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Σάββατο 14 Ιουλίου 2012

Stone Cold Countenance in an e-book!


Stone Cold Countenance, my very first novel in English, is available for purchase HERE!. You can read the first five chapters for free in the page Stone Cold Countenance and get a full synopsis, but what the hell.

Stone Cold Countenance is a post apocalyptic fantasy novel, set in a world very much like the old West. There's gunfights, killings, revenge in the name of a thousand dead men! There's magic and ancient technology!

There's also bonus content from an upcoming short story anthology of mine, called Under the Staircase! But you know what the best part is? The best part is that this e-book costs only ONE DOLLAR!

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Δευτέρα 13 Φεβρουαρίου 2012

Stone Cold Countenance-part 5


This is the story of Jonah Warden. Some say he was a just a man, dealing out the Old Guard’s retribution from beyond the grave, riding a horse black as night, a beast meaner than a hungry wolf. Others say he was so much more than a man, a hurricane trapped in a man’s body, a curse uttered by the Emperor’s dying lips, come to punish us for our sins.
For some, he was a blessing. To others, a plague. The stories said he’d been of the Old Guard, last of his kind. That he’d hidden in the Rift for a decade, amid winds so fierce they could flay the skin from your body, in the invisible heat that would burn you from the inside out. That he had made his black revolvers himself, melting down the Emperor’s Iron crown. That he’d made his bullets out of the badges of his dead friends, whom he’d seen die, on the day the old capital burned.
They said he’d trained himself, made himself a thing that was rough as a rock, its soul tempered in the fires of retribution. Said his horse was a Thing of the Rift, with unimaginable powers, that he’d broken himself, in a battle of wills that lasted for months. Others said the horse was the Devil, which had offered him its service in exchange for his soul, giving him resilience far beyond that of mortal men. Said that was why his eyes were so alien.
Like pitch-black beads, they were.
But I know now, that despite what everyone said, back then, Jonah Warden was a thing of fury and determination. I know this, because I knew him. Knew his ways and his thoughts better than any other human being might claim.
I will tell you this: a man is defined by something more than the sum of his parts. Even the toughest, most merciless, unrelenting, kind, generous, understanding being on God’s green earth is nothing more than an animal on two legs, if it lacks humanity.  It is the element that brings these things together, to make him a man in both his own eyes, as in the eyes of his fellow human beings.
You see, when I met him, Jonah Warden was so much less than a man.
I saw him before the Gwynn Gulch massacre, for the very first time. Saw him cross the main road, riding that black, mean horse of his. People all over stopped just to look at it. The children stared at the animal and us, the adults, felt a shiver run up our spine. We hadn’t seen a horse for ten years now. They’d gone extinct after the Vas’Iiri invasion, see.
I looked at this strange sight for a while. He was riding it without a saddle, his back straight, his hands hooked on the reins. You can’t blame me for mistaking him, then. As I looked at him, I could tell: his posture, the line of his jaw, the way he stood on the saddle, crossing the town as if he owned it.
If it hadn’t been for those mysterious, incomprehensible eyes of his, I would have still thought him for the real Jonah.
The town was buzzing at the site. The man simply stood there, like a statue, a monument that seemed impervious to our attentions. My hands shook as I looked at him, thinking how strange, how impossible it all was: the man I was to marry, a captain of the Old Guard that had died when the old capital was bombed, alive and well before my very eyes.
I don’t know how long I stood there, not speaking a word, frozen in place. But as I saw him, coming closer, I thought that he was coming at me. That he had seen me from horseback, recognized me. My foolish eyes thought he was smiling at me, that grim, hard smile of his that crept up to his eyes oh-so-slowly.
I was about to run to him, to take him in my arms, when Dob Haight, the runt of the gang, shoved me aside.  I staggered then, the contact with Jonah broken. Terrified, I saw the youngest of the Haights move through the crowd, in his way. Jonah stopped the horse with a tug at its reins. The beast whinnied and let out a groan.
“That’s a mighty fine animal you got there, stranger.” Said Dob Haight, brushing his moustache. “How much for it?”
“You can’t afford it, boy.” He grumbled and I felt my knees give way. His voice, it was so much like Jonah’s. It seemed much rougher, but I couldn’t mistake it. I was a fool then, see.
“Heh. No, I don’t have the money, stranger. So how about we make a trade?” said Dob, grabbing his revolver, pulling it off its holster. “How about, you give me the horse an’ I don’t put a bullet in your belly?”
Dob was a mean bastard, I’ll give him that. He was quick, rough, born a ruffian. He was barely eighteen and second in command in the Haight gang. Most of us feared the damn bastard. Still, he shouldn’t have died the way he did.
The horse, you see, it bit into his face as he was about to point his gun on its rider. Its teeth clamped on his cheeks and tugged, ripping flesh and muscle. Dob tried to fire his gun, when the horse got up on its hind legs and struck him across the chest with its hooves. He fell on the ground, wheezing. I could tell the blow had shattered something in his ribcage. Blood was gurgling out of his mouth, his hand desperately trying to raise his gun, defend himself, when the horse got up on its hind legs and stomped his head.
Dob Haight twitched, then was dead.
It had all happened so fast. We all just stared at this black horse, its mouth stained with blood, its hooves planted inside the boy’s caved-in skull. And all the while, the man I thought was my betrothed just stood there, expressionless. When at last he spoke, the crowd jumped back.
“I’m looking for Simon Haight!” his voice echoed through the street. A thunderous roar, like a  shot from a gun. He sounded so much like Jonah, then.
From the salloon’s door, I saw them come out in single file. The Haight gang, the six roughest bastards to ever plague the South. All of them armed, dressed in black. Long faces, full of angles, with beady eyes, all of them. They’d come here a year ago, made Gwynn’s Gulch their own and not one living soul ever stood up to them. They’d heard the challenge, but hadn’t seen the sight.
Standing in line there, backs straight, chests out. You could tell they used to be military men. One-time Expungers, they said, kicked out of the force. Their hands on their holsters, as if they’d been born with sidearms strapped to their hips.
Took them a minute to realize who the man with the crushed face was, under Jonah’s hooves. Then they started raving. Every one of them but Simon.
“Dob?”
“Sonuvabitch killed Dob!”
“Kill the bastard!”
“Poke his damn eyes out!”
 Simon Haight raised his arm then and they fell silent. He was the eldest, the tallest, roughest one of them all. He was hardly phased at the sight. After all, everyone in town knew Dob meant nothing to him.
“I heard you’re looking for me, stranger.”
The words that Jonah spoke then, he repeated to me, a few days later:
“Simon Haight, of the Irregulars. With your brothers, Farrel and Ned, you swore an oath to serve the Emperor in exchange for pardon from your execution, during the Vas’Iiri war. When the war was over and the Irregulars officially disbanded, you instead chose to turn against the very hand that fed you and opted to use your expertise and the aid of your colleagues, ex-convicts like yourself, to support the coup.”
“Yes, I did. And I won, too.” Said Simon, looking at his brothers. Farrell and Ned smiled at the stranger.
“Before the coup, you took place in a number of operations aimed to destabilize the Empire. One of them took place in a small town housing a Gunsmith facility, called Prosper. There, you attacked the garrison and took the populace hostage, in exchange for the foundry’s weapons stockpile.”
Simon stopped smiling then. He looked at the stranger with a puzzled look on his face, as if trying to remember him.
“When the Gunsmiths gave you the weapons, you set fire to the town hall, where you had placed the populace, leaving them there to burn alive. You doomed three hundred people to an agonizing death. I am here to make sure you repay this debt to them.”
Then Jonah drew his guns, those black, heavy things of his. The Haights were halfway through the draw, when he opened fire. To this day, I swear I can’t explain how he drew so fast. There was just this blur and then the cocking of hammers, before the roar.
Clive was killed first. Saw him stumble as he was about to take aim, his gun drawn. His head jerked backward and he fell on the ground like a ragdoll. The rest scattered, but I saw Pearce stumble, blood dripping from his thigh. The stranger must have got him.
They ran for cover, then, into the crowd who were running away in panic, throwing themselves behind old stack of crates. I felt a hand grab me by the neck, pulling me onto him. Simon was using me as a shield.
Jonah spurred his horse. Saw the beast run across the street, straight toward the crates Ned and Pearce used for cover. Farell took a shot at him from the saloon’s window. Saw the bullet tear through Jonah’s shoulder, blood dripping from the hole in his duster coat. He hardly took notice. This should have been my first clue, but I was a scared fool, then.
His horse crashed through the crates. Ned, who had raised his head to peak, had his neck broken, as the horse rammed onto him. Pearce cursed and took a shot at him, missing in his panic. Jonah shot him twice in the head. I’ve been told he put one bullet in each of his eyes.
“Kill him! Somebody take that bastard down, for God’s sake!” shouted Simon, at the top of his lungs. He dragged me inside the hardware store, wheezing and cursing. I couldn’t stop smiling. Thought myself as a damsel in distress and pretty soon, my vigilante would burst through the door to save me.
Dougal and Farrel got help, then. I couldn’t see it, since Simon was cowering, looking for cover, but I know this much: their lackeys, ten highwaymen they had dragged into Gwynn’s Gulch with them, came blazing out of the town’s houses, rushing to aid their bosses, weapons in hand.
There was thundering and the roar of guns and the chocking smell of gunpowder in the air, mixed with blood. There were curses and commands and screams of terror. Then, there was silence. Just the sound of a horse’s hooves, trotting closer to the store.
Click clack. Click clack. Click thunk. Thump thunk.
Simon got out of cover. He saw the figure of Jonah, on top of his horse. He’d led the beast all the way to the wooden steps to the store. Standing in the terrace, blocking the sun, he looked like an eclipse, shaped like a man.
 “Let the woman go, Simon.”
“You want her you bastard, you come take her!”
As the man I thought was Jonah climbed down his horse, I felt a shiver of delight and terror at the same time. Felt like the helpless dame, used to lure the brave gunman. Wouldn’t have that. Searching around, I saw an old screwdriver tucked under the counter. If only I could reach it…
Creeaakk. Thump. Thump. Thump.
“Not a step closer, you bastard!”
“I have killed your brothers and their lackeys, Simon. Let the woman go. Now.”
“Put your gun down, or I smear the wall with her brains, swear to God!”
He put his black revolvers down. My eyes were fixed on the screwdriver, my fingers inches away.
“Did as you asked. Now let her go.”  
“Kick them toward me.”
Thunk. Hssssskk.
Simon tossed me away then, as he reached for Jonah’s guns. I grabbed the screwdriver and lunged at him, shoving it into the back of his thigh.
“AAAGH! YOU BITCH!”
He tried to turn, but the man was already on him. Simon tried to raise his gun. I saw Jonah grab his arm, breaking it at the elbow, before he smashed his face into the counter. The last surviving Haight fell on the floor, unconscious.
I saw him then, covered in blood, his duster coat full of bullet holes. Saw him caked in blood and gunpowder and was very much afraid of him. His eyes looked at me and I felt like I was falling in pools of boiling tar.
“Jonah? Jonah Warden?” I asked, my voice trembling. “Is that you?”
The man I thought was Jonah helped me on my feet. Then, he took Simon away, on his shoulders, put him on the back of his horse, as if he were a goat, knocked out from the heat. I stumbled after him, waiting for a reply. He looked around and said:
“I will need rope. And fuel for a large fire.”
Someone rushed and gave him a tank of vegetable oil. Another brought him a length of rope. He nodded and got back on his horse, galloping away, without a single word. The man I thought was my betrothed was running away from me, again. I had to know, though. I was still young and reckless, see.
I ran after him, following him for many hours, until nightfall. Found him setting up camp by a cave. Hidden in the nearby bushes, I saw him tying Simon Haight up against an old, dried up tree. The horse whinnied as the man woke, screaming.
Jonah was talking, but the Haight was screaming obscenities at him. Couldn’t make sense out of either of them. But the gunman kept talking, on and on, despite Simon’s screams. When he was done, he took the stopper off the tank of oil and showered the poor bastard with it. Took him a while to realize what was going on.
 Simon sobbed and pleaded and cursed. But the gunman didn’t stop until he’d emptied every last drop.
Then he struck a match and threw it at him. Simon caught fire immediately then.
To this day, I cannot believe there can be a worse death, than the one by burning. The screams he let out, as his clothes, his skin, his hair caught fire, the steady roar and crackle of the flames as they devoured him, this is a sound that creeps into your dreams at night and pushes your sleeping mind in lightless, terrible realms, that smother you. And the smell, that terrible smell, of human flesh burning black, skin cracking, muscle popping. The body makes small, crackling sounds, like when setting fire to a log full of termites. You hear it screech and pop and make terrible noises, noises that go on for much longer than the screams.
I saw the burning remains of Simon Haight fall on the ground, and then lost consciousness.


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Παρασκευή 10 Φεβρουαρίου 2012

Stone Cold Countenance, Part 4


The yellow dog had been walking through the Salted Desert for days, its paws and fur matted by the stuff on the lifeless dirt. From time to time, it would lay down to alleviate the pain in its legs. They were full of cuts made by the rough terrain and the salt had seeped on the exposed flesh underneath, intensifying the pain.
From time to time, the yellow dog would forget and lick at the wounds with its long, forked tongue. The salt would sit on its tongue and make it retch, filling its head with a horrible, burning sensation. This place was toxic to both its kind and to the bipeds that had sent it here, for vastly different reasons though. 
As it lay there, its nostrils picked up the scent of something in the distance. Craning its head, it searched for the source. Focusing, despite the merciless heat beating down on it, the yellow dog saw the scent as it lingered above it, swirling in the air, a thread extending itself from the main body, like a thin tendril.
Sighing in a manner that was very much like its master’s, the yellow dog got up, flinching at the pain, as its scabs touched the salt. Letting out a yip, it then looked back at the main body of the scent and adjusted its sight. There it was. Just a stone’s throw away.
It slowly trotted toward the source. No longer having any reason to hurry, it closed in on the small, desiccated thing that had been its target. Looked human in shape, though just barely. It was a bundle, curled into a ball, its arms frozen round its belly, its knees all the way up to its chin. There was a circle made out of dried blood around it that smelled foul, like human waste. Its face was a mask of agony, its jaw unnaturally distended. The thing that was once this bundle must have died screaming.
The yellow dog crawled closer to the bundle and stuck its muzzle up to it, gently poking till it turned the thing around, so it could get a second whiff. The side that was on the ground, away from the sun’s rays, was caked in salt, but reasonably well preserved.
Yes. This was the one it had been looking for.
The yellow dog placed its paw on the bundle and extended its neck, opening its mouth wide open, much, much wider than a dog would. Its forked tongue crawled out of its mouth, extended and let out a soft schlipp sound, as wicked barbs extended from it. The tip of its tongue slid under the bundle’s eyelids and wrapped itself around the soft eyeball, tugging at it.
Releasing the eye from its socket, the yellow dog gave it another tug and severed the withered nerve. Then it retracted its tongue and placed the eye behind its back teeth, taking great care so as not to pop it.
Its mission accomplished, the yellow dog realized it had no real reason to hurry and decided to make the most of it. Moving the eyeball under its tongue, it shoved its muzzle into the dead man’s mouth and chewed on his tongue. It was salty and dry, but it was spiced with the terror of a slow and violent death.
The yellow dog savored the taste. It tasted like a five-day hunt through the desert, like the slow death of hope and death by agonizingly slow poisoning. It tasted also of a man, with a face like chiseled granite and eyes like pitch black beads.
It was the best meal it had had for a good while.
“Last train to Raker’s Bluff! All aboaaaard!”
The gambler shut the suitcase that contained his wares (and his entire fortune), tucked it under his armpit then rushed inside the wagon, as it began its crawl across the station. The wagon was packed and he almost fell onto a large man dressed in black, who looked him all over.
“ ’Scuse me, sir” said the gambler, tipping his hat. He gave the man his best smile, making sure he hid his missing teeth. Then, he noticed the conductor’s badge. His smile faded.
“Tickets, please” grumbled the conductor.
The gambler hadn’t been counting on that. The conductors hardly ever made the rounds this late.  Now he’d have to give the bastard that one ticket he’d been saving for the trip to the capital.
“Here you go.” Said the gambler, grudgingly handing the conductor a weathered old envelope. The conductor tore at it and took out his ticket, ripping at the paper.
Go easy on it, you fat bastard. Know how many cons I had to pull to get that?
“Third wagon, cabin 2b. You can find your own way there.” he grumbled, handing him the ticket. “Watch out for cutpurses, old man.”
“I’m a man of the soil and the desert wind, my good man. Ain’t got no purse worth cutting.” Said the gambler, taking back the ticket.
Pressing through the throng on the way to his cabin, the old man silently swore at his bad luck. Round him, the mass buzzed with the sound of conversation.
“So I tol’ him, I tol’ that sunovabitch, you tryinna trick me, you bastard? Then I socked him right between the eyes.”
“So a reverend, a gunman and a tax collector walk into a bar-“
“Say there was this man, on a black horse-“
“Get outta here!”
“I was passing through Vane flats, then see, so I suddenly hear some gunshots and then-“
“Hear that talk about Government people disappearing all over the place?”
“I heard that there was a Vas’Iiri agent done got killed in Thornsville…”
“Keep having this weird dream. There’s a yellow dog, see…”
“Watch it, old man!”
“Stop shoving, it’s bad enough as it is!”
The gambler went through the wagons, entering the third. He let out a sigh of exhaustion. Human conversation always took a lot out of him. Conning a man, now that was easy. There was just two of you and you steered the talk any way you fancied. But this? This was like trying to eavesdrop in a swarm of angry wasps.
Crossing the corridor, he looked for his cabin. There was someone already in there, his head hung low, sleeping soundlessly.  That’s a shame, thought the gambler. Could’ve passed the time with a bit of chit-chat. Opening the door quietly as he could, he sat across him.
He’d just opened his suitcase, ready to open himself that bottle of wine he’d been saving, when the man across him woke up. The gambler almost shot up on his feet.
“Damn. Scared the bejeesus outta me.” He muttered. The man across him straightened the creases on his duster coat and tipped his broad-rimed hat at him. The gambler could tell he was armed.
“I’m sorry if I woke you.”
“No problem.”
“Care for some wine?”
“I don’t drink.”
“Going through the day sober? Man oh man, you play it rough, don’t you?” Pop. “Got a name or should I call you stranger?”
“Stanger sounds good. What’s yours, then?”
“Uh-uh. You don’t give me your name, I don’t give you mine. I’m the gambler.”
“Con-man, huh?”
“Nope. Just a poor lonesome gambler with a peddling problem. Been called a cheater by sore losers across the regions numerous times, though.”
“What’s your game then, gambler?”
The gambler smiled, as he leaned to snap his briefcase open. Fumbling inside, he took out a weathered old deck of playing cards.
“Klaberjass, bezique, ombre, you name it, I can play it, stranger. Take your pick.”
“Got anything else in there? Or is it just stacked with playing cards from top to bottom?”
“Just my wares: leather belts, playing cards, tobacco, some things for the ladies to pretty themselves up so they can sink their claws in unsuspecting men.”
“Sounds like you’ve set yourself quite a trap there, haven’t you?”
“I’ve never tricked someone into playing with me yet, stranger. And I see you still haven’t picked a game.”
“Ever heard of Spite and Malice?”
“You play Spite and Malice sober? Brave man.”
The gambler took out his deck, removed the two Gremlin cards and shuffled. The stranger stared at his hands the whole time, tracking his every move.
“That’s a northerner’s game, isn’t it? You a rockbiter, stranger?”
“Is that what you southern softskins call us nowadays?”
The gambler stopped shuffling and placed the deck on the collapsible tray between the benches.
“Cut it.”
The stranger cut the deck slowly, never taking his eyes off the gambler. Returning the stare, the old man drew the card at the top of his pile. The stranger did the same, not missing a beat.
“Empress.”
“Hermit. Guess I’m going first.” Said the stranger.
They went through the first round, drawing cards and throwing them on the piles. The gambler seemed about to win that first round, when the stranger went ahead and drew an Emperor, taking the entire pile in his hands.
“That’s one-nil, gambler.”
“Bet you’re pleased as punch, beating a man three times your age. Bet your mother would be proud.”
“She would. She taught me, after all.”
The gambler gathered the cards and started shuffling them again. The stranger stared the whole time.
“What’s a rockbiter like you doing this far down south? Thought you people melt in the heat.”
“I’m here on business.”
“What kind of business requires carrying a gun?” said the gambler and saw the stranger tug at his duster coat, obviously alarmed at this.
“How can you tell?”
“You sit like you’re carrying a gun, you look at me like you’re carrying a gun and you talk like you’re carrying a gun. You ain’t exactly discreet about it, stranger.”
The stranger kept his silence. The gambler placed the deck on the tray.
“You Government, stranger?”
The stranger cut the deck in silence.
“See, I can tell you’re not a gun for hire, because guns for hire don’t take the train, especially when they’re packing. Too many Marshalls move around in trains, see. It’s too risky. Bishop.”
“Marquis.”
“Damn. See what I’m talking about? There’s no discipline to this damn game. It’s just blind luck! No skill, no finesse, just…drawing cards!”
“Thought blind luck was the name of the game with you gamblers.”
“You thought wrong, stranger.”
The second round was way more hectic than the last. The gambler and the stranger tossed cards, shuffled the piles, each trying to outdo the other with every draw.
“How about we call it a tie?”
“A tie sounds good. Where was I? Ah, yes. I was saying how you don’t look like no gun for hire. You look more like a Marshall, what with the black clothes and the grim stare and the long, dark silence. Am I getting closer?”
“You’re getting way too nosey, gambler.”
“Struck a chord there, didn’t I?” said the gambler, as he began to gather the discarded piles. The stranger stopped him then, taking the cards into his own hands, and then started to shuffle.
 “You’re here about the murders, aren’t you? All them people turning up dead?”
The stranger stopped shuffling and placed the deck on the tray.
“That’s just plain old hearsay.”
“Oh, come now, it’s all over the place. Heard talk of a man on a black horse, dealing out justice with his guns. Heard he waltzed into Vane Flats, took a Government official hostage.”
“Cut the deck.”
“Week later, hear people say he showed up in Thronsville, killed a man that turned out was a Vas’Iiri Jaguar. “
The gambler flashed the stranger a grin, as he cut the deck.
“Heard he took buckshot to the chest, didn’t even flinch.”
“Didn’t have you for a sucker for tall tales, gambler. Twelve.”
“Tall tales don’t spread like wildfire cross these regions, lest they got some truth in them. So what’s the score, Marshall? You better own up now. Aces.”
The stranger drew his first card and tossed it on the tray, making it slide on the varnished wood. An eight. The gambler could feel him crack. He drew the next card slowly, chipping at his nerves.
“There’s talk of the Old Guard, dealing out vengeance from beyond the grave, stranger. Of the Vas’Iiri trying to pull off another invasion.”
The gambler drew his card. Bishop. He slid the pile on his side.
“The Vas’Iiri aren’t a concern. Most of them are agents, left behind by the main invasion force. No organization, no ties to each other, no agenda worth speaking of. It’s the Old Guard that’s0 been a thon at the Government’s side. Ever heard of a man called Johren Crom?” said the stranger, drawing a card from his deck, tossing it on the tray. Empress.
“Can’t say I have.” Replied the gambler, drawing a card. Sixes. The stranger slid the pile on his side of the tray.
“He was an Imperial Gunsmith, see. Finest one there ever was. There’s word he’s still out there. That’s he’s the one behind all this.”
“Thought the Gunsmiths died off with the rest of the Old Guard, when the Revolution ended.”
The gambler drew his card. Four. He sighed and tossed it on the tray. The stranger smiled and drew his own. Four. Tie. Both cards stayed on their pile, untouched.
“That’s what the Government thought, too. They thought dropping the L-Bomb on those bastards would wipe them all out. Turns out Gunsmiths are hardier than cockroaches, however.”
“You mean they survived the Bomb?”
“No. They had gone into hiding, most likely, about the time the Revolution took off. The Government has reason to believe there are cells of Old Guard remnants just lying in wait, ready to stage a coup any day now.”
“But it’s been ten years. There’s no way someone could hide that long and make a coup happen at the same time!”
“Not unless they’ve been planning for that since the Vas’Iiri war ended. What with the dehydration bomb and the rain of salt, there’s no way the Empire couldn’t have seen the Revolution coming.”
The gambler stopped halfway drawing his card. The stranger went on.
“So, I started thinking, see. What if people like Johren Crom and the rest of the Gunsmiths had stockpiled Imperial resources just for this eventuality? What if they’d planned a decade ahead, so they could bring down the Revolution by causing a panic, strategically striking at Government officials?”
“Sounds like too much trouble. Besides, how could they take over, now that the Emperor’sdead?”
“Well, I’ve got every reason to believe they aren’t planning a takeover. They’re just in it for revenge, see. If Gunsmiths are behind all this, then they lost everything on the day the Government dropped the bomb on the old capital. They’d have lost their purpose, their backing, they’d be desperate people after a desperate cause.”
“That’s why they’d be killing people left and right.”
“That’s why I decided to check up on them. Why I decided to pour into every last bit of information on them, to track them down and find each and every one of them.”
“Don’t sound like a Marshall’s job to me.”
“It’s not a Marshall’s job.” Said the stranger, as he removed his gun from its holster. It was a heavy thing, well-oiled that clicked lightly as he cocked it. Looked like it could take down a bear with a single shot.  The gambler had gone pale. “It’s Expunger jurisdiction.”
“What the Devil do you think you’re doing?”
“Taking you in. I know you’re Johren Crom, see. I’ve seen the stills. I’ve been after you for six months now. Was gonna give up, go back to the Capital, when all of a sudden, you pop up right in front of me.”
“You better put that gun back in its holster, son.”
“You better be quiet, old man. No one ever said I had to take you in alive. Now, you can be a good lad and come with me nice and quiet, or I can put a bullet in your brainpan. How does that sound?”
“I see.” Said the gambler, his expression suddenly grim. His eyes stared right back at the Expunger. The gambler’s eyes looked like little pools of emerald-green water, surrounding a bottomless pit. The gambler seemed ten years younger, somehow, his very presence taking over the cabin. The Expunger’s hand trembled, beads of sweat formed on his forehead. “You know your gun won’t work on me, boy.”
“Bullshit.”
“Try me.”
The Expunger pulled the trigger. The gun’s hammer struck a full chamber, but nothing happened. No ignition, no flash, no puff of gunpowder smoke. For an impossibly long second, the Expunger prayed to God for his gun to fire.
His prayer was answered, but the very shell exploded in the chamber. Gunpowder burned his hand and face. Shards of metal tore through his hand and bit into his face, like a hundred invisible needles.
The gambler stared at the Expunger, as he writhed and squirmed on the bench, screaming like a maniac at the pain. Calmly, the gambler walked to him, reached his hand out and took his other gun, a serviceable revolver, far less fancy than the gun that had just failed him.
The gambler then struck him with his own pistol across the head, again and again, till the Expunger stopped screaming.
““How old are you, kid?”
“T-t-twenty-five.”
“Like shit you are! You look barely old enough to drink.”
The gambler pressed the gun’s muzzle against the boy’s forehead, pushing his head against the wall behind him. Gently, he cocked the hammer.
“I’m going to ask you a question. You’re going to answer it, truthfully, or I will shoot you through the head and the Expungers will have lost one more stupid bastard by my hand. Understood?”
The boy whimpered and nodded yes.
“Good. There is a man, has been seen in the region. You said he could be a Gunsmith, like me. One that’s kidnapped that Government man in Vane Flats. Know who I’m talking about?”
“Yes…yes!”
“Is there an Expunger squad sent out to find him?”
“There is one…in Thornsville…went to meet them when I was looking for you…”
“How many men?”
“Ten strong.”
“That’s a regular posse, isn’t it? Do you know which way they’re heading? Where they’re going to look for that Gunsmith next?”
“They…they said they’d head for Sarat…said they’d look for help there.”
“Sarat? What the Devil’s in Sarat?”
“Don’t know. Kept talking about a black woman...never told me her name…”
The gambler nodded, thinking about what he’d just heard. The black woman. No, no, that couldn’t be her. They couldn’t have let her live, not after all this. But if she were alive and if she was on the Government’s side…
“Thanks, kid.” Said the gambler, uncocking his hammer. The boy let out a sigh of relief.
Then the gambler wrapped his hands round his throat and crushed his windpipe, staring at him right in the eye as he choked and kicked and squirmed, till he was still and silent, his tongue a swollen thing, popping out of his lips.
He went through his belongings and took his Expunger badge, a thing of hammered bronze, depicting the skull of a large saber-toothed cat, twin sabers crossed between its teeth. Then, the gambler set the kid’s head down, so that he’d look like he was sleeping, sat down on the bench against him and looked out in the distance, watching the world crawl slowly by.
Somewhere in the Salted Desert, the yellow dog was slowly walking home, its belly filled with the flesh of a traitor. Under its tongue, the eye that had seen its body’s killer, taken from the man it had devoured. The yellow dog traced his countenance across the forks on its tongue and saw him in its thoughts.
Now that was worthy prey.
Content and excited at the same time, the yellow dog sat on its haunches and howled. From miles away, vultures scattered and wolves cowered in their caves. In its master’s abode, a silver-lined mirror clouded over.
Somewhere far away, on top of a black horse, the man with the face like chiseled granite felt an ill-wind blow against his back. Despite himself, he raised his duster’s collar flaps and shivered.

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Τρίτη 7 Φεβρουαρίου 2012

Stone Cold Countenance, Part 3


He turned the key in the lock twice, after stepping into the little room he now called home. Downstairs, the saloon was silent. The last cluster of drunkards had headed home an hour ago. Now, he only heard the steady clinking of the glasses and the groaning of the chair legs, being dragged across the hardwood floor, as the innkeeper and his helper tidied up for the night.
The old broom brushing the floor sounded like an old mouser’s purr, full and content. It soothed his nerves, giving him the strength to unlock his drawer, reach inside and take out an old, weathered notebook. From the hidden bottom, he took out an old, ivory-handle pen (his most prized possession). His fingers traced the small, intricate carvings with reverence.
On the handle,there was the very shape round which his life had so far orbited. The engraved jaguar purred, in his mind’s ear, in unison with the broom dragging downstairs. He could feel the beast playfully dragging its claws across the calluses of his thumb, its teeth nibbling at the hard skin.
He looked at the animal, made immortal in ivory, forever pouncing at its enemies, teeth bare and shuddered. A lifetime ago, there was the sound of drums made from taut human skin and the rattle of necklaces made out of human teeth on ceramic plates of armor.
With trembling hands, he opened the notebook. It was a battered, weathered old thing, its pages cracked and yellow. The faint scent of old ink and the sight of words written by someone he used to be took him back. A lifetime ago, there were barefoot marches across a rocky peninsula, the green hell he once called home slowly creeping away into the horizon. There were azure banners with intricate designs, mercilessly whipping at the morning breeze. 
The words on paper were symbols. Each symbol was a meaning unto itself and a collection of meanings spelled out thoughts, formed and written down by a dead man. It was the story of his life, written in a language that had no symbol that stood for retreat, mercy or hope. It was a language given unto them by bloodthirsty gods, the language of the Sun himself, who retreated into his great marble palace each night, to feast on human souls.
A lifetime ago, there were blades made out of chipped obsidian, sharp, terrible things that, in the hands of an experienced warrior, could rip through flesh and cut through tendon in one swipe. There was congealed blood in the grooves of the temple floors.
He read the last entry. It was written by a warrior tasked to wait among the tall grasses like a snake, hidden near and out of sight of the enemy’s herd. The snake would lie in wait, killing those who strayed from the herd, the weakest (or boldest) among them. He’d keep the herds in a constant state of panic, unable to ally against the common foe, making sure they were weak enough for his masters to crush, once and for all, when they came back at full strength.
Pompous words, written by a hypocrite, which no longer held any meaning. He’d strayed from that purpose long ago, his snakeskin now a part of him. He’d been part of the enemy herd, even made friends with some of them. He’d lived, laughed and shared some of their troubles. He couldn’t bring himself to hurt any of them now, even if he wanted to.
There were only two pages left now, in the little battered book. He tried to come up with something to write down, something that would undo everything that was in the pages that came before it. Something that would tell his story here, among the enemy herd, which would somehow tear down the sovereignty of the symbols that he would no longer even acknowledge as his mother tongue.
 He uttered one of the symbols. The sound that came out his mouth was the sound a stone ax-head makes, striking a tree. Surprised at the sound escaping his lips, he shut his mouth. In his mind, the jaguar growled menacingly.
A lifetime ago, there was the sound of a severed head, tumbling down the steps of a ziggurat.
Thump. Thumpthump.
“Doc? You in there?”
The man in the room nearly jumped with terror. He had almost replied to the innkeeper in his mother tongue.
Thump. Thumpthump.
 “You all right? You didn’t look that well tonight.”
“I’m…I’m fine. Thank you.” He muttered. His fingers traced the pouncing jaguar.
“You can come down, if you want. There’s only me and the kid down stairs, so we’re gonna shut down for the night. Care for a drink before you hit the sack?”
“I’d love to.”
“See you downstairs, doc.”
He let out a long sigh of relief after the innkeeper walked back downstairs. How could he be all right? He’d seen his future in the trail of the sortes bonesthis morning. He’d seen, at the borders of his mirror, his killer’s face. He was destined to die,this night.
He’d been prepared for this. For a faceless, terrible death.  For every kind of torture imaginable. He’d been told that, when he died, his soul would descend into the lightless depths of the Inverted Heavens, to fight against the Tzitzime with all the other dead warriors before him at the Sun God’s side. There, he’d be immortal. No wound, no matter how great, would make him back down from the fight. Were he a good and able soldier, then the Sun-god would deign him fit to return among the living, to serve the Emperor, his son.
He was no longer a soldier, however. The Sun-god was no longer the preserver of the universe for him. This life he lived, it was no longer just a pause between wars, an endless cycle of pain and violence. It was a life he wanted to keep on living.
He got out and walked down the stairs, to the saloon. The old wood creaked with each step. For some reason, he was unable to shake the feeling he was a stranger in his own body, one he had hijacked years ago from its rightful owner.
The saloon seemed so much smaller, now that the patrons were gone. Its benches and tables were like elderlyleopards, covered in spots from spilt drinks and cigarette burns. The old piano hunched in the back, an old, sad thing, wilting in the corner, deprived of affection. The innkeeper sat behind the bar counter, keeping an eye on his help, as he kept polishing the old wood.
“Hey there, doc!”
“You closed down early tonight.”
“It’s the good Lord’s day tomorrow, doc! All my patrons are going to ask Him for something, see and they can’t all be wasted!”
“Always thought God was above such petty matters.”
“No he’s not. The only ones he cuts some slack for are innkeepers, doctors and whores. It’s in the good book, see.”
The boy laughed, pausing his scrubbing. The innkeeper whacked him in the back of the head.
“You’re still under scrutiny, boy. So get scrubbing.”
“Don’t be so hard on the boy.”
“He was a boy two weeks ago. Became a man when he stuck it to my daughter, that ungrateful little hussy. He’s working for me till his sins are paid off in full.”
“What about your daughter, then?”
“I absolved her first, after she got belted. What can I get you, doc?”
“What have you got that isn’t watered?”
“Doc, you know I’d never serve you any of that horse-piss.”  
The innkeeper took a small jug from under the counter and poured its contents in a shot glass. The doctor gulped it down, before even taking a whiff of the liquor. It was  bitter enough to make him want to retch and made his tongue go numb.
“What is this thing?”
“Root wine, doc. How was it?”
“It was like getting my tongue bit by a damn viper, that’s how it was!”
“Have a couple more glasses. Bet you’ll like it then!”
 The innkeeper filled his glass again. This time, he sniffed at it, carefully. It had an acrid, metallic scent that crept up his nostrils and set the back of his eyes on fire. He let it settle in, feeling it turn into a slow, happy buzz. A lifetime ago, there were bare chested women with emerald-green eyes, their skin the color of sunset.
“How long have we known each other, Rom?” asked the doctor, peering into his glass.
“Five years, by the end of the month. Are you gonna buy me an anniversary gift?”
 “No, it’s just…I got to thinking. About my life, that is. Can you believe I can’t really recall anything since I got here?”
“Can’t handle your liquor, can you, doc?”
“That’s not what I meant. I meant, I can’t remember anything vividly. Sure, I can dig into my brain for some facts, some faces, but that’s all. The rest is just sight and sound. They don’t seem to have any weight anymore.”
“You sound like my father. He thought the same way, since he got back from the Vas’Iiri  war. He was a Salted Desert veteran, see. Just him and a handful of men came home after that nightmare was over. I must have been fifteen at the time. Kept pestering the poor bastard, trying to get him to tell me what happened back there. He gave me pretty much the same talk you did.”
He gulped down his drink, then. The glass fell from his hands, on the bar. A few drops creeped across the wood’s surface and formed a familiar shape.
“Kept thinking the old man was holding back on me. That he was somehow trying to shelter me from whatever I could have found out about that day. Looking back, I just think he didn’t have it in him anymore.”
From the shape, a word emerged. The word which had haunted him, that had burned itself into his brain that day.
“I think that what he saw…hurt him, somehow. In his mind, see. And he never really recovered from that.”
Death.
“When the Government got in power, they made us move, all of us Old Guard families. He died a few days after we got in town. I remember my mother was relieved. He’d found a way out of what he’d seen then, she said.”
“You’d never told me about your father. My condolences.”
“My father was dead long time before we even came here, doc. I remember my mother told me he was like a sick tree. Rotting from the inside.”
The doctor looked right back at the shape on the bench. Had a single drop been off, then the word it formed would have been Peace.
 “It was the Vas’Iiri, that did this to him. He killed a lot of them, on that day, this much I’m sure of. Heard everyone talk for days about the way they beat their retreat. Hope they all got their holes in their backs, like proper cowards.”
“Have you ever seen a Vas’Iiri?”
“I haven’t and I never will. We pushed them far from our borders and killed those that were left behind, hunted them down like they were dogs.”
“What if some of them evaded capture? What if you found out there were Vas’Iiri agents everywhere, scattered across the regions, hidden for a good part of a decade. What would you do then?”
“I’d buy myself a mile of rope and find a good, tall tree where I could hang them all. One by one.”
“And what if one of them was a good friend of yours?”
“I’d hang him first.” The innkeeper unsheathed a long-bladed knife with a curved blade, a thing made out of chiseled obsidian and nailed it down on the stool. “First though, I’d cut his belly open, so I could watch him spill his insides before his neck snapped.”
The sight of the blade unearthed secrets he’d thought long buried from his mind. A lifetime ago, an instructor had taught him to split the enemy open from side to side: a single swipe, one end to another, shaped like the Moon goddess, as she rests.
“You know of any Vas’Iiri, doc?”
“One of them is going to die here, tonight. That’s all I know.”
 The innkeeper was about to speak, when the door to the saloon creaked open. The doctor looked at the figure walking in. His every step seemed to reverberate across the hardwood floor.
“We’re closed, stranger.”
“I just need to rest for a while. Just came from Vane Flats.” Said the stranger and sat by the bench. The doctor snuck a peek at his face, then looked away. His eyes were pitch-black beads.
“You a messenger?” The innkeeper asked.
“More or less. What are you serving?”
The doctor stole a glance at the stranger. He wore a duster coat and a broad-rimed hat, both caked in dust. The stranger looked as if he’d just burst out of the desert. A lifetime ago, he’d heard the legend of the clay warrior, sent by the Sun god to slay the men who had sided with the Tzitzime, many years before the first sunset.
The innkeeper poured some root wine for the stranger, his eyes darting back and forth between the doctor and the boy. The stranger took the shot glass, sniffed at the content as if he were a dog, then put it back on the bench, untouched. He looked at the long, curved knife and said:
“That’s an impressive knife. Yours?”
The doctor tried hard not to look at the stranger. He could feel the hairs on the back of his head stand at attention, every time he’d hear his voice. Keeping his head down, he stole glances at him.
“It’s my father’s. Ripped it off a dead Vas’Iiri Jaguar’s hands, after he crushed his windpipe.”
The stranger nodded. His right hand slid down his coat, all the way to his waist. The doctor looked then, at the mirror across the stranger and noticed in it the outline of his face, for the very first time. His heart skipped a beat, right then.
That was the face in the mirror. That was the man that would kill him.
It was then that his instinct dug up years of training he could have sworn he’d forgotten. His hand went for the knife with blinding speed, his muscles taught under his skin. His fingers wrapped round the handle and applied just the right pressure, enough to free the blade’s tip. With the blade now freed, his arm made a horizontal sweep, aimed at the stranger’s neck. His momentum and the sharpness of the blade would be more than enough to sever the stranger’s head from his body.
Each move was carried out perfectly. The angle, the blade’s path, were both sublime. All that was left was for the blow to connect. Trace the blade in the likeness of the Moon goddess, as she rests. For an instant, he shut his eyes and waited for the soft, almost inaudible hiss the stranger’s thick neck would make, as the obsidian edge would cut through flesh, muscle, tendon and bone in one motion. His only regret was that, after this, he’d have to kill the innkeeper and the boy and leave this town for another. He’d have to hide all over again, somewhere else. But at least, he’d be alive.
Opening his eyes, he saw that the stranger had ducked his dead, dodging the blow. His right hand was a blur, reaching at something on his waist. The next instant, he was staring right in the bottomless depth of his gun’s barrel.
“You’re a Vas’Iiri Jaguar.” Said the man, in the doctor’s mother tongue.
 “I am a Jaguar clad in snake skin.”
“A spy.  You’re an agent with the intent of enacting sabotage and causing panic behind enemy lines.”
The innkeeper looked mortified at the scene. He kept glancing back and forth between the doctor, a close friend of his for five years now and the stranger, as they spoke in gibberish.
“What the Devil is this?” he exclaimed. He received no reply.
“There’s no way you’re Government. I didn’t see any badge.”
“I was sent by the Old Guard. Came all the way from the Salted Desert for you, once I’d taken care of a traitor.”
“You can’t be Old Guard. The Government killed them off..”
“I’m not one of them. I’m just carrying out their revenge.”
The innkeeper stepped back and made a vague signal at the kid. The boy creeped to the other side of the bench and took an old, well-oiled shotgun from its hiding place under the counter. The boy placed it in the innkeeper’s hands, then backed away.
“You made me lose my cover. I’ve been living for a half a decade here now, not having harmed a single soul in this town and with nobody being the wiser. I was one of you. Now I’m just a Jaguar.”
“I’m sorry to hear this. But I have to kill you.”
“Spare me the drama, stranger.”
 “Doc, get down!” shouted the innkeeper, as he cocked both barrels of his gun and shot the stranger. The man was blasted right on his chest, falling on his back. The doctor raised his knife, pouncing at the incapacitated man.
The innkeeper barely had time to see the doctor in mid-air, his blade already at the end of a deadly arc, as the edge ripped through the coat, into the man’s flesh. A trickle of blood ran down between the ripped folds of the fabric. The damn thing seemed impossibly sharp, then and there. Another second, and it would have cut the stranger’s arm clean off.
Then, he heard the gunshots. The doctor was tossed back in the air, then fell hard on the floor, clutching at a hole in his chest. He stared at the stranger, as he got up, with a huge white spot on his duster coat, where the shot got him. There was the smell of cordite, seeping from the barrels of his revolvers.
I never saw him draw that other revolver, did I? How the hell did he do it? How could he draw the other damn thing then shoot, when he was getting his damn arm cut off?
The stranger walked toward the doctor, who writhed on the floor with a hole in his belly. Turned him on his back with his boot, as if he were a dying turtle. The doctor coughed blood, then said, in his mother tongue:
“In my room… top floor. There’s a pen and a notepad there. Please, take them. Don’t let them find out who I really was. Don’t…don’t want them to think I was going to betray them…”
The stranger shot the doctor once with each gun, before he was done pleading. A bullet in the chest and one between the eyes. The doctor was still, then. The innkeeper was shaking like a leaf.
“Shot you… I shot you right in the damn chest! Why are you still standing?”
The stranger looked at the white spot on his chest and smiled a mirthless smile.
“Next time you want someone taken down, use buckshot.” He tossed a tarnished silver dollar on the counter. “Rock salt is for kittens.”
The stranger turned around and left the saloon then, just like that. In the doctor’s room, on the top floor, the dry desert wind rustled the dead man’s journal pages. The paper ruffled, silently narrating the story of his crimes. He was absolved in the final pages, but he was a proud sinner and a traitor in the first, once more. The man who died on that night was a Vas’Iiri Jaguar, with the snake skin he had once donned lifeless and cracked on the salloon’s floor downstairs. The doctor, who thought he’d escaped the burden of slaughtered children, poisoned wells and the curses of widows was gone, just like that.



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Πέμπτη 2 Φεβρουαρίου 2012

Stone Cold Countenance, Part 2


Now:
He’d been running across the desert for days, now. There was terror in his eyes, spiced with a glimmer of waning hope. His tongue was a pink, gummy thing in his dry mouth and his insides were knotted up by fear. His breath was shallow and rugged, like a dying dog’s.
Tripping on a stone, he fell to the ground. His lips touched the salted dirt. Licking them reflexively, he felt his tongue shrivel and go numb, like a dying snail. Spitting out bile, he staggered to his feet. His legs and jacket were covered in white patches, and creaked as he moved.
 Despite himself, he shot a glance behind him. He was there, at the outmost edge of his field of vision. A patch of black, framed by the midday sun. Seemed like a thing out of myth, the way his horse and his body seemed joined at the waist, standing perfectly still, staring at him with seemingly unblinking eyes. He let out a hoarse scream and tried to run, but his knees buckled and his legs failed him. Half-crawling, he reached a shady spot by a rock and lay there, gasping for breath.
This sick little game of his had been going on for days now. The man on the black horse never gave him a chance to catch his breath, to put his thoughts in order. He hadn’t even uttered a single word, since it all started. Every time he caught up with him, every time he’d find him (and he always did), the man would give him a reason to keep going at it.
He’d told him, when the game started:
“I was told to make you suffer.”
Those words clawed into his soul. There was something in that stranger’s eyes, those pitch-black, soulless beads that looked down on him from horseback. Something that stared right back at him, every time he’d catch up to him, that made him feel as if he were a little kid again, hunted down by wolves with all too human vices.
 His right hand sent a steady pulse of pain right up his arm, a pain that nested in his skull. The stranger had broken it at the wrist. The skin was blue-black now, like a drowned-man’s tongue. Not thinking clearly, he touched it and felt the bone crawl under his skin. The shock almost made him retch, made faceless black insects crawl up behind his eyelids.
The horse’s figure blocked the sun, a few years later, by his reckoning. For a moment there, he could swear he felt relieved by it. But it was then that the terrified little monkey inside his head tugged at his thoughts, digging out the terror that had been muffled by the pain. He looked at the stranger, his eyes full of fear.
“What do you want from me? In God’s name, what did I ever do to you?”
The man with the face that looked like chiseled granite looked at him the way one would look at a stomped roach, stuck under one’s boot. His pitch-black eyes stared at him, pinned him back against the rock.
“Please…kill me or let me go…no more….I’m begging you…”
The stranger stuck his hand inside a pouch on his duster coat. For a second there, the hunted man hoped he’d pull out his black revolver and shoot him. A bullet in the head, or one in the heart. A quick death, that’d be something to wish for, right then.
The water flask was dropped between his legs. He could hear the water slosh around, inside the full canteen. His insides grumbled, both by joy and fear.
“Water? Water? Oh dear God, thank you!”
With trembling hands, he snatched the flask and uncorked it. He was about to take his first sip, when the stranger kicked him in the face. His head bumped against the rock and some of the precious water spilled on his jacket, washing the salt away.
“Run” the stranger grumbled. He leaped to his feet then and did just that. His legs pumped at the dry, dead ground beneath him, as this fresh terror whipped him on. The cantine in his hands, he’d bring it to his lips and take a sip every now and then. Some of it spilled out, but he felt like he was showered by molten gold.
3 days ago:
“Run”
“Who the Devil you think you are? Think ‘cause you took out three of my men, you’re gonna walk away with that? Know what the rest are gonna do to you when they get you, you? You ain’t getting away, you sonuvabtich, y’hear? They’re gon-AAAAAGGGHH!”
“Guess you didn’t hear right. I said run.”
“You broke my wrist, you fucker! I’ll kill you, y’hear? I’m gonna break your legs and-“
Click
“You wouldn’t dare. You ain’t getting’ shit if you kill me, I can tell that much! You ain’t gonna pull that trigger, you bastard, I know it! You wouldn’t dare!”
Bang
Now:
At night, he stopped by some cactus trees and made a stone for his pillow. The water on his jacket had dried of hours ago and his flask was almost empty. He sighed in relief, as he heard the precious last gulps of water slosh  inside.
The hunt would always cease at night. The stranger would always stop at the edge of his field of vision, blanketed by the night. He’d stand perfectly still and look at him as he slept. The hunted man wondered whether he slept at all in the first place. He remembered how he’d tried to slip away on the first night, how he thought that the stranger had surely fallen asleep on his post. He also recalled how the stranger caught up with him, grabbed him by the back of the neck as if he were a kitten and beat the shit out of him.
His tongue teased the gum where the stranger had busted one of his teeth. His mind wandered back to the bets he’d make with his brothers, trying to spit as deftly as they could through their missing teeth. He’d always win those bets. He’d always win every bet.
He was a gambler alright He’d always bet on the winner.  For example, when he switched sides, leaving the Old Guard and fighting for the Government instead. He’d sold his information for a steep price and had given his new friends some quick and decisive victories.
All in all, he’d had a good life. Till now, that is. Filled with easy money and loose women. And when some of his Government friends got mad at his misconduct, he still got off scot-free. Got himself some guns and some goons, then crawled off to a lazy little border town, Vane Flats and made it his own.  
Those were the days.
He slept peacefully, that night.
4 days ago.
“What the hell is this?”
“It’s all I have, sir. Everything I have on me.”
“Then why don’t you pay me in kind? You got stuff right here.”
“I’m afraid I can’t do that.”
And whys that?”
“I give off my merchandize, there’ll be nothing here for me to sell! Caravans don’t come by here anymore and then I’ll have to go to Sarat myself to get more! I can’t risk that, not the way things are, right now!”
“Well, what do you know!”
“So, you see, I’m begging you, take the money. I’ll pay you back after I’ve-“
“How about this: lend us your daughters, instead.”
My-my girls?”
“Or just the pretty one. Your pick.”
“Hahaha, good one, boss!”
“I…I can’t let you do that…”
Click
“Who asked you, maggot?”
“No, please, don’t-“
“Eldon Torm?”
“Who the hell are you?”
“I’m the last, worst thing you’ll see before you die.” 
Now:
His teeth chattered so hard they hurt. He was shivering from the cold. The nights in the Salted Desert were so much worse than the days. In the daytime, the sun beat down on you, mercilessly, staring you right in the eye with a big, shit-eating grin, as he made you suffer.
At nights, though, the heat subsided and the cold would coil round you joints and your innards, crawl up your nostrils and behind your eyelids, make a nest in your lungs. It killed you slowly, taking its sweet time. He curled his body up into a ball and slipped the palms of his hands under his forearms, trying to preserve what little warmth he had left.
Stealing a look back, he could see the shape of the stranger. Even on a starless night, he could make out his figure. He looked like a vast, black hole, filled with evil, primeval eyes that stared back at him their claws dragging themselves silently across his soul.
He lay down again, trying to lull himself back to sleep, trying to ignore this big old hole in the world, as it watched him sleep.
2 days ago:
“Just name your price. You want money? I got enough money to buy you another horse, like this one! No? Not money? You want women? Is that what you want? Man oh man, I can get you so much tail, you’ll get sick to your stomach of it! I got everything you want! I got Government people working for me, just ask and I’ll make it happen! C’mon, what do you say?”
“I want you to get running.”
“What? Are you insane? I’m giving you the chance of a lifetime, you bastard and you’re still going on with that shit? I’ll give you double, no, triple what they offered you! Come on, just scoot over on your horse and take me back to Vane Flats, y’hear? Come, now-UFF!”
Whump.
“What the hell did you do that for? No..nonono!”
Whump. Wham. Wham. Crack.
“AAAAAHHHH! Stop! For God’s sake, stop! Don’t-AAIIEE!”
CCRRAAACK.
Now:
Daylight.Oh, dear God, daylight. He saw the sun rise up, dispelling the night’s feezing cold and terror creeped up his spine and crawled back in his head. The stranger spurred his horse and it slowly trotted toward him. The hunt started, once again.
 He didn’t bother getting up, this time. In his heart, he knew he couldn’t get away. Even if he ran, till he exhausted every ounce of his strength, the stranger would still catch up with him and torment him some more. He didn’t have to run, then, he thought. He didn’t have to keep up this sick game of his, like an animal. He could just lay down and wait for the sweet release of death, right then and there, on the dead dirt.
His troubles would be over and done, then and there. Just like that.
But the stranger would still reach him, not letting him get off that easy. He’d beat him up some more and if he tried to put up a fight, then he’d bust his leg, or worse, he’d cut the inside of his thigh and let the blood flow, so every vulture for miles would follow him and wait for him to collapse from exhaustion, so they could pick the flesh from his bones at their leisure.
No. He wouldn’t let that happen. He’d die on his own damn terms. He’d tire himself out first, though. He’d give the son of a bitch a run for his money, then take his own life, deprive him of his little source of amusement. He’d fight the way the Old Guard had taught him to.
Let no wound, no bars, no chains, detract me from my solemn duty…
He laughed out loud, as the oath crossed his mind. The sound that came out sounded more like a hoarse bark than any sound a human being would make. His mind wandered back, to the way things were. How he’d fought, in the saddle or on foot, with sabre and gun in hand, with good men at his side. How they’d stuggled to save the world, to uphold the ideals that they though made them great, to keep their doomed Empire from falling apart.
They won their battles, their small, insignificant victories, but the war had already turned sour. Each day, more and more of their number died in vain, trying to stem the catastrophe that is now their everyday reality.
There was a lake here once. He reckoned that the place he lay right now was once covered by water. He’d fought at the banks of this lake, against the Vas’Iiri, leading the charge. He’d fought like a rabid dog, that day. He’d given those bastards a run for their money. They’d pushed them back, toward the border, well away out of the Empire.
Then the Vas’Iiri detonated their withering bombs. He saw his men and their men die in unison, as the bombs evaporated the water from their bodies. They all withered and died, their bodies turning into little bundles, wrapped in cloth and ceramic armor. He saw them creak, crack and turn into dust, like they were made out of old, dead paper.
Fell apart like they were made of twigs. He’d thought that day. Dead wood that walked like a man for a while, before it keeled over.
The Vas’Iiri had struck them a fatal blow, despite their huge losses. They’d deprived them of their greatest source of potable water, leaving behind just a dead old crater. Any sane man would think that to be punishment enough, but then the Vas’Iiri made the skies rain salt for seven days straight, all across the province, so that nothing would grow there again. This was the place that had gotten it worse.
He got up and walked in silence for a while. He stumbled and fell, but didn’t bother to get up this time. See, he was ready now. He’d sold out his brothers in arms, the very same people that he’d led to victory once. He’d seen the Empire he’d served crash and burn all around him. He’d been been hunted like an animal for a bastard’s amusement. Enough was enough.  He’d let the sick son of a bitch come close to him and then he’d bite off his own tongue, looking at him straight in the eye all the while.
He’d die on his own damn terms.
The stranger spurred his horse on, galloping toward him, as soon as he fell on the ground.
1 day ago:
“I just got…ptui! One…question…why are you doing this to me? Who…who put you up to this? What sick, heartless, twisted son of a bitch paid you to do this? I mean, I can see you’re batshit insane, there’s no other way you’d take this kind of work, right? Come on, tell me, who put you up to it?
“Your name is Eldon Torm”
“C’mon, quit monkeying around and-“
“You served in the Third Brigade, Second Cavalry Company of the Old Guard during the Vas’Iiri war. You were the youngest man to be promoted to the rank of Leiutenant Colonel due to exemplary conduct in the field of battle.”
“Who…who told you this?”
“You were also the reason behind its destruction. You defected to enemy lines during the coup d’etat that took place two years after the end of the Vas’Iiri war. You gave sensitive information out to the enemy. You caused the death of a hundred good men, which used to be your friends.”
 “How can you know all this? Who the Devil are you?”
“As a token of their appreciation, the Government let you keep their old rank in their newly- formed militia. Charged you with training and organizing them into a tactical force.”
“Those bastards weren’t warriors! They were farmers and convicts! I couldn’t make soldiers out of them, for God’s sake!”
“And that’s why you let them roam freely in the countryside, take what they wanted from the populace, take over any small town that caught their eye and rob the people blind, with the pretext of restoring order and keeping the peace. No one could stop them, after all. They were armed with the very same weapons you showed them how to make and use against their own kind.”
“They were worse than dogs, all of them! Out of order, civilian and militia alike! They deserved every bit of suffering they got!”
“And so, before they sent me after you, they told me this: Eldon is not going to repent. He will not plead forgiveness or admit his guilt. He’ll repeatedly attempt to buy you off your mission. Know that he deserves to be given no quarter, no mercy.”
“That voice… dear God, no! He couldn’t have sent you!”
“I was told to make you suffer.”
Now:
He looked at the stranger straight in those pitch black eyes of his and let out a hoarse laugh. The stranger kept his silence.
“There was no point in keeping this up. We’d fought too hard, too long and the world got worse, each passing day.”
He drank down his last gulp of water. Let it pool round his dried tongue and swallowed it slowly. It was the best drink he’d ever had.
“I lost all of my friends when the withering bombs went off. Saw them die in a way I wouldn’t even wish upon your sorry hide. And when that nightmare was over with, there was the coup. Then we fought all over again. Then they dropped the Bomb.”
He drew a long, deep breath. Mustered the courage he needed to end this.
“Saw too much pointless, mindless killing in my lifetime. Saw everything I’d fought for blown away, just like that. And every time, it would sweep away someone else I cared about along with it. I’m not sorry for what I did. I regret nothing. And I’m gonna die on my own damn terms.”
Placing his tongue between his teeth, he was about to bite down, when the stranger pulled out his gun and shot him in the underbelly. Torm let out a scream, as the bullet tunneled its way through his innards, the pain washing his determination away.
“You lost that privilege a long time ago, Eldon Torm.”
 The man with the hole in his gut screamed in both pain and horror, knowing what was next. He’d seen others die like this. He knew that his own filth would seep out into his blood, poisoning his body. He’d die a slow, agonizing death for many hours, never once losing consciousness. He tried biting his own tongue off again, but he couldn’t find the strength to do it. Rolling around on the salted dirt, he left behind him a trail of foul blood.
For seven hours straight he suffered, before he finally died.

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Τρίτη 31 Ιανουαρίου 2012

Stone Cold Countenance, Part 1

“His face was like chiseled granite,” the old woman said to the man from the Government. He took down what she said on his notepad, a weathered, dog-eared thing.

“He wore a thrifty duster coat and wide-rimed hat. Dust all over him. His eyes were pitch black. Looked like beads. You never could tell which way he was looking.” 

The man from the Government kept taking notes. He opened his mouth, to ask the old woman about something, but the old man cut in.

 “He was armed. He had revolvers, pitch black and smooth. He never pulled them out, but I saw them. When the Rift wind blew and spread his duster coat. He wore them on his belt.”

“And those hands o’ his, they were big. Fingers all rough, like tree bark. They had all kinds of scars, all over. He’d hurt them and let ’em scab then hurt them again.” The old lady went on.

 “And they were strong. I shook his hand and he squeezed it till it got numb. Bet he didn’t even use half his strength. Strong hands. Face like that, you wouldn’t tell he’d know how to use ‘em.” 
Grumbled the old man.

The man from the Government cocked his eyebrow, looking at the old man. He asked them both if they spoke with that man, if they knew where he came from.

“He came from the Rift. The sheriff’s son saw ‘im, walking through the sandstorm, with his horse right behind ‘im. Poor child was terrified.” the old woman explained
.

The Government man explained that this was impossible. Noone could survive a trek through the Rift. And for horses, those had been extinct for a long time now.

“We thought the same, but he had one anyways! Covered in dust, with mean, mean eyes, just like his! Whole town gathered round to see them! Someone tried to pet it and the horse almost bit his hand. Mean old thing, that horse.” 

“It was all black, without a saddle. Didn’t let no one get near it, just the man from the Rift. I tried to feed it some oats. Stared at me like I were some horse thief the whole time, didn’t even touch the food.”

The man from the Government sighed. The old couple was giving him their own, incredible side of the story, which was useless to him. He needed facts, but they were the only people in the whole damn town that had deigned to talk to him. Had they spoken with the man, he asked. Did they know why he was there?

“Never spoke to him, no. He never spoke to nobody. Only spoke to the sheriff, who took him to the mayor. But the mayor’s maid, she told me she heard the man talk. He knew the language. He had a hoarse, hard voice. Sounded like a millstone grinding out words, she said.” The old woman shivered at the thought.

“She told me he said to the mayor that he knew ‘bout the Thing that lived round these parts. Said he’d kill it, for a price.”

The man from the Government’s pen stopped scrawling on the notepad for a moment. The Thing? What Thing?

“The Devil-spawned Thing that lived in the old silver mine! It’d go out hunting, kill anyone crossing the roads! No caravan’d come near us, no one dared come out, because of it!” shouted the old man in frustration.

There was no official report from your town sheriff about the Thing, replied the man from the Government. 

“The Sheriff weren’t no fool, he didn’t wanna die. The Thing ate the last Sheriff, when he was still a deputy. Said it took the form of his late wife and when he couldn’t find the guts to pull the trigger-“
Crack! The old man clapped his hands, like wolf’s jaws
,
ripping into flesh. His face drained of color at the thought. After a long pause, he said:

If he’d asked for help from you, you wouldn’t have bothered without ‘sufficient evidence’. But to get that, he’d have to go find it. And he didn’t want to die too.” 

“He wouldn’t ‘ave come out of them mines alive, if he tried to get them evidence. The Thing would find him and eat him, too.” Mumbled the old woman. 

The man from the Government looked at the couple, puzzled. Their statement seemed truthful and Anomalies (or Things, as they called them) weren’t an unusual sight in areas so close to the Rift. Yet he’d never heard of an Anomaly with that kind of ability. He asked them: How did the man know that the Thing was there in the first place? 

“I don’t know,” said the old woman. “I didn’t hear no thing. But the blacksmith’s wife, she done spoke to the mayor’s maid. She heard him say he’d been after it a long time. That he’d killed a pack of those Things, when he was in the Rift. That this one was the last of its kind and that he had to kill it, or it’d make more like it, even if it was the last one left.”

“We’d thought he was trying to pull our leg and fill our heads with scary stories, if he were anybody else. But we believed him, when he said it.” 

That he lived in the Rift? That he killed a pack of those Things and that someway, somehow, he found the last one? How can they even be sure he killed it?

“He killed it ‘cause it’s dead. The Sheriff followed him and saw the whole thing. Told us what happened. His eyes had gone white and he’d soiled himself, but he swore, on his own life. That man killed the Thing.” said the old man.

Is there any evidence of it being dead? A body, a piece of chitin, some residue that it might have left behind after its death, at the very least?

“No,” the old man replied. “When it died, it melted into soiled water. I smelled it myself, when I went there to see. Left no trace behind, but that grimy water and a smell like a mouthful of pennies.”

The man from the Government took down their report. He thanked them and left, without even touching the glass of water and the pickled rat that the couple had offered him. He placed his notebook in his jacket pocket and headed for the Sheriff’s office. He’d had just about enough of the secrecy and the tall tales of the townsfolk. He had to speak with an eyewitness.

“My daddy ain’t well. Don’t wanna see nobody.” said the boy that sat at the front porch, wearing the Sheriff’s hat. The thing was way too big for his head, almost drooping down his eyes. 

The man from the Gorvenment asked the boy to call out his mother. He needed to speak with her.

“Momma’s taking care of my daddy. Said I sit outside, don’t let no one in, ‘cause daddy ain’t well and he don’t want no one see him like this. I’m not s’pposed to say that, but I know you Gov’ment people can smell lies.” 

The man from the Government smiled, despite himself. He reassured the boy that he couldn’t smell lies.

 “All the other Expungers can, Dead Eye said so in his books! They can taste fear too. Dead Eye did cross the Salted Desert with just a flask full of the sweat of a terrified inmate and a whiff of his bounty’s terror!” 

The man from the Government told the boy he was no Expunger, just a census man. The boy seemed disappointed, but still went ahead and called for his mother. The woman that answered his call looked more like a grandmother to him. Her face was like a dried fig.

 “What is this all about? I’ve a sick husband in there and he needs constant care.”

The man from the Government explained that he didn’t mean to pry. He just needed a moment of her time. Asked her if she knew what happened in the mines that got her husband sick. The woman’s face went pale, her lips turned into a thin, pink line.

“That’s my husband’s own business, if you don’t mind. Now, please…” she tried to close the door in his face, but he stopped her halfway. He told her that yes, he did mind. That he didn’t have any more time to waste on tall tales and that her husband was obligated, by law, to give him any information he might possess. After storming inside the office, he went through the door that led to the small house behind it. On a bed he saw a pale, shriveled bundle with wrinkled clothes on its body. It wore the Sheriff’s badge. 

“You’re…you’re Government. I can tell by that badge of yours, when you started waving it around, the minute you came into town. If you hadn’t shown off that much at first, people wouldn’t have minded answering your damn questions.” wheezed the bundle. The mere act of talking seemed to take too much out of him in his current state.

The man from the Government nodded. Found that he couldn’t stop staring at the bundle that lay there, wheezing. From the corner of his eye, he caught a glance at the picture on the drawer next to the small bed. The Sheriff was there, a 30-year old man with a perfect smile and a mane of blond hair. The bundle’s voice was the one he thought the man in the picture might have, but it looked nothing like him.

“You wanna know about the man from the Rift. He’s a tough son of a bitch and he killed the Thing all by himself. I didn’t do anything. I just looked at it and then it killed me.”

But he’s alive, exclaimed the man from the Government. Beaten, weathered, but alive.

“I’m dead inside. The Thing in the mines poisoned my soul and now I’ve died in every way that matters. Just clutching at strings here. Matter of time before my body follows suit.”

What did he see there? In the mines?

“My late sister. She’d wandered off in the Rift, when she was just a little kid. Got lost. Saw her as a woman, like she would have been, if she hadn’t been lost. Had the voice I thought she’d have. Thought I was gonna save her from that man, because I thought she was my sister for real, so I fell right into her trap. Took me off with her and when she thought she’d gotten away, she sank her teeth into me.”

What about the man? The stranger from the Rift, how did he manage to kill her?

Just looked at her, pointed his gun and pulled the trigger. He had a pair of black revolvers. She spoke to him before he pulled a trigger, couldn’t make it out. He just said no and then killed her, just like that. In his eyes, it could have been his wife, his brother, anyone. But to me, she was my sister. Saw her die again, just then. Right before my eyes
.

Did he know what the man did afterward? Did he ask for payment? Did he, at least, know his name.
“Never bothered introducing himself.” the bundle said, panting on his bed, so much more shriveled than before, tears in its eyes. “Just upped and killed my sister. I saw her die. Again
.
Saw her body run like water as he walked away. Then he carried me back home and left.”

The bundle started crying then, its body wracked by huge sobs.

“He killed her right in front of me and I couldn’t even save her! Oh dear God, I lost her again!”

The man from the Government took out his notepad and opened it to a certain page. In an act of desperation, he thought about showing the Sherriff a design that he had drawn on one of the older pages, before he came to the town. His eyes darted back to the woman. Her eyes were radiating malice, boring holes in the back of his head. In the few moments he had before the wife would throw him out, he showed him the picture. Asked him if he’d seen that design on him.

“On the inside of his duster. And on his belt buckle.”

The Sherriff’s wife grabbed him by the collar and dragged him out the room. He let her throw him out, all the way to the door and shove him outside. The door slammed behind him. 

He knew exactly where the man from the Rift had come from. Suddenly, this tall tale made perfect sense. And he knew exactly where the man would be headed. He gathered his belongings from the room he leased and left the town running. He left the road and crossed the dried up stream.

He might have a horse, but there’s no way he could be that far ahead. The man from the Government knew that his quarry would rest for a while, so that he could regain his strength, after his fight with the Thing. Even if he just shrugged off something that killed a young man with one glance, then the man from the Rift must have expended every ounce of his own strength, so that he could kill it.

He found his camp in a small opening at the foot of a hill
,
the very next night. He hadn’t rested in the meantime, only stopped for a while for a drink and a bite. This was going to be his only chance and he needed to make the most of it. He saw the horse by the campfire and the man, wrapped under a frayed blanket.

The man from the Government took out his revolver, made sure it was loaded and cocked it as quietly as he could. Crouching, he approached slowly, not making a sound. The air was still.

The horse saw him when he was just a few steps away. No matter, he thought. It’s just an animal, couldn’t possibly stop him. Carefully taking aim, he was about to pull the trigger, but the horse rushed him then, its teeth grabbing hold of his sleeve. He shot it once and got it in the neck. The blood gushed out, but the animal fell down and pinned him under its own weight, nevertheless.

Struggling to free himself, he noticed that the horse’s blood smelled strange. It was a strong, intoxicating scent that made him sick to his stomach. It was then that he looked for his quarry and saw the barrel of his gun looking back at him, square in the eye.

The man from the Government felt a chill going up and down his spine and stood perfectly still
,
then. He looked at the revolver. It was a perfect black, like the night that surrounded them. His hands were rough and looked strong, as they held the gun with ease. His face was rough, hard, like chiseled granite. His eyes were pitch black beads.

“You’re a Government man.”

Yes.
 
“And you know who I am.”

He explained that he knew what he is. Same went for his horse.

“You don’t know my name, then. Bet you know about the Rift and the Thing I killed back there in the mines, right?”

Right.

“So you thought you could kill me and take the bounty that’s set on my kind. Maybe take the horse too. That wouldn’t have worked though. It wouldn’t put up with you.”

It wouldn’t have worked, of course. This isn’t a horse. Horses have gone extinct. This is just a replica. An automaton.

“And you damaged it. You’ll make me go off-schedule for a few days.” He cocked his gun. “I’ll let you live if you give me any notes you got from the town.”

The man from the Government gave him the notebook then. The man from the Rift tossed it into the campfire without even giving it a second glance, then shot him in the eye. The gun’s loud bang echoed in the stillness of the night. He took off the man’s clothes and fed them to the fire. He broke his teeth off with the butt of his guns and then scattered them around in a wide circle. Lastly, he dragged the body away and left it to be eaten by vultures. 

When his hunter was dead and gone, he kneeled by his horse and petted it behind the ears. Its legs twitched, which meant that none of the central servos had been damaged. But the leaking fluid meant that the hydraulics had been damaged. He got to work with a sigh of exasperation.

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