Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Step Up, Step Down


Chance came down gutter road all sleek and spiff, doled up for the rent boys.  Like they’d care.
He reeked of woods and spice cologne, but couldn’t hide the candy.  He believed his money was a passport into my world. 

Stupid fucker. 

I licked the smile off him. With his teeth bared, breath bated, eyes rolling back, he finally looked something like a man – but not much. 

They never expect you to interrupt their glamor, like none of us know tricks to hide what we are. 

I sent him back out, hollow with insatiable need.

Fairies make the best whores.

Clean up in the Aisle of Man


Michael sets aside the newspaper, rubs his forehead. He should have been the one with horns, with all the damage he’s done. Righteousness still masks his pleasure at the smiting, but he’s moved from blood and black bile to slow withering. More time to enjoy the sad attempts at repentance.

“When your basement is littered with the corpses of cats and children, you have missed your shot at ascension.”

“But…It wasn’t me! I would never do that!” As if Michael cannot see the soul stains.

Given free reign, he’d shrivel them all.

Perhaps it is time to release his brother.

Objective


“Why is treasure always deep in caves or in rooms atop a spire?”  Lorelei grumbled.

“They’d hardly stick it in the hall closet.” Talking made it harder to climb, but kept her calm.

“Why not? We never ransack normal homes.”

“Fair point.”  I looked down on the glossy twist of two rivers far, far below.

“What does the item we’re after do?” she asked.

“Maybe it keeps lovers from roaming.” I slid in the window.

“Why not just cut ‘em loose and find better?”

“Sentimentality, I suppose.”

I watched her fall, my once clever girl, then took the elevator down.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Burying the Lead

The headlines said Look up! Look up!
The sky – or parts of it – could fall
and you’ll only be safe
if you keep looking up.

So we looked up in panic.
And every time we thought
about how our neck hurt
or that maybe we should check
on the kids or the flowers
or the old lady next door,
the sirens would wail
Look up! Look up!

We kept our eyes trained
on the sky so long
that our bodies got comfortable
looking up.
And they told us how much safer
the world was
because we listened.

One day, the people
who wanted flowers
and a life for their children
and to look after the old people
stopped
looking
up.

They raised their voices
in desperate cries
to warn the world
waken the world
save the world.

But we were too busy looking up
too busy being safe
to hear them tell us
about the monsters.

For their brave stance
they were corralled
shackled
tenderized and seasoned.
And they still tried to warn us
we were surrounded.

When we finally look down,
look back,
we will regret
that we were not blessed
to be the first
to be consumed.

-          R. R. Kovar 9/26/11

Friday, May 27, 2011

Penance

Jana says the soulless were Angels once, the template for all of us gone terribly wrong.

I asked how He could make such a mistake. The priest slapped me so hard I slammed into a pillar. After a day on my knees where the terrible things happen, I didn’t ask again.

Mama cried because my beauty had been spoiled and penance had made me worthless.

Headaches came, like spikes in my brain, every time I passed the church.

I prayed, and Angels came to paint the cathedral red. I sprinkled them with water, blessing their recycled souls.

No one kneels anymore.

Sunshine Laws


“Stand,” the matron says. “Observe.”

We obey, wanting to look away. Stephen glares, defiant. Doomed. I want to rescue him, hold him close. I have loved him for ages. He doesn’t know my name.

“Structure keeps us safe,” the matron says. “You know the dangers out there.”

We don’t, having never seen. Others have been caught trying to look outside. This is my fourth Assembly, but the first time I’ve cared.

Blades fall.

Stephen vaults. Up, over. Gone

He flings open the blast doors.

We scramble for the shadows, skin smoking.

Stephen blows me a kiss, and bursts into flame

Truth and Consequences

I murmured her true Name, sang liquid metal into a ropy structure. I’d observed her so long, sculpting her curves took little effort.

“What is it?” She hugged me, his scent on her skin, her smile his doing.

Bile rose from the pit of my stomach. “A dress form. It needs to be fitted.”

Metal vines enveloped her. She laughed until leaves sprouted to seal her lying mouth, her nose.

“We had an agreement.”  A simple fact.  I should not have had to remind her.

As thorns grew, pierced skin, her eyes offered desperate apologies. Too late.

“All you had to do was ask first.” Why do they never believe me?

Thursday

“Say grace.” Darla scowls by her cast-iron stove.

“It’s your death cult, not mine.”

“Blasphemy.” She flips another pancake.

“Can’t be condemned if I never believed.”

“Someone neglected your education,” she says. “If enough people think you’re disrespecting their beliefs, you’ll hang for it.”

“Faith should withstand challenges and dissent.” I pour syrup over the flapjacks.

The perfect beauty of the Light-Bringer forms in the sticky liquid. No one would report this daily miracle. People have forgotten Him.

I swallow the divine, go to school, and wait to be blessed as a true believer when Iblis awakens the world.

Patterns

I hate making wedding dresses, but like the money. Tense brides, begging to be worthy of white, hear promises I don’t make.

One bad stitch, a single mistake, and my clumsy fingers will ruin the enchantment of their day. You’d expect them to use better magic, stronger, to bind a man forever. Those with the proper spell rarely divulge the price for casting.

Our mothers started a revolution, organic wisdom of the self. We tried to swallow it, but candy-coated romance tasted so much better.

A tiny drop of blood mars a hidden seam. I do my part for freedom.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Transition


New moon leaves the middle night dark.  Soft grass and bramble take turns against my ankles.  Useless in the woods, my eyes adjust in starlit meadow where the fox waits, panting, and I imagine the low light comes from him.  I lower myself, crawl on my belly, slow and steady lest he flee or become unreal. 

His breath tickles my ear like a sigh, and warmth pools in my nethers.  He stretches out  beside me, ginger hair framing a sharp, pale face.  He pulls me to him, knowing I have come to surrender. 

I am so tired of being human.

Pillar of the Community


Mandear denounced me as barren.  Stood up in the square like the wicker witch, I burned with anger they all mistook for shame.  When cold night came and I remained tethered, I wept.  

He came to me then, the horned one, perhaps mistaking my form for his sacrificial bride.  Leather ties broken by his will, I slid into the comfort of his arms, tears forgotten, and let him make me his fertile home.

Eyes avert at my fecund strength, round, whole, His.  When the child comes, I will slake its thirst with their blood, binding them to the new god.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Quick note

The sudden influx of posting is largely due to my having been pointed in the direction of Lily Childs' Feardom. Each Friday, she posts a three word prompt for no more than 100 words of dark fiction. I am enjoying the challenge. If you write dark things, or think you may want to, that is a lovely forum and a great space to share and learn. If you simply like to read dark things (which are sometimes also funny), you're encouraged to do that, too.

Wed

She arrived on the tide,
his Irish bride,
with her too-bright hair
and her soft green eyes
alight with love.

Her gloved hand paused on the door
of his coach and four, as she skipped
the creaky step as though she knew
it made the sound of dead things.

I’ll wager he never told her
how that came to be,
the things he’d done to me
not so long ago
when I was pretty.

She will learn, tonight,
of his unnatural appetite
for terrible tangles
of flesh and fear.

His desire satisfied,
she will fly from him.

Straight to me.

Stock in Trade

“Not your night.” He takes a long drag.

I shrug. “Dreamers got the mark first.”

“You’re slow.” It’s a warning.

Can’t let my nerves show. “I’ll get the next one.”

“Best had.”

I follow the stench of copper. Iron, too. Ahead, a boy pushes a girl up against the wall. She doesn’t resist. I wrap myself around them, my shape their shape, their breath my breath. They topple, fall.

I hold their essence in my mouth until Shadow arrives.

“Girl tasted bitter.” He knows I swallowed the boy.

“Girls always do.”

He smiles. “Only some.”

Definitely not my night.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Tribute

Skin like papyrus rasps against mine. I would close my eyes if I could. He slithers, scents me, savors tiny sounds I can’t suppress. I shiver, but remain, a sacrifice required for another year of food for the town’s children. Children I will never have.

My corruption began when he entered the room. It compounds when he enters me, a sharp dart in a dark place. I bleed as I was meant to. His skin warms, softens.

“Inhuman, that’s what it is,” a witness whispers. She means inhumane, but speaks the truth.

He isn’t human.

And now, neither am I.

Thursday, February 03, 2011

Recompense

He walked the spirals willingly, each step a memory. Here was her hair like fine silk on his pillow, there taut tendons as he stretched her beneath him. A twist brought mornings spent tending their bruises – some on the inside, where the dark thing grew.

A thousand steps for the days he’d kept her. A thousand pinpricks, each in a different spot, his poisoned nerves dying upward, until he could barely make the final turn.

She stood, pitiless and perfect, her malice a reflection of his love. At her feet, the darkling child crooned to taste his heart.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Portrait

Everyone said Sela had a feline grace to her. I never understood what they were talking about. She was more of a snake, slithering into my life and wrapping herself around me until I could hardly breathe. It was her ability to unhinge her jaw that kept me from walking away. Not too often you see a trick like that, much less get to experience it intimately. Unfortunately, the novelty wore off after a while, and I was stuck in a hell of my own making.

Back in the day, I was the big draw on the art scene. The critics said I was daring in my approach to painting, subtle with the elements of horror, hiding monsters in every day moments. Sometimes, they were so obscure that you only saw them when you looked away. That was a trick I learned from an old man down in the fens. He told me to make sure the monsters were held back by something, so they didn’t escape the painting and wreak havoc on the world. I thought he was crazy, but I always included the proper sigils or gates or real silver in the paint.

Don’t bother asking how to find him, or even his name. He gave me a dozen different ones he’d been called over the years, some in languages so obscure I’d never heard of them. I was too busy being flattered by his attention to think about how weird that was. See, a lot of people had tried to get the old artist to teach them, but most of the time he didn’t answer the door. When he did, he’d just blink at them and close it again or swear a lot, then close it. I saw my friends’ failure as a challenge, so I persisted. On my twelfth visit, he sighed and let me into his house, a mess of twisted sticks and mud on the outside. Inside was a whole different story – thousands of stories, carved into dark panels, curled around twisted pillars, dripping from the ceiling in a riot of color and texture, so real you expected them to move when you touched them. That was part of what he taught me. I should have listened to the rest.

Trouble started when Sela asked me to paint her. She didn’t want a classic portrait. She had seen my work and wanted something macabre. I couldn’t figure out why someone like her wanted to be surrounded by horror, real or imagined. You’ve seen her. Hell, her picture is everywhere you look. Tall, glossy blond hair with that natural curl that catches the light no matter what the source, smoky gray eyes, the perfect pucker. And her curves…well, you’ve seen those, too, if you’ve opened a magazine.

I thought I was hot shit when she called me with her request. Naturally, I wasn’t going to deny her. Even if she hadn’t hit on me, I would have taken the commission. A painting like that has a good chance of becoming iconic. I was all about making a name for myself in those days. When it comes down to it, I guess I got my wish. More people have seen that portrait than anything I’ve ever done. Search the internet for images of Sela, and it’s the first thing to crop up – dozens of sites expressing all sorts of opinions on it, but whether or not they approve, they’re all willing to post a picture of her, arms spread out, covered in blood. Too bad it’s not what I painted.

I couldn’t do what she asked of me. I couldn’t soil her image. So I put the horror in the corners, at the edge of the mirror, in the shadow of the half-open closet door. Her I left pristine and beautiful, the way she’d been made. The bitch threw a fit like you wouldn’t believe over that. It was a stunning piece of work, probably my best and most commercially viable painting. And she hated it. She paid for it, of course, and she didn’t leave me the way I thought she would. Instead, she walked into that painting and sent out her flawless image, all because I forgot what the old man taught me: never give the monsters a way out. No, I didn’t see her do it. But I know what I know.

You probably think I’m insane for talking about her this way, when a year ago I would have told you she was the love of my life. That hasn’t changed in fact, just theory. It took me a little too long to figure out that this Sela is a walking disease. You heard that right. She doesn’t have one, she is one – a special sort of illness that settles in through the skin and slowly corrodes the internal organs until your system shuts down completely. Doctors were baffled by my rapid aging, white blood cell count, the toxins raging through me. I didn’t tell them the truth because I don’t want to spend what’s left of my life in a nuthouse.

Instead, I sit here, watching the smoke from an endless chain of cigarettes fill my studio. The walls used to be robin’s egg blue, but they’re closer to slate now. From time to time, I open all the windows and let the smoke clear, until it almost smells good. Almost. There’s still my rotting body to contend with. If I didn’t reek of stale tobacco, I’d recognize the slaughterhouse stench of my corruption. Then I might be tempted to leave the windows open until the cold seeped in and blessed me with an end. Pneumonia would be welcome, since I’m too messed up to go outside and try to contract that fancy new strain of influenza. And to think, I used to be a motivated guy. But I know what will happen if I walk through that door. The monsters are out, and they’re waiting for me.