Short Order

He got the Glock up and into play, squeezing off several rounds and putting at least one of them into the thing before it reached him.  Then he hurled himself sideways, grabbing for a big squeegee on a pole and jamming it between himself and the reptile, fending the beast off like a damn caveman with a sharpened stick.

Then he felt a burning sensation on his own backside, and realized the lizard had forced him so far back he was sitting on the edge of the grill.  The grill was a flat metal slab heated from beneath, and it burned the entire surface area of Eddie’s buttocks.  “Damn it!” he shouted, aimed the Glock a little higher—

bang!

and shot a hole in the jug of oil.

Glug, glug, glug, the contents slurped out, filling the kitchen even more with the cloying, dull smell of vegetable oil.

The lizard pushed forward, Eddie jammed the squeegee into its face, the beast kept pushing and Eddie’s makeshift spear snapped in two.  Suddenly, the creature was in his lap, clawing at him and snapping with a mouth like a blender on high.

Eddie fell back onto the grill, smelling the scorch-stink of his jacket and feeling the heat intensely.  Above him, gray-white feet hung flaccidly dripping blood, a dozen corpses hanging each with its neck drilled through by a saber-like tooth in the mouth of a grinning scab-faced fiend.  Eddie heard the gunshots and shouting and the zipping of winged serpents through the air behind him like a soundtrack to the infernal carnage he saw overhead.

He shuddered and kicked.

He caught the lizard square in the center of its face with both his boots and threw it back into the puddle of oil.  It hit hard and slipped back, sliding across cracked and mildewed tile in a puddle of canola.  Eddie rolled back on his feet, backside and elbows burned and the back of his neck too warm for comfort, but he was still holding his pistol.

The lizard thrashed to regain its footing and scrabbled to try to launch itself at Eddie, jaws gaping.  Eddie didn’t waste time shooting it again.

He shot the puddle of oil.

Bang, bang, bang

and on the third shot, he got a spark and the oil ignited.  A sheet of flame like a grassfire snapped into being, rushing across the floor in all directions.  The lizard squealed and paddled backward as the fire overtook it, hissing in pain and rage.

Eddie jumped out of the way too, vaulting up onto his feet on the grill.  He could feel the heat of the cooking surface, but the vulcanized rubber soles of his boots kept him from being burned.  Yet.

Eddie had never owned a decent car, but he’d never let himself be without a good jacket and boots.

A flying serpent whizzed in through the order window.  Eddie grabbed it with his left hand, feeling scratchy, twitching wing inside his clenched fist as he swung the thing around—

and brought it down hard, impaling its head on the order spike.  It wasn’t much in the way of justice, but it cheered him up a bit to see one of the serpents twitching out its last snake breaths over Mike’s double order of coconut cream pie.

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The Dream Mine

“Where are we going?” Burton asked from the front bench.

“It’s called the Dream Mine,” Roxie told them.

“That sounds cheerful,” Poe judged.

“A man named Koyle had it dug,” Roxie said.  “He told everyone he’d dreamed that if you dug a shaft where he said, you’d hit an old Nephite mine, all dug out and just full of precious metal sitting around waiting to be taken away.”

“What’s Nephite?” Burton asked.  “Is that like bauxite?”

“The Nephites were an ancient people,” Roxie informed him.  “They lived around here a long time ago.”

“Hiya, heya, hiya, heya,” Tam chanted, then made his best Indian war-whoop, slapping his hand against his round O of a mouth.  “I’ll admit I may be disadvantaged because I got my schooling in Ireland, but the sisters never told me about Indians digging for bauxite.”

“The ancient world is as unexplored and mysterious as is the modern,” Burton growled, and took his eyes off the jittering road to shoot Tam a gruff, schoolteacherly look.  “Nobody can afford to pat himself on the back for his wisdom just yet.  Least of all the Irish.”

“Go to Hell.”  Tam took a slug off his bottle.

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Chakras

Poe shook the contents of the fruit jar out into his hand.  He carefully laid the mouse skull on Bill Hickman’s chest.

Hickman swallowed.  “Pretty,” he drawled, “but nothing you can’t do with a knife and a little bit of free time.”

Rockwell pricked his cheek with the tip of his blade.

“Ouch!”

“True,” Poe admitted.  He set the mouse’s bones on the Danite’s chest too, one by one, in a circle around the tiny skull.  “It’s easy to make the mistake of thinking that the solution with the most engineering incorporated into it is the best one.  Sometimes, what is most effective is the simplest solution.  The knife, the poisoned cup, the wire around the throat.”

Hickman looked down at the bones.  Uneasiness showed in his face, so Poe knew he was getting into the man’s head.  “So… what do you want?”

Poe placed the brass beetle on Hickman’s sternum.  “Who says I want anything?” he asked.

Hickman grinned.  “I know all kinds of good shit,” he said.  “I got information.”

“How delightful for you,” Poe told him.  He dug a second beetle out of the canister and laid it on Hickman below the first.

“I… hey!… don’t you want to know what’s going on here?  What, with the… kidnapping and everything?”

Poe placed a third scarab over Hickman’s belly button, and a fourth just below it.  “Should I want to know?” he asked.

“Yeah!”  Hickman struggled against his bonds and against Rockwell’s iron grasp, but he was pinned fast.  “Hell yeah, you should!”

Poe placed a fifth and final scarab, balancing it carefully right on the crotch of Hickman’s denim trousers.  He stood, and held one finger conspicuously close to the attack button inside the canister’s lid.

“You’ve almost found the man’s chakras,” Burton gruffed.  “Not quite, but you’re close.”

“I can find his chakras easy enough, need be,” Rockwell growled.  “They hang the same place on a man as on a bear, more or less.”

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Worse

Beyond the pulpit, there was a human body.  He was an old man in a dark blue suit, with gray hair and beard, his feet and shoulder jammed against something that forced his knees and head into the air.  He was pinned onto the lid of a big wooden chest with what looked like a wooden stake, pushed all the way through his torso and into the wooden container beneath.  Death was always ugly, and Mike had seen his share, but he’d never seen it this ugly, or weird.  He couldn’t see blood anywhere, despite the gaping hole in the man’s body.  The chest underneath him had two sphinxes carved into its lid, facing left and right away from each other.

The old guy was still moving, though not very much.  He muttered something inaudible, just a gasp through twitching lips—

and his skin bubbled.  It crawled, and jumped and wiggled like it was loose over the body it covered, and something small, a thousand small somethings, were crawling all over underneath it.

“Jeez.”  Mike stopped just inside the gnawed-down pulpit and stared.  “Vampire?”

“Worse,” Twitch shook her head.  “Rabbi.”

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Merry Christmas

Here’s a non-fiction book recommendation: Christmas: The Original Story, by Margaret Barker.

The First Temple’s major furnishings were made of gold; frankincense topped the Bread of the Presence displayed and eaten in it; myrrh was a component of the incense burned inside; and choirs of angels sang during its worship.

Interested yet?

Merry Christmas.

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The Christmas Song

Chris Isaak and Michael Buble.

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Who Are You Guys?

“Jeez,” Mike said.  “Who are you guys?”

“Like I told you this morning,” Eddie chuckled.  “We’re a rock band.”

“On the phone this morning you forgot to mention the Hellhounds.”

Eddie shrugged.  “We’re a rock band that fights evil.”

Fights evil?  “What, like knights of the round table?”

In the dim light inside the van, Mike saw Eddie’s bad eye drift sideways again, and Eddie hesitated before answering.  “Not like knights,” he said.  “More like rival gangsters.  We’re out to get Satan.”

“Before he gets us.”  Twitch laughed.

“Carajo.”

“We’re your family now,” Twitch added.  “Jim took you in.”

“You’ve got the Hand on you,” Eddie explained.

Mike met Jim’s eyes in the rear-view mirror.  They were shockingly pale, even in the darkness.  “The hand?” Mike asked.

“The Left Hand,” Twitch said.  “It’s a bad thing that Jim agreed to let you in.”

“No it isn’t,” Eddie snorted, and immediately began reloading the spare shotgun clip.  “The bad thing would have been getting left behind and eaten.”

“And going to Hell, poor boy,” Twitch continued.

“No,” Eddie finished, “it’s not a bad thing.  Look, it’s like… it’s like getting admitted to the hospital for cancer surgery.  It’s bad that you have cancer, and getting operated on is no fun, but getting admitted to the hospital is a good thing.”

“Unless you get an infection,” Twitch pointed out.

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Would You Want to Experiment?

“Well how else do you explain it?” Mike asked.

“Explain what?”

“Uh… explain fairies?  That’s what we’re talking about, right?”  Mike’s head was spinning, and he tried to clutch tight to the thread of the conversation.  “You’re a fairy, aren’t you?  How do you explain that?”

Twitch snorted.  “Explain that I exist?  How do you explain that you exist?  Do you have an explanation, or just a bunch of guesses?  And since when did everything have to be explained, anyway?  I swear, the Enlightenment ruined you humans forever.”

“I don’t know.”  Mike felt defensive.  He wasn’t sure what enlightenment even had to do with anything; didn’t that mean people in California sitting in the Lotus position and burning incense?  “Stuff should make sense, I guess.”

“For that matter, how does Eddie here explain that Jim and I are so different, if we’re supposed to be cousins?”

“Different?”

“Do you see Jim changing shape?  Do you see him burning at the touch of iron?  Or do you see me commanding the legionaries of Hell and biting my tongue all the time for fear my dad will hear me?”

“You’re both immortal,” Eddie pointed out.

“And you and the chimpanzees both have opposable thumbs!” Twitch snapped.  “Do I go about telling everyone you’re related?”

“I might be related to chimpanzees,” Eddie said, “for pretty much exactly that reason.”

“Jim’s immortal?” Mike asked.

“Well, he doesn’t get old, anyway,” Eddie modified his words.  “We think he can probably be killed.”

“Probably?”

“Well, you never really know until you try, do you?” Twitch pointed out.  “And if it was you, would you want to experiment?”

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Finished!

Twitch followed right behind Jim, in her horse shape, with the boy Rafi slung over her back.  Adrian walked next to her, holding the kid in place.  He patted Mike on the shoulder as he passed.  “Good to have a rhythm section again,” he said.

Eddie brought up the rear.  “Can you drive?” he asked.

Mike nodded.  “I’ve been a driver before.”

“Cab, or limo?”

Mike sighed.  “Getaway car, mostly,” he admitted.

“Perfect,” Eddie laughed.

“I had a rough youth.”

“Everybody does.  Let’s go get the instruments and hit the road, before Fido here remembers that daddy sent it to fetch Jim.”

Mike scratched his head and they both walked out of the kiva.  A fresh, water-bearing breeze blew into the overhang from the canyon below, and Mike breathed deep.  “Aren’t they burnt to cinders?” he asked.

“All the band gear is fireproof and impact-resistant,” Eddie told him.

“Wards of instrument insurance?”

Eddie chuckled.  “Something like that.  Your bass is probably gone, but we have another one you can use.”

“I saw it in the van,” Mike remembered.  “I’ll try not to impale myself on it.”

“That’d be good,” Eddie agreed.  “That’d be a real good start.”

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Essential Classics: Ancient Egyptian Literature

Miriam Lichtheim has collected a lot of ancient Egyptian writings into three slim (200+ pages each) volumes, covering the Old and Middle Kingdoms, the New Kingdom and the Late Period.  There are a lot of reasons you should read the literature of old Egypt, and here are some:

  • It sheds light on the Bible, and therefore on the early history of Bible-related, Abrahamic religions.
  • We don’t see back any further than Egypt (and Sumeria and a few other coeval cultures), so these writings are, practically speaking, the roots of our civilization.
  • All writing constitutes, in some sense, the field notes of the human species.  Living an informed life requires that we check our predecessors’ logs and adjust our own course accordingly.
  • This is a blog about writing, so here’s the writer’s point: in ancient Egypt, we see a lot of writing firsts, and a lot of things written really well.  The Story of Wenamun, for instance, is a historical novel that predates Homer by several hundred years (and the Tale of Genji by thousands).  Ramses II’s account of the Battle of Kadesh is an important primary source for a pivotal historical event, and is also a piece of blatant and entertaining propaganda, which claims that the Pharaoh’s men all fled and he fought off the enemy hordes single-handed.  It’s a great piece of writing for insight into the psychology of kings, and the need many of them have shown to claim the mantle of military hero.
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