Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Pathways, Part 4

In which the plot finally begins. OMG, spoilerz! I haven't touched this story for a while. Hope it doesn't show.....


My father, on his part, never set foot in the town unless he absolutely had to – meaning that he only went when there was trouble with our taxes. And since it was an act of great bravery for our tax collector to set foot in our woods every year, this was not often. So he was not too concerned with the looks we received, or what they might be saying about us.

I wished, more than once, that I could be more like him – but more than just in not caring about others’ thoughts.

I remember, as I sat there going at my sewing like a crippled old horse plowing their last, huge field, thinking about the stories of those schools in the cities – wondering if they might be true. I was not as taken to reading as my two little brothers were, but I liked to learn. And I suppose I liked the thought of being educated, like a proper city dweller was supposed to be. Maybe, I thought to myself, I could even become a great science scholar – one of those clever people who were building those strange and delightful machines that made life easier, like the stove that didn’t need wood and the carriage that went without horses (which we had never seen but had heard much talk of). Maybe I could even invent something that would make me famous! Everyone all over the world would know my name – and far into the future, I would still be remembered as Maria Wood, the one who had invented this very useful and amazing thing. My fantasies took no notice of my impatience with sitting still, or that I took no interest in books, but they were nice fantasies anyway. They took my mind off of my sore fingers.

It was then, in my fifteenth winter, that my fantasies drove me to wonder about the world outside of the forest, beyond even Laktown. As I went about doing learning my duties in the home - scrubbing, sweeping, cooking, sewing, repairing – I wondered about that faerie-tale land that we were so far away from. What was it like, really? My mother only rarely spoke of her life before she married Father. I tried, once, to ask her what her hometown was like.

Her answer was to pause her sweeping and look at me.

“Why do you want to know?” she asked.

“I just wondered.” I said, looking down at my own broom.

She sighed, returning to sweeping. “It was nothing like this, Maria, I can tell you that. It was very grey, lonely place. Nothing like this at all.”

I took this in quietly, and didn’t ask her about it again.

It didn’t stop me from thinking about it, though. The older I grew, in fact, the worse it became. My mother noticed, and my father noticed, and I even think my brothers noticed, but nothing was said of it. I think they reasoned that I would grow out of it – or if I didn’t, I would soon have to leave it behind. As much as I daydreamed, I didn’t really have the courage or desire to do anything about it, and deep down I knew what was waiting for me. I didn’t argue it, or was even really very much against it. Marrying was not so bad a thought, although who in our small world would want to marry me was a mystery. My troubled ancestors had managed well enough, but very narrowly. Looking at my family tree (the only thing my family took any care to write down, in a tattered bunch of paper and parchment on top of our single bookshelf), it was very thin and straight, with many lines ending right where they started.

What would become of me, I thought, if I didn’t marry? Would I just stay here forever, taking care of everyone? Mother and Father would die before us, I knew, so there would be a time when it would be just my brothers and me. And what would they do? Perhaps they might marry, and have families. Perhaps not. Maybe they would be like me, old and still single. This thought felt better to me. I thought it would be terribly lonely for me, if they did marry. They would have families, wouldn’t they, and I would be…what would I be? An old spinster aunt, maybe, who told stories to my nieces and nephews in front of the hearth at night and who cooked the most wonderful meals. That was not too terrible, I suppose. I still preferred to my other vision. At least then I would still have my brothers to myself, and we would all be on equal ground with our spinsterhood - or bachelorhood, whatever the phrase is. Our line would come to an end, to be sure, but it would be a peaceful one. I don’t think our ancestors looking down from heaven would mind too much.

But what if I did find someone to marry?

This brought up a whole new bunch of questions in my head, and I finally, wearily, stilled my brain and told myself to stop thinking about it. I had a good long time to think of those things. I contented myself with living my life as it was. I was young , and that worrisome time was a far ways off.

Chapter 3

It was one other winter day that it so happened my brother Josef snuck out of the house after chores were done, and went out into the woods. He had done this many times before, so it was no surprise when we noticed him missing. We did not bother ourselves to search for him – we knew that he would come back in a few hours, flushed and sheepish, and Mother would give him his scolding and Father a smart smack and a stern talking-to of his own.

Many hours later, when the sun had set and dinner had been served and eaten, Josef still had not come back. Mother, sitting in front of the fire with her sewing, glanced often out the window, looking more and more worried. Father, sitting beside her and tending to his gun, grew slower and slower in his movements as time went on, until finally he stopped altogether.

He looked out the window like Mother, and sighed. He rose from his chair, placed his gun in its place on the mantelpiece, and went over to the door. He grabbed his hat and coat from the rack, hurriedly wrapping himself up as he opened the door.

“I’m going to look for him,” He announced. He looked at my two brothers sitting in their customary place. “Tomas,” he said, addressing the elder brother, “Keep watch. Martin, you’ll help him? Good.”

Father’s eyes traveled to me. I, standing wrapped in my blanket before the fireplace, stared back, feeling suddenly very afraid.

“Maria,” he said, “You will keep charge with your mother?”

I, too startled to do anything else, swallowed and nodded. And so he turned his back and left to go look for Josef.

We all sat frozen for a long while. Father had never left us at night before. Night was when the forest was silent – not a peaceable silent, but a frightening silent. There was nothing friendly or good about this nighttime forest. Now, with so much worry on our shoulders, it seemed more frightening than ever.

I looked at Mother, who was sitting very still, sewing limp in her hands.

“M-Mother?” I said.

She blinked, and turned to look at me. She smiled, in a forceful way.

“It’s all right, Maria,” she said. “They’ll come back all right. Nothing can harm them there.”

My grown-up resolve dissolved as she said this. Shaking, I went and sat down beside her, snuggling in close and took her hand. Tomas and Martin, with only the smallest bit of hesitation, came up as well. Mother, surrounded on all sides by her children, grasped our hands and smiled. We all looked at the fire, crackling warmly away in the fireplace, keeping away the frightening darkness.

My thoughts went to Father and Josef. I wondered….oh, I did so much wondering in my mind, in those days. My mind just could not help itself. The images came, so bright and vivid, and right then none of them reassured me. My thoughts were of Josef, fallen from a tree or down a ditch, bloody and broken. Or, perhaps, mauled by some ferocious animal, ripped to pieces. The terror ran down my back and up again, and my shaking grew worse. Mother, feeling my fear, placed a hand on my head and rocked me back and forth, humming gently – as she had done when my brothers and I were babies, helpless and crying. I felt a great deal like a baby then, wanting my mother to take care of me. Not the almost-grown-up young woman that I knew I should be.

The minutes slowly, slowly went by, so very painfully. We were all stuck then, lost in our heads. I don’t know if you know this feeling – the feeling of pause, when one moment seems to keep on going and going, and you can’t think of it stopping.

It did stop, what felt like a thousand winters later, with a hard knock on the door. We all jumped, startled. Mother rushed to the window, and then to the door to open it.

Father limped in, carrying Josef in his arms. Josef was stiff, his face whiter than the snow outside. I saw blood dripping down his leg, and felt the panic rise in my chest again.

“Josef! Bern, what – Josef! Josef, can you hear me?” Mother cried. Father went down the hall, Mother coming close after him, and I could hear Josef’s moan as they set him down on his bed.

“What happened?” Mother demanded.

“He fell.” Father replied. “Broke his leg pretty badly.”

I found myself drifting towards their talking, and stood at the doorway, staring at what was going on inside.

My brother laid on his bed, eyes closed and teeth clenched. I stared at him. I couldn’t do anything else – my arms and legs had stopped working.

Mother looked up, and saw me. Father looked up as well.

“Is he….” I said. My voice wouldn’t come out all the way. It was as frozen as the rest of my body.

Mother rushed over, taking me out the door. “Come along, Maria,” she said. “Go to the fire. Please.”

I did as she said, my legs sliding stiffly across the wooden floor. I sat down in my place – Martin and Tomas were watching me, eyes wide.

“What happened?” Martin asked, his small voice shaking.

Mother looked at them, and then back at me. Her face was blank – for a moment, she could think of nothing to say.

Then, she closed her eyes, and took a deep breath. “Josef broke his leg.” she said. “He was wandering out in the woods, were he shouldn’t have been.” She looked at all of us, severely. “Let his be a lesson to all of you.”

We all lowered our heads, properly shamed. We had never wandered the woods as Josef had, but we knew better than to point that out now.

Mother went back to Josef’s room, shutting the door behind her, and we were left sitting in front of the fire, back where we had started. I looked at my two little brothers. Their faces had gone pale – as pale as Josef’s. I thought of our mother holding us while we waited for Father and Josef to come home. I would not be much use to my parents now – or to Josef. I rose, and sat next to Martin and Tomas. They leaned into me, instinctively, and I held them both, stroking their hair.

I still felt afraid, but I couldn’t let my brothers see it. I couldn’t let them feel my fear. So I shut my eyes, and thought of nothing else but the feel of their warmth and their soft hair underneath my fingers.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Language Building Development

So... I've decided to come up with two languages simultaneously, upon discovering that Portuguese and Ancient Galacian are all but the same language. That, mixed with my 5 years of Spanish and my 5 weeks of Russian have emboldened me!

My 1st language, Waeglyt, shall be the Wygar's language, and based on old Slavic languages.
My 2nd language, and most recent project, is called Lilaian, and is based on a corruption of Latin. As I intend its speakers to be analogous to the Roman Empire, I thought it fitting that they speak a derivative of Latin. It'll be the Seventh Romance Language! Haha! The others, in order from the Latin, I think: Italian, Galacian, French, Romanian, Portuguese, and Spanish.

Plus... I know Portuguese, and to my surprise, a good deal of Galacian (they're almost identical!). So it'd be easier to come up with a language derived from one I speak, right? So I started by writing a simple poem... sort of derived from the old Spanish hymn Riu, Riu, Chiu:

Weep, weep, river, for those you would protect
For they are devoured by the beasts of the forest
Cast thyself, river, between deathly shores
Then your blessed children will be delivered

Lira, lira, rau pru tuis protetrat
Pos manducat prus coueri florestat
Tira, tira, rau, intrels malourae mourtai
Tou illivrat era tuis lilae bellelai

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

The Velociraptor Chronicles part III

Behold: the day-dawn was breaking. The young man (with whom this story concerns itself) was not terribly excited about this prospect. The bed was much more inviting than the cold rays of the sun that were not shining through the clouds. And wind. And rain. At length he forced himself out of bed and to his feet. He cast a longing look towards his bed, and his bed cast a longing look towards him. The two must part, they knew, though that knowledge hardly eased their heartbreak. Alas, they bade their farewells, and John’s morn began.
            The peanut butter and jelly sandwich was the next thing to greet John, and it anticipated the meeting. It had been planning for this meeting for months in advance: ever since it had been purchased, in its separate components, it had waited for the day that the cereal would run out, and the young man would be forced to eat the PB&J instead. It had grown a healthy culture of mold – healthy, and quite advanced, too, making great advances in art, science, and especially military conquest in all its moldy glory – and hidden it from John until the peanut butter had been spread and the precious jelly expended. Just as he was about to take his first bite, the sandwich couldn’t help but giggle in anticipation, alarming John somewhat. A second look at the sandwich, and its plot was foiled.
            The mold itself was thoroughly disappointed. It was no ordinary mold, to be cut off from its home bread and cast into the trash! It had suffered so much for this invasive moment! It was no easy feat to move a whole horde a spore-based lifeforms to action, nor organize them into legions, armed and trained for battle. They had sat, poised, as they saw the gaping maw of the young man stretching forever before them, preparing to leap into the deep blackness within. Then, to their horror, the two horizons of his lips, above and beneath, rushed shut – quite shut – and then disappeared from view. Instead, the world became a blur, and the rushing of wind welcomed them into the oblivion of the trash bin.
            John’s roommates were largely unconscious of this dramatic exchange. In fact, they were largely unconscious of anything, owing to their being largely unconscious. This was not an uncommon state to be in before 9 a.m. in this apartment.
            Unbeknownst to any within the apartment, though, an eerie visitor watched them from without the basement-floor windows. It tracked John’s movements as he meandered to and from his room and the kitchen. He had been very quiet, it observed. It noticed that he made no sudden movements, almost as if he were aware of its presence, aware of its gaze. Once or twice he jerked his head toward the window, only to see the sidewalk beyond it empty – the visitor dodging out of sight just in time. At length, the time had come. John had put on his coat, and his messenger bag slung over his shoulder. The visitor hastened down the stairwell to the door John would inevitably open. Slowly the handle turned, and
            Click
                        Swing

            They stood face-to-face. John, and the velociraptor. Again. This time, the velociraptor was not so slow to react. It leapt forward, claws reaching for John’s throat. The claws never found purchase in his flesh. Before it had time to react, John was gone – no, beneath it as it leapt through the air, rolling on the floor and leaping to his feet just as the velociraptor landed. It turned to face him in time to see the door slam, and hear John’s footsteps  fade out of earshot. Enraged, it ran to the door, and found it locked. It cursed in Velociraptor under its breath. It could open doors, yes, but its clawed extremities were not well-suited for handling tiny locking mechanisms. Chagrined, it turned to face John’s roommates, who stood  with arms folded, scowling in disappointment at it. It hung its head.
            “I have failed you again, masters,” it said, voice breaking.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

The Velociraptor Chronicles part II

So. My creative writing class. Fun! Only my teacher prefers such somber, depressing literature. And gives us the most bizarre prompts to write about. Also, he seems to make a point of not calling upon me to read my resulting literary work (he calls on 2-3 people per class period to read something they have written. 5 weeks have gone by and I haven't been selected yet). So I decided that my goal in this class is to somehow incorporate velociraptors into everything I write from his interesting prompts.

This one was the Minimal Prompt. Trying to give us very little material to work with: we were told we were to describe our morning with one imaginary conflict, using ONLY nouns and verbs. No adjectives, no and's, a's, the's, or anything.

The writing prompt is only supposed to give us about 10 minutes. He gave us about 20. I ran out of stuff to write halfway through.

Awake. Alert. Sniff sniff. Aha: Liberty.

Embark – bed no more. Floor. Carpet. Stagger. Stagger stagger. Ouch! Wall. About turn! Stagger stagger.
           
    ‘Morning, Roommate! Asleep? Couch? Odd.
                           
    Stagger stagger. Fridge! Food! Food!

                                               …Waffles.

W A F F L E S.


W            A             F              F              L              E              S.

               And banana.

                   ‘Morning, toaster! Receive waffles!
           
            Oh, wafting scent! Wafting scent!
                           
    Kachink!


W      A       F        F        L        E        S.
     
    ‘Morning, syrup! Aha: the mapleness.
       
    Devour. DEVOUR. Devour.
       
    ‘Morning clock! Oh dear – 5 minutes. Time-lack! Depart! Shoes – on! Old Spice – on
(Hello, Ladies. Look – man. Back – me. Back – man. BACK – ME).
       
    Open door.
       
    ‘Morning, Velociraptor.
                   
    Velociraptor.


Shut door.
       
    Closet!

AK-47.
                   
    Breathe. Breathe. Pant. Pant. Sweat. Breathe!
                               
    AK-47.
                                           
        Open door.
       
            Velociraptor?
                   
                Gone.
                   
                Packs. Pack-hunters. Sneaky.

Left – nothing. Right – nothing. Class – Oh no! 3 minutes.
                                              
To class?
                                           
        CEILING!!!
                                           
            VELOCIRAPTOR!!!
            
    AK-47!!!
       
    Rambo.
                   
    Awesomeness.
                               
    Minus one velociraptor.
                                           
    Remove head. Trophy!
                                           
    Store head. Freezer. ‘Morning, other roommates!
                   
    Check watch – 1 minute. Run?
       
    …run?

…run?
WAFFLES

Okay, run.
       
    Run. Run. Run. Class! Run. Oh no! Clothes – velociraptor blood! Cold-blooded. Freezing! Return! Apartment! Return! Run! Pant pant pant BREATHE BREATHE BREATHE. Deposit clothes. Replace clothes. Depart! Trip – dead velociraptor! ‘Morning, ground!
                   
    Run. Run. Run. Run. Run. Run. Run. Breathe. Gasp. Run. Breathe. INHALE! Work, alveoli! Work, alveoli! Function, bronchioles!  Function! I think I can I think I can! I know I can I know I can! I KNOW I CAN I KNOW I CAN!
       
    Class! Door locked! Check clock!
                   
    I thought I could I thought I could (steal from Gary Larson!).
       
    Sit. Sit. Class. Read. Write. Module. Module!!!! Thoughts – not module-thoughts.
                   
    Not module thoughts.
                                  
Velociraptor thoughts!
       
              … waffle thoughts.
       
    module module module module
                   
    Story! Invented! Students inventing? Random! Merlin! Apocalypse! Zombies! Donuts! Submarine! ...velociraptors.
           
    Story – write. Morning? Morning. Morning. Morning – awesomeness. Velociraptors.

W A F F L E S
                       World
                       Amnesty
                       Foundation
                       For
                       Long-
                       Endangered
                       Species

                                   …like VELOCIRAPTORS

The Velociraptor Chronicles part I

So. My creative writing class. Fun! Only my teacher prefers such somber, depressing literature. And gives us the most bizarre prompts to write about. Also, he seems to make a point of not calling upon me to read my resulting literary work (he calls on 2-3 people per class period to read something they have written. 5 weeks have gone by and I haven't been selected yet). So I decided that my goal in this class is to somehow incorporate velociraptors into everything I write from his interesting prompts.

This one was from the Photo Prompt: a Depression-era photo of a woman in threadbare clothing and a cardboard suitcase sticking her head into a taxi cab window, her back to the camera. This was the resulting work of genius.

“I can’t! I won’t!” cried the taxi driver as the woman leered over him, through the window of his car.
               “I’m afraid you have no choice,” she said, bringing her reptilian face closer. Her hat and thick hair framed the scaly snout that protruded from under it, her sharp teeth forming a horrifying smile. Her eyes were like headlights, bulbous and yellow, parted by black slits which the driver could only assume were her pupils.
               Hesitantly, haltingly the man obeyed, reaching for the documents that lay in his glove compartment. He kept looking over her shoulder at passers-by, hoping that someone would see through her innocuous disguise, but to all the world, the velociraptor leaning her head through his window was a simple poor woman with a cardboard suitcase.
               Velociraptor. He remembered being taught about those in his government training. Six foot four beasts that hunt in packs. Their claws could tear open nearly any prey within seconds, and their insatiable hunger for meat was surpassed only by their insatiable hunger for power. And, oh yes, their disguises had grown ever so clever in recent years. They could walk through a street filled with innocent people, and none would see them for who they were, unless one were to notice their obvious dinosaur faces. Granted, this was New York City, where looking someone in the eye was almost a criminal offence, so they walked the streets as if invisible.
               This one gave him no chance to avoid recognizing her for what she was. The long, leathery tongue flicked out towards him, as if to determine what flavor he might be.
               “The documents, if you please,” she reminded him through that seemingly endless row of teeth.
               The man finally gave in, and handed her the manila envelope which contained everything.
               Everything. The blueprints, the reports, the memos, everything.
               Three clawed fingers reached out from within her coat to receive the precious tribute, and the hideous smile, it seemed, widened.
               “There,” she said, “Was that really so hard? Now, Agent 2, I suppose I should be on my way. Send my regards to whatever fool it is who now sits in your superior’s office in the Pentagon.” The horrid head retreated away from him, those reptile eyes never wavering from his face, until it was entirely outside of his car. “Best of luck explaining all of this to them,” she added, and was off, shoes clicking on the cracked asphalt, snout held high, a hint of a satisfied grin still etched on her face.
               The man buried his face in his hands. He had failed. Headquarters would be attacked this very evening, he knew it. The fledgling experiment that of the President would fail. He and the rest of the FBI were about to meet their doom this evening – the ‘raptors were now one step ahead.
               “No,” he said aloud. He looked up, and it seemed a cloud lifted from his vision. He could still warn them. There was still time.
*             *             *
               “I know, Agent 2.”
               The words hit him harder than a fist. A flood of either embarrassment or relief – or perhaps both – washed over him.
               “You do?” He asked, and remembering himself, added, “Mr. President.”

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

This was also Far Too Much Fun

The intro is totally Harry Potter. Wanna know why? Because this totally started out as a Harry Potter fanfiction. No joke. I wrote a Harry Potter fanfiction.

Kind of. None of the original characters were in it. I never got very far with it. But it was totally the same universe.....except that I decided to put it in the future. Because....you know....haven't you ever wondered what the wizarding world would be like in the future, with Muggles getting more and more technologically advanced every year and pretty much taking over the world, bit by bit? Come on. Don't tell me you never wondered.

Well, anyways, I actually enjoyed writing this. I tried to make it less fanfiction-y - like, Toggle was originally a house-elf (cough). And Esther was originally a Squib. She still kind of is, but not, because this isn't HP. Stop laughing. It's undignified.


Lazarus Peter Johann Savatt was an unusual man in many ways. For one thing, he was blind, which gave him cause to wear round black spectacles that gave everyone the spooks, and walked with an old-fashioned redwood cane that bore an intricately sculpted design of mermaids set in the gold cap at its top.

For another, he spoke in the oddest way. He certainly had a strong accent of some sort – the difficulty was discerning which. It wasn’t English, American, French, Scottish, Chinese, Swahili, Indian, Spanish…….. nothing that the citizens could think of seemed to match. Some of the few who speculated on the matter and had done some traveling in their time commented that it sounded like it had a bit of everything mixed in. To save headache, however, many decided that it was just an unusual speech impediment.

Yet another thing was that he kept mostly to himself. He was very friendly with his neighbors, of course, and polite to strangers, but apart from a greeting and perhaps some small talk, he did not associate much with society. He stayed in his house much of the time, coming out only to stroll down the road and head to the main city, cane in hand.

He also dressed strangely, in neatly pressed suits with long calf-length coats, and had a fondness for bizarre and colorful fabrics (which most attributed to his being blind), as well as pointy, high-heeled maroon leather boots with gold buckles.

Yet the strangest and most unsettling thing of all was that he had a strange aversion to high technology. His house was not fully computerized, as was standard, and from what people had seen of the inside, there was no television, computer, light-switch – some questioned whether his house even had electricity. The only evidence of energy usage was the lamp on his porch, which was always brightly lit at night.

Well, no one could really accuse him of being a lunatic, so for the most part he was left alone. He didn’t do any harm to anyone, and he seemed like a nice enough person in spite of his oddities. So, having their own lives to live, his fellow citizens went on with their existence with only a curious glance in his direction.

*

On one particular evening in March, when most of the residents of Outer New Reddington were asleep in their beds, the streets were very quiet, and empty – save for the tall young woman walking down its length with a purposeful stride.

If someone had seen her, they would have furrowed their brows and said that she reminded them of Mr. Savatt. She had the same arched sort of brow he did, and the same pointed chin, except that hers was softened a bit. That was where the similarities ended, though – where Savatt’s hair was thick, dark and curly (usually combed back and gelled smoothly over his scalp), hers was auburn and cut severely short, barely an inch long; where his eyes were a pale, milky blue, hers were a dark hazel; and where he was usually of a calm, placid temperament, her eyes sparked fiery determination, and her movements were brisk and impatient. She wore loud, clashing fabrics, and a strange assortment of clothes, but otherwise seemed far more normal than he did. Forgetting, of course, that she was currently walking down a deserted street in the middle of the night.

Arriving at Mr. Savatt’s porch, she marched up the steps and, rearranging the bags she carried, knocked on the door.

A high-pitched, rather aggravated voice spoke: “Who is this?”

“You know bloody well who I am,” the woman said, speaking in the same indiscernible accent or possible speech impediment that had puzzled the neighbors for so many years. “Let me in.”

“Master Lazarus is not receiving visitors,” the voice said. “Come back tomorrow.”

“Toggle, for the love of all that is good and holy, open the door.” The woman growled.

There was a pause. And then the lock clicked, and the door swung open, allowing the young women entry into the house.

She stepped over the threshold slowly, looking around with a curious expression at the house’s interior. “How long have you been staying here?” she asked abruptly.

A little man – about three feet tall – closed the door, and turned to look at the woman with suppressed irritation. He was dressed in a very fine red tunic and trousers, with pointed slippers on his feet, an Arabian flavor to his features, and a very dignified set to his shoulders.

“Two years, madam.” he answered shortly.

“Longest yet.” The woman murmured. She looked up at the ceiling again, noting now the constellations painted on the ceiling. “The night sky, as seen from Alexandria.” she said, mostly to herself. She swallowed, and renewed her determination. “Where is he? I need to speak with him.” She said to Toggle.

Toggle’s mouth tightened. “Master Lazarus is busy at the moment – if you would care to wait, the parlor is just this way.”

“No, that won’t be necessary, Togal.”

Master Lazarus Savatt stepped out from a shadowy doorway, looking suitably mysterious with his black lenses and his long, mud-stained purple coat. He smiled, reaching out to touch the young woman’s face. “Esther. My, it’s been….” He raised his eyebrows, his hand sliding over her rigid face to feel her nose. “Good heavens, you’ve grown! I swear, your nose feels longer.”

“Shut up.” the woman said impatiently, pushing away his hand. His smile widened. “Stop that.” She snapped, now somewhat sulkily. “I’m twenty-six years old, Laz. Twenty-six. Not twelve.”

He laughed at that – far too heartily, for Esther’s taste. Her mouth tightened, but she made no remark.

“W-well, then,” Savatt regained his composure, clearing his throat. “Let us repair to the parlor, shall we? Togal,” he said to the little man, “would you mind whipping up some of that special tea I’ve been saving? And while you’re about that, would you also mind adjusting the heat on the antidote in the laboratory? I believe there is a small chance that I might have left it too long.”

Toggle bowed, and briskly went about his tasks. Savatt smiled again. “So, Esther,” he said, walking in the direction of the parlor, the woman trailing behind, “Tell me, how long has it been, exactly, since you’ve darkened my doorstep? I’m having a bit of difficulty remembering. Ten years? Twelve?”

Esther’s mouth tightened. “Thirteen.”

“Oh, so you’ve been keeping track, then, have you?” Savatt said, lifting and waving his cane in the air. The dark room was immediately illuminated with a merry golden light, emanating from several spheres attached to the ceiling.

“Don’t start.” she said, somewhat wearily. Savatt sat down on the exceptionally comfortable-looking couch near the fireplace, and patted the space next to him. Esther hesitated, and then reluctantly took the indicated space.