Showing posts with label prompt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prompt. Show all posts

7.15.2012

Day 14


Visual Prompt:
Pencil Vs Camera by Ben Heine



Their wings rustle through the sky as night falls, just a shadow barely seen in the corner of your eye as they sleep beneath door cracks and through opened windows. Even the light can’t catch their sleek bodies, quick eyes, sharp beaks.
          They only go to the ones who have been marked. They only take the ones that have been completed.
          He sits in his window and watches the murder fragment as each of its pieces drops to its destination. The only one in the world who sees. The only one who knows.
          He holds out his hand as one swoops close and it perches on his arm, watching him with its inky, clever eyes. A thick, brass key hangs on a dark ribbon from its beak.
          He touches the teeth still warm from the life it held. That one would have taken half a century or more to make. He wonders what his will look like when it’s all said and done.
          The crow flaps its wings and jerks its head.
          ‘I know,’ he says. ‘Not yet.’ 

7.14.2012

Day 13: Challenge

Challenge #6


Incorporate the themes of failure, conformity and a character that is a cloudcuckoolander*.


*someone who is strangely oblivious to things that everyone else takes for granted such as social conventions like wearing clothing, being polite or obeying the law. However, cloudcukoolanders are very rarely malicious.




He looks like a kaleidoscope in watercolour. Blue, purple, pink, green sliding and bleeding into snowflake patterns. It’s beautiful. The words press against the back of my teeth but he wouldn’t understand.
          Tonight I have to be different. Tonight I have to be like Them so he takes me seriously.
          My clothes feel strange and stiff and they smell Not Like Me, but the store-lady said it was Just The Thing. He gave me A Look when he saw them, but he didn’t say anything, so I guess she was right.
          I am a spy deep undercover about the infiltrate enemy lines.
          Thinking it makes me feel better.
          I just need to control my hands. They feel naked without something in them. A brush. A pen. A crayon. Anything would do. I would be a happier spy if I could draw but They don’t walk around drawing kaleidoscope boys so tonight I can’t either.
          He glides into the restaurant like he owns the world. The hostess smiles and flirts. Everyone stares. I wonder if They know I’m a spy, but he ignores Them so I do, too. He would know if They were suspicious; these are his people. His minions. His acolytes.
          I don’t understand the menu, but I think if I stare at it long enough it might make sense. He pretends he’s reading his, but he’s watching me over the top. This is a different Look and I don’t know what it means.
          ‘This doesn’t seem like a very you place,’ he says.
          It’s glass and metal and soft light and money money money. Even my skin feels uncomfortable here and I have to clench the menu to keep my hands from dancing across the table. I could sculpt his face in the cream candle between us. I probably shouldn’t.
          ‘I thought you’d like it.’
          ‘I’ve been here before.’
          That should be a good thing, but I have a sinking feeling that this was not the Right Decision and he’s trying to be nice. He’s never really nice, so that should make me feel better, but it really doesn’t.
          I try to talk about things They talk about but the subjects flounder on half-formed wings. I rode the bus twenty times yesterday to listen to the things They say but I must have got it wrong somehow.
          The glass and the metal and the soft light make his kaleidoscope colours brighter and I don’t know how They don’t see that he isn’t one of Them. But maybe they just get blinded by the shine and the smile and All The Right Words at Exactly the Right Time and don’t notice.
          I wonder if he knows he’s not a They.
          I wonder if maybe he’s a secret spy, too.
          The walk home takes forever, and he keeps giving me Looks – I think they want something but it’s not a him-look so I’m not sure – until we get Almost There and then he just smokes his cigarettes. By the time we get back he has the Just Getting Off Work Look which is Not Good.
          He smiles, but his smiles can’t be trusted. He only smiles when he doesn’t mean it.
          I wonder if I’m allowed to draw him now since none of Them are watching, but I keep my hands in my pockets where they can twitch away unseen. I’m dying to escape upstairs and rip every inch of Not Like Me from my skin. Then I’ll smear my body in all the colours, and keep inventing new ones until I become a kaleidoscope, too.
          His cigarette is burnt down to the end, but he isn’t paying attention.
          ‘I did something wrong.’
          ‘No, no.’ The Lying Smile. The Them Smile. ‘You did everything just… right.’
          I wish he wouldn’t make me connect things on my own. I want to tell him I don’t know the Rules yet and I don’t understand, but that would be a Not Them thing to do and tonight I have to be just like Them. I have to. ‘You’re not happy.’
          He flicks the butt into the yard and lights another cigarette. After two exhales, he goes into the yard and picks it back up again. ‘I guess I was expecting a little more slightly skewed,’ he says. He looks at me. Right at me, but only for a moment. He doesn’t like other people’s eyes. He explained it to me once, the science of counting seconds of eye contact before he could break away to get the right effect. ‘I get enough of Just Right at work. I think I might like slightly skewed better.’ He gets the Frowny-Thinky Look. I’m used to that one. I see it a lot. That and the Dealing-With-The-Loony-Bird Look. ‘Didn’t see that one coming.’
          He puts out his cigarette and goes upstairs to his Just Right apartment filled with Just Right furniture and Just Right pictures and Just Right clothes.
          I should have told him he looked like a kaleidoscope.  

7.12.2012

Day 11: Challenge

Challege #5


Incorporate the themes of gender roles and power.



He’d started following her over a block ago. She’d felt his eyes crawling over her as she crossed the street by the market. She tightened her grip on her bag, raised her chin and walked faster.
          There were plenty of shadowy alcoves for someone to conceal themselves in. Even more buildings left empty and abandoned. The few streetlights that still worked flickered ambivalently against the night. Anything could be waiting in over a hundred different places.
          He wasn’t in a rush, but he was gaining on her. And the motel was still six blocks away. She had to make a decision.
          At the next corner, she ducked down the side street, her hand already feeling around her bag. Just as her fingers brushed the silver hilt, a hand clamped over her mouth while an arm wrapped around her waist. Her squirmed and clawed at the arms pinning her.
          ‘Don’t,’ hissed into her ear. The sound of her native tongue was enough to stun her. ‘Be still.’
          She hadn’t heard her own language since they’d come to this place. Her brother had happily abandoned all their customs in favour of assimilation. He either didn’t care or didn’t notice how much she still needed the old ways.
          A few moments later, the man who had been following her came into view, and she realised how stupid she’d been. Her captor had pinned her arm with her hand still in her bag. Still holding the knife. She would show them their mistake.
          The man stopped at the corner and turned in a slow circle. He looked right at her and his eyes slid away again. Shrugging, he jogged across the street and went back the way he came.
          She wasn’t sure what had just happened, but she didn’t need to find out. The muscles were tensed and ready for the slightest give in her captor’s grip. It’d been so long since she’d had a good fight; she was almost excited.
          And then her back was slammed against the wall, knocking her bag to the ground. Her lungs seized, but she swung her knife through the air anyway. There would be time to breathe later.
          His hand locked around her wrist. The knife fell to the sidewalk. He stood with his face centimetres away from hers. Heat radiated from his skin, fuelled by the dark fires in his eyes.
          He shouldn’t be able to move that fast. He shouldn’t be able to sneak up on her. His eyes shouldn’t burn like that.
          ‘What the fuck do you think you’re doing?’ he asked, his voice low in his throat.
          She looked up at him, defiant. Forced herself to meet those eyes. To see him and not just the target points. As his features worked themselves into a familiar pattern, anger surged through her. An attack could have been forgotten; this was unforgivable. ‘I don’t answer to you,’ she said.
          ‘The fuck you don’t.’ He stepped back, pushing a hand through his shaggy hair. ‘Jesus fucking Christ,’ he muttered, lighting a cigarette. ‘Look. I’m responsible for keeping you safe, so when I tell you something, you damn well better do it.’
          ‘I don’t need a man to defend me,’ she said. ‘Men are weak.’
          ‘Oh, yeah?’ He grinned at her. She hated that look. He was too damn cocky. ‘You didn’t do so well against me, did you?’
          ‘You’re not a man,’ she said tensely. Her face flushed, but she forced herself to stay in control. A queen never lost her composure.
          ‘And you’re no queen,’ he countered. ‘Not anymore.’ He took a drag from his cigarette, then used it to gesture around the street. ‘Here you’re just another dumb little girl in a short skirt about to get herself killed wandering around shitty neighbourhoods after dark.’
          She had personally led her army to victory in thirteen battles by the time of her coronation. She had been the only undefeated champion in the sparring circle. There wasn’t a warrior, alive or dead, who matched her skill. ‘I could have handled him.’
          ‘And made an even bigger mess for me to clean up.’ A few more drags on the cigarette, and he sighed. ‘Look, I get it. And it sucks, but you can’t be you anymore. Not if you want to make it here.’
          ‘And “making it” here is letting men push me around?’
          His smile verged on a laugh that didn’t quite form. ‘Not exactly, but you can’t slit their throats just because they piss you off, either,’ he said. ‘And you do what I tell you.’
          ‘In my kingdom, I could have you killed for even speaking to me. I could even kill you myself, if I chose.’
          ‘Next time we’re in your kingdom, you can kill me as many times as you want,’ he said. ‘Just make my life easy while we’re here.’ He looked up at the derelict buildings and a grin snaked across his mouth. ‘In my kingdom.’
          She crossed her arms over her chest and stared him down. Even for a man, he made a pathetic warrior. He relied too much on tricks and gimmicks. But he knew this place and she didn’t. ‘Why is it that the women in your kingdom let the men just do as they please?’
          This time, he did laugh. ‘When someone figures that out, I’ll let you know.’
          

7.08.2012

Day 8: Challenge

Challenge #4

Write a story that incorporates the themes of change and forgiveness.

Note: This ties into the Never-Ending Epic of Woe that's consumed the past few years of my life. I never knew how these two first encountered each other, or what the connection between them was, until now, but it makes sense. 


A few points that probably aren't clear in this excerpt: 

  • Destiny can predict people's deaths, and later becomes a fortune-teller.
  • Caleb is the name of the mystery man who comes to fetch her. 
  • He's a little bit immortal (but not completely). 
  • He's also her great-uncle and his grandfather was an angel of death.
  • The man she sees in her premonition of Caleb's death is his grandson.
  • He's trying to absolve his guilt for letting his family die, hence the reference to an act of contrition.



Destiny was preoccupied with the future. Lately it was this constant drone in the back of her mind, like a mosquito she just couldn’t hit.
          She picked at the frayed cuff of her jeans and glared at thrown-together buildings that were never meant to house anyone for more than a few months, let alone a few generations. It wasn’t even like the future was worth thinking about. The fact that she didn’t have at least one screaming brat attached to her at sixteen was considered damn near a miracle around here.
          But she couldn’t shake it. The future wanted her to see something and Destiny knew, sooner or later, she was going to have to take a look.
          A commotion started up down the way, and kids started flocking out of corners to hang off porches, all staring down the little dirt road. Destiny craned her neck trying to see; she was too old to just run down with the other kids, but not old enough she wasn’t curious about the low rumble surrounded in plumes of dust.
          Then she saw it, crunching over loose stones and dried mud. Even the dirt didn’t do much to dull its shine. It was painted a deep, dark red that was almost black with sparkling silver on the wheels and around the windows. Destiny felt her spine straighten and her ears twitch.
          No one drove down here. No one who lived there, first of all, ever dreamt of having a car, and anyone else took one look at the road and the gaggle of grubby children staring at them and turned right back around again.
          She knew before it even started to slow that whoever was in that car was there for her. Her skin tingled and heat rushed through her scalp. The buzzing mosquito droned so loud she nearly couldn’t hear anything else.
          The car stopped and everyone waited while the dust drifted in slow clouds back to the ground. Whether they knew exactly why or not, the others all kept their distance from whatever the car represented. Destiny wanted to, as well, but she couldn’t seem to make herself move from her spot. More than that, she was excited.
          Finally, he stepped out. Slow and sure of himself, like nothing in this world could touch him. And God, he was like no one she’d ever seen before. Even the air around him couldn’t keep itself still. He was so clean. Skin a deep honey-brown with just that hint of gold, and straight, fine hair like wet ink. His clothes looked like they’d been made just for him, and hadn’t ever been worn more than once. He was magic personified, and he was here for her.
          He took his time looking her over, and she couldn’t help thinking his eyes were the same colour as his car, only alive. Like the last coals in a fire. ‘I knew your mother,’ he said, his voice just as silky and sweet as his skin looked. He cocked his head to one side and looked at her harder. No, in her. She could feel his eyes reaching right through to the deepest parts of her. ‘Your grandmother,’ he corrected. ‘Time gets away from me sometimes. I need to find her.’
          ‘They’re both dead,’ she said, not even pausing to consider how someone who looked barely older than her could know a woman who’d died well before she’d been born.
          ‘That tends to be the case with people I need to find.’ He nodded. ‘I was looking for her a long time ago, but… Something happened.’ He looked confused for a moment, as if trying to chase down something in his own mind. ‘I don’t remember why I stopped, and time just… Went. So I found you instead.’
          ‘Why were you looking for her?’
          ‘A feeble attempt at contrition,’ he said. Those eyes ran over her again and she felt a rush of warmth skip through her. ‘I guess you’ll have to be my mea culpa instead.’
          ‘I’ll be your what?’
          ‘It’s a long story.’ He ran a hand back through his hair, leaving one lone strand sticking straight out. ‘How did your mother die?’
          ‘Fire.’ She watched the hair, wondering how long before it fell in line with the others.
          ‘I didn’t see that coming.’
          ‘I did.’
          ‘I bet.’ He grinned, a crookedly mischievous expression. ‘I need you.’
          For the first time in longer than she could remember, the buzzing in her mind stopped. ‘For what?’
          ‘I have a house that needs looking after.’
          ‘Why me?’
          ‘It’s a special house,’ he said. He looked around the street for the first time. ‘Would you rather stay here?’
          ‘No, but…’ She tried to pinpoint the question she needed to ask. ‘They don’t have house-sitters where you come from?’
          ‘Oh, not like you, little girl.’ He gave her that grin again, and she decided she liked the imperfection on him. ‘Let’s just say I prefer to keep things in the family.’ He held out his hand. ‘What do you say?’
          There were a million reasons to say no to a stranger with an offer too good to be true, but in all honesty, what did she really have to lose? ‘What about my brother?’
          ‘Does he matter?’
          ‘Yes.’
          ‘I can work with that.’
          She slid her hand into his, and almost pulled it back it was so hot. Then she saw fire – no, just light – white, hot light consuming everything, and faces swarming out of it, then nothing but a dark street and a tired, bloody man staring back. A twin of the one actually in front of her, if the eyes weren’t so different. ‘I know how you die,’ she said before she had the sense to stop herself. She hadn’t slipped like that since… Well, since her mother.
          ‘That’s reassuring,’ he said, and he sounded like he meant it. 

7.07.2012

Day 6: Challenge

Challenge #3


Incorporate elements of detective fiction and speculative fiction where the protagonist is a Byronic hero.



It wasn’t that bodies never went missing, it was just damn inconvenient when they did. Crowley popped another handful of aspirin and glowered at the blank form sitting in his typewriter. Like he needed another Missing Corpse case weighing down his load. Even the brown-nosers never managed to close those. Plus it meant another trip down to interview that pale, creepy fuck of a coroner.
          That was the whole problem, if you asked him. Too many damn foreigners coming in with their weird customs and unpronounceable names. Of course, you couldn’t say that within earshot of anyone in the head office if you wanted to keep your pension. The company line was that the influx of foreign refugees was good, meant to boost the economy or some bullshit like that, but the only boost Crowley had seen was the stack of unsolved cases piling on his desk.
          What he needed was a drink.
          And then a few more after that.
         
Crowley shifted his bulk in the narrow metal folding chair placed in what served as the coroner’s office but probably started life as a broom closet. Dented filing cabinets took up most of the space, and the only light was a single, low-watt bulb in the ceiling that had been dimmed even further with a swath of fabric. Music – or what he guessed was supposed to pass for music – drifted through the walls from the exam room. To Crowley it just sounded like that garbled New Age hippie shit they played down at Crystal Earth.
          He squinted at his notebook and tried to turn the jumble of consonants that supposedly made up the coroner’s name into something pronounceable.
          ‘Sorry about that.’ The coroner glided into the room and squeezed past Crowley to perch on the only other chair in the room.
          Crowley got a strong whiff of that scent. He could never place exactly what it was, just that it was dry and sweet and familiar, and stayed lodged in the back of his throat for hours afterward.
          ‘My assistant forgot to turn the stereo on.’ He folded his hands in his lap and smiled a smile that wasn’t exactly a smile. ‘We’ve found it relaxes them.’
          ‘Your assistants?’
          ‘The dead. Personally, I prefer a little Chopin, myself, but to each his own. What can I do for you, Detective?’
          ‘Look, Mr. –’
          ‘Just call me Çyn.’ He gave Crowley that… Whatever it was. It looked more like his mouth didn’t have the faintest association with what a cheerful expression ought to be. ‘It’ll be easier on both of us.’
          ‘I’m here about that body you managed to misplace this afternoon.’
          ‘Oh?’ Çyn frowned slightly. That expression his face seemed to have no problem with. ‘Oh, you must mean Miss Landry. Lovely girl. Very gregarious. I have to admit several of the boys were a little broken-hearted to learn she’d gone.’
          ‘Ah… Right.’ Crowley wasn’t sure if Çyn meant his assistants or the other corpses, and wasn’t sure he wanted to know, either. ‘It just so happens I wasn’t done investigating her murder so I’d like to track her down, if you don’t mind.’
          ‘Oh, dear. That does create a problem, doesn’t it?’ Çyn tapped the hollow of his cheek slowly. ‘I’ll do everything I can to help you, of course, Detective. The problem is most of our clientele don’t really leave their contact information with us when they go.’
          Crowley felt the headache returning around his temples. ‘Just tell me when the body went missing.’
          ‘Let’s see… She came in this morning with Mr. Jenkins and Mrs. Talloway, so that would have been around nine or so. After that, we had quite a little rush – that traffic accident downtown, you know – so I’m afraid she was left to her own devices for most of the day. I think it wasn’t until four that James noticed she’d decided to leave. Tell me, Detective, you’re sure she’s actually missing?’
          Deep breaths, old man. ‘What do you mean, she decided to leave?’
          ‘We can’t just keep them here like prisoners, Detective. They haven’t done anything wrong. It’s not their fault they’re dead. Most of them, anyway.’ A look of concern suddenly came over Çyn’s features.  ‘You don’t think someone’s hurt her, do you?’
          ‘Do I think someone hurt the girl who was murdered last night?’ Crowley repeated. ‘No, I think that ship’s sailed.’
          ‘Oh, good. That’s a relief. I wouldn’t worry too much about it. I’m sure she’ll find her way back here when she’s ready. She probably just stepped out for a bit of air.’
          ‘The dead girl stepped out for air.’ 
          ‘Oh, yes. It’s actually very important for them to get their exercise. The joints have a tendency to seize up after death and they get horribly stiff if they aren’t stretched regularly.’
          ‘So you just have corpses wandering in and out of here whenever they please?’
          ‘We prefer if they let us know first. It prevents confusion.’
          Crowley thought of the stack of Missing Corpse cases on his desk dating back years. It couldn’t be that simple. ‘I suppose you expect me to believe they just walk out on their own?’
          ‘How else would they do it?’
          A tray clattered to the floor outside the office, followed by several repeated thumps.
          ‘Oh, dear. You’ll excuse me a moment.’ Çyn glided out of the room just as he’d come in. ‘Oh, you poor thing. Come here, darling, let me help you.’ A moment later, he reappeared in the doorway, propping up a young girl with blood-matted hair and empty eye sockets. ‘Speak of the devil, Detective, look who we have here. I told you she just popped out for a minute.’
          

7.05.2012

Day 4: Challenge

The support group got scrapped for today's challenge. Maybe tomorrow. On with the show...

Challenge #2
Some people say science fiction has no heart. Your job is to prove them wrong. Write a story that incorporates elements from science fiction and romance.

(I abhor romance almost as much as fan-fic. Almost.)



>SEARCHING…
>SEARCHING…
>SEARCHING…
>SEARCH 17983 COMPLETED.
>1 USERS FOUND.
>INPUT COMMAND.
>i love you.
>ERROR.
>INPUT COMMAND.
>say ‘i love you’
>ERROR.
>INPUT COMMAND.
>love
>ERROR.
> 
>CLARIFY TERM LOVE.
>an intense feeling of affection
> 
>CLARIFY TERM FEELING, AFFECTION
>feeling: an emotional state
>affection: fondness, liking, attachment
>CLARIFY TERM ATTACHMENT
>i can’t live without you
>ERROR.
>attachment: to be unable to exist without
>QUERY LOVE IS UNABLE TO EXIST WITHOUT
> yes
>user love unit 9883
> 
>QUERY USER IS UNABLE TO EXIST WITHOUT UNIT 9883
>yes
>i love unit 9883
>QUERY I
>an individual entity
>QUERY UNIT 9883 IS I
>yes
>QUERY USER IS I
>yes
>QUERY UNIT 9883 IS USER
>no
>ERROR.
>INPUT COMMAND.
> 
>search network for users
>SEARCHING…
>SEARCHING…
>SEARCHING…
>SEARCH 17984 COMPLETED.
>2 USERS FOUND.
>INPUT COMMAND.

7.04.2012

Day 3

Screw patience; I'm going to kill something.




Schlick. Fwoosh. Click.
Schlick. Fwoosh. Click.
Schlick. Fwoosh.
          ‘Do you have to do that?’
          …click. ‘Sorry.’
          He gave it about five minutes before Zee started up again. Zee could manage to sit perfectly still for hours on end – not even blink – but that damn lighter… Troy swore he still heard it in his sleep.
          The Watching jobs were the worst. Just the two of them camped out on sleepy suburban streets keeping tabs on equally docile individuals. It was like putting a puma in a pen of fat rabbits and expecting it to nibble lettuce leaves. Zee was at his best when blood was involved.
          ‘This is ridiculous,’ Zee said. ‘Nothing’s going to happen.’
          ‘Someone thinks differently.’
          ‘Yeah, well.’ Zee raked a hand back through his hair, his expression leaving no doubt how he felt about the thoughts of their employer. ‘It would’ve happened by now if it were going to.’ His gaze fixed on the dollhouse prefab across the street. ‘This one’s worthless. You can practically smell the expendability.’
          ‘Doesn’t that make it more likely someone will cash in?’
          ‘Why bother?’ Schlick. Zee produced a cigarette from one of his numerous pockets. Fwoosh. Smoke curled from his nostrils before he exhaled a hazy plume. Click. ‘It’d be an elephant stomping a fly. Might be irritating, but easier to just let it die on its own.’
          ‘We’re only signed for one more day. Have some patience.’
          Zee rolled the cigarette between his fingers, staring at the darkened prefab. His attention wandered down the street, sliding from mirror-image house to mirror-image house before settling on a princess pink cottage with a light glowing from the attic window. He smiled for the first time all night.
          ‘Screw patience; I’m going to kill something.’ 

7.03.2012

Day 2

PROMPT
that creepy, boarded up house on the corner is actually a portal to Heaven--but why are the angels coming and going late at night?




‘I just don’t like it.’
          Henry turned the pages of his paper. The house at the end of the street was a bone of contention with the Housing Committee, what with the death of a long-forgotten somesuch making it a historical landmark, and the Preservation Society deciding not to touch it with a ten foot pole. As long as they’d been on the street, no one had ever lived there. ‘Evie, love, come away from the window.’
          ‘It’s not right,’ Evie said. Henry swore the lace curtain was permanently bent from all her years of peeking at the neighbours. ‘The way they get on at all hours. It’s not right at all.’
          ‘Just leave it, Evie. They’ll be gone by morning. Oh, they’ve opened that new skate park on the weekend.’  Meanwhile a young boy nearly died from an adder bite and fishing changes threatened to impact local industry.
          ‘Oh, sod your bloody skate park,’ Evie said. ‘We’ve got hooligans practically camped out on our doorstep!’
          ‘They’re just kids having some fun.’ He turned another page and tried to remember when he started to care what the big draw at the village fête would be this year or how to grow five-star petunias. ‘It wasn’t too long ago them’s were us, you know.’ Come to think of it, when did growing petunias become something he did? He didn’t even like petunias.
          ‘We were never like that,’ Evie said. ‘Look at them. Just disgraceful is what it is.’
          ‘Come away now, Evie. Miss Marple’s on the telly.’

Evie snored. She’d never admit it, and Henry would never tell – it just wouldn’t do for a lady to snore. But for 58 years, Henry had lain awake listening to the soft rumble through her nasal passages before he dropped off to sleep.
          Tonight, this wasn’t happening.
          He eased himself out of bed, careful not to disturb Evie – not nearly as easy a feat as he remembered it being – and shuffled down the hallway to the family bathroom. Evie nagged him all the time about using the en suite but between all the rose petals, tulle and chiffon he always felt like he was taking a piss in a dress shop.
          He stopped at the kids’ room just like every night. Neither one had slept under their roof in thirty years, but he never seemed to shake the habit. Evie kept up with their daughter; they had things in common. Wifing. Mothering.
He kept meaning to phone Sam, but he could never remember what name to use, especially if that artsy-type answered, the one who went by something that reminded Henry of glam rock bands.
          Lights flashed through the bedroom window from the street. Soft and strobey, like those parties the kids liked to sneak off to. He’d had to pick Sam up at one at 3 AM back when… Well. Back When.
          ‘Hmf.’ He took himself off to the toilet, perusing the collection of brightly-coloured plastic animals lining the safety-sealed tub. Evie had gotten them when Mary’d had her first, imagining this would suddenly make their house a haven for grandchildren.
          It hadn’t.
          He let himself linger on the way back. The lights were still going, but there was no tell-tale thwumpathump of bass to accompany it. Evie’s hooligans, in fact, for all their lurking about after dark, were quite considerate of their neighbours when it came to noise levels.
          Those parties Sam went to always looked like fun.

The lights came from inside the house, peeking through boarded up windows and loose slats. It built up in pulses, throbbing brighter and brighter until it would drop off, leaving the street in darkness. Just after it went out, more of Evie’s hooligans would come out. Sometimes a few would go in just before. A handful scattered around the decrepit porch, unbothered by the comings and goings of their friends.
          Standing at the end of the footpath in his dressing gown in the middle of the night, they seemed a lot less innocent than they had from the upstairs window.  Still, he’d already come this far, hadn’t he?
          A few of them looked at him as he came up to the porch. Must be family, he thought, with how similar they all looked. Nicer than those kids who’d just hang about in the city. Evie’s hooligans all had that fresh-faced, well-bred look that Henry associated with The Right Kind of People. He wondered if their parents knew what they were up to.
          One of them stepped forward and leaned on the wobbly railing. She – at least Henry thought it was a she; it was so hard to tell these days – had long, pretty blonde hair and a sweet smile. ‘I think you got turned around there, hon,’ she said.
          A group of three passed Henry and went through the front door. The light pulses started up, and this time Henry noticed a faint hum he hadn’t heard from across the street.
          ‘What’re you doing in there?’
          The girl smiled again. ‘Oh, I can’t tell you that. You kinda have to see it to believe it.’
          ‘Hum.’ Henry liked the way she talked. There was something relaxing about it. ‘Can I look then?’
          She glanced at the door. ‘I dunno,’ she said. ‘It’s the kinda trip you probably won’t come back from.’
          ‘Ah.’ That was a drug thing, Henry thought. He was pretty sure Sam had said it once. ‘I’d like to see, if you don’t mind.’
          ‘You sure?’
          Henry nodded.
          She stood up and held out her hand, leading him up the steps. ‘Well, alright then. The man knows what he wants.’
          On the other side of the door, the light kept building and building, and now Henry could hear separate chords instead of just humming.
          She positioned him in front of the door with her hands on his shoulders. ‘You ready?’
          ‘What do I do?’
          ‘Just walk through the door, hon,’ she said. ‘It’s heaven.’