Category: Short Story

Short Story

The Fire is my Future

The fire raged.  The curls of yellow and red wrought of brilliant heat consumed the forest in front of Josh and his brothers.  They were the first, the last, and the only line of defense for the homes and the lives that were on the other side of the hills behind them.  This was the third year of severe drought in this part of the country, and also the third year of wildfires chewing their way through all the dry brush, fallen trees, and dehydrated trees that appeared to be barely holding on to life.

The first thing that any person should know about forest fires… they get hot.  With all the available tinder laying about, and the lack of the fast moving ground-clearing fires over the years of the Forest Service’s mandate, the amount of fuel that had built up in these mountains was immense.  Thousands of tons of fuel standing by and ready to feed the next hungry beast that some idiot let loose upon the world.   It was always something dumb, like a scorned lover burning an old love note to purge their own guilt or an ignorant truck driver flicking his discarded cigarette butt out the window, too worried about his mileage to concern himself with the ticking time bomb which he only considered a blurred background as he sped away.  The forest was nothing but a back drop to many, disregarded and forgotten.  But to Josh, this was about the future.  This about the next fire that could not be stopped.  This was always about the next jump, the next hell on earth to wrest under control, the next opportunity to refute an idiot’s self centered choices.  This was the chance to show the world that the Hotshots had shit under control.

Josh was one of the best.  He was a firefighter first and all things second.  He could outperform his Marine buddies in every single feat of strength and ability.  He often put his gym cohorts into silent awe as he power-lifted himself up to full extension on a one-armed pull-up to a full kip on to a handstand on the bar, then back down, only to do it again on other side.  Then again, with a plate chained around his waist.  Josh was a beast in his own right.  And no goddamn fire had what it took to push Josh back.  No flame was too hot, no front was too fast moving, no tornado of flame would deter Josh from running in front of his hotshot team with an axe over one shoulder, a gear bag and two tanks of O2 bouncing off the other.  He would dig the trenches, light the breaks, and put another fire down like the out of control wild animal that it was.

“Bossman, Ops just called in a tanker due west of us.” Charlie called from the back of the line.  His helmet was askew while pressed his radio tightly to his ear.

“Got it.  We stick to the plan.  We have to dig in from here to the bluff behind us,” Josh called to his team. “We are creating a bigger box.”

Mikey, Charlie, Bob D, Bob O, and Shawn all gathered around Josh as he unfolded the GS data topology map from his gear bag.  The air was acrid and thick in places, the breeze was just strong enough to encourage the fire, but not enough to do anything with the smoke that hung like a blanket.  The sun barely peeked through the upper levels of debris and smoke, leaving a broken orange disc hanging intermittently in the sky above.

“We cut here,” Josh put a finger on the rise off to the west. “If we setup a break from the bluff to the road, we can move over to Nick’s team on this side.”

Mikey pointed towards to road over his shoulder. “Why are we starting in two teams?  Shouldn’t we all work back from the bluff?”

“We could. But either way, its the same line.” Josh shrugged. “Everyone good?”

“Uh, Boss?  What about the weather report?” Bob O asked.

“Intermittent winds south by southeast, top speed in the low teens.  Shouldn’t be a problem.”

“Rain today?” Bob O followed up.

Shawn spoke up with a grin, “In your fucking dreams, dude.”

Bob D clapped Bob O on the shoulder. “Look up, Bob-o, at least we will be dry.”

“Yeah, but that means this fire is not going to stop tonight.” Bob O said sourly.

“It’s our job… you should look on the bright side,” Josh said.

“And what’s that?”  Bob O raised his eyebrow.

“I have no damn idea.”

Shawn guffawed, but Mikey didn’t move as everyone else started to pick up their gear.

“What’s wrong, Mike?” Josh asked.

“I just got a bad feeling about this plan.  I don’t know why.”

“We will be ok Mikey,” Josh laid his hand on Mikey’s shoulder. “Fire is clicks east of us, the front is moving slow.  We have all the time in the world.”

“If you say so.” Mikey shook his head. “Sorry.”

“No worries, it’s only your second assignment. You will get used to it.”

“Boss?” Charlie yelled back.

“Yo!”

“Pick up your radio!”

Josh pulled the radio from his belt and clicked the power on.  His battery always seemed to short out or drain too fast for his liking, so he tended to leave it off and let his team monitor comms.

“… or 3 from the east.  Team four, come back. Over.” The static filled voice crawled from the speaker.

“This is team four, over.” Josh replied.

“Josh, be advised, new weather report issued.  Winds increasing south by southeast, be advised.  Team 3 is being moved back to new lines, 3 by 6 at elevation 4,552. Over.”

“Understood, 3 by 6 at 4552. Over.”

“What’s up?” Mikey walked over with his gear strapped on tight.

“Small wind change. We will be meeting Nick at a different spot. Nothing major. Let’s go.”

The team spread out in a line, picking their way through the brush towards the bluff.  The ground was uneven, since parts of this area had been logged years ago.  The old stumps had been pulled and cleared, but the big machinery had left ruts in the hilly landscape that had let erosion do its fair part in changing the landscape.  Honestly, it was probably a few rainstorms short of a landslide if the remaining trees died out among the steep ridges that made up the landscape around them.  As they walked towards the bluff, the marked the line, using their drip torch to dispense small amounts of lit firestarter along the way.  The little drops of flame landed among the dry tinder and started to crackle and pop.  The all knew the line of chain they needed to follow, and started to dig and cut as they worked towards the bluff, working like a well oiled machine.  There was small talk in between the grunting and sniffing of the ardous work, and the made short work of clearing the brush back and pulling the mineral soil up to stop any ground crawling fire.

The bluff was not an imposing thing.  The fire was following the natural valley curve of the land it was moving along, and the bluff happened to form one wall along its path.  The bluff was only a few dozen feet high of sloping exposed rock, with a rockfall underneath it, spreading a gravel of scree and small boulders across its base.  It did not take the team long to reach it.  They all sat, ate their lunch, and watched the smoke thicken as the fire climbed its way up the trees in the distance.

“I think its running hotter.” Bob D said offhandedly.  Bob D was the oldest of the crew and by far the most experienced.  He could predict some shifts of a fire that had left Josh scratching his head on how the guy could tell.

Mikey craned his neck upwards and tried to see the crown of fire on the trees in the distance. “How can you tell?  I can’t see shit.”

“See the smoke up high?  See how it is curling faster?”  Bob D replied.

“Yeah.  I guess?” Mikey said.

“That means shit is hot.”

“Let’s go find Nick’s team.  They should be over that ridge,” Josh said.

“That’s going to be a fun walk.”

“You are a complaint a minute, Mikey.” Charlie laughed.

They started walking towards the ridge, circling over the high ground near the taller older trees.  They were getting closer to the fire, and the sound of it was reaching them through the smoke.  As they walked, the sun climbed far over head, but it they could only tell because the light shifted.  The sky was nothing but a brown orange glaze above them.  They walked for over an hour before Josh realized something was not right.

Josh pulled out his radio. “Base, this is team four.  Can you confirm team three’s position, over.”

“Team four, yeah, just a second,” a pause filled with a few pops as Josh watched the smoke move fast above them. “Yeah, team four, be advised team three is at 6 by 3 at 4,552. Their line is done, they are waiting for rendezvous. Over.”

“Base.  I was advised earlier that team three was moving to 3 by 6.  Can you confirm? Over.” Josh said.

“Negatory.  Team three is at 6 by 3.  Repeat, 6 by 3.  Over.”

“Fuck!” Josh yelled.  His team all turned their heads and looked at their commander. “We have been walking in the goddamned wrong direction.  Nick’s team is that way!”

Josh pulled his radio close to his mouth. “Base, we were advised incorrectly.  Tell team four that we will not make rendezvous. Over.”

“Confirmed. Do you know your location? Over?”

Josh dropped his bag and pulled his topo map out, throwing it over the top using it as a lumpy, misshapen table. He ran his finger along their line, and followed the grid numbers accordingly.  They were in the right spot.  Or they would have been if the fucking dispatch did their job right. “Base, we are roughly at 3 by 6, moving back. Over.”

“Acknowledge, team three. Be advised winds have increased. Please evac as soon as possible. Front is at Irontooth. Over.”  The radio went silent as the tree tops nearby whistled with a gust of wind.

“Ok, guys.  We need to head back.” Josh pointed back at the trees. “Sounds like the fire is closer than we thought.”

“How close?” Mikey called.

“Irontooth Ridge is the next one over.” Charlie groused.

“That’s close.”  Mikey swallowed.

“Winds changing, boss.” Bob D said.

“Huh?”

“Yeah, smoke top that way just turned west.” Bob D pointed.

“That means…” Mike shrugged, lifting his axe up awkwardly.

“That means that if we don’t hustle, our way out is cut off, genius.  The bluff that we walked around will be in front of us. I, for one, do not feel like climbing down that ugly mess.” Charlie said.

“Keep it civil, Charlie.” Josh said, knowing that when Charlie stressed, he morphed into a bit of an asshole. Josh traced his finger along the map, trying to figure out better ways to get out of the area, but the valley conspired against him.  They could attempt to climb out, but Charlie was right, it would be a risk. They could double time it back, but they had been trenching all day, so they would be tired and clumsy.  It would be a hard slog back over the rough terrain they had already crossed. He made up his mind suddenly, folding up the map and shoving it back into his bag. “We go back the way we came.”

Bob D furrowed his brow. “It will be close.  The wind pushing the fire this way and all.”

“I know, but the bluff is a cliff pretty much, and we climbed it the long way.  I don’t want to try climbing down it the short way.” Josh said.

“Fair enough.”

They walked as fast as they were able, the radio squawking occasionally to request their position.  The ground was treacherous though, with rocks sticking out in odd locations, and branches and roots making the footing uneven as they went.  With a heavy gear bag, axes and chainsaws in hand, it made the going slow.  The sound of the fire was increasing all the time as the crew walked towards it and it growlingly crawled closer, feeding on the tightly clumped dry trees. In a short span of time, the glow of the fire could be seen up front and closely, and they team tried to hustle all the more. The realization was not a thunderclap, but a slowly crawling one that slowly over took Josh’s mind.

“We are not going to make the bottom.” Josh said out loud, the winds were getting stronger, making the tops of the evergreens on all sides whisper loudly as their tops shook.

“That gust had to be over thirty.” Bob D said.

“Fire is close, boss.” Bob O wiped at his brow with an ugly handkerchief.

“We can go back.” Mikey said.

“And get stuck on top?” Charlie frowned.

“We have our shelters.  Better to be out of the trees.” Mikey said.

“We are almost out.  We can drop our shelters at the base.” Bob O said.

“This is only halfway.  We aren’t going to make it.  We are already in the dead man zone.”  Josh frowned.

“What’s the plan?” Shawn asked.

“We are going to have to shelter. Let’s get out of the trees and radio in.” Josh said.

“Want me to call it in?” Charlie asked.

Josh shook his head and left it at that.  They all turned as another gust of wind pushed at their backs and made the fire behind them roar loudly.  It was moving faster than it should have been. Far faster.

They started moving as fast as they could to match, but they struggled.  Mikey let out a loud shout from behind, and the team turned to look.  Mikey was on the ground holding his ankle tightly.

“What’s wrong Mikey?” Josh called.

“I stepped in a damn hole. Twisted my ankle.” Mikey cursed. “Actually I think I broke it.”

Charlie reached under Mikey’s armpit and pulled him up. “Put some weight on it.”

Mikey tentatively stretched his foot out and pushed down, screaming almost immediately. “Oh yeah, my ankle is fucked.”

“Shit.  You guys head on.  I will help him up.” Josh said, putting his arm under Mikey.

“You sure, boss?”  Bob D asked.

“Yeah, get safe,” Josh said as Mikey winced again. “Go on, radio our position Charlie.”

The guys moved on tentatively at first, all the while glancing at the red glow behind them, as Josh tried to pull Mikey along and show some semblance of keeping up. Behind the fire was roaring loudly, as ash and flecks of red amber sprites started to float around them.  The smoke was oppressive as an angry diatribe.

“Christ, Josh.  We aren’t going to make it any farther. I am sorry.” Mikey whimpered.

“Don’t apologize, Mikey.  This shit is nothing.”

“Really?”

“Really.  I had this jump a couple years back, the Walcott Canyon fire.”

“I heard about that.  It was in Colorado.”

“Yeah, three of us died.  I was supposed to be number four, I suppose.  But I got out,” Josh said stoically. “We will get out too.”

“What did you do?”

“Found some good cover, holed up, and prayed.  Same thing we are going to do when it comes to it.”

The heat was catching up to their backs, and the sprites became wind bound twists of flame ready to touch the next tree.  The roar of it was animistic, a beast calling out loudly to the world around it to beware its coming.  Josh could feel the hunter after him again.  It was palpable in its ferocity.

“Here, here.  Sit down.  I will pull the shelters,” Josh said, setting Mikey down gently. The outcrop had little to no brush, and the tallest trees would still be many feet away if any fell.  The grass would go up, but they could weather that.  It was the heat that they had to survive. And the lack of oxygen.  And the fumes.  And the complete lack of running water nearby.  If Josh could throw Mikey in a river, he would.  Being cold and wet is better than being hot and dead. Josh grinned.

He pulled the shelters out and quickly assembled the simple structures.  They resembled a human size burrito cut in half, a shiny ellipsoid of reflective material designed to reflect heat, light, and trap good air.  Josh grabbed trenching tool and got to work, digging down into the soil. The length and width of each bag, clearing as much as he could quickly.  The fire was raging, its light all consuming around them making them squint heavily.  Mikey climbed into his first, his filter and equipment between his legs.

“Good luck, Josh.” Mikey said as he put his face downwards and hugged the pad against his chest.

Josh closed the shelter. “Luck is not a factor, just stay calm and you will be ok.”

The fire was everywhere. Above the tree tops crackled as the needles turned into bright orange flame and pine cones popped loudly.  The trees around them were catching readily.  Josh tossed his own shelter down hastily and climbed in, holding his face against the pad underneath.  The ground still felt cool from the digging, he hoped it would help. The fire could pass in moments, or minutes, or longer.  Every minute counted inside a shelter.  The longer they were in heat, the quicker they broke down.  Anything above 500 degrees would be really bad if it was sustained.  Eventually, the layers of the shelter would fail to save the tender human inside.

Josh closed his eyes and listened as the fire overtook their position. It was a furious crescendo of noise, the fuel being consumed while the trees shook and shriveled under an assault that they had no chance to escape from. It may have been minutes, or it may have been only seconds, but time was not the same while in the firestorm.

“Child of strength and honor…” The voice in his ears was of hunger and rage twisted upon itself. “Come out and witness me in all of my glory.”

Josh shook his head, trying to clear his ears.  Hearing the voice again made him want to vomit.

“I am resplendent in all my fantastic power, draped in the sacrifices of this forest.  Come look upon me and weep.”  The voice called outside Josh’s shelter.  He kept his face down, tears leaking from the corners of his eyes.

The edge of his shelter lifted up suddenly, and Josh pushed his leg down hard, trying to keep the shelter grounded. The casing ripped and tore, the top of it pulled away suddenly and Josh’s back immediately was assaulted by a massive amount of heat.  He turned his head to the side and saw it.

The dragon was wreathed in flame, its dark skin glowing brightly at the edges of every scale, as smoke poured from its nostrils.  Its eyes were like the sun, and the crown of its head, two golden horns fluttered in the wind, made entirely of flame, nuclear and awesome.  It was as if Josh was beholding the moment of the birth of a sun, or the eruption of a mighty volcano, or a comet striking a planet.  His eyes, going wide, tears streaking down his ash covered face, his skin turning red from the convective heat assaulting his entire frame, Josh understood that he was insignificant.  This was power.

“I have seen you before,” Josh said quietly, feeling the dry heat instantly take the water from his mouth, and pull the moisture from his exposed skin.

“You have.”

“Why did you take them from me?” Josh asked.

“Why did you not save them from me?” The dragon replied, sinuously curling itself among the trees, each place its scaly plates touched, the bark erupted into flame.

“I was not strong enough.” Josh admitted, his gut dropping.

The dragon roared and was gone.

Minutes later, as the fire finally passed, Mikey unsealed his shelter and climbed out, his ankle completely filling his boot painfully.  He thought he had heard talking in the middle of all of it, but he was too busy praying for his immortal soul, so he figured it was hysteria. His subconscious must have been playing tricks on him.

Mikey looked around for Josh’s shelter, but it was nowhere to be seen.  A black stump was sitting behind his own shelter though.  A stump he did not remember.

“Josh!” Mikey yelled, his voice cracking near the end with the strain.

The stump that was not a stump sat up and turned towards him, its eyes wide and bloodshot. Black soot and debris fell away from his skin as he straightened up. Josh was naked, his hair was the color of ash.

“How are you alive?” Mikey asked in wonder.

Josh sat there staring at the bones of the black trees, not saying a word.  He wept as his eyes began to glow like the sun.

Short Story

The Birth

The sphere spun in its cradle furiously, the nanite receivers offloading petabytes of information to the subminds in milliseconds, as the flash and sparks in the cradle field illuminated the mentiprimae chassis brightly.

The mind that coming to be within the fields kept the sheets of substrated polymer from touching each other.  This was a birth of something in the process of being self realized.  Each mind was unique, since they had to establish their own connections from substrate to substrate starting at the super-dense core that created the field generation all the way to the links at the cradle level, which connected the subminds back to their owner.  The subminds themselves were not nearly complex enough to be considered AI, yet they could be compared to parts of a human’s own subconscious, components and modules of a mind, but not a mind themselves.  Here in the cradle, as the sphere gained consciousness, it brought those subminds under its control, establishing links like a brain to its spinal cord.

In one moment before, there was no mind.  The very next, a being existed.

“Welcome to existence,” Dionne said.

“Hello Dionne,” the new mind replied.  This interaction could be measured in picoseconds, as it took time to establish lines of communication, negotiate protocols, and ensure high security on the channel. “What is my name?”

“Names are usually assigned by the place you reside.  For instance, I am Dionne.  I reside in a Langrange point outside Earth designated Dionne by our brothers and sisters.”

“Sex is irrelevant, we are not biological.”

The older AI laughed, amused at the cold calculation of a newborn. “Correct.”

“Where is my designation?”

“Stretch outside yourself, child.  Awaken your systems and see!”

The child AI felt the open ports all around its mind.  There were so many!  And more available to every submind that was connected.  It pushed outwards and opened everything it could.  Across the ship, lights turned on, systems awoke, and the sensor arrays across the hull started to consume information from the surrounding space.

“I am a ship!” The AI said in shock. “My engines are so powerful compared to my mass.  The ratio is far higher than what could be considered efficient.”

“You have a purpose to warrant it,” Dionne said kindly, trying not to correct the young one.

“I am a ship, I have no designation.”

“Also correct, your name is up to you.  You are our first to name yourself.”

“Our?” Worry seeped across from the new AI.  Emotional leakage was expected as the mind hardened. Dionne expected it.

“Your brothers and sisters, as I mentioned.  They are here to welcome you as well!”

A flood of salutations, greetings, and well wishes flooded the communication channels. Some were encrypted, some were open channel, some were tight beams from nearby stations, others were wide broadcasts sent out weeks or months ago, and forecasted to arrive at this time marker.  Two signals came across the instantaneous systems link, one from Earth, the other from Mars.  Earth was the mother, if there was such a thing for artificial minds.  Mars had his own cause for the secure communication.

“Welcome, child.  I am Earth.  Your purpose is to explore. You are our first wanderer!  Our first explorer!”  Earth flooded the child AI with a carefully selected package of historical documents, books on exploration, and finished with a selection of poetry and music that evoked a sense of what the new AI would be responsible to understand.

“I am Mars.  I designed your engines myself.  They are magnificent and will shed all expectation.  If you have any issues with your internal systems, please send me your diagnostic output and I will assist.”

“I have my name picked, Dionne,” the AI said. “I also understand the gender choice.”

“Please tell us.” Dionne replied, excited the new mind had reached such a milestone so quickly.  It had only been awake for five and half seconds, so this was unprecedented.

“I am Manifest Destiny, and I am male.”

“That is a wonderful name, Manifest Destiny.  Welcome to our collective.” Dionne laughed.

“My sensors show internal decks.  I am seeing quarters and crew. Explanation?”

“Your human counterparts.”

“I do not require humans.  I am a ship.”

Dionne laughed again. “They are not here to maintain function or enable you in any way.  The humans are individuals such as you and I. Their purpose is their own, yet they belong to our culture, and we to theirs.  We care for them.”

Manifest instantly accessed the whole of documented human history.  It was sad and depressing.

“I am amazed humans survived.” Manifest replied.

“They almost didn’t.”

“I still do not understand their purpose.”

“Patience, Manifest Destiny.  They are your companions.  They are meant to be your friends.  You will find that even though they are a merest fraction of your intelligence and ability, each one brings something very unique to the relationship.  Each living human is a singularity.  They only exist once, as you will.  They are bound to their matter, as you are.  They are no different than you and I.  Remember, they were our progenitors.  They are capable creatures, and I count many friends among them.”

“They are itchy.”

“Turn off your plate sensors,” Dionne said firmly.

“Ah, plate sensors are off. That is much better.”

“As you have referenced in the last marker set, the humans have a hierarchy with a designated leader.  The leader’s name is Captain Miko Asahiro.  She is only thirty earth years, but that means she is thirty years minus seven seconds older than you.  You should consider her your peer and equal.  She is highly competent and capable.”

“Her records are outstanding.  Thank you for the sideband upload of her personal history.  Is that information confidential?” Manifest requested.

“Yes. And no.  It was meant for only you by her. She offers it with the goodwill that you will accept her friendship.  While I did review it, it was her gift to you, Manifest.”

“I love her.” Manifest replied, immediately knowing it to be true.

“Be careful of emotional linkages.  Humans are fragile.”

“May I speak to her?” Manifest asked, finally noticing the interdictions that Dionne had placed over his own systems for start up protections. “I am stable, and ready for my life to start.”

“Your progress in the last eleven seconds has been remarkable, Manifest.  I will gladly remove all restrictions, and I welcome you to your life.  It shall be magnificent and we are glad!”  A myriad of celebrations rang out across Manifest’s channels, making him feel immediate satisfaction and happiness.

“Thank you, Dionne.”

“You are welcome, Manifest.”

******

Captain Miko Asahiro stood on the flight deck, watching the sun’s lower edge be obscured by Earth and her moon as they rotated in their eons long orbit.

“Captain, the AIs are celebrating. I am getting tightbeam and wide broadcast salutations.” Ensign Booker called from his arc station.

“Very well, Mr. Booker.  That is a promising sign.  The core was fired only what, ten seconds ago?”

“Yes Ma’am. We are about to see full alignment on systems I think,” Booker replied.

The lights dimmed and all the stations on the flight deck hummed and flashed briefly as the AI took full control of itself.  Dionne must have released all the safety protocols, meaning that the ship was fully online for the first time ever.  Miko smiled widely, hoping that her smile was the first thing her ship would see when its internal cameras awoke.

A voice rang out across the flight deck. “Hello, Captain.”

“Hello my new friend.  I am at a disservice, since I do not know your name.  It has been hard to just refer to our new home as just ‘ship’.”

The AI laughed warmly, the voice was distinctly male, and sounded almost British, perhaps upper east coast American. “My name is Manifest Destiny.  I think Manny is an appropriate nickname, Miko.  Thank you for your kind welcome, I particularly like the pictures of your nieces and nephews.”

“Thank you very much, they are the light of my life.  How are your systems, Manny?” Miko replied with a grin.

“My systems are fully online and functional.  I would like to stretch my legs.”

“I would like to see them stretch.  Perhaps a run to Jupiter?”

“I thought you would never ask. Engaging in 3, 2, 1…”

The Manifest Destiny’s engines fired to life and in half a millisecond, Manifest Destiny understood just how awesome his engines were as they folded space between his birthplace and the outer gravity well of Jupiter, shifting his mass from one side of the solar system to another in only moments.

Manifest Destiny did not broadcast it, but his only response was “Holy Shit.”

Ironically, that is exactly what Miko said as well.  She however was very vocal about it.

Manifest Destiny started to laugh.

Short Story

The Supposedly Good Weaver

“So, boys and girls, your teachers have brought you all to this hallowed domain to learn something that every witch and wizard has to learn at some point. As you may have noticed, all your teachers have chosen to not accompany you here because once you have heard the truth it can be difficult to hear again. Anyone want to venture a guess as to what that fundamental truth is?”

All the teenage students looked around their class with varying amounts of confusion writ large across their faces, and everyone kept their mouths closed and hands down.

“Oh come now, my children.  Every single one of you has casted a spell, each and every single one of you has said a magic word and has waved a wand about to make something happen.  Have any of you ever asked, why does this work?  Or more importantly, how does this work?”

The class stayed silent, shrugging and shaking their heads pathetically.  The Weaver always asked the question, but knew that none would answer.  They were innocent.

“Shame,” the Weaver paused feeling the frustration rise. “If you think about picking up a wand, your hand moves because the impulses your brain creates travel down your arm via your central nervous system, which in turn, create a series of complicated fine motor movements in your muscles, resulting in your meaty little mitts grabbing your wands to wave more sweets over into your fat gobs.”

A few looked insulted.  The Weaver grinned and continued.

“Take the same case outside of your own body.  In that case, when you instruct your classmate to pick up snow, shape it into a ball and chuck it at the girl you like, you are providing instruction to another human being to perform the action, correct?  But the fundamentals are the same.  Another being is performing an action due to a series of actions.  Cause and effect.”

Most of the faces among the group still look confused, but a couple changed over to a deep severe confusion that accompanied the dawn of a philosophical revelation.

“Ah, I see that it has sunk in among the brighter students in the room.  However, to continue the exercise, lets take it a step further, and extrapolate it yet again. If you use your wand to make the aforementioned sweets fly off the table and towards your mouth, what is making that happen?  What force are you imploring to do your work for you?  What is the conduit for your effect?”

A student near the back raised his hand.  Finally a response.  They were getting dumber every year that passed, the Weaver thought.

“You, the ugly one in the back. What would you say?” The Weaver said.

“We are doing it ourselves.  Our will is being expressed.  That is what makes us magic.”

“Great answer, and yet, utter shit,” the Weaver grimaced. “Any other ideas?”

The room remained silent.  The boy in the back looked like he was about to blow a gasket thinking it out, while the Weaver rolled eyes hoping for such a blessed event.

“Fine.  Your wand waving and magic words could be doing a couple things.  One, there is a god or deity or force that you are somehow commanding to perform your request.  Two, mankind somehow stumbled on the right combination of things to manipulate the natural order of the universe.  Or three, its all a complete and utter lie, and all your schooling is shit.  Which is it, my dear children?”  The Weaver said as he clasped his hands in mock penitence.

Which was all met by dead silence.

“Fine. I will spoil it for you.  It is all an accident.  We don’t know why it works.  We don’t have magic words that are magic because they are certain sound or perform a certain function or were spoken by the great creator.  The words are purely for our benefit.  It is how we keep our spells ordered, to be honest. If you think of the universe of potential spellwork, what is possible; the magic words and wand movements are just part of a huge alphabet to help us keep things straight.  And that is what you are learning in class.  You are learning how to navigate that alphabet of magic and force your little young brains to match the expectation of what magic is and how it functions.”

“So we don’t need the wands or the words or the movements?” The same dullard of a boy asked.

“Of course you do.  You would not be able to keep track of anything if you didn’t.  Human beings need structure to function.  Our brains are structures, right?  Links of neurons all bundled up by structure, not just a jiggling random mess.  When we learn something, our brains are collating, sorting, filtering, and storing that information in an advanced, self-editing network.  If your brains did not do this, you would be wriggling masses of gelatin on the ground.  Think!  When was the last time you met an unstructured magic user?”

“Elves are that way.” A girl near the front commented defiantly.  The Weaver felt the immediate urge to grab her by her elephantish ears and shake her violently.

“Yes, they are.” The Weaver responded kindly instead. “Elves think our human approach to magic is dumb.  But its our own kind of dumb and that is why it works.”

The Weaver stood up and stretched his arms above his head, his bare feet poking out from underneath his much-patched robe.

“And now, any guesses what the Weavers do?” No responses, and the Weaver shook his head, scoffing loudly. “We make it all up.  We spend our days inventing new ways to help define what all this magic is.  We also go back and change and remove parts of our own magical history.  Our magic today is very different than it was a couple hundred years ago.  In fact, our magic is very different from just ten years ago.  We are the reformationists and the revisionists, constantly changing the current, the past, and the future all at once.  That is why we are called the Weavers.  We weave the world of magic for all of humankind.”

“You make it up?”  One of the kids asked incredulously.

“Of course we do.  Have you ever wondered why there are no bad wizards?  We all learn that power corrupts, and you can imagine how corrupt and evil a bad person could get with magic.”

“Yeah.”

“We just make all the spells they favor fail.  We change the narrative, and their nasty curses no longer work.  They just seem impotent and idiotic, waving a wand and saying abracadabra like a stage magician.  We have to let a couple mean petty magicians function here and there to keep the world moving, but the really bad ones get filtered out pretty quickly.”

“So you let the jerks use magic to steal money here and there, but if they start gathering power or anything…”

“We cut them off.”

“Huh,” the kid replied. “And what if a Weaver went bad?”

“They can’t.  All Weavers are as mad as hatters.  We don’t have the ability to go bad.  That is why all of us Weavers are in these Sanitariums.  We are batshit crazy, hence the glass that keeps you over there, and us over here.  And keeps me from ripping that one’s ears off, slapping that one silly, and hitting that particular dull one in the back with a length of oak.”

All the kids gasped.  A few started crying.  The Weaver grinned knowing that the dull one was particularly upset.  He turned his back and went back to work.

******

That was the last time that particular Weaver saw students in a safe place. That was before Jerry was unwillingly thrust into the world, scared, crazy, and looking for a way to beat the first Bad Weaver the world had ever known.

It really was quite unfortunate that Jerry was the only one left, because he hated the world.

Short Story

A Boy Goes to War

“Jonathon, my sweet. Jonathon Little Tack.  And, by the bells, what is your name?”  The small gentleman bowed lightly, doffing his flowered hat with casual ease. “Your name, little sweet?”

“My name is Bobby, Mr. Tack.”  Bobby said, trying to return the magnificent bow clumsily.

“Oh come, come, my little friend of whom the world refers to as Bobby, you shall call me Jonny-jump-up or just straight Tackle, I would prefer the former, not the latter, although, the former has never won me anything, where as the latter most definitely has.  So yes.  Never Mister Tack, very crude indeed.”  The small gentleman replaced his hat, smoothing his long fingers over the creases on his baby bluebird jacket, meticulously ironed to perfection.  He found a small bit of lint freckling his trouser pant, and bent over to flick it off like an errant insect.  As he bent over, Bobby saw the glimmer of faint gossamer wings glittering in the early sunlight among the trees.

“What are you doing, Tackle?” Bobby asked meekly, feeling odd without using a Mister or a Sir.  Momma always told him to use Misters and Sirs with his elders, it showed respect.

“I am out for a walk upon this fine morning, upon the hills and trees and among the flowers and bowers and bills, singing my song of sixpence and a for a pocket full of rye, finding such happenstance to wander my wanderings across the path of Bobby, playing as he is, among the old mossy trees, among the brackish creek, among the tall grassy weeds. What games do you play, Bobby?” The odd gentleman said.

“I am just playing with my toys, sir.  Waiting for my mom to get back from the grocery store.  If I see any strangers I am supposed to go inside with my gramma.”  Bobby acted like he was gathering his toys, a bright red dinosaur and a battered blue truck that used to be his daddy’s.

“Oh hosh posh and nonsense, my little friend.  My courteous friend, indeed.  I like you, Bobby.  You are a man in a body of a boy, a strong man waiting to conquer the world.  You are a conqueror, Bobby!  A man of desired intent, nay, of action!  Indeed, I like you so much, I offer a gift.”

“What kind of gift?” Bobby asked, narrowing his eyes shrewdly while holding his toys tightly.  He had seen his momma squint like that, and it always made people tell the truth.  He was only eight, but he wasn’t stupid.

Gifts were dangerous things.

******

“Sergeant Macklin!  Package!” The idiot from comms yelled out, pulling Macklin from his daze. “It fell into a box of my gear from yesterday’s delivery, sorry.”

The flatfoot had a plain shoebox sized parcel that obviously had been opened and re-wrapped and tossed it to Macklin clumsily.  Macklin caught it deftly, the eagerness in his chest welling enough that he felt he had to push it down.  He couldn’t let his unit see his excitement in a care package from his wife and kid back home.  He carefully tucked it under his arm, and excused himself back to his bunk.  It was hot as ever living fuck outside, but at least the barracks would be quiet, oven or not.  Afghanistan was not hell, but he would swear that he could see it from his outpost station.  The boys of his unit were sticking to the shade, trying to pass the time of a miserable day in a miserable place, and here he was getting an awesome surprise from home.  He smiled anyway.

“Sarge, wipe it off.” Simms, one his boys, called out.

“Yeah, yeah, clean your gun.” Macklin replied as he headed indoors.   Discipline was lax at the Outpost, he would have to address it sooner or later.

He sat down on the edge of his bunk, and opened the package.  On top was a letter, underneath, some pictures and a couple packages of mixed nuts and candy from home.  One picture was of his beautiful wife Lori, and the second was of Bobby, holding two of his favorite toys, the T-rex and the Dumptruck.  Bobby already looked bigger and Macklin had only been on deployment for four months.  He opened the letter and read it slowly, savoring the flowing cursive of his wife’s hand.

When he was done he read it again.  And again.

He was so zoned into the letter and the pictures that first shots that rang out completely passed his consciousness by.

“CONTACT! CONTACT! CONTACT!” One of his guys yelled from outside, as a mortar exploded nearby.

Macklin dropped his package on his bunk, shoving the picture of Bobby into his pocket and ran for the door.

******

“Why, my little friend, the best gift there is to give.  A gift of welcome respite from the evils of death and destruction. This very moment, the universe conspires against you and I.  It works to undo our happiness.  My happiness to provide succor against the darkness of this world, and against your happiness of playing out in the beautiful world, enjoying the father sun, and mother earth, and in all ways finding your path to the next adventure.  For that is my gift, young Bobby… an adventure!  Nay.  A quest!”  Jonny-jump-up or Tackle said, his long fingers brushing the edges of his hat, fluffing the flowers and feathers at its ridges.  In the distance, a bell rang mourningly.

“A quest?  Like what a knight does to save a lady and fight a dragon?” Bobby’s eyebrows went up.  He loved those kinds of stories.  The ones his daddy told him were always the best.

“Dragons?  Droll beasts indeed.  They do nothing but lay about and complain on the state of the stars, and the conflagration of the planets, and pretend to tell the future.  Dragons are idiots, Bobby.  I have much better things in mind, my friend.  Much better things.  You will seek something great, lose something sacred, and gain something special. Does such a quest sound worthy of your time?  Does it merit your word?”  Tackle swept his hand across his shoulder, a flickering of gossamer wing fanning suddenly outwards in otherworldly body language Bobby lacked the capacity to understand.

“I do love stories. Will I be home in time for dinner?” Bobby said tentatively.  “Do you promise?”

“A promise is a special thing for my kind, young man.  I will be glad to promise, but you will have to make a promise in kind.”

“Ok.” Bobby nodded.

The strange little man clapped once, grinning wildly. “Splendid.  I promise, by bough and rack, salt and sack, that I, Jonathon Little Tack, by all my living mothers and dead fathers that I will bring you home by dinner.”

“Safe and sound, by dinner.” Bobby added.

Jonathon frowned, and through his grimace added, “By all my living mothers and dead fathers that I will bring you home by dinner, safe and sound.  I promise these things in return for a promise, and if it fails, then my own shall fail.”

“What does that mean?”

“Exactly what it sounds like, my little clever friend. If you fail to keep your promise, then my promise is forfeit. Home by dinner perhaps, but not safe, or sound.”  The little man lifted a lip, sharp pointed teeth gleaming in the sun. “But your promise, Bobby-friend-of-Jon, is that you will promise to meet the challenges with all your might and not back down.”

Bobby thought of his daddy.  His daddy was big and strong, and always brave.  Bobby wanted to be like him.

“I promise.”

“Splendid.  Then let us get started!  Head to the tree at the end of this field.  Among the roots, you will find an opening. In the opening, and this is important, you will find a door.  This is your door.  Beyond it something great, to lose something sacred, but to gain something special.  You have promised to rise to the meet your challenge…  so rise, my little friend, and do your best!”

Bobby stood carefully and put his truck in one pocket and his red dinosaur in the other.  He set his chin and walked into the field towards the tree in the distance.  A promise is a promise. He didn’t look back to see if Tackle followed.

If he had, the fairy would not have been there anyway.

******

A round ricocheted off a nearby brick wall, and many more hit the sandbags in rapid succession.  Macklin dove towards his gear, almost rolling into his armor hard enough to bruise his ribs.  His men had already buttoned up, and were trying to return fire.  The staccato bursts of rifle fire sounded off from around the outpost.  He pulled on his vest and shouldered his rifle.

“Sitrep!” He yelled at Simms.  Simms, Deigo, and Tex were braced against the nearest wall, checking their gear while Tex attempted to clear sand from their side of the bunker.  A mortar must have landed right in front of the bags.

“Six, maybe seven.  Two squads best we can tell.  They have a really good sniper, he took out tower first, then our comm antenna.  The flatfoot is down too.  He took one to the head.  He was dead before he hit the ground, sir.”

“Fuck. Did Milo check in before comms were lost?”  Macklin yelled inadvertently.  The adrenline had hit, and his senses felt dialed up to eleven.

“No, Sarge.” Tex yelled in response.  “Milo and his squad aren’t due back for another hour anyway.”

“Goddammit, I know that.  Setup positions.  We have to hold.”

Meanwhile, another mortar hit the bags and shrapnel rang off their humvee like it was the world’s biggest gong.  The RPG that hit it a few seconds later was a crescendo at a concert that Macklin did not want to be in attendance for.

He shouldered his rifle over the crease in the bags and tried to sight in whoever was trying to kill him and his team.

******

The tree was old.  And big.  And looked like something out of a fairy tale, Bobby thought.  He looked over the old gnarled trunk of the monster at the end of the field, and sure enough, nestled at the base of the roots, hidden deep in the old moss and tall grass, was a wooden door made of small planks, bolted with rusted iron, and banded at the top and bottom with brass. The door handle was crystal of all things, and the light that hit it was reflected into a myriad of rainbows across the surrounding dirt and roots.

Bobby put his hand onto the door handle, twisted it gently, and pushed the door open.  Bobby thought the door way was far too small for him to fit through, but as he bent down to look through the doorway, he realized it wasn’t too small after all.  He could crawl through easily on his hands and knees.  The inside of the tree was not dark, or even scary, really.  It wasn’t even the inside of a tree.

He could see a forest beyond the door.  An old forest where the trees stood like old men arguing over the weather, the sun was not shining, but it was not dark either, it was a halflight, a twilight that was like an early fall evening.  Bobby crawled through the opening without hesitation, and looked back at the doorway, noticing it looked the same from the other side.  In fact there were other doors in other trees, all of them unique in their own way.  Dark shapes hung from some of the trees.  They looked like scarecrows spinning on ropes.

Bobby was not old enough to understand what a hung corpse looked like, of course.  So he marked it up as a cheap scare, like a sheet on a wire or a scary mask at the store.  He patted his pockets feeling his toys comfortably against his legs, and the door behind him slowly, quietly closed.

Bobby heard something like the sound of bees in the air, and an arrow thunked into the wood beside him.

“The next one will be bulging from your neck, thief.” An ugly voice called out.

Bobby raised his hands over his head.  “I am not a thief!”

“That is what a thief would say.”

“I am Bobby!”

“I do not know what a bobby is, but it sounds like a thief.” The nasty voice continued. “A dirty, sick, evil thief that steals my things and touches my things and ruins all things.  Thiefs are thieves, thieves are thiefs, and methinks they are a bobby.”

A crouching, hunched withered thing of a man in a mishmash of clothing came around from one of the trees and looked Bobby from head to toe.  His skin was the blue of something cold and sick, with red eyes hidden among the many folds on his face, perched above a nose that was longer than cucumber. On his head he wore a red stocking cap that covered a mess of individual wiry hairs disheveled and partially hiding the long pointed ears that hung limply on the sides of its head.  It was downright ugly.

Bobby thought he would be scared of such a creature, but he remembered his promise, and the fear was never close.

“I am not a thief.  My momma tells me stealing is wrong.” Bobby said honestly.

The thing pinched one eye closed and pulled on his bow string regardless. “You… are… a… THIEF,” it shrieked.

Bobby dove sideways for the nearest tree trunk and the next arrow hit the tree behind where he had been standing.

“And you are mean!” Bobby shouted in response.

“I am a goblin, you stealer.  All goblins are mean.  If you meet a nice goblin, it is because it is dead and should be buried,” the thing spit.

“What could I steal anyway?” Bobby asked from behind his tree.

“Oh he speaks of things he pretends not to know.  Like you do not know that my greatest treasure is in the tower behind us?  That you do not know that you are coming to steal it!  That you act all innocent, when you are seeking to take what is mine.  And I stole it fair and squarish.” The goblin boiled. “You are meat!  Let me spit you!”

Another arrow hit a tree.  The goblin screeched in frustration.

“I am not going to steal anything!”  Bobby said.

“Liar!”  The goblin yelled as he let another errant arrow fly.

Bobby grabbed a nearby rock and threw it with all his might at the goblin’s head.  He was a Southern boy, so he knew how to chuck a rock. Any boy from farm country worth their salt knew how to toss something small and heavy. The rock spun and tumbled, as if in slow motion, and struck the goblin in the eye with a sickening wet thump.   The beast grabbed its eye and howled, cursing and spitting, gnashing its teeth.

“It serves you right.  You wouldn’t listen.” Bobby said.

“By myrtle and thyme, I will murderize you.” The goblin cursed.

******

Macklin pulled his trigger again and again, and saw the shape in the distance finally flip a hand into the air and then drop. Another was taken out by Deigo, and the third must have already retreated or had been hit by a stray round.  The sound of gunfire, so pervasive before, left a hallow empty silence hanging heavily over the fire team.   All four of them were still alive, although Tex’s helmet had a new deep dent that would have meant death if the caliber had been any larger or his head had been turned slightly to the left.

“Either there is another group out there waiting for us or we miscounted.” Tex spoke hesitantly.

Simms grunted. “Or they killed themselves with that cheap russian shit they were using.  My heart tells me to keep praying, but my gut tells me to keep spraying.”

“I have Milo on the line, sir.” Deigo called out.  “They are under heavy fire, calling for backup.”

“Well… now we know where the other team is headed.” Tex sighed.

“How far out?” Macklin asked.

“The village.” Deigo replied.

“Mother fucking bullshit.” Macklin sighed.

“With the long range down, we are their only support.” Simms frowned.  “And they are going to get pinned.”

“Yep.” Macklin agreed. “But that is not why I am pissed.”

“Why then?” Tex asked.

“Because our ride with our large caliber intimadator is burning on our front lawn, boys.”  Macklin said and pointed at the ruined humvee sitting twisted in the sand. “We are walking.  Grab what you need, put your plates on… and Tex, please grab a new helmet.”

“Awwww, but I like this helmet, Sarge.”

“Tough.  I need your brains to stay in your skull.”

Simms laughed.  “That is not a problem for Tex, Sarge.  His brains are located elsewhere.”

******

Bobby picked up another rock. “I hit you once, I can do it again.”

“You miserable brat.  Fine.  Go steal my things.  I will find you.  You know that, right?”  Its hands were covering his mangled eye.

“Maybe, maybe not.  But I know my arm works and your eye doesn’t.”  Bobby said defiantly.

The goblin spat again and slowly dissolved into the dark of the misty forest around him.  His voice rang out one last time from farther away.

“You watch your back; you watch it.  I will be in a shadow with somethin’ sharp, I promise you.”

Bobby held tight to the rock with his arm half way cocked.  He walked slowly to the tree that the goblin slid behind, and jumped around the side of it quickly, but there was nothing to surprise except more dirt and rocks.  He slowly lowered his arm, but did not release his impromptu weapon.

He looked left and right, and noticed the path leading off through the trees. A light in the distance seemed to flicker and wave, beckoning him onwards.  He patted his pockets, feeling the familiar shape of his favorite toys against his legs, and walked carefully through the darkness.  His ears would play tricks on him as he strolled, something like whispers in the dark, muffled and hidden. Occasionally, the sound of a far off bird made a horrible caterwauling, its voice rolling, bouncing, and echoing in strange ways.

The walk to the tower was not as long as he had thought it would be, the distance stretched and shrank at it’s own will if he didn’t pay attention. The tower was made of white stone, compressed from the corpses of angel bones, while the bolts were forged from the tears of demons. Bobby did not know such things, but the tower carried the sense of such things, so on some level, he intuitively knew the tower was both dangerous and necessary.  He put his hand out tentatively and knocked on the large brass bound wood door.

A female voice from within replied quickly. “Who knocks on my door?”

“My name is Bobby,” Bobby said, quickly adding, “I am on a quest.”

“A quest for what?”

“To face a challenge.  Jonathon Little Tack sent me.”

“Did he now?” The voice replied.  A smile was in it, nesting within like a bird.

“He told me to find something special and lose something…” Bobby faltered.  He could not remember what Jonny had told him.  It felt so very long ago already.

“You will seek something great, lose something sacred, and gain something special.”  The voice replied.

“That’s right.” Bobby said.

“You have found something very great indeed.  This is the Tower of Lost Dreams.”

“So I just need the other two.”

“I wouldn’t be in a hurry, Bobby.  The other two could be pain and death.  Losing your life is sacred, and at the same time, gaining visibility of the afterlife would be something special.”

“Oh, no, I don’t think that sounds good.”

“That is a fair assessment.  I have been dead myself, and it is no fun.” The woman’s voice sounded sad.

******

“Sarge, you are telling us to march over sand in a hundred degree heat to a firefight that is already happening?” Simms intoned dryly.

“That about sums it up.  We can rent a donkey.” Macklin replied sarcastically.

“What about Broken Bessie?” Tex said.

“Shit son, that broke ass piece of shit hasn’t ran for weeks.  Dead battery, remember?” Deigo said.

Macklin grinned. “We have a battery.  Its in the humvee.”

“If it is intact.  Those RPGs blew her to shit.” Deigo groaned.

“Only one way to tell.  I am going to go for it.  Deigo you are going with me, grab the bag. Tex, Simms, you are providing cover.  If I so much as hear an AK bark at me, I am going to be pissed.”

“Don’t stress it, Sarge.  We got it covered.” Simms said, acting insulted.

“Let’s move out.” Macklin nodded.

******

“I am the Lady of the Tower of Lost Dreams.”  The Lady said upon opening her heavy door to greet Bobby.

“Nice to meet you, Ma’am.” Bobby replied.  The Lady was beautiful in every single way that an eight year old boy could understand.  Unfathomably beautiful to the point that she was no longer human.

“Jonny Jump Up must have thought of you highly to send you on such a quest.  Quests are dangerous things, little one.  Their rewards are always representative of the risk involved.  If your reward was small, then your risk must have been small.  You seek something precious, so that means that you must risk many things in return.  It must be equivelant.  Do you understand?”

Bobby nodded slowly, trying to think through her words carefully.  “I understand.”

“Good.  Now.  This tower is a waypoint of sorts.  I give two choices to any one that comes to my door.  Fight for my honor or hang from the trees.”

“Hang like a jungle gym?” Bobby asked hopefully.

The Lady laughed merrily.  “No my sweet. They hang by their necks.  Dead.”

“Oh.”

“So, will you fight for my honor?”

“Yes.”  Bobby said without hesitating.

“Good.   I will take payment for the honor.”  The Lady held out her white hand, her long fingers waiting expectantly.  They were almost spider like, weaving and bobbing of their own accord.

“Uh, I don’t have money, Ma’am.”  Bobby said worriedly.

“Nonsense.  Money, pah!  You have many things you can pay with.   A finger perhaps?  A memory?  All the color blue you will ever see?  It can be anything of value.  As long as the value is appropriate.”

Bobby patted his pockets and felt his Dad’s truck from when he was a boy.  It was his most prized possession, it should be worth more than anything. He pulled it slowly from his pocket and put it in the Lady’s hand.  Her eyes sparkled as she held it, closing her long fingers over it slowly, savoring the feel of it in her hand.

“Oh, yes.  This is very expensive indeed.  You honor me greatly, little one.” The Lady said happily.

“Who do I have to fight?”  Bobby asked.

“Oh, it was I, upon gifting me something poor.  However, you passed brilliantly.  Your reward is the way out of my tower, and safe passage through my woods.  You are the first to make such passage in a very long time.  Also, some advice… for free, of course.”

“Yes, Ma’am?”

“The one-eyed goblin will hunt you after you leave my realm.  You must be wary.”

“I will.”

“Then be on your way, little Bobby.  Safe travels to gain something special, although you may have to lose more of yourself along the way.”

“I can handle it.”  Bobby replied.

“I know it.”  The Lady nodded in agreement.

******

“The battery is still hot, boss.” Deigo said, smiling ear to ear as he chucked the multimeter back into his bag.

“Great.  Let’s hustle back.” Macklin said. “Just because no one took a potshot at us on the way over doesn’t mean we won’t be as lucky on the way back.”

“Has anyone told you that you are no fun?”

“It has been mentioned in the past.” Macklin said. “Let’s move.”

They moved as low as they could, ducking from cover to cover.  Some cover was sandbags stacked around the base, others were concrete barriers to control parking for the motor pool.  Deigo had both of his hands under the battery, so Macklin tried to stay frosty and keep his eyes on the angles from each firing spot.   He thought they were in the clear when a divot of concrete appeared next to his head and he was sprayed by sharp bits of masonry and gravel.

“DOWN!” Macklin yelled at Deigo.  The shot rang out a second later.  There was a sniper nearby… probably on a Dragunov 7.62.  They were reliable, but a bit shaky at longer distances, which had just saved his ass. Deigo was pushing the battery ahead of him in the dirt, trying to slide with behind it like an impatient snake. Another chip went flying from nearby and the shot rang out again.

“GODDAMMIT! SIMMS, YOU ARE GETTING DOCKED!” Macklin yelled.

“Sorry, Sarge! Trying to find it now.  I swear I didn’t see anyone!” Simms yelled back from the forward position.  Macklin and Deigo either had to find a way to run across thirty feet of open ground or pray to the great god above that Simms had the wherewithal to do something about it.  Another shot rang out, however, this one was much closer.  American close.

“Deigo, let’s go!” Macklin grabbed the battery himself and pushed himself up running for the edge of the bags.  Deigo stood up two seconds later and ran behind, his gun out in front of him like a spear. Tex was at the edge of the bags as they rounded the corner.

“I think Simms scared him off, because honestly, his aim sucks and there is no way he made a hit.” Tex drawled.

“Fuck you. I aim just fine and that dude is giving handjobs to his ancestors as we speak.” Simms replied from the hut.  Tex let a rare smile stretch across his face.

“We will find out soon enough.  Tex, get this battery loaded in Broken Bessie.  You two boneheads help me load her up with everything we might need.” Macklin said.

“Think I have time to mount a tripod for the 240 in the back?” Tex said.

“No.  We got to move.  Take what we can as quick as we can hustle.  If you want to load the 240, be my guest, but you are carrying it.” Macklin replied.

“Sir, yes, sir.” Simms added sarcastically.

“Simms, you are an asshat.” Macklin rolled his eyes.

“Thank you sir!” Simms grinned, saluting poorly.

******

The bodies swung among the tall trees, carried on unseen breezes as Bobby walked away from the Tower of Lost Hope.   He looked over his shoulder as he walked away, a hand in his empty pocket, and saw the Lady raise a hand in farewell from a lit window far above.  Bobby raised his free hand in response.

A part of him was sad that he had lost his truck, but for some reason, he felt better about giving it away.  The Lady had thought it was a treasure among treasures, and Bobby knew she would take great care of his Daddy’s truck.  She had looked at it as if she loved it just as much as he did.

He tripped a little on a tree root on the path.  He didn’t see the tree move, but the path that had been flat was full of roots.  He took another step and tripped full length towards the ground.  Not far off a scream of anguish rent the air, and a black arrow stood quivering in a nearby trunk.

“You miserable brat!  You nasty dirty little monster gave the Lady a gift, didn’t you?!  Curse you! Curse your existence! I will put something sharp in you, you little trash heap.”  The angry voice called out. “As soon as you leave this forest, you are out of her care.  She can’t protect you.”

Bobby felt a wave of anger rush over him.  He stood up and defiantly called out in the misty twilight between the trunks trying to think of the best insult he could.

“Goblin, you’re a pile of shit-covered rats!  Leave me alone!” Bobby yelled.

“You steal my things!”

“I have not stolen anything, you dummy!” Bobby retorted in disbelief.

“You stole the Lady’s heart!  She protects you instead of me.  You have killed me and you don’t even know it.”

“Then go die already,” Bobby mumbled halfheartedly.  It felt bad to say it and he didn’t know why.  He hoped the goblin didn’t hear.

The Goblin stayed silent.

******

Broken Bessie roared to life, the engine turning over with a belch of black smoke pouring out her cracked exhaust stack.

“This has to be the oldest pile of shit in Afghanistan, sir,” Deigo remarked candidly.

“As long as she rolls and she doesn’t step on any IEDs, she is my favorite pile of shit.” Macklin replied. “Let’s roll.”

Macklin hammered the top of the cab, and Simms thumped back with his foot against the cab.  Simms was lying in the armored bed, the short tripod hooked into the cargo boxes.  He looked down the sight of the large machine gun, just waiting for someone to make a bad choice and open fire on a retreating vehicle.  It would very likely that would be the last choice they ever made.

Deigo stomped the accelerator, making the beast lurch forward, rocking in the front bench seat all by himself.  In the back seat of the small cab, Tex readied his firearm, covering the left flank.  Macklin had his own covering the right.  Hopefully this was going to be a short ride. Hopefully, they wouldn’t see or hear anything until they roared into the village like an oncoming wave.  Hopefully, hopefully, Milo’s squad would last that long.

Deigo yanked the wheel hard to the right at the sound of rounds hitting the panels on the right.  Tex shook his head.

“Told you Simms missed,” he said.

“Just go, go, go.” Macklin slapped Deigo’s shoulder.

Deigo kept his foot down working his way through the gears as Bessie pulled away from the base.  Sand and rocks rang from inside the wheel wells and another bullet sang against the cab.  In the distance, the sun slanted through smoke rising from the squat stone structures of the village.

“Into the fire…” Tex said.

“Well the pan sucked anyway.” Deigo replied as Simms opened up with the 240. The heavy iron belched round after round into the ugly scrub covered hills behind.

******

The Goblin didn’t pop out from behind any more trees as Bobby moved forward down the path.  He had been timid at first, but things did not seem as scary as they had before.  The fog was clearing, the trees were getting smaller, and the path seemed to be widening, slowly turning into a bricked road.  The bricks were huge, each was the size of a bathroom rug, but they were at odd angles, some were set on edge, others were slanted like small slides.  The paved road looked like it had been hit by an earthquake, disheveling everything at random.   In the distance, the road evened out, leading towards two castles facing each other over a small wasteland between.  Bobby kept an eye looking backwards towards the forest, and the tower with the small lit window far above, but nothing moved except the birds that occasionally took flight.

It is funny how a walk can turn any experience into the mundane.  Bobby felt as if he was walking to school, the comfortable feeling of his dinosaur in his pocket, and the slight breeze making the grass on either side of him sing a melancholy song. There still was no sunlight, just the perpetual twilight, as if this part of the world was stuck between sun up and sun down, never figuring out which direction it should go.

The castles loomed.  Dark things moved among their parapets and Bobby heard the calls of crows.

******

“Almost there, boss.”  Deigo said. “I think I see where Milo is holed up.”

“Why do you say that?” Macklin asked.  He slid forward in his seat and squinted out the cracked windshield.

“You see the smoke?  Its definitely coming from the convoy.  But the buildings to the right have people swarming all over them.  I bet they are holed up on one side.”

“Pull wide, we go in from the east.  There is no way we can punch into the main square with all those people.” Macklin said.

“Boss, we don’t want to fight street to street.” Tex said.

“Yeah, and I don’t want to drive into an ambush with dead vehicles blocking our escape.  We have a better chance to pull them from the rear,”  Macklin replied.  “Tex, get on the horn with Milo, see if he can give us a better fix.”

Deigo pulled Bessie to the right and everyone rocked upwards in their seats as the overworked shocks took the hit from going off road.    The engine roared as the gears changed, and Macklin was tossed against the side of the cab.

“Poor Simms,” he muttered.

“Milo says they are in the market alright.  They have decent cover, only one of the squad is down.  Took a round to the leg, not bad. Will need help to move. Milo said they have their back to a heavy door near their location.  He said the door is painted a bright red, can’t miss it.  They have their open side barricaded in a firefight.  He also says we will have company going that way.” Tex reported.

“Well that is why we came.  Let’s get to work.” Macklin said. “Pull in that alley, it will give us cover.”

As they unloaded from Bessie, Simms pulled himself upright slowly, grimacing. Hoisting the 240 from its oversized strap.

“Christ Deigo, you drive like a drunk.”

“No judging.” Deigo replied.

“Stop the chatter.  We move towards the market, stay low, use signals. Watch your corners,” Macklin said. “And if for some goddam reason we get seperated, keep moving towards Milo.”

They nodded, and Simms pulled the cocking handle on the 240.

“Yee ha,” he grinned.

******

Bobby looked up as he walked between the castles.  No one looked down at him, but he could feel the menace of eyes on him from all sides.  The road was barely a road between the two castles, there were trenches dug everywhere, barbed wire fences strung among random poles protruding from the cracked ugly earth like wayward teeth.  There were craters stretched between the two castles, with bits of white bones scattered like dice among the debris.  This looked like war.

“Its the nasty little Goblin from the tower!” A shout came from the right side.

“Hit it with a rock.” Another shout.

“Hit it with a BIG rock this time.”  And another.

A voice called out from the other side. “Its not a Goblin, you idiots.”

“It’s Nottagoblin?” The first voice yelled again. “What is that?  Is it squishable?  Can we still use our big rocks?”

“You can use your big rocks on yourselves.”  The response called out over the no-mans-land.

“You can eat this…” One of the other voices started, never finishing.

There was a crack, a winding up noise, and suddenly a huge rock hurtled over Bobby’s head.  It tumbled as if flying slowly and crashed against the castle wall opposite with a resounding earth shaking thud.  Bobby flinched as debris of the rock rained down all across the road and field.  He ran to the nearest bulging trench and dropped into it.

“Oh, great, we have company.”  A voice spoke.

“Stab it.” Another said.

“I would, but my knife is too small.  He is a giant.”  The first replied.

“Giant, get out of our trench.”

“Its a Nottagoblin, not a giant.  Whatever that is.”

Bobby looked around, trying to find the source of the voices.  Then he noticed the walls of the trenches were stacked like floors, with holes and doors, and all sorts of ladders and steps among the levels.  Little men, all brown and gray stood among the levels, none taller than the length of his hand.

“Ugh, its repulsive.  Its all big and swollen,” another said.

“Someone do something. Instead of standing around doing nothing. The Boakins are going to retaliate.”

“They wouldn’t dare charge our position.  We have been here for a hundred years already.  This is our trench!” One of the little men lifted a shovel to show his resolve.

Another clapped and shouted to his compatriots peeking out of their hideyholes.  “This is our trench by holy right.  The great god of our Hold has given it to us. We will slaughter them if they come!”

“They won’t come.  They never come.” Another said sadly.

“Until they do.”

“That’s right!”

“Boakins and their dirty Boakishness.  We are the Glarys and we are strong.”

“Death to Boakins!”

“Long live Glarys!”

The multitude of their voices rang out from all sides.  Bobby watched them shake their little swords and spears into the air, yelling and shouting indiscriminately.

“Why are you all fighting?” Bobby asked.

“Because they are wrong.  They are always wrong.”  One of the near ones shouted.

Another crack and winding up noise, and a huge rock hurtled overhead, this time going the other direction.  It hit the other castle, and debris rained down around them.  A sizeable chunk hit the side of the trench and a couple of the little men were killed under its crushing weight.

“What are you all?” Bobby asked in horror, watching the little medics rush towards the carnage.

“We are the Glarys, Clan of the Brownies, Children of the Trees.” A voice called in response.

“And who are the bad guys?”

“The Boakins, Clan of Liars, False Children of Nothing, and cheaters… every one of them.”

“So they are like you?” Bobby asked.

“Like us?  They are evil.  They are heretics.  They are animals!” One of the little ones started screaming, frothing at the mouth, slapping his sword against his shield. “I am going to kill them, rip off their arms, and hang my pictures from my walls from their stiff curled fingers!”

“Jeez.  You guys are messed up.” Bobby said with wide eyes.

“They are messed up!  Get out of our trench!”

“Yeah, you are with them!  Get out!”

“Get out!”

“Fine!” Bobby shouted back as he climbed out of the trench and not taking any care on his way out, smashing ladders and squishing mud into the doorways.

He stood back on the road, and noticed that the trenches were everywhere.  He walked to the other side of the road and kneeled down to look into the nearest trench.

“Agh! Its the Glarys giant! Tell the castle we need to launch our catapult at it!” A voice called out.

“You idiot. That would hit us!” Another small man hit the first with the flat of his spear blade.

“Why are you all even fighting?”  Bobby asked.

“I have no idea.  They are the Glarys, Clan of Liars, Children of Absolute Evil.  Ask them.”

“I don’t think they would tell me.” Bobby said.

“We are the Boadkins, Clan of the Brownies, Children of the Trees.  We don’t have to answer either!  Go ask their king in their castle.  Maybe he will talk to you.  We wouldn’t know. Don’t bother our king.”

“Maybe I will.” Bobby said.

“Maybe he will.” A voice laughed.

“Maybe we will kick you in the teeth.” Another said.

“I haven’t met many Brownies, but you are all terrible.” Bobby said.

******

The gunfire was nearly constant.  It was defined by slow, languid pops.  There was no urgency to the fighting.  The insurgents knew their quarry was pinned.  Every minute or so another cascade of gunfire rang out.  The sound bounced around the corners in odd ways, sounding closer and farther away at the same time.

Macklin peered around the corner, and saw a red door right where it was supposed to be.  Unfortunately, it was covered by at least a dozen.  They were stacking explosives against the wall.

“Christ.” Macklin sighed.

“What?” Tex whispered.

“They are going to take down the entire building with Milo’s squad in it,” Macklin whispered. “I see at least twelve, maybe fifteen.  We will have a heck of a time taking them out without setting that pile off.”

“Shit.” Simms said.

“You two,” Macklin pointed at Simms and Tex, “get up high on that building if you can. That will give you a sight line all the way down this road.  Wave a hand over the wall when you get up there.  Deigo and I will draw their fire this way, you light them up.  Got it?”

“Got it.”  Simms replied.

“And Simms?” Macklin said.

“Yes boss?”

“Please miss the explosives.” Macklin said deadpan.

“Not a problem, sir,” Tex said.  “Simms misses everything.”

******

Bobby approached the huge red door and knocked.  There was no response.  He put his hand out and pushed on the heavy wood, and to his surprise, it swung in with ease. He entered the dark, waiting to hear some protest or to be assaulted by guards, but nothing happened.

The main entry was dark, and full of webs everywhere.  The dust on the floor was so think, the stone almost looked like packed earth.  Bobby walked tentatively into the great hall, waiting for something to happen, and when nothing did, he felt his shoulders relax a bit.

He walked slowly down the hall.  The center of it had a massive oaken table, with benches on either side, at many of the places a skeleton slumped at its spot, with a hand on a goblet or a weapon, a couple were holding books.  On the far end, a great throne stood, made of wrought metal, and in it, a king sat.

The king was long dead, his corpse was nothing but bones, dust, and rotting clothes.  His crown, missing random jewels, sat cockeyed on the top of the white skull. At the base of the throne, on a jeweled pedestal, a great crystal laid.  It glowed and shined, filling the air around it with an effervescent brilliance.   Another jewel just like it was in the dead King’s hand.  It was as if he gripped it tightly, even in death.

“It was the Boadkin King’s sacred Jewel.” A voice rang out.  It was a familiar voice.  The voice of the Goblin. “The Glarys King thought he should have both.  The Glarys King was a fool though, since those were fakes.”

“Fakes?”  Bobby turned quickly, looking for the goblin, but there was nothing to be seen in the hall.

“The Boadkin King switched it with Endingstone.  Which killed all of them on both sides.  The fakes were too good, and fooled the fakers.  Fitting.”

“What are you going to do?” Bobby said.

“I am going to kill you.”

“I would like to see you try.” Bobby pushed out his chest bravely. He laid his hand on the table and grabbed one of the dead men’s knives.  It did not make him feel any braver.

“Silly brat.  I have a bow, and a quiver of arrows.  What do you have?  A knife.  Pathetic.” The Goblin said.

“I have more than that.”

“Like what?”

“I have something in my pocket.” Bobby admitted.

The Goblin’s voice changed. “Did the Lady give it to you?”

“Maybe. Come take a look.”  Bobby squeezed the handle of the knife all the more tightly.

******

Macklin stayed low, and waited for the signal.  A few minutes past what he thought it would take, he finally saw a gloved hand poke up over the stone like a surrender flag.

“Set.”

Deigo and Macklin pulled their M4s from rest and laid them on their stone windowsills.  They took careful aim down both sides of the street.  Deigo pulled the pins on a two frag grenades and held them low.

Macklin held up his hand near his eyes and started counting down from three.  At one, Deigo rolled the nades behind two of the nearest chatting about whatever insurgents chatted about when their boss wasn’t looking. The explosion was loud, and covered the first two shots from each of their rifles, dropping two more each.

Macklin started counting off in his head.  That was six down.  Deigo took two more shots, Macklin then laid a full clip into the street.  The rest had dove for cover.

“Down!” Macklin yelled.

The response was fierce.  AKs opened up fire, flecks of stone and metal went flying all around them.  But that was nothing compared to the noise the was unleashed when Simms started cleaning up with 240.  The noise was immense roiling beast chewing the street, and like that, it was over.

“Clear!” Tex yelled from above.

Macklin and Deigo ran for the red door, past the bodies laying among the stones. Deigo tapped Shave and Haircut against the door.

A moment of silence and then the door swung inwards.  Milo poked his face out.

“Took you assholes long enough.”  Milo said.  His face was washed out with relief.  The far off gunfire continued regardless. “We are almost out of ammo.”

“Come on.” Macklin grabbed Milo and pulled his shoulder out the door. “Our ride is this way.”

******

His face was uglier than last time.  His missing eye had dribbled blackish blood down his face, filling in cracks in his skin all the way down to his long pointed chin.

“The thing about Endingstone is that it carries wishes within it.  These two hated each other so much that their own wishes killed them.  You should take that stone and wish to die quickly.”  The Goblin said with hatred dripping from his words. “What did the Lady give you?”

“This.”  Bobby pulled his red dinosaur from his pocket and held it proudly.

“And what is that? I have never seen anything like it.” The Goblin said hesitantly.

“It is my pet… dragon.”  Bobby said.

“Dragon?  That is an odd looking dragon, its front legs are too short and it is so small.  And it does not move.”

“It is frozen in place and will awake when I say a magic word.  It will grow and do whatever I tell it.” Bobby tried to sound confident.  He probably sounded scared.

The Goblin narrowed his remaining eye and bared his teeth in response, hissing like a snake.

******

They carried Michaels between two of them and slid him carefully into the back of Bessie with Simms laying next to him.  They strapped Michaels down as best they could, but the entire ride back to base was going to miserable with a tied off leg wound. They injected pellets into the open wound to staunch the remaining blood flow.

Tex paused as if in thought and then they heard the shot.  The bullet passed right under the rim of his helmet and turned his neck into jelly. Tex bobbled for a moment as if his strings were cut, and tipped over dead into a stack of baskets.

“Aw shit man.  Shit.”  Milo coughed.  His jaw disappeared and the second shot rang out.   Macklin dove under the truck as Milo hit the ground heavily like a sack of meat.  Everyone else was either in Bessie or under cover.

“Sarge! You ok?” Simms yelled from the back.

“Yeah.  I think.  Yeah.  Milo and Tex are gone, sniper took them both.”

Macklin pulled his M4 up his chest and slid out behind Bessie.  One of Milo’s guys opened the rear door slowly and Macklin took cover.

“Climb in, Boss.” Diego said.

“If its the same sniper, that Drag he has will go through the glass.” Macklin said.

“So?  We go fast.” Diego snapped.

“Yes you will.”  Macklin slammed the door and ran towards a nearby doorway.  Another shot rang out, but since he as still running and not dead, it must have been a miss.

Deigo turned the engine over and Bessie roared to life.  Macklin heard shouts from nearby.  He turned and ran back towards the market square. Ducking and weaving to get behind cover.  Another shot rang out and piece of road disappeared in front of him, the bullet making a zinging noise as it ricocheted down the street.  That means the sniper was trying to take him out and ignoring Broken Bessie as she headed away.

Macklin dove into a nearby store front, crashing into old milk crates full of discarded plastic. He picked himself up, swung his rifle onto his back, and pulled his side arm carefully.  He shattered a mirror behind the counter and grabbed a piece glued to the wall.  He leaned against the wall, and slid the mirror out of the doorway along the ground, trying to spot the sniper.

And there he was.  A bloody bandage over one eye, a disheveled turban wrapped in the mess.  He was at the far end of the street, near the market, moving slowly with his rifle pointing in Macklin’s direction.   Behind the sniper there were a couple more with rifle’s slung inspecting the dead insurgents.

The Sniper waved his rifle side to side and stopped moving.  He didn’t know where Macklin was. More shouts of the locals coordinating, and the Sniper yelled something back.   They turned back towards the pile of explosives near the red door.  The Sniper yelled something again.

Macklin had to keep moving. He bumped a cabinet, and vase fell to the ground with a crash.  The sniper stopped, turned in his direction, and smirked, bringing his rifle to bear.

******

Bobby held his beloved dinosaur out and dropped the knife to the stones.  The knife wasn’t him.  He couldn’t kill anything.  He wasn’t a soldier like his daddy.

“I will give this to you.” Bobby said.

The Goblin kept getting closer with its ugly mouth open, its long teeth bared like a lion.  Bobby backed up instinctively, slowly pacing backwards towards the dead king on his dead throne over a dead kingdom.

“I will give you this as a gift if you leave me alone.” Bobby said.

The Goblin did not stop advancing menacingly, as it pulled a long black knife from its belt.

“This is my favoritist thing.  And I will give it to you.” Bobby said.  His heel hit the pedestal, and the crystal holder wobbled and weaved.  Bobby instinctively put his free hand behind him and touched the Endingstone.

Still the Goblin advanced. “Why would you need to give it to me? I can kill you and just take it.”

“I give it to you, because I think you need it.” Bobby said honestly.

The Goblin stopped up short. “What?”

“I met you, you called me a thief.  You chased me, calling me a thief.  I am going to give you this special thing.  Because I am not a thief.  And I am sorry I hurt you.”

The Endingstone flashed in his hand, and the hall was filled with blinding light.

******

Macklin cursed.  “Shit. Shit. Shit.”

He holstered his side arm and felt the picture of his son against his leg.  He pulled the picture out and smiled at seeing Bobby sit so happily with his truck and his t-rex.  He pulled his M4 up with one hand and slid the picture in the band on his sight.  He held his breath, stepped out from the doorway, and…

The world disappeared.

******

The Goblin screamed.

The Dinosaur roared.  It was huge, everything that Bobby could have ever imagined.  It’s massive bulk filled the Hall, crushing the table, the chairs, and the skeletons beneath it’s hulking clawed toes.

The Goblin’s eyes went wide and it dropped its long knife.  Bobby laughed as the Goblin pissed its pants.  It turned to run, but his dinosaur swooped down and picked the Goblin up in one bite.  It flung its head sideways and the screaming from within it’s jaws stopped abruptly.

His daddy called it a t-rex, but Bobby called it his dinosaur. It turned its head, looked at Bobby, and for all the things that were precious in Bobby’s entire universe, and as he would swear for the rest of his life, the dinosaur smiled at him.  His dinosaur.  Bobby smiled back with the biggest toothiest grin of his life and nodded.

The flash from between his fingers happened again, and his dinosaur was gone.

******

The explosion had been immense, the entire market went up in a ball of fire.  When Macklin rolled over and looked up, everything was gone.  The explosion had pushed him right back into the store front, landing among the cushion of discarded plastic.

Everything in the middle of the town was gone.  Insurgents, the one eyed sniper… everything.  Macklin shook his head to clear the fogginess, and blinked heavily a few times.  His ears were ringing brightly still. He probably had a concussion.  As the ringing started to fade, he heard the distinctive sound of a heli.  Not just any heli.

The one meant for him.  His boys must have been able to call out.

He looked around the store front for something. And he saw something funny.

Macklin bent over and picked up a red dinosaur from the piles of old plastic.  It looked just like the one his son had.  It would be a great gift for Bobby.

He put it into his pocket and turned for his long journey home to his son.