Tuesday, September 25, 2012


Things I will change in transfer to comic form: It isn't a 'hospital' in the way we think it is. It's more of a clinic. Thing. Anyways. That's one thing. I'm also going to get rid of a LOT of Gehnn's lines. I have since disposed of the idea of giving her a speech impediment, since it didn't add anything to the story and just made writing (and reading) dialogue a huge pain. But part of her character is being less chatty and social and more quiet and observant. So not as many lines. 

Oh, man, I have rewritten this so many times. I recently read that it's best to just be simple and straightforward when writing scripts, and let the artist (well, me) figure out the pictures, instead of outlining them in the script. And it has made writing these scripts SO much easier. 

So, anyways, this is the end of chapter 1 and the start of chapter 2. The chapters are pretty short thus far - need to lengthen them a bit, methinks. Ah, well. Hope it makes sense!


(Gehnn takes Rex to the hospital. She bursts through the door, Rex drooping over her shoulders)
Doctor: Well, hello, Gehnn.
Need something?
Gehnn: I….(pant pant) found him…..outside….thicket…..
Skin hounds…..attacked….almost didn’t….
Doctor: What? Skin hounds? How’d you make it out?! Not even a scratch on you!
Gehnn: I…..he…..
I…ran. Somehow got away.
Please. Just help him.
Doctor: Well, you came at a good time. Most of the beds are empty. Here, let me help you –
(they plonk him on a nearby bed)
Doctor: Well. Certainly is unique, isn’t he? I don’t think I’ve seen clothes of this make…well, anywhere.
Gehnn: Can you help him?
Doctor: Hm. His heart’s beating normally. And he seems to be breathing normally.
Of course, I can’t say anything for certain until I get a proper look at him.
You found him in a thicket, you say?
Gehnn: Well….under it. He was resting there. I think. I was going out to collect....to cut some seasoning. For supper.
And I found him.
Doctor: I see.
I’ll look at him, see what’s wrong.
You should probably head home. Get some rest. You’ve had a big shock.
I’ll send you a message later.
(pause)
Gehnn: I….guess so.
Oh, wait. Min.
Doctor: (pulling back cloak) Tell him you had to go home by Doctor’s orders. I don’t think he’d be willing to risk annoying the Merchant’s Guild by making you work with that over his head.
Gehnn: Yeah.
Thank you.
Doctor: I’ll be sending you the bill later, you know.
Gehnn: Heh. Yeah.
Yeah.
(Scene: Gehnn walks back to her house. She sits down on the bed. She rubs her head, and stares at the wall.)
Gehnn: Rex…..
(flops back)
Rex.
Is that a name? Or a title? Or a race?
(pause)
How did he speak to me?
(she sighs, and closes her eyes.)
Min’s gonna have a fit.

CHAPTER 2: Rex
(Scene: Doctor examining Rex. Still has mask on.)
Doctor: Don’t want anyone to see you, eh?
I can understand that. In this part of the world, not many do.
Lucky for you, this is the safest place for miles around. So whatever trouble you’re running from, you’ve found a good hiding place here. A second chance.
(pause)
Heh heh. Why am I even talking to you? It’s not like you can hear me.
(feels around the edges of the mask. Perturbed.)
Huh.
You sure got it well stuck.
Don’t think I’ve ever seen a mask like yours, come to think of it. Nothing like with these slots or markings. Or these….cursed….straps!
(he gives up. Sighs.)
Do I seriously have to call Arzin in and have him cut this thing off?
(looks at mask.)
Well, you’re not gasping, I guess. Nothing I can do about that now.
Let’s just see about the leg, then….
(Scene: Gehnn is at the stall again, this time with customers.)
Boy: C’mon, Gehnn, just put in a good word for me!
Gehnn: No.
Boy: Come ON!
Gehnn: I’ve told you a good thousand times, Hy, she said no. She’s not gonna change her mind.
Hy: But, if you talk me up to her –
Gehnn: Hy, the plain fact of it is, Yul knows what she wants in men. And nothing I’ve said about it has ever changed her mind.
Hy: Uh…..what…kind of men does she like?
Gehnn: You would probably be better off not knowing, Hy.
Hy: I mean, maybe if I spruced myself up a bit, she’d –
Gehnn: It ain’t spruce she’s going for, Hy. Trust me on that.
Hy: But if you told me-
Gehnn: Hy.
You’re a good guy. Don’t let her spoil it.
Hy: Oh.
Gehnn: Really.
Hy: Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Sure. Um.
I guess….I guess I’ll just….go this way. And think about this.
Yeah.
Gehnn: (sighs)
Customer: Boy troubles, honey?
Gehnn: Not mine, praises be.
Customer: They all come around eventually, don’t you worry.
My own Pike, he an’ I were bandit children up on those desert trails. I ignored him until he killed up a pack of skin hounds and made a coat outta their hides for me. I married him the day he gave it to me.
Gehnn: That sounds….wonderful.
Customer: It is, isn’t it?
Just remember what I told you, Honey. Keep strong!
Gehnn: Sure will.
(thinking, wearily) Yul would love that.
Min: Gehnn!
Gehnn: Oh, hi there, Min.
Min: Gehnn, Arzin finished those chair repairs. I can take over shop while you go to pick it up.
Gehnn: Does this mean I don’t have to sit on this thing anymore? (points at splintery old stool upon which she was formerly sitting)
Min: Just go and get it.
Gehnn: Sure thing!
(runs down street, towards smith’s. She comes to a barrage of crowds – goes down alley, climbs on top of wall, runs across roofs, drops down in front of smith’s. She walks up to the door, and rings the bell.)
Apprentice: Someone’s at the door.
Arzin: Then get it.
(door opens.)
Gehnn: Hi, Clem. Arzin said the chair was ready for pickup?
Clem: Uh, yeah. He’s busy right now, but I can-
Arzin: Hey! Is that Gehnn?
Gehnn: Hey, Arzin.
Arzin: It is you! Here for the chair, I take it?
Gehnn: Yep.
Arzin: Clem! Go to the back and get the chair.
Clem: Yessir.
Arzin: It’s been a while since I’ve seen you around my shop, girl.
Gehnn: Min’s been running the stall longer since the Trade Fair. He’s even had me work on rest-days.
Arzin: Ridiculous. Who would be at the bazaar on a rest-day?
Gehnn: He just likes to take what chances he can get, I guess.
Arzin: Hmph. Ridiculous.
If he’s not careful, he’ll get reported to the Guild. They’re tightening their hold on everyone these days.
Gehnn: Eh, he’ll figure out how to get around it.
Arzin: One of these days, though…..
But never mind that. How have you been faring, with all this extra work?
Gehnn: Well enough. I’ve gotten a little extra pay out of it.
Arzin: Good, good. And how’s Yul? Managed to stay out of trouble?
Gehnn: Do you even need to ask.
Arzin: Ha ha ha ha! I like that girl. She’s got spirit. And a strong fighting arm.
Gehnn: Yeah. Wish she’d keep it to herself, though.
We’re already under the wire as it is.
Arzin:….people asking questions?
Gehnn: No, just….can’t let ourselves stick out, you know? Can’t take chances.
Arzin: Hm.
Well, everyone here has something to hide. This whole city was built on second chances.
Gehnn: Some things don’t warrant second chances.
Arzin: Don’t you worry about it, Gehnn. I’m sure Yul will settle down. Or else be tossed out on her rear. Either way, you’ll be at peace.
Gehnn: (laughing) Guess so.
Clem: I’ve got the chair here, ma’am.
Gehnn: Oh, yeah! Thank you.
Arzin: That should stay sturdy. And I polished it, so you’ll be able to sit without getting splinters.
Gehnn: Thank you so much.
I’d better get back to Min.  He’s all alone at the stall right now.
Arzin: Of course, of course.
You just make sure to come back and visit!
Gehnn: I’ll see if I can make the time.
Arzin: Come at midnight, I don’t care. Just visit.
Gehnn: Sure thing. Thanks again.
Arzin: Any time, Gehnn. Just say the word.
(she leaves)
Arzin: (to himself) That girl has something on her mind.
Clem: Didn’t she say she was working long hours?
Arzin: No, something else.
Hm.
Oh, well. Back to work, boy! Can’t stand by ogling pretty girls all day!
Clem: Um….right, sir!
(scene: Gehnn is walking over the roofs, about to come to the market. She sits down, sighing.)
(looks up at sky. How pretty.)
(she notices a shape, high up. She squints. The shape looks like a blimp of some sort. She raises a hand to her eyes, trying to get a better look, but is then suddenly distracted by a shout.)
Min: GEHNN!
(Gehnn looks down.)
Gehnn: Um….hey there, Min!
Min: GET DOWN HERE!
Gehnn: Right, right. Sorry, sir. Be right down.
Min: I told you to go and get the chair!
Gehnn: I did get it. It’s right here.
Min: I meant….never mind. Let’s just get back to the stall.
Gehnn: Right, sir.











Thursday, September 20, 2012

The Woodsman and the Wizard

So, sort of in the style of a Tolkienesque Grimm fairy tale ... something I am writing for my ENG 370 class.


The Old Wood was forbidden. It was not forbidden by law or decree of any sort, but by the common sense of the people of Worthmint. The Wood itself was not like the other forests, even the other forest which surrounded Worthmint and lined the road that passed through it—while the sun shown through the forest on the King’s side and the Lord of Worthmint often hunted in them, the Old Wood was dark, as though the sun could not penetrate into its canopy of leaves and its walls of thickets. It was a deep green which never lost its color, even in the direst of winters. One blisteringly hot summer, a fire had begun after a thunderstorm, and it burned a portion of the forest on the King’s side, leaving a visible line of blackened land and felled trees at the foot of the evergreen Wood.
At the edge of a farmer’s field, where a poor woodsman and his wife lived by agreement with the farmer, the line of tall pines that stood against the naked fields of Worthmint’s farmland served as a barrier on all the kingdom’s maps as the boundary between the King’s realm and the wilderness where the creatures of the old world still ruled. The sky above was dreadfully silent and deep grey-blue, just at the very onset of dawn. The trees were black against the dim light of the sky, their stillness unsettling. Even when a gust of wind from the west rustled the wheat of the field and creaked the timbers of the wooden fence surrounding the field, the forest seemed to swallow the wind, its branches and leaves unmoved. Then the silence was shattered.
A voice, high and inhuman, shrieked with delight. From the darkened homestead on the edge of the field leapt a pale, indistinct thing. It was the size of a small man, but moved too quickly to be seen clearly. It ran, laughing in horrible cackles, toward the forest. A tall man sprung from the door after him, half-dressed, crying,
“Fey-man! Thief! Coward!”
The pale man-kin hopped over the fence without a glance behind it and disappeared into the blackness of the Wood, its harsh giggles lingering. The man ran after him, but stopped at the fence. A shiver ran though his body as  he peered intot he depths.
A woman emerged from the house, more dressed than he, and cried after him,
“Aelfric! Come away from the Wood!”
“I must follow it!” Aelfric returned, “It’s ruined us if I don’t!”
“What has it done?” she said.
“It has taken my axe!” And with that he crawled over the fence and he, too, disappeared into the Wood.

After the pale fey ran Aelfric, roaring with the pain in his head from the last night’s drinking and stumbling in fatigued clumsiness. He wove between the trees as best he could, bush and thistle slapping his face and arms in the darkness around him. Beneath the canopy of the old wood in the predawn and all but choked in by thorny growth, he could see only a faint glimmer of light ahead like the tail of a comet marking his query’s progress ahead of him.
The forest seemed to have a will of its own, however, and the harder he ran after the faery, the more the bushes and thistles seemed to throw themselves into his path. He strove with the invisible thickets and vines that lashed and tugged at him from the darkness of the forest, but like a fly wrapped in spider’s silk, he soon found that his struggles only worsened his lot. Soon the silvery glimmer of the fey faded away, and all fell dark. He gave a shout of despair that was consumed by the thick air around him. He struggled, but the vines and thickets held him as tightly as rope. So there he lie, staring upward in despair, straining his eyes for a snatch of light through the vaulted leafy ceiling, but all was silent, cold, and black.
Then, much to his surprise, the silvery light returned, at first faintly, then stronger, until he saw he was in a grove of trees. Each tree trunk was thicker than his house, wrapped in vines and furry with moss, stretching too far upward to see even the branches of. Near the center of the grove he lay tangled in every manner of forest plant, roots, vines, bushes, thistles, and thickets, all clinging to him and wrapped around his arms, his hadns and feet, and his neck, and they seemed to writhe as through controlled by a mind. they moved in utter silence, not stirring one another’s leaves, but in perfect togetherness dragging him closer to the center of the grove, where the growth was densest and from which many stones thrust upward like jagged teeth.
The fey stood above him. He looked rather like a child, small, beardless, and slight, with pinched features and a wicked grin upon his face. He was naked and his flesh was bloodless and pallid. His white hair, tangled and knotty, fell heavily around his bony shoulders, from which hung long, thin arms down to his long, thin legs. He leaned over him and gazed into his eyes with his own white-within-white eyes, like a blind man’s. He parted his teeth and spoke,
“The manling has become caught! How have you become caught so quickly?” He held up Aelfric’s axe and looked it up and down. “the Wood remembers you, methinks, and the bite of your axe. But no!” he seemed to spasm, and went kicking the vines and branches which held Aelfric down. Each went slack and motionless as the fey struck it, and soon Aelfric freed himself. No sooner had he risen to his feet than he gave a cry and lunged toward the fey, who deftly stepped out of his way.
“No!” he giggled, “No, no, no! My game is with you, and the Wood shall not spoil it!” and he lighted off again, deeper into the wood.
“What game?” cried Aelfric, charging after him, “What game is this? Why do you toy with me and not someone else from the village?” He was too slow—the faerie was already so far ahead that Aelfric could only run in the direction of the light.
“You, you!” the fey’s voice floated back to him from the trees ahead, “It is you I want!”
“I think,” Aelfric wheezed, winded from running, “You will not be so pleased with me when I catch up with you!” Now as he ran, Aelfric tore away any vine or branch that caught on his clothing, and was lighter on his feet than before. His head was clearer, also, and his headache ebbed.
A deep, dim blue light began to fill the Wood as the sun’s early rays penetrated the fortress of leaves and branches overhead, and his eyes had adjusted better in the half-light of the fey far ahead of him. These trees stretched far above, and were unlike any he had before seen. Unlike those of the grove, these trees were gnarly, bent, with stretched bark showing beneath carpets of moss, like the belly of a fat man poking out from under his shirt. Some stood straight, like unbending giants, while others leaning to one side before laboriously reaching upward.

Monday, September 10, 2012

More Jadrus Script


For context, Gehnn has been sent out by her employer to collect a certain type of leaf. 
Rex is my favorite character to write/draw. I think it shows. 

(She walks out into the wilderness - show off the plantlife and greenery, with a tiny river flowing down a small channel. She stops to look at the pearly insects flying around it, and smiles.)
(she continues walking, looking around as she does so. She comes to a rugged set of rocky columns and such, riddled with small and large caves. She carefully makes her way over to a patch of spidery-looking bushes with thick leaves and red stems (sort of like poison oak). She sets down her basket, kneels down, and starts to cut.)
(she hears a noise behind her. She turns around, sees nothing there. She turns back to her clipping. She suddenly notices a glint through the bushes. Curious, she puts down her clippers and basket, and makes her way through the thicket.)
(she discovers the figure of a man, lying on the ground, wearing strange clothes and a mask that makes him look like an insect. He is bleeding from his leg, and he clutches a strange staff-like tool across his chest (hence the glint). She stares at him. The man suddenly turns his head towards her. Gehnn backs away, frightened. He sits up, reaching out a hand. She backs out of the bushes, and flees. She hears rustling behind her, and picks up her speed. She looks behind her, leaps over some brush, and then stumbles into a pack of sleeping skin-hounds. They wake up, and attempt to pounce her. She tries to run away, but is cornered.)
Gehnn: (thinking) Damn it! Damn it, damn it!
(The skin hound pounces, but suddenly flies away. The pack turns to see the man, leaning on his staff. They all go for him - Gehnn looks terrified. The man makes a strange gesture - the hounds are all swept up in some invisible tornado, and thrown everywhere. They all take off, wimpering.)
(Gehnn stares at him. The man stumbles forward, and falls to his knees. Gehnn rushes over to him. They look at each other, and then the man reaches out and touches Gehnn's forehead.)
(She suddenly has the image of kneeling in an empty space, her surroundings melting away. A soft whispering speaks in her ear. Gehnn looks confused, and then speaks, slowly.)
Gehnn: R....Rex? You are.....Rex?
Rex: Heh....Heh heh....
(She sees the eyes behind the mask's lenses - they are half-shut, exhausted. She stares at him, and then, slowly, reaches out to touch his face. He collapses.)
(Gehnn stares at him for a few more seconds. Then, she reaches down, and pulls him up, draping him over her back. She is surprisingly strong for her size. As an afterthought, she reaches down and picks up his staff, and with that, she takes off with him towards the city.)
(She comes to the gate, banging on it. It opens, and the guard comes out, looking concerned.)
Guard: What -
(she rushes past. The guard looks astounded. His partner comes out, staring after Gehnn.)
 (A few minutes later - The man is lying on a table, in Yul and Gehnn's room. They stare at him. Yul reaches out to touch his mask, looking wary.)
Yul: You found him? Outisde?
Gehnn: H-he.....was in the...bush.
Yul: A Rem. Outside of Asorame.
Never thought I'd see it.
Gehnn: His name is Rex.
Yul: What?
Gehnn: That's....that's what he...um....gave me. His name is Rex.
Yul: Gave you? What do you mean?
Gehnn: I don't...I don't know. H-he just....he t-touched my...head....and it was...in my brain. Just that. Rex.
(Yul backs away from the man)
Yul: We need to call the Captain.
Gehnn: What? No!
Yul: It's dangerous, Gehnn! I'm not gonna be in the same room as a mind-controlling Rem.
Gehnn: He's hurt! A-and sick! He just n-needs help!
Yul: What if this is all a ruse, Gehnn? What if, the minute he wakes up, he starts getting in our heads? Getting a hold of our thoughts, twisting them around?
Gehnn: He....he wouldn't.
Yul: Why? Did he give you that, too?
Gehnn: No, he....he saved my life. He.....h-he made a pack of skin hounds run away! I was g-gonna get ea....eaten!
Yul: What? How?
Gehnn: Um.....
Yul: I knew it. I knew it I knew it I knew GEHNN! This is bad! We're already under the wire as it is! What are we gonna do with a Rem?! A live Rem? What if he makes the city explode? What if he makes us kill people? Oh god oh god...
Gehnn: Y-you got....that out of stories....Yul.
Yul: He cowed a pack of skin hounds! How's THAT for a story?
Gehnn: Yul!
(Yul looks at her)
Gehnn: Please. He's....he's sick. And hurt. H-he needs help. And he's....alone.
I mean....we kn-know how that...well, y-you remember.
 (Yul looks at her. And then looks at the man. She closes her eyes, in a tight-like fashion, rubbing her nose, and then goes over to the man, looking down at his insect-like mask.)
Yul: If he burns the house down, Gehnn -
Gehnn: You always hated this place, anyway.
Yul: Dern straight.
All right...lessee....
(Hesitantly, she touches his face. He makes no move.)
Yul: D'you think.....there's, like...a face, under this?
Like, a human face?
Gehnn: (touches goggles) He has....e-eyes, I guess. Human-sized ones.
Yul: Well, that's....good. I guess.
(She closes her eyes, takes a deep breath. They both lean in, wearing intense expressions.)
Yul: I'm betting....he's not getting enough air. Through that mask.
Gehnn: Y-y'think s-so?
Yul: I just bet.
Gehnn: So we....sh-should maybe...maybe take it off, then?
Yul: I....I guess that would be the best thing to do.
(She hesitates, looks at Gehnn. Brow set, she then places both hands on the sides of the mask. She feels around trying to find a buckle.)
Yul: (annoyed) Is this thing melted to his face?
(She finds a slide on either side of his neck, under his collar)
Yul: Hm?
(She slides the switches. The mask suddenly hisses, causing them both to jump back. They stare, frightened, before realizing the mask has come loose. Cautiously, Gehnn approaches, and removes the mask.)
(She stares. Yul comes up and stares as well. There is a lot of staring in this chapter.)
Yul: Huh.
Gehnn: Huh.
(Viewing the man's face - it is quite human.)
Yul: (after a pause) How'd he get his sidies like that?
Gehnn: P-probably....magic?
Yul: Hm.
He's breathing now, anyways. And his leg is bleeding. I guess.
And his clothes are....filthy.
Gehnn: Are.....are you...s-saying...?
Yul: (bright red) This is what you do with hurt people! You gotta get 'em clean!
Gehnn: But-
Yul: Just go to Min and borrow some clothes.
(She turns back to the Rem. Sighs and rolls up her sleeves. In a manner of speaking.)
Yul: Let's get this over with.


Chapter 2: The Stranger
(Flashback – blue ink? Boy’s hands in water. Cuts his palm on a rock. His hands are enveloped by his mother’s. He looks up into a sweet smile and deep teal-black eyes. The face suddenly transforms into that of a little girl, who holds up a pendant, grinning. She places it around his neck. He looks down at the pendant, looks up again. The girl is replaced with a skin hound, who snarls. He opens his eyes, staring at the ceiling.)
(He looks over, seeing the open window. His brow furrows, and he sits up, looking out the window. A bird flies past. He jumps, frightened, banging his leg against the bed. Or wall. He winces. Curious, he pulls up his pant leg and sees that his calf is bandaged. He is very confused. He swings his legs over the bed, and tries standing up, wobbling a little. Successful, he smiles. He looks around the room, taking in everything. There is a black and white photo pinned to the wall (Yul and her family), a dresser, two messy pallets on the floor, a table, and a stove in a little niche. He is instantly drawn to the stove, feeling the heat with his hand. He looks up at the pipe, seeing it go through the ceiling. He looks through the grate, seeing the coals within.)
Rex: Hm.
(the door opens, Yul comes in. She turns to lock the door, and turns to the see Rex standing there. He stares at her, and then smiles awkwardly.)
Rex: Ah…..viat ae-
(Yul’s eyes get bigger)
Rex: Eh heh…..niat viat ae viridam (looking uncomfortable)
Aaahhh…..
(Gehnn comes in, her blacksmith apron over one arm. She sees Rex, and is startled.)
Gehnn: He’s awake!
Yul: (very distressed) Yeah! Yeah, he’s awake!
(Rex smiles broadly, seeing Gehnn. He points to her.)
Rex:  Duam turraem!
Gehnn:……what?
Yul: I think he’s talking to you.
Gehnn: I-I……what?
Rex: Ah…..
(he thinks for a minute, and then points at himself, and points to the window)
Gehnn: Um…..(pointing at herself questioningly)
Rex:  (nods)
Gehnn: A-are you….um….asking me....if I was just outside?
(Rex looks elated for a minute, and then performs a weary facepalm)
Gehnn: I d-don’t think we’re…… getting anywhere.
Yul: Does he look like he’s going to blow up the house?
(in the background, Rex notices his clothes folded by the stove. He rifles through them, pulling out a small book.)
Gehnn: Yul, d-does he…..look like….he is?
Yul: I don’t know what a Rem looks like when he’s about to blow something up.
Gehnn: A-and I do?
Yul: You’re the one who read his mind or whatever! Why wouldn’t you?
(There’s a growling sound. They all look at Rex. It’s his stomach. He looks suitably embarrassed.) 

Monday, September 3, 2012

More Blushby


She quickly took to her newly found masculine ways. It was most helpful, and relieved her of the stress that befell most young damsels. When another young woman slighted her for the tackiness of her garb, she simply struck her over the head with a large stick. Consequently, the young woman made no more attempts of mockery. When the young cowherd she fancied laughed at seeing her, a woman, attempt such manly feats as swordsmanship and archery, she knocked a sword in her bow and shot it straight underneath his arm, lodging the sword in the cow at his side. She soon found herself having to make the excuse that she was preparing for that terrible day, and every bit of violence was necessary to this preparation. Did the villagers want to be quivering under their tables while their homes burned around them? It did not take long, though, before she no longer had to make excuses to others, as people generally avoided her; nor to herself, because she began to be genuinely comfortable with it all.
So it came to be that one day as she was shaving her chin (her face was quite smooth, as becomes a lady, but she felt she had best get into the habit in case she should be mistaken for the frail damsels prone to require rescue) with her sword that Edmund Humblebottom, master of the most prosperous farm of the forest, came to beseech her hand in marriage on behalf of his nephew, Blushby. She knew little of the boy, who was kept out of sight of the villagers most days, but she could not deny that she was pleased to be approached by so manly a villager with a personal invite into his hairy family. And besides, she thought, she would no longer have to be so careful not to permanently damage the eligible young men of the village.
The marriage contract was drawn up, the date was set for a lovely manly day in the dead of winter, and a tasteful dwelling for the soon-to-be happy couple was built by Master Edmund Humblebottom. It was furnished with the finest furniture that could be found after he had raided all the local carpenters for their finest furniture for his own tasteful dwelling, all those years ago.
As for Blushby, it seemed that he had resigned himself to his fate, his heart broken and hopes dashed. He could no longer hope to marry a fair elven maid from the old Elvenwoods or go on his grand adventures. It no longer mattered that he could fire seven arrows at once, with twelve more knocked by the time the string twanged (which he admitted was impossible, but how could he be expected to vanquish the heart of an elven maiden within the realm of possibility?). All that mattered now would be that the farm is taken care of, that he would not go hungry, and that the farm would be defended on the off chance that the evil king should ever want to hunt down him, specifically. It was as though no one gave the faintest care for his own hopes and dreams. His life was over, written for him to the final page; the only excitement left would be to turn the pages over the years. He wandered as though a ghost in the house, saying nothing and being ignored in return, staring with the most morose of eyes at Uncle Edmund. Unfortunately, Uncle Edmund had only eyes for his crops and his quite tasteful furniture.
Blushby sighed, and thought, Uncle Edmund may be able to arrange a room with excellent taste and bedeck it with the most beautiful furnishings and decorations, but for all that, he knows nothing of the furniture in the darkened room of my heart.

Monday, July 2, 2012

Drake the Poem


This is the short story that was accepted for publication by The Outlet Magazine

He came to with a feeling of nausea and disorientation. The room was dark and small, and everything about it sent shivers of déjà vu through him. He couldn’t remember how he got there. When he tried to remember, a sharp headache struck him, so intense that he nearly fainted. He made to stand up and found to his surprise he was already standing. That, he reasoned, was decidedly weird.
The only light in the room spilled in through a window right by a bedside, dimly illuminating the figure of the girl asleep on the bed. The light was from a streetlamp somewhere in the night without, and though it was wan, it was just enough to make out the girl’s features. He felt a thrill as he looked on her face: she was the most beautiful girl imaginable. Her hair gathered like a halo around her head on her pillow, framing her heart-shaped face in blonde locks. Her breath escaped her plump lips in slow, relaxed rhythm.
Alice,” he cooed softly, drawing nearer to her. A smile split his face. It was Alice. How did he know her?
The headache intensified. He hissed in pain and sat on the bed, massaging his temples. Nothing was as it should be. He was not supposed to be where he was, and he couldn’t remember how he had come to be there. He knew this girl, and very well, but he couldn’t recall how. Something was very wrong.
Perhaps if he could recall where he had been before showing up here?
More pain. Much more pain. He squeezed his eyes shut and rubbed all the harder.
Nothing to jog his memory. The closest thing to a memory that he could conjure up was a blank, white void. The harder he tried to remember, the worse the headache became. With a sigh, he gave up and let himself relax.
Alice,” he said again, and she stirred. Inside of him, something bubbled and fluttered. He turned to look at her again. A sweet warmth spread from just beneath his sternum, and engulfed him. She shivered a little bit. It was a little bit chilly in the room, and her blanket had bunched around her legs. He moved to draw it over her body.
Don’t touch her,” a voice demanded from behind him.
His heart nearly exploded. He spun around and saw with terror who had spoken. Her voice was distinctly female, which was the only way he knew that she was a she: her face was shrouded by a black gossamer veil over a white mask with painted lips and black eye-holes. Apart from the odd head-wear, she wore a thick, chequered covering like a funeral shroud, fastened shut by a row of double-breasted buttons from her collar down to the floor. A shiver crept up through him, and he recoiled at the sight of her.
Who are you?” he said, trying to sound as calm as possible. “What are you doing here?”
I should ask the same of you,” she returned. “I imagine you would not be able to answer.”
I don’t know why I’m here,” he confessed, “Or who I am, exactly. But who are you?”
You’re wholly unqualified to question my identity until you have one yourself. Let me help you in that regard.” She walked around the bed and reached toward Alice. He tried to leap to his feet — he had to protect her, and he didn’t like this newcomer one bit — but he couldn’t budge. His muscles didn’t respond. He struggled fruitlessly, but the woman-person was already away from the bed, bearing a piece of paper in one gloved hand, which protruded from a slit in her covering. She offered it to him. He made to receive it, and this time his body allowed him.
Read this,” she said, handing to to him.
Though the room was dark, letters were visible on the paper, as if they were made of tendrils of ember.
It was a love poem. It was addressed to My Dear Drake, someone who was, to judge from the poem, the most incredible person to have been born on this Earth, free of any fault and owning every virtue. He admitted internally that it wasn’t a very good poem — the rhyming scheme was amateurish at best, and a few malapropisms caused him to wonder if the writer was even a native English speaker — but it was sweet and ever so heartfelt.
What does it have to do with me?”
That is you.” said the woman-person.
This?” he laughed. “This is a piece of paper.”
It was like a slap to the face, only pleasant. It was so clear, he felt stupid for having not made the connection before.
She wrote this poem about me!” He said excitedly. He was stupid to have not realized that earlier. “That means she loves me back, then, doesn’t it?”
After a fashion,” said the woman-person, “She loves a boy named Drake. She wrote a poem about him. Around the time she finished writing is when you came into existence. You are her poem.”
There was a very awkward pause.
I am her poem,” he repeated.
Yes.”
In his vague understanding of everything, he didn’t really think too much of poems as living, breathing things like himself. He held up the paper.
Isn’t this her poem?” he asked.
No,” said the woman/person, “That is a piece of paper with ink sloppily arranged on it. You are what that piece of paper represents.”
I don’t quite follow.”
I don’t expect you to. Alice described you as smart, not a metaphysicist.”
So, if I’m her poem, then who are you? How do you know so much about it?”
Knowledge is power,” she said, “and the tomes that represents me are hidden away somewhere safe, forgotten to the world. No one person should have that much power.”
You’re that powerful?” he asked out of curiosity rather than cheekiness, though her mask regarded him coolly at this.
I am in charge of this world,” she said. “There are many like you, Drake. I am chief among them. There is one thing you must never do, and you nearly did it: you must never, under any circumstances, touch her, or speak to her, or make contact in any way with the human world. Your life is a blessing and a curse: she created you, and now you are here.” She sighed. “Some poems are better left unwritten.”
I can’t touch Alice? Or talk to her?” he asked.
No.”
But I love her! What kind of rule is that? What’s the point of her creating me if I serve no purpose?”
What, indeed,” she answered dispassionately.
And what if I decide not to obey your rule?”
She reached across the room.
Her arms were far too long.
One stretched from where she stood over to the window, which shattered at her touch. The other stretched toward the door of the room, which her gloved hand opened, and continued stretching beyond it. She grew terribly tall as well, her masked head looming over him, until it reached the ceiling. Her back curled at the ceiling as continued she stretching, her head bowed and leering ever nearer to Drake’s face. Her mask was an inch from his face, and her veil touched his face.
I’m very fond of you, Drake,” she said, “But don’t test my limits. I have few.”
Her mask retracted away, and she shrank down to her previous height. Her arms retracted to back within her covering, and the shattered window reassembled itself. There was nowhere to hide, no place to run, no way to escape her, so he sat dumbfounded.
Humility aside, however,” she said in a lighter tone, “you are the newest addition to my realm. I just thought I’d welcome you personally before I left you to your own devices.”
Very much obliged,” he forced the words out.
Yes,” she agreed, “you are. Remember: you can go anywhere and do anything so long as it does not involve the humans.”
Her head tilted like a curious dog cocking his head.
You look exhausted. Coming into existence is difficult work. Sleep now, and tomorrow your life can begin in earnest.” Involuntarily, he relaxed, and found himself overwhelmed with sleepiness. Waves of exhaustion lapped at his eyelids and the base of his neck, and he sank into such a blissful ocean of peace and tranquility that he toppled gently to the floor. The last thing he saw before the darkness took him was the fuzzy image of Alice’s empty room.

The light was intense. Drake’s eyes opened to the blinding world of what was probably daylight. He didn’t have much experience to go by, so he had to make assumptions.
The room was artfully painted in electric blue and black; she had probably painted it herself. A really quite large chest of drawers lay opposite the four-poster bed upon which Alice had been sleeping, and it was open, clothes spilling out of it. Across the room was a massive mirror, in front of which was than Alice. She turned around, and began to leave the room, taking no notice of Drake.
She was even more beautiful awake. Her hair now fell in shimmering locks about her shoulders, and her smoky green eyes shone with a sparkle that sent a thrill down Drake’s spine. Even her hideous nose-ring could be forgotten in the ensemble. Her rosy perfume filled his nostrils as she disappeared out the door.
Out the door.
Away from him.
He leapt to his feet and ran after her with one thought on his mind — she must be protected! And so it was he found his way to her high school.
The place was altogether dodgy. It was dirty, the cement ground cracked and covered in old gum. The buildings were concrete and cinder-block structures, bleak and cold. The lockers were scratched and dented, some apparently relics of a more ancient time. It was hardly a place where someone like Alice could fit in. The sea of people closed in all around, but Alice flitted through the crowds with no trouble. No one could see Drake, but Alice didn’t seem to escape anyone’s notice. Everywhere she went, a pack of girls called out to her (in their ear-piercing shrill tones), or a boy with a look of ill intent (to say nothing of fashion sense) would greet her. To all she would smile with bared teeth and wave her slender hand. Every wave was like a slap to Drake’s face.
This was so unfair. She had written her poem about him, not these people! Especially not the one with the stupid hair! Not like he could really pass judgment — he had quickly discovered that he couldn’t see himself in mirrors; he could look much worse than they, and in any event, he didn’t exist yesterday, so what did his opinion really count? — but if Alice’s poem were any indication of the sort of men she liked, what was she doing with these idiots?
Can’t you see that these guys are all horrible?” he yelled at her. To his surprise, she frowned and inclined her head in his direction. Could she hear him?
Alice!” He cried, “Alice, it’s me, Drake!”
She looked straight through him, her face vacant.
What’s up, Alice?” one of the losers asked her. “You okay?” Drake couldn’t stand the sight of him. He wore a tiny little beard just under his lower lip, and his short, spiky hair was a shade of orange that seemed incredibly unnatural even to someone whose reckoning of the world dated less than twenty-four hours back. His white shirt looked very comfortable and clean, and his jeans were tight around his skinny legs. He gave off a sickly sweet, musty smell.
Yeah, I’m fine,” she said in her glimmering voice, “I just thought someone was calling my name.”
I am calling you!” Drake shouted as loud as he could. At this point, he wasn’t worked up about her not noticing him; he was very worked up about the possibility that she might be able to. She shook her head and turned back to her friends.
I could have sworn someone yelled my name.”
You’re just paranoid,” said the boy.
You’re just a jerk,” she said with a grin and made to punch him playfully.
He grabbed her arm.
Drake’s breath caught in his throat.
The boy pulled her in closer to him. She kissed him.
No. Why would she kiss him? Drake’s heart was trying to wrestle its way out of his chest.
The boy kissed her back.
Drake raised one shaking fist, and let it fly.
The boy reeled from the blow and let out a yelp. So Drake could interfere with the world after all! He was trembling all over, but now it was from excitement. The boy’s spectacularly white shirt now shone red from his bleeding nose.
Drake, what happened?” shrieked Alice. Drake?
Was this Drake? This couldn’t be Drake.
Drake, what happened?” came a voice over his shoulder. He spun around to see the masked woman-person directly behind him, towering over him. “Did you just harm a human being?”
But he —”
We do not interfere with their world.”
Really? I just found out we can.”
She was twenty feet tall. Her hands stretched down and grabbed him, drawing him up to her eye level. The empty eye-holes regarded him coolly while the voice that addressed him was anything but cool.
At what cost, Drake? Did it feel good, dipping your finger into the fabric of reality?” The voice howled, tore, wailed, falling on him like a tempest . “You take a deadly risk by disobeying me. My rule does not exist for my sake, but for yours! Did that occur to you? Look at your hand, and see what I mean.”
A third hand emerged from her covering, grabbed his right arm brought it before his face. He had no right hand. The flesh ended in a clean stump at his wrist.
You can’t survive in the real world, Drake.” Her voice was softer. “Your existence is locked up in this girl’s mind.”
So if I ever touch or talk to her, I disappear?” he spat. “Just like that?”
I barely saved you from much worse,” she said. She set him down. She was his height. “Even if I had been by your side the whole time you hit him, I couldn’t have protected you for very long in the human world. Do not attempt to interfere again.”

Alice escorted Real Drake to a place that smelled oddly clean, for a school like this one, with pale-green tiles and newer-looking paint. Drake watched as a woman in white took Real Drake away into another room behind the desk. Alice took a seat in one of the many chairs that lined the walls, and plugged buds into her ears, while she tinkered with what he knew, somewhere inside of himself, to be a phone. Drake sat down next to her and watched her intently. He was calmer now, but he couldn’t rid himself of the sense of betrayal. But really, he reasoned, whom had she betrayed? Not him, certainly. It was only because of Real Drake he even existed. Still, he wanted to be the one to protect her, to care for her. He reached a hand out toward her, and it was all he could do not to let it rest on her free hand.
Of course she didn’t notice him sitting there.
He pulled from his pocket (he realized now he was wearing the same tight jeans as Real Drake) the original Poem.
Strong, it said. Caring. Kind. Chivalrous, respectful, and loving. That was what Real Drake was to Alice. And what was he, Drake the Perhaps Not So Real? The longing he felt was pretty real to him. Still, Alice had written her poem about the Real Drake. He alone could make her feel so safe and loved. He, Drake the Perhaps Not So Real, could not. Even after all that thinking (he was quite good at thinking by now; there was little else he could really do), he still felt betrayed. She didn’t even know he was there, and still he felt like she had tossed him aside. But then of course he would feel that way. The Poem said he was faithful and protective (and maybe a little bit jealous). Just like Real Drake, about whom it had been written. Perhaps he had misjudged Real Drake.
Real Drake emerged from the door behind the desk, a bandage on his nose and cotton balls in his nostrils. His expression was cold. Alice popped the buds out of her ears, her beautiful smile in place.
How is it?” asked Alice.
It sucks,” Real Drake glowered. “Nose is broke.”
Broken,” Drake instinctively corrected. He frowned; surely Real Drake would know the difference between a preterite verb conjugation and an adjective. Neither of them seemed to have heard him.
I’m so sorry!” said Alice.
Wasn’t your fault.”
Are you going to be okay?”
Yeah. I’m going home, actually. Going to take it easy.”
Okay,” Alice said, though she looked dismayed. “I’ll miss you in class.”
Sorry,” Real Drake replied in a flat voice. He headed for the door.
I’ll see you tomorrow!” she said. He paused and regarded her, and walked over to her. He kissed her again. Drake clenched his fist, but kept himself under control. Well, he tried, anyway. Something about Real Drake really did bother him, the more he watched him.
Alice kissed him back, and Real Drake was out the door. Alice sat back down, replacing the buds in her ears. Back to the phone.
Are you feeling unwell?” asked the lady in white from behind the desk in a loud, pointed tone.
You have no idea,” muttered Drake.
I’m really tired,” said Alice, not looking up from her phone. “I need to rest a bit.” The woman sighed, and sat down, busying herself with whatever it is women in white are always busy with at desks.
Drake considered what to do next. It was very likely Alice was going to be true to her word, and stay here for a while. He still wanted to protect her, in the absence of Real Drake, but it was just that: something about Real Drake was not as it should be. He stood up and peered out the door and down the hallway. Real Drake was still visible at the end of the corridor. Drake looked back at Alice, and then began to follow Real Drake. Perhaps the best way to protect Alice would be to find out more about Real Drake.

Hey, Drake!” came a girl’s voice from the other side of the road. Real Drake stopped where he was, and smiled broadly at the girl. She was pretty (Drake supposed), but she could not compare with Alice.
Hey, Amanda,” Real Drake said. Amanda crossed the street and gave Real Drake a hug. They clung together for a moment too long.
Oh, gosh! Your nose!” She squealed.
Yeah, broke. I don’t know what happened. It’s just broke.”
Broken, broken!” Drake corrected under his breath.
I’m just headed to school,” Amanda said. “I slept through my alarm, but I have a Spanish test fourth period. Can’t miss it.”
Yo sento.”
Lo siento!” She corrected, giggling.
See, you’ll do fine. Hey, come by my place after school,” Real Drake said, “We need to hang out again.”
Isn’t Alice going to be there?”
Nah. I’ll tell her I’m sick.”
Okay, then! I’ll bring the Coke I owe you.”
You better.”
Their heads came together, and their lips met, bloodied nostril cotton balls notwithstanding. Drake stood dumbfounded. This was not him.
Bye, Drake!”
See you later,” Real Drake said, resuming his slouching gait home.
No. This could not be Real Drake.
There came a buzzing from Real Drake’s pocket. He pulled out his phone, looked at the message it received, and stuffed it back into his pocket with a huff.
Yeah, miss you, too.” His tone was not dripping with sincerity.
Drake felt like he might throw up, if he had ever eaten anything before. Alice had been wrong about him—so nauseatingly, awfully wrong. Disgusted, Drake left Real Drake to mosey on home on his own. He’d seen enough.
He found Alice in her room, laying on her bed. She was writing something in a notebook, earbuds firmly in place. A buzz from her phone gave her a start. She pulled it out and smiled.
She hopped out of bed, taking her notebook with her. Her walk was half-dance, gliding on the balls of her feet toward the kitchen, making hardly a sound with each footfall. Her rosy scent hovered in the air behind her, and Drake let out a sigh. He followed her and watched as she removed a tray of chocolate chip cookies from the oven, placing them gently on the counter to cool. As they did, she finished what she had been writing, and pulled it from the notebook, leaving it on the table as she placed the cookies on a plate. Drake stepped in to investigate.
On the paper was the Poem, with “Get Well!” written at the bottom.
Drake,” came the voice of the woman-person.
He turned, and there she was. She did not stretch to the ceiling and her arms lay hidden beneath her covering. Her black-veiled mask peered emptily at him, waiting for him to fill the silence.
What am I?” he asked her.
You really have lost your spark.”
Well, can you really blame me?”
I really can’t,” she said.
Alice was wrapping the cookies in plastic wrap.
Who am I?” asked Drake.
Why do you ask?”
Because the person the Poem was written about is so different from me. I’m not him. Who am I, then?”
But you are him,” the woman-person said. “To Alice, he is everything you are.”
He’s nothing like me!” he yelled. Alice looked up, a bit startled. She had just taped the “Get Well!” note to the wrapping over the cookies. “He’s treacherous, cold, unloving ...”
Yes, he is.”
Well, why can’t I be something else, too? If Drake isn’t what he should be, why do I have to pick up his slack? What if I don’t want to be some teenaged girl’s poem?”
The masked face regarded him coolly, but the woman-person did not respond, so he continued,
What if I want to be more than this? I don’t want to be some silent, doting spectre that follows around a girl because he’s too helpless to do anything else!”
We can’t change what we are any more than the humans can,” said the woman-person. “But we can change who we are.”
Then why don’t you? Why don’t you change? How do you watch everything around you burn to ashes, and do nothing to stop it? How do you do it?”
I can hardly bear it.” Her voice was choked. “But without me, what would become of people like you? Where would you be without me? You’d have disappeared into the void from whence you came, never even knowing your name. That which makes me be gives me power and wisdom; without me, our kind wouldn’t last long at all. We’d flare up and then extinguish, like sparks on a cold night. I can’t shake this world by the shoulders, but I can give our kind a chance to live for longer than a few seconds. That is how I have taken what I am and used it to change who I am.”
He stared at Alice as she looked for her shoes.
You said you couldn’t protect me for long in the human world,” he said.
Not for very long at all, no.”
How long is that?”
Why are you asking me this?”
How long?”
Ten minutes.”
She had her shoes on, and was donning her sweater.
I need to tell her who the real Drake is.”
Are you aware of what will happen if you do?”
I’ll cease to exist?”
Sort of.”
It was strangest thing to imagine not existing. What is it like to not think, touch, know, see, hear, or want anything?
Will I ever see her again?”
I’m a collection of all humanity’s wisdom and knowledge,” she said, “But nowhere in my pages is there proof of any of it. I have a hundred different answers to your question, but I couldn’t tell you which is correct.”
He didn’t try to fully understand what she said. Alice tested one of the spare cookies.
Will it hurt?”
I don’t know about you, but I can promise it will hurt her.”
This would be the only time he would ever spend with her, he realized. And he would spend it telling her that her boyfriend was nothing she believed he was. He would spend that time breaking her heart, and the last thing he would see before fading into oblivion would be her tear-streaked face.
Or he could live forever knowing he could have saved her from a worse fate.
He took a deep breath, trying to shove away the headaches that were already coming back. He hid his hand-less arm behind his back.
Let her see me.”
Drake!” Alice squeaked. “How did you get in here? I didn’t even hear you come in!”
Drake didn’t answer her. He only drew her into the first and last embrace he would ever feel, and held her. She was soft and delicate to his feel, and he held her as if she were made of glass. Her perfume filled him with a tart sweetness, and the touch of her skin sent trills and tingles throughout him. She was taken aback, and didn’t seem to know how to react. She held him back, awkwardly, like she was very unused to this sort of thing. She probably was.
He began to feel very weak, and his head began to swim. He hadn’t much time. He drew back and looked Alice in the face. Her liquid green eyes stared into his, her eyebrows arched inquisitively; a smile graced her lips.
What is it?” she asked.
Alice,” he said, a smile curving his lips. She was listening to him! Finally he could speak to her—he only wished he had something pleasant to tell her. “I’m not who you think I am.”
What?” she frowned. He pulled the poem from his pocket and showed it to her. She blushed.
Yeah,” she ventured nervously, “I wrote that for you.”
I know.”
Kind of dumb, huh?”
Alice, this is not Drake.” He pointed to the words on the page. Loving. Strong. In short, perfect. “This isn’t anyone you’ve met.”
Drake, you’re amazing!” she cried. “I’ve never had a boyfriend like you before. Heck,” she laughed, “I’ve never had a boyfriend before!”
Drake is anything but amazing.”
Why are you talking about yourself like that?”
Alice, do you love me?”
She withdrew a little bit.
Drake, you’re scaring me.” This was getting to be too much. There was a gnawing in the pit of his stomach. His knees began to shake, and his vision blurred around the edges.
If you love me, let me see your phone.” She did as she was asked, handing him her bright red cell phone. He took it with his good hand and looked through the contacts until he found Drake.
Is this my number?” he asked her. She nodded. He called it and put it on speaker phone. After a few rings, he heard his own voice answer flatly,
Hey, girl, what’s up?” Alice shrieked and jumped away from him. She stared at him with huge, frightened eyes.
Hey Drake, this is Drake,” he said, his voice as acidic as he could make it. “How’s it going with Amanda over there?”
Who the freak are you?” Real Drake yelled.
I told you, I’m Drake.”
I don’t know anyone called Drake.”
Wish I didn’t either. So, I’ve got your girlfriend on the line. One of them, anyway.”
I don’t know what you’re talking about, man,” Real Drake said.
Alice saw you with Amanda after you went home,” Drake lied. “I thought maybe you’d like to explain to her what that’s all about.”
For several seconds, no one said anything. Finally, Real Drake piped up,
Well, she should really mind her own business. What are you, her new boyfriend?”
Wish I were.” he barely forced the words out; his voice was growing as weak as his body.
You know what? Fine. I’ll just keep Amanda. Tell Alice to—”
Drake hung up. Alice’s arms hid her face as she sobbed silently, sunken in a seat at the table. Drake sat down beside her — he could barely stand, as it was. He couldn’t see the woman-person now, but he knew she must be reaching the end of her strength. He was too weak to talk, and so he rested his stump of an arm on Alice’s back, until the lights around him began to flicker, and one by one, they each winked out.