. No good for me back, the bendin down, but I do it anyway. Sort of bloke I am. He tries to talk but there's just a load of blood comes out, and he starts coughin. I back away a bit, still holdin up his head.

He puts his eyes skywards.

There's a car goes by, but no-one can see us here. I mean, who comes to a place like this, this time of night? No fucker, that's who. Less they got a job to do.

Me dad used to bring me up here as a kid. At night. He'd sit me down in the grass and tell me not to move a muscle. He'd know if I did, he said. Then he'd fuck off to the pub for a couple of hours. I'd sit there shakin, listenin to the owls and the wind and the voices what sounded like they was everywhere. But there weren't never no-one here, not that I never saw, anyways. He'd come back for me, all stumblin and pissed . Drag me into the car, and if he saw so much as a tear on me face, he'd beat the shit out of me with his belt when we got back home.

Said it was like the Spartans. Said they had the right idea. Told me they'd leave their littl'uns on the side of a mountain day they was born. Come back the next night. Any still left, you know, still breathin, they'd bring em down and make warriors of em. My dad loved all that shit. Warriors, and that. Said you gotta look after yourself in this life, your loved ones, and that. Know how to handle yourself, you know.

He'd be tellin me all this while he was hittin me with his belt, so I never got it word for word what he was sayin, but I got the gist, you know. Done me the world of fuckin good, mind. Wouldn't be here today if it weren't for my old man and all the lessons I learned off him. Was a tough little fucker growin up. Hard as nails. Still am. I got respect on the manor cos of it, and respect is the most important thing there fuckin is.

His head's gettin heavy. He ain't got long, this geezer. I don't usually get this close. Usually just do the job and fuck off out of there. But this ain't no usual job. Fuck me, it ain't. Didn't really wanna do it, to be honest, but I got me reputation to think of.
I'm tryin not to look in his eyes, but he's sort of draggin me to em just by lookin at me. Sort of forcin me. He's tryin to say something, but there ain't nothing comin out his mouth other than a load more blood. But everything he's sayin, he's sayin with his eyes, like he's lookin right inside me.
There's a wind whipping round us. And it's got cold as fuck.

Me mum, she never knew the half of it. Reckoned she never, anyway. Said me dad was old school, didn't know no other way. She reckoned he loved me to bits, and in his own way he probably did. Never felt like it at the time, mind. And I never saw nothing in his eyes other than hate and black and blood.

When he popped his clogs, me mum never talked about him again. Like he never lived.

He's coughin up again, this geezer. And I'm cradlin him in me arms and he's shiverin and the blood's splatterin all over me face, and the moon's showin blood all over the dog collar thing round his neck and me breath's catchin in me throat.

I tear me eyes away from his face for a sec cos I can't bear it no more.

The gravestones are watchin us. Watchin me. Watchin what I done. What I am.

Fuckin hell.

I'm thinking of them babies on that mountain not havin a fuckin clue why they're cold and why they're scared and hungry and wonderin if this is it, you know, if this is what it's all about.

I pull him close. Lean right in. And there's a tear comes out me eye. Drops on his face. I twist the knife in harder and push it upward, and I let his head go gently onto the grass. Then I lay down next to him.

And look up at the stars.


BIO:
Ian Ayris' stories appear in several online and print publications, including the Byker Books 'Radgepacket' series, 'Caught by Darkness' - a Static Movement anthology, A Twist of Noir, Thrillers, Killers 'n' Chillers, Pulp Metal Magazine, and The Flash Fiction Offensive. Other stories will shortly be appearing in Out of the Gutter, Powder Burn Flash, Yellow Mama, and Beat to a Pulp. Ian lives in London with his wife and three children, and has just completed his first novel.

http://ianayris.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, 6 October 2010

THE MAN IN ME by Michael O'Brien

BERJAYAMichael debuts in fine style...

The Man in Me

Home again, but only in the literal sense, for Jared received no joy returning here. He strode up the handful of steps to the front door. Through the bay window he saw a teenage girl watching television. The sitter’s here. Alicea must be out again. Why they needed a house sitter in the first place never made sense to him. But Alicea never listened to him anymore. If she wanted one, she would have one. Jared turned back down the stairs and walked to the back of the house. He hated interacting with the sitter more than he did his wife.

Besides a few scattered blades of grass reflecting the moon, the backyard, bound by a chain link fence, was completely dark. The small, concrete patio had a cheap, plastic table with four chairs. In the corner was a name brand grill with a cover on it to protect it from the elements. Jared couldn’t recall ever using it.

He slipped through the back door, then carefully stepped through the kitchen, and made the turn down the hall behind the sitter. She was either asleep or too enthralled in the stupid program she was watching to notice. Not much of a house sitter.

The hall was long and putrid. God only knew the last time it had been cleaned. The air hung heavy. The light was off, making it look like mold decayed the walls before his eyes. They were a peculiar beige color, with cobwebs in the corners. Home.

Jared entered through the master bedroom door which had been left open, and gently closed it behind him. The bathroom door was open a crack, and the light shined through, revealing the crib in the small space between the bed and the closet. The crib: a daily reminder of their broken dreams. They bought it before the miscarriage. Now, it sat empty in their bedroom. Jared turned the bathroom light off and his nightmare disappeared into the darkness. With a clear conscience, he lay on the far edge of the bed.

An hour or so later he heard a noise. It was his wife returning from her nightly adventures. He had been sleeping peacefully for the first time in as long as he could remember. Jared heard giggles, then a man’s deep voice. Jared’s heart thumped against his ribs. Here? She brought him here? Then Jared heard the sitter’s voice. The door opened and shut. Maybe the stranger left with the sitter. No way would she bring him here. At least she had always offered Jared that decency. Then the man’s voice echoed again. The stranger was here. Jared curled in the fetal position on the far side of the bed away from the door.

Then Jared heard their footsteps approaching down the hall. He knew where they were headed. He shut his eyes, not wanting them to know he was awake, and saw the light from the hall burst into the room as she opened the door. The light shone onto the crib across the room from the bed. Jared squeezed his eyes shut. Tighter, tighter, desperately trying to make this nightmare disappear the same way he made the crib disappear: by turning out the lights. He didn’t move and barely breathed.

“Is the baby sleeping?” the asshole joked.

“Go to the kitchen and make yourself a drink. I’ll be right there. I’m gonna get into something a bit more comfortable,” spoke Alicea in her angelic voice.

Even now, he still loved her voice. He still loved her smile. But it wasn’t the same as it used to be. She used to be his and only his. Now she was like the unattainable girl in school. Someone he saw everyday and fantasized about, but could never have.

“Just go.” She gave the man a kiss and sent him on his way.

Jared heard his steps retreating to the kitchen as she eased her way into the master bathroom and turned the light on. Now, the crib was illuminated from both sides, as Jared remained in the dark. A few silent tears escaped down his cheek.

“I hope I didn’t wake you, honey. I’ll be done in a second,” she said sweetly.

He opened his eyes and looked at her, his wife. She stood in the doorway looking down at the crib. “You brought him here,” Jared whispered.

She ignored him. Then he heard a whimper and some rustling. He didn’t think he had whimpered, but he must have. The sound could come from nowhere else.

“I’m sorry it’s so late, sweetie,” she said in an innocent manner.

He was about to confront her, but lost the opportunity when she shut the bathroom door. The smell of alcohol and cigarettes lingered. And some strange cologne stained her clothes. Something different, something new. Over the past year Jared had become obsessed with colognes. Sometimes, after work, he would go to the mall and smell colognes until he found the one he remembered from her clothes the night before.

A minute later she came out wearing her bathrobe. It was pink and said, “Hers” in bold, white letters. They had gotten the pair for their fifth wedding anniversary from his parents. Jared’s was blue and said “His.” It hung in the bathroom collecting dust.

“Good night, sweetie,” she said as she made her way to the bedroom door.

“I hate you,” he whispered.

“I love you,” she said.

As soon as she shut the door the tears flowed. He wouldn’t cry in front of her. He wouldn’t give her that satisfaction. He really did hate her. But he loved her too. Sometimes, when she did something that made him hate her, he remembered that he loved her. He remembered when they met. When they were young. When they were in love. A year after he had finished graduate school and the summer before she graduated college. It was pouring rain that day; sheets of rain came down between the towers of New York City.

Jared loved to walk the streets in the rain in those days. He would wait all morning for his lunch break so that he could walk and watch all the miserable faces hiding behind umbrellas race by him. The rain and the streets and their misery kept him company.

The day he met Alicea, his lunch break began as all the other rainy ones. Jared strolled down the street whistling Paint it Black by the Rolling Stones, laughing at those who hustled by him. He loved the despair of others. As Jared turned a corner he looked down to avoid a puddle. When he looked up, she was right in front of him wearing a miniskirt and a black rain coat, looking down. He couldn’t stop. They collided and he almost knocked her over.

Jared was mesmerized. Her face was perfect, and she knew it, for she used little makeup. She had on a thin coat of red lipstick, a beautiful, white smile, and a perfectly curved 5’5” frame. She was the only one smiling amidst the rain drops. He asked her to dinner and she said yes.

He took her to a little Italian place on the Upper East Side. Short on space, long on personality, with great, unpretentious food. They told each other their stories. She had a year left at Pace University and was interning for the summer. He had finished graduate school the year before and worked at an accounting firm. She was from upstate New York. He was from upstate Pennsylvania. After dinner they walked through the still rainy streets, huddled close under his umbrella. He knew he had found his wife.

As Jared lay, knees curled up to his chest, he smiled through the tears. Those had been some of the best times of his life. They spent the summer frolicking in Central Park, and racing to one another’s apartments during lunch breaks to make love. He thought he was living a dream. And now, looking back, maybe it all had been a dream. How could he not have seen what was coming? The devil’s rage gripped his soul.

They married on a picturesque day in the fall, sixteen months after they met, completing Jared’s fairy tale. He had nabbed the girl of his dreams and he thought it was time for them to grow up and prepare for their family. He concentrated on his career more and more.

This is not what Alicea envisioned. She was in no hurry to find a career. She wanted to continue making love in the afternoons. He rarely obliged, but when he did, it didn’t satisfy her as much as before.

Jared convulsed, his body forcing the tears from his eyes. He needed sleep, but he knew he wouldn’t get any more tonight. Smelling cologne on her clothes was one thing. Somehow, he had gotten over that. But now he could hear him. The man was in their house. At that very instant he could hear them giggling in the den. In their den. The tears streaming down Jared’s face became hot. His face flushed. His feet curled as though with cramps.

As Jared tried to ignore the memories he couldn’t avoid, he heard another noise. They had moved past giggling and flirting. Now the floor creaked rhythmically.

She screamed the words that made him remember what happened to his perfect girl. “Fuck me! Fuck me! Harder!” She had screamed the same words at him about a year and a half ago. Not amidst the throngs of passion as she was doing now, but out of disgust. “Fuck me!” she had barked. “Get hard!” But orders like that didn’t arouse a passive man like Jared. It turned him off. She told him all the time that he wasn’t pleasing her. “When are you gonna fuck my brains out?” She would ask. “When are you gonna be a man?”

Alicea aroused him, of course. She was still only in her late twenties, and her three workout sessions a week had actually improved her figure over the years. He loved the way her ass looked and her breasts bounced when she walked. Jared masturbated to images of her to help his own needs, but dared not try and arouse her. He feared any intercourse with her for fear of not pleasuring her. Every night he prayed that she wouldn’t want to have sex. If his prayers failed him, more often than not he would remain flaccid, and she would bark orders at his penis to no avail. It was only a matter of time before she went outside their home to get her satisfaction. This was the first time she ever brought a man here though. Home.

Those memories stopped his tears. He opened his eyes and stared at the ceiling. His tears boiled and steamed off his cheeks. He still heard them. Self-pity had long passed. The pulsing rage seized control. Jared enjoyed the sensation.

He jumped out of their bed and went to the bedroom door and opened it a crack. As though she knew, she screamed louder. He knew Alicea was putting on a show for him. “This could be you,” she was telling him with every passionate moan, “but you screwed it up.”

At that moment, he felt the testosterone he would need to please her, and he knew he’d be able to give her the best fuck of her life. But he wasn’t going to. He repressed a sudden urge to go back to bed and jerk-off. He had something else in mind.

He crept down the hall to the end, where it opened between the dining room and the den. His pestering thought motivated him to peer around the corner and watch. He watched this grizzled man with tattoos and muscles on his arms fuck his wife. She was bent over in front of him, leaning her head and hands on the arm of the couch, and he had his back to Jared.

The room shimmered. The lights flickered in his mind, and his focus zoomed in on his wife. The most beautiful woman he had ever bumped into. She was his once, but she didn’t think he was man enough for her.

He left his post and retreated down the hall to their bedroom without making a sound. Not that he needed to, for any creaks he made would surely be drowned out by his wife’s screams. Jared went to the closet and not back to bed as he should have. He searched through the corners and the clothes to find something personal. Something that would let him feel it. Then he found it.

In a silent flash he was back down the hall, peering around the corning at the man still fucking his wife. She was on her back now, with her legs in the air, and her head arched back. Jared crept up behind the man, who was still standing, praying that his loud heartbeats wouldn’t give his presence away. When he was the perfect distance, he clenched the bat, brought it back the way he did as a kid, closed his eyes, and swung with every ounce of strength he possessed.

The asshole’s skull exploded with a loud THUD! Jared felt the vibrations of the impact through the bat, and the splatters of blood across his face. When he opened his eyes he saw the pools of blood forming on the couch, on the floor, on his wife. Alicea screamed, but Jared couldn’t hear her. He gripped the bat tighter and looked down at her, his mind still blank, the room still trembling.

“Who are you?” Alicea screamed as Jared’s hearing returned. “Why? Why?”

“Why?” Jared barked. “Why? Because you brought him here! How could you do that?”

“What!?”

Jared raised the bat above his head as his eyes crossed. His mouth curled. There were splatters of blood everywhere. She screamed again as he swung the bat down. The bat cracked against her face. He swung again and again, lost in his fit of rage.

***

It took the police a little more than a half hour to respond. A neighbor had called 911 and reported hearing screams. When the two officers received no answer at the door, they broke it open to find the massacre. In the dining room, Jared had hung himself from the decorative wooden beams that lined the ceiling.

Other than the blood staining the white furniture and the expensive rugs, the house was very clean. The walls were painted white and lined with artwork and pictures of relatives.

“Oh shit… I know this guy,” the first cop said as he looked at the body dangling above the dining room table.

“From where?”

“He does my taxes.”

“You trusted this asshole with your money?” the second cop asked as he walked over to an end table and picked up a photo album.

“He did a great job. That’s all he lived for. Work. He seemed like a real lonely guy. No wife, no nothing. Just work,” the first cop replied. “He was real quiet. Couldn’t even make small talk. He just talked business. I told him I’d buy a couple rounds once and he turned me down. Said he didn’t drink. I felt bad for him.”

“I don’t feel bad for this piece of shit,” the second cop said as he leafed through the album. He motioned to the couple covered in blood on the couch. “These two look like they’ve been together a long time.”

“I wonder what made him do this. He doesn’t even live around here. He’s got a fancy apartment in the Upper East Side.”

“Jealous lover probably.”

“I don’t think so. No way that schmuck could’ve scored a babe like that, even if only for a night.”

“Whatever. Better call Homicide and let them figure it out. Go check the rest of the house.”

Suddenly, a baby cried from the master bedroom.


BIO:
Michael O’Brien currently lives in Hightstown, New Jersey where he bartends full time (aka babysits) and attends Wilkes University in pursuit of his MFA. He also volunteers as a tutor to illiterate adults and to English as a Second Language students.

Monday, 4 October 2010

PSYCHOPATHS ANONYMOUS by Phil Beloin Jr.

BERJAYAWelcome back Phil...

PSYCHOPATHS ANONYMOUS

When she’s rocking on top of him, he imagines taking his hands from her near perfect tits and reaching up, wrenching her wicked bony throat, watching her eyes turn from pleasure to emptiness. She leans back, her hands down by his knees. He has to think about his girlfriend Trisha to delay his orgasm, though his Honey-babe is going soft, her face loose and glassy and she’s faking another one, throwing herself on him. He gets a nose full of hair goo, hot breath curdles his eardrum, their bodies sticking together.

He over-groans through the finish line and she falls off, in cuddle mode replete with communication. Well, it’s just her blathering and he’s hoping to stay awake long enough so she’ll make him bacon and eggs for breakfast.

Oatmeal. With water. She knows he prefers milk. Women will never understand the fatigue of horseplay. Not worth pondering, cuz he’s got to morph into white collar guy; get the three S’ in, put on the trousers, shirt and tie—Honey-babe, do you see any wrinkles?—buff the shoes, check the mirror for mismatched clusterfucks. Nope, none, he’s good, nobody will utter a nasty comment after he passes by. He hits the highway at eighty, playing NASCAR with all the other commuters. This gets the juices flowing better than the paltry American java served up on every filthy street corner.

He’s a customer service rep with the Department of Labor. In a recession, too! Great job! Listening to all those sad sacks worrying about their future. His favorite question: reason for separation from employer? “Fired.” Oh, you’re a loser. “Lack of work.” Oh, you’re boss is a loser. “Company closed down.” Oh, there’s kids all over the globe who will work for five cents a day. Ha. Ha.

At lunch, he takes ten for chowing grub and thirty for chowing on Trisha in her
car. Dessert pussy. Fantastic. He likes to call her Trysta, but she tends to get pouty, as if their 69 in the back of an SUV in a parking garage ain’t special enough.

Post-work, fueled by his “customers’” bad news, he avoids Trysta—she’ll want to talk about her feelings—and heads home to a simmering crock-pot. Honey-babe isn’t there yet, but he’ll wait for her before consumption. Sitting in an easy chair, he tries to figure why he loathes Honey- babe to her very villus, yeah it’s that primeval, that disgusting. But, really, he’s got no good reasons for his feelings. She keeps a clean house—OCD freak he suspects—reads books, prepares Rachael Ray-like meals, and her freed boobs droop only a millimeter— or perhaps it’s a .9 mm. Heck, she doesn’t even like oral. Could she be any more wholesome that than?

As she opens the front door, he thinks, maybe, just maybe, it’s how she pretends—it’s too good really, as if she truly loves him.

After dinner, he’s getting signs from his co-habituating horny toad; she’s powdered and lounging around half nude. Her hand brushes his unicorn and the rut begins anew. He twists and bends and flips her into a sticky caramel frenzy and then she’s climbing on board— All a’ bored!—and she’s doing him slow and tender and then whispers how jealous she gets and how he must never cheat on her.

He mumbles oaths of fidelity as his hands reach up, grasping her hair, then down the damp cheeks, and now for the snapping of her wind section. That’s when she reaches behind her, grabs a brick—a brick she stole from Trisha’s back patio— and swings it towards his face.

Phil Beloin Jr. is not a psycho, but his mental health provider might disagree.
He lives in New England with his wife. His novel, The Big Bad, is available on amazon.co.uk. Check out his other story on TKnC in the July 2010 archives,The Devil Knows My Love.

Sunday, 3 October 2010

A QUESTION OF FAITH by Chris Allinotte

BERJAYA
A Question of Faith

“And the Lord banished Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden, and did set an Angel with a fiery sword at the gate. And the serpent looked at the Angel and said, “So, what do you want to do now?”
–Genesis 3:23(½)


Quaestor Godwin sat back in his padded chair and sighed. He really would have to be getting on with his day. The coffers of the church would not grow themselves, after all. The monk took a deep breath, and squeezed his eyes shut. He exhaled slowly, and smiled.

“That was exquisite, darling woman. Inform your husband that his slights against Mother Church have been forgotten, and in fact…” He gave a shudder of pleasure. “You have procured for him one less year of atonement. Does that please you?”

In response, the young cook’s wife just raised her streaming, red-rimmed eyes, and said nothing.

“Leave me. I have the work of the Lord to do.”

She needed no further coaxing, and ran from the room, as though Satan himself might be at her heels. Godwin allowed himself a small chuckle. It was a dreadful burden being the town’s sole link to the Almighty, but he thought that there were some benefits. He rose then, and straightened his cassock. Time to do his Good Works.

His first visit was to Duke Geoffrey, a man as infamous for his wickedness as he was for his fear of Hell. Godwin had collected an enormous sum from him over the years, and as long as the farms kept producing, he could count on a steady stream of income from the “Duke of Sodomy.” He’d often thought he might like to try that act himself with Anabella, she of the cheeky husband and chaffed kneecaps.

It was to his great surprise that the Duchess Felicia met him at the gate herself, crying “Dear Lord in Heaven, you heard our prayers.”

Godwin tried to keep his air of aloof power, “We had planned to meet on this day, did we not, milady?”

“Indeed, Brother Godwin,” said the Duchess, “but something has happened. It is horrible. Words cannot describe; you must come.”
Were it any other family, he would have refused, but to turn his back on the family that had built his fortune would be foolhardy to say the least. He made up his mind. “Lead on, Duchess.”

The Duchess opened the way, and Godwin entered the house. The door slammed shut, crushing her nose, and barring her from entering.

“Hello, Brother Godwin.”

A man’s voice, but not the Duke’s, seemed to be coming from everywhere, and nowhere. The house was freezing, though it was midday outside.

“Come to hear my sins?” There was a gleeful malice in the tone, and the monk looked behind him. Hanging in midair like a macabre puppet was the Duke, eyes rolled up to the whites, blood running from a dozen self-inflicted wounds.

“Welcome, holy man.” The thing mocked him.

“I… I cast you out, demon.” Godwin had to take control. Was he not the servant of the Almighty? “The Lord God of Hosts commands you!”

Braying laughter was the reply. Underneath, Godwin thought he could hear the screaming of the damned. “I think not, Quaestor. Remarkable as it seems, I am closer to God than the likes of you. God requires evil to give himself purpose. Who, pray, do you serve?”

Godwin felt hot piss soak the front of his cassock.  He was paralyzed with fear.  His panicked mind touched briefly on the dagger concealed in his robe - perhaps he could kill the body and extinguish the devil that way - but he couldn't make himself move.

Suddenly, a new voice rang out from the top of the stairs, shouting “Go away!”

The Duke-thing growled in surprise. A skinny, young red-haired girl, looked down at them. “God hates you. Go away."

The demon shrieked. The walls shook, and pottery shattered. Godwin was transfixed.  Amazed as he was at the Duke-thing's reaction, he was equally astounded that this debauched noble and his simpering wife had produced such a wholesome looking young girl.  He moved to the door and tried it.  It was still locked, and the hasp rattled impotently as he tried to force it open.  The demon swung an arm absently in Godwin's direction, landing a glancing blow to the back of his head. It was enough to send the Quaestor sprawling on the cold stone floor.  Stars exploded in his field of vision, and his face felt hot with a sudden rush of blood.  Still, through this new, sudden pain, he could hear the raspy voice of the possessed Duke addressing the interloper.

"This man is ours, child.  He is ours."

The little girl, who had come down the stairs now, and was standing, facing her father with her little fists balled at her sides.

"God doesn't want you here," she said through gritted teeth. "Get out!"

Her words were like no exorcism rite the Quaestor had ever heard, but they were effective.  The body began to tremble, and its feet touched down on the ground.

Taking a great, hissing breath, the Duke-thing spat, "Your father's soul is damned, child! Damned by his own deeds!"

In reply, the little girl cocked her head, and her expression went queerly blank. She was listening.  Her hands seemed to float of their own accord to meet in prayer before her chest.  The demon, taking this pause as indecision, made to attack and the limp body of the Duke began to lurch forward in the entrance hall, stumbling towards his daughter.  Before he could reach her, her head snapped back upright, and her eyes flashed with righteous fury.

Incredibly, she began to move forward to meet the demon.

"God says he'll forgive Papa, but you have to leave!"

On the word "leave", she raised both hands to the sky, then placed both her palms, which seemed to glow with brilliant white light, squarely on the Duke's chest.

"Get out!" screamed the girl.

Without another sound from the demon, the Duke collapsed to the ground, trembling violently. His daughter moved swiftly to his side, and knelt to check on him.

Godwin got to his feet and walked over to the girl. “My darling child, that was incredible.”

She looked up at him, scowling, “No, Quaestor, that was faith.

At that affront, the Quaestor felt some of his own righteousness return.  That he should be spoken to as such, and by a child

He straightened his back and, unmindful of the fact that he  was still soaked through with his own urine, began to lecture the child, "Do not presume, child, to know the will of God."

Her eyes flashed with holy fire once more, and this time, her voice was lower and stronger, seeming to fill the room, "I do know the will of God; and you, Godwin, have much to answer for."

She raised her hand then, and it was glowing again with almost savage white light. In the moment before she touched him, a thousand thousand sins flashed before Godwin's eyes: the forgiveness of  pederasts in exchange for riches, rivals murdered to further his power, everything he'd done, up to and including his dalliances with Annabella - and all done in God's name.

Faced with the brilliant, redemptive touch of the God he’d abused, Godwin committed his final sin. He retreated from the girl before she could touch him, and from his robes withdrew the dagger.  Squeezing his eyes shut, he shoved it hard into his chest.
As the world darkened behind his eyes, he said a silent, blasphemous prayer that Satan would have mercy on his rotten, blackened soul. 


Bio:
Chris Allinotte lives in Toronto, Canada, with his wife and children.

His work has been featured in many places online, and recently in the anthologies "Novus Creatura" and "Creepy Things".  You can check out more about Chris' stories at his blog http://chrisallinotte.blogspot.com.


WHY WE NEVER MISSED RUSSELL by Kristine Ong Muslim

BERJAYA
WHY WE NEVER MISSED RUSSELL
 
(first appeared in Kinships #7, May 2007 and reprinted in Literary Bitch #1, Feb 2009)
 
 
When my brother, Russell, went away to attend college, he only took a small duffel bag with him. It was filled with the few things he considered important.  
 
Last night, Mother and I tried to make Russell stay home and forget about going to college.
 
Russell said: "Leave me alone. I had enough memories of this stupid family to hound my way to hell. Dr. Rainey was right about all of you!"
 
"Son, college is only for losers who want to prove themselves otherwise," father said as if he was the world's expert on knowing what was good for people.
 
"Oh, shut up, Mark," Mom snapped. She curled, pouted, and chewed her lips to emphasize how angry she was.
 
Then they argued for an hour and forgot that they were supposed to prod Russell to stay.
 
I thumbed the copies of Penthouse I remembered sneaking under the mattress two days ago. The centerfolds were very, very nice. One of them reminded me of Stella, a girl from a long time ago. I could not remember how we were related, only that before she called 911, she had once said something like: "You really need help, Raymond. Mygodmygod--"
 
When I woke up the next morning, I saw Mom in the corner. She gave me a look, the one that said she was bored, sleepy, and badly needed to gossip with Elena, the half-Mexican woman in the other bed.
 
Elena tried to purge herself clean by drinking lots and lots of water.
 
I did not know that water could be toxic if taken in significant amounts.
 
A nurse went inside the room. Her hair was tied up in a bun. I did not like women who would not let their hair down.
 
There were a lot of things that I did not like.
 
There was no need to hide the stack of Penthouse since she acted as if they were invisible.
 
Dad, the idiot who never left the three of us alone, eyed the nurse's jiggling breasts.
 
The nurse checked on Elena, tinkered with the equipment beside her bed, and left.
 
I sat back and cursed Russell for leaving us. 
 
Sometimes, I tried to stir my brother Russell out, since we were, after all, family. But you see, he just would not budge. Perhaps, next week we would simply forget that he even existed.
 
Besides, I was sure Russell never really went away to college. Dr. Rainey got rid of him. I could never forget how he referred to Russell as "a passive personality that could be yanked out without resistance and without leaving a psychological after-current behind."  
 

Bio:

Kristine Ong Muslim authored the full-length poetry collection, A Roomful of Machines (Searle Publishing, 2010). Her work has been accepted in over four hundred publications including Aberrant Dreams, Abyss & Apex, Alternative Coordinates, Expanded Horizons, Space & Time, and Tales of the Talisman. She has received several Honorable Mentions in Year's Best Fantasy and Horror as well as five nominations for the Pushcart Prize and four for the Science Fiction Poetry Association's Rhysling Award.