Tag Archives: 3WW

#3WW: The Virtuoso

3 Aug

Joe walked up the aisle in resignation.  Burgundy seats watched each stride from the shadows of the empty auditorium.  Each step came slower, with a heavier movement he attributed to a hearty dose of cold feet as sweat prickled at the back of his neck and dampened his palms.

The wooden stage creaked.  His footsteps echoed up to the painted ceiling and the gilded angels emerging from marble pillars.  The heavy stage curtain was parted for him, and he walked quicker now, his destination the metal folding chair just beyond.

He did not sit; a violin already rested where he ought to, its varnished gleam apparent even in the shadows and beneath a layer of silk swaddling.  He unwrapped the instrument and tied the silk scarf around his neck.  It smelt like rosin, like a violin should.

He lifted the violin to his shoulder and set his jaw against the chinrest.  His fingers moved with quick memory, dancing over the strings as his other arm reached for the bow.  Once the bow had felt as awkward as a fifth limb, but he no longer remembered those days; the wood and horsehair was an extension of him, a sword in its own right.

Closing his eyes, the virtuoso raised bow to strings and began.  The first quavering notes rose slowly, piercing the darkness.  The chandeliers glowed with soft light, slowly illuminating the shadows and dusky aisles.  Patrons appeared, men and women, as if out of the night itself.  They watched in stillness, filling the hall with wonder at the angelic music.

And the violinist played on through the silence, his body bending with a musician’s passion as he passed through trills and crescendos and consoled his nerves with the perceived emptiness surrounding him.

#3WW: Both Sides of the Void

27 Jul

Killing myself didn’t go as planned.  It should have, though.  The rafters were high enough.  The rope was short enough.  I had drunk enough liquor to properly stupefy myself, liquid courage to knock the chair away. I was done, ready to die.

John walked in and saw me hanging from the ceiling beams.  Maybe he had heard the crash of my chair toppling to the wooden floorboards.  Maybe it was intuition – a funny sense that my banter had been forced lately.  John ran, grabbed me by the legs and held me up while he fumbled for his phone and dropped it.  He screamed for help until someone came, found the scissors in my desk drawer and cut the rope.  The second man forced air down my windpipe while John called the paramedics.

And here I was thinking he had my back.

It was Hell.  I was half dead with an ear listening to both sides of the Void.  Sara’s voice was an ever-present and impossible whisper across my skin, but I heard the paramedics talking into their radios.  It was a savage reminder of their futile efforts; any second now they would realize just how futile.

“Kill me,” I begged Sara.  I couldn’t see her, but I felt her.  She sat closest to me, her fingers caressing my face.  In the background I heard animate chatter – medics wanting to defeat my purpose.

Bright white light faded into the dark hue of night.  Other buses poured into the parking lot behind ours.  It was a cacophony.  They wheeled me through the clear glass doors, not bothering to wait for Sara.  Her sharp heel steeps were fading into silence.

“Twenty-three year old male, apparent suicide attempt, severe injuries to the trachea,” announced the EMT to the E.R. doctor running beside him.  She barely glanced at me before directing us onward.

“No,” I wheezed, “Sara.”  My vision blurred.   I was being unreasonable – she was gone – but she’d just been with me.  “Where is Sara?”

A nurse shushed me, unable to bear my croaking.  My throat was in excruciating pain, the breathless burning ripping through me, and tears were coming all too easily.

“We’ll get her for you,” the nurse said again, and my heart froze.

You weren’t supposed to bring back the dead.

Word Play: Fungible

25 May

Circumstances had changed since the riots. The disenfranchised youth grew, understood and adapted. The Hesiod learned from its children, expanded and organized. The original components functioned; the new members lived.

Miles Rizden, financial wizard and orchestrator of Old City crime, had been behind the scenes since the beginning. He was a calculating child with a quicksilver grin and then a callous man with the golden touch. Success was inevitable. He earned the degree, found the connections and built an empire – impressive in the days of strict government oversight. And then, as the world turned to madness and the government screamed for control, he realized that his purpose was to undermine its power.

There was a time when his bosses called him charming when he was sly and clever when he lied. He was persuasive, believable and clear-headed. They called him reliable. He excelled, and they called him Boss.

The Hesiod called him Recruiter.

When he brought Apollo Passos into his world of darkness, it had been for the organization. The boy wasn’t a brother. Miles was a handler with a slick tongue, and Apollo was the new recruit, a man with the skill sets of someone he would never meet.

Each team member had the abilities of another. The parts were interchangeable and managed to form the same composite no matter how they were jumbled. It was the smartest way to avoid government infiltration. Each team member was to be fungible, a simple commodity to be traded for an identical skill.

At least, that is what he’d thought at the time. Circumstances changed. They always did. Beliefs became devotions, coworkers became friends and business got personal. It always did.  Before he knew it, the little radicals he guided onto his side were more than pawns.  They were family.

It was the phone that woke Miles. He sat upright in the darkness of the bunker, surprised at the chill, and fumbled for the light switch as the caller disconnected and redialed. His fingertips brushed rough concrete, and he sighed heavily before clapping twice.

The light was blinding. Given the hideous surroundings, Miles was almost glad he couldn’t see; the gray slab walls would bore him to death if he saw them much longer. The room was a cellar once used as a cistern during the early twentieth century. It had been retrofitted with electricity and plumbing since then, making it an adequate but dismal living quarters. The natural surfaces were gritty and had a tendency toward the damp, so he didn’t risk decorating.

He reached the phone and answered on the third redial. The monotonous voice relayed the message, and his stomach dropped.

We found the sun halfway across the River Styx. He’s visiting friends with allergies.

He sat back on his cot and digested the words with his head in his hands. Apollo had been missing for months. A search of his apartment turned up nothing but rumors, which was to be expected. A search of the prison, however, turned up empty. He had vanished, a ghost among phantoms. When Jack Kohel walked free, Miles had expected the worst.

But the boy was alive. That much, at least, was a relief. The message indicated that he was badly injured but breathing. Allergies… They were taking him to Dr. Lewis, the veterinarian, for help. Miles did a mental scan of his peoples’ positions across the city and hit upon the industrial complex in the southeast Erstine District as the most likely spot of origin.

The concrete door had never seemed like more of an imprisonment. The room was a glorified bank vault, but it was the safest place to hide while his possessions were being seized by the government. Miles had an undying faith in reason. He knew better than to leave this cell, walk outside and head east until he arrived at the animal hospital; routine police scans would catch him before he made it three blocks.

By all rights Miles should be there, though.  If ever his little brother needed him, it was now.  If ever there was a place he ought to be, it was by Apollo’s side.  The kid had never let him down after all the years and horrible things he’d been asked to do, and Miles knew his absence tonight was pure failure to live up to that trust.

He paced anxiously from cot to shower in twenty well-traced steps.  The phone would not ring again.  The message would not be repeated, and protocol forbid radio communication if there was a death.  He would never know unless he opened the bunker door.

After fifteen minutes he turned to the door, his jaw set.  He was a mastermind.  He was clever, a quick thinker and a smooth talker, but as he wrenched the heavy door open he felt only naked fear.

If ever there was a benevolent force at work, he prayed, let it work tonight.

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