Thursday, 29 September 2016

Episode 13




Previously…



“All I know for sure, is that if that woman following us catches you, you will never go home again. So come. We must hurry now. Clytemnestra has caught a whiff of something ugly in the air.”
“And what about her…the demon lady?”
Once again it is the messenger who answers.
“She is a feeder – she stays alive, in a manner of speaking, by feeding on the energy left behind by the people who have died…like the echoes.”
“Then why is she after me?”
“Because you are in no man’s land and are fair game…and you have plenty of energy. If she taps you she will be very powerful. With all your energy she could live forever.”
This is also one of the reasons why the old lady refrains from touching the boy too much, especially when she needs comfort. It is alright if he touches her, but she knows that every time she touches him in need, she takes energy away from him – his life force. Skin touching skin is the most powerful way of exchanging or transferring energy – especially the palms of the hand and the lips where all the nerve endings are. One kiss from that demon lady and the boy would die within moments.
“GAAARRRRRRRRRR,” roars the camel, and begins to prance around as if she’s on hot coals.
“Mount up,” says the messenger to the old lady. “We must move swiftly now, she is closer than we think. The echoes have been speaking to her, and giving her directions.”


And now...



Clutching his limp hand, Clara sat by Joshua’s side, day after day, watching the drip-feed bag run dry…watching the urine-bag fill up and get replaced by the hard working, never complaining, nurses who washed and changed him every morning, smoothed out his clean sheets and combed his hair. For the millionth time she examined his face for signs of change. Today he seemed more white and drained of blood than usual. But she must stay cheerful. Remain positive. Count her blessings…
But sitting there all by herself her resolve soon crumbled. One by one her fears came home to roost, settling down blackly in the gloom of her mind. As a child, when things had become too much, she had often sat and banged her head against the wall to bring her some respite from her thoughts. Now her demons multiplied; and in the same poisoned vein, mixed with her guilt and shame, came the same old sad refrain, ‘you are the one to blame’. Her sins clung to her like a cloak, dragging her waterlogged spirit down into a pit of bottomless depression. She was actually finding it difficult to breathe, her physical body being adversely affected by her thoughts. There was nothing she could do about it. There was nothing she wanted to do about it. She was almost starting to convulse as she spiralled down and down…and each time she came to the bottom, it gave way and she fell through into an even deeper, darker hell than before. Then she stopped breathing.
And there was God.
God knows she never believed in Him before, and didn’t expect Him to answer her now…..a fair weather Christian. But there He stood, in the depths of her despair, book in hand, serenity upon His face.
“Father?”
“Hello my child,” replied the priest. “Thought I’d come and cheer you up.”
Clara froze, caught in a vice.
“Sorry to sneak up on you like that.”
 It can happen like that. In a single moment all the sins she’d been hiding from in the last twenty years finally arrive all at once. One of the unforseen problems of not going to regular confession. With no outlet, the sins just keep piling up like bad debts till it comes time to pay the piper. And here he was; so much older.
Looking at him now she remembered the feeling of relief and lightness she used to get after unburdening herself in that little confessional box. How easily she went into the day after that. How friendly the world seemed. How lovely the sunshine. And then she hit puberty and stopped because her mother said her period was a sign of Satan and her sins began to pile up like bricks on a wall of silence which hid her like a dirty secret. No more sister in Christ, or friend to all. No more innocence. No more facing your foe with a forgiving smile. Now she sneaked amongst the shadows, shy, sly and self preserving, no longer believing in forgiveness and redemption for herself or for others. She drained her cup of abundance down to the bitter dregs of a drab and lonely existence. Now it had come to this.
Clara did a quick check of herself to see if she was presentable…touching her hair back and brushing her skirt straight. There was nothing she could do about her soul however. She was a lapsed Catholic and the priest knew it. No hiding that from him.
“I…er…haven’t been to church for a while,” she stumbled and bumbled over the sentence, eyes darting here and there.
“Ah. You aren’t the only one,” he said, smiling kindly and sitting down on a chair nearby. He had aged considerably since she’d last seen him. She was sure she actually heard his bones creak.
“But never mind. No biggie,” he said in an effort to be ‘hip’…or ‘with it’ as the teenagers said today. “Times are changing. I remember when you and your mother used to come…” he said with a faraway look in his eyes.
“Some parents have a habit of scaring off the younger ones with their…dedication, shall I say, to the do’s and don’ts in the Bible. In fact, I know some children whose parents used to beat them over the head with the Bible, literally – hoping to transfer some piety and knowledge that way. As I recall, your mother was quite a fervent bible basher herself,” he said tactfully. “Doesn’t matter. Just wanted to say that I understand…and no hard feelings.” He smiled at her so sweetly that she nearly burst into tears.
‘Just don’t be nice to me,’ she thought. ‘Please don’t be nice to me or I shall never stop crying.’
“I heard about Joshua from the hospital,” he continued. “They keep me informed about such things.”
“I’m….” said Clara, waving a tearful hand at Joshua. “He won’t wake up. And I think it’s my fault.”
“Hubris.”
“What?”
“It’s God’s fault. He is in charge actually. It’s hubris to think otherwise. You caused nothing. You only lack faith, which is why you’re feeling so down and giving yourself airs.”
“But what can I do? I feel…”
“Well considering your agnostic point of view, I suppose the best thing is you could try doing a few push-ups or something,” he joked with a smile.
Clara laughed and felt her burden ease a little.
“Thanks for coming. It’s actually good to see you again.”
“I’m glad. And by the way I think you’re holding up very well under the strain. These things aren’t easy.”
“Do you think he will wake?”
“I believe so….but what I believe is not important. It’s what you believe.”
“I only have doubts….and that’s not good, is it?”
“No. Which is why I’m here. I thought it might help if I gave you a little blessing.”
“Bless Joshua.”
“There is no need to bless Joshua. He is already blessed. It is you who needs the help.”
Clara looked at him uncertainly, suddenly feeling a bit awkward and embarrassed.
“Do you object?”
“No.”
“Here we go then,” he said before she had time to change her mind. The priest opened his Bible and laid it carefully on his lap. Then he reached into his pocket and took out a vial of holy water. Gently he unscrewed the lid and held it ready in his left hand.

“In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.”
Automatically Clara made the sign of the cross and replied: “Amen.”
“May God, who through this water and the Holy Spirit, has given us a new birth in Christ, be with you.”
Clara replied: “And with your spirit.”
“The blessing of this water is to remind us of Christ, the living water, and of the sacrament of Baptism, in which we were born of water and the Holy Spirit. Whenever, therefore, we are sprinkled with this holy water in blessing, we thank God for his priceless gift to us and we ask for strength in our time of travail.
“These are the words of the Holy Gospel according to John: 7:37-39
"Let anyone who thirsts come to me and drink. Whoever believes in me, as Scripture says: ‘Rivers of living water will flow from within him.'
“Let us pray.
“Blessed are you, Lord, all-powerful God, who in Christ, the living water of salvation, blessed and transformed us. Grant that it will help us be patient and bear our burdens lightly, that we may be a pillar of strength to those around us.
“We ask this though Christ our Lord. Amen.
“Let this water call to mind our Baptism into Christ, who has redeemed us by his death and resurrection.”

 When the cool drops of water trickled on her forehead, her first emotion was to cry. Someone was actually taking the time to be nice to her…to help her. It had been so long…..just always holding on, without any relief, or hope. It was such a soothing feeling….to have someone do something special for her. She surrendered to the coolness of the water running down her face and fancied that it was indeed cleansing her dark and misgiving thoughts.
Then the strangest thing happened. Clara actually began to feel her worries lift off her like plasters peeling away, until the skin underneath showed through, smooth and new and whole, and felt her sins, one by one, disappear into thin air.
A great sigh wrenched her body and her sadness was torn from its throne perched on her heart and dragged into the open air, along with all her despair – where it withered and died. And in its place, a resignation to the way of all things. Not a giving up, but an acceptance of what is, and what she couldn’t change with any amount of worrying and fretting.
Her mourning for her loss was quite gone. For that’s all it was. Joshua suffered not – he would wake when he was ready….or not. She did not assist him with her wailing and her woe. She saw that now. He would not come back any the sooner for it…indeed, if he had heard her carrying on like that he might have been convinced that he had died and not come back at all.
She looked up to thank the priest but he was no longer there, making her wander if she had made him up out of empty air. But she wasn’t really surprised. Things had a habit of slipping away from her lately. Anyway, it did not matter. For the moment she had respite from her suffering.

 It did not last forever though. On her own, alone beside the bed, she could manage her equilibrium. When she went home for a change of clothes it was another story. Things were much more fraught with danger there.
“Don’t stay all night.”
“Don’t tell me what to do.”
“Sorry.”
“You’re not bossing me around anymore.”
“Sorry. I only meant…”
“Why don’t you go and tell your sister what to do if you want to boss someone around. She has pretty much been hopeless since she got here.”
“She is trying…
“She does bugger-all. Sits around eating and uses all the hot water. That’s what she does. Watches TV all the time.” Clara immediately regretted her language and hoped the priest wasn’t listening…but that woman… Basically that woman had the power to drag her down into hell with her and there was nothing she could do about it. She wished she’d asked the priest how to deal with Alice. But she could guess at the answer, and ‘forgive your enemies’ was too bitter a pill to swallow at the moment. Her pride would not let her do it…even if it meant losing her soul, she’d rather go to hell than give that woman the time of day. She’d rather die.
“I’ll talk to her,” said Samuel, sincerely regretting that he’d invited his sister over. Clara hadn’t stopped complaining since she’d arrived. And it was only going to get a whole lot worse. It would have been easier to try and cope without her. Too late now. No way could he tell Alice to pick up her sticks and leave.
“The place is a mess.”
“I’ll speak to her.”
“She’s supposed to be doing the laundry and the housework….and just look at it…why don’t you get her to clean the house…wash the fucking dishes, because dear god I will break the next dirty dish I see over your head.”
Clara turned tightly on her heel and all but bumped into Alice eavesdropping at the door.
“Telling tales are you?” she said in a sotto voce. “Can’t fight your own battles? Gotta get hubby to do that for you. After all, he is the boss of the house.”
“And you are a slovenly cow.”
“Meow! And what makes you think you’re such a wonderful wife and mother? You also ‘lie in bed all day’.”
“I work.”
“Oh yeah…like two hours a day.”
“Three.”
“…and the rest you slob around in your dressing gown dreaming of your little toy-boy and fantasizing about how you’re going to get on the bus and drive away with him. You’re no better than me….I’m just up front about it,” she said, purposely pushing out her far superior bosoms to make the point.
‘Just a lucky guess,’ thought Clara in a panic. ‘She’s just fishing. She can’t know anything.’
“You didn’t think I knew. Did you? Well, a little birdie told me,” she said with a wink, waggling her pinkie at Clara.
“You really are a scheming bitch, aren’t you?”
“Oh now the gloves are coming off.”
“And that’s because I don’t give a fuck anymore. My darling boy is in a coma so I’ve got nothing more to lose. I don’t even care about you and Samuel anymore. I used to. And that’s how you could get under my skin. But not anymore. You can have him for all the good he does around here. The two of you are welcome to each other. Evil twins that’s for sure. Go ahead and do your worst. I don’t give a shit. Animals, both of you. Rutting animals.”
Alice purposely didn’t deny that, a point not lost on Clara.
“And speaking of which, you can take that slobbering dog with you….in case Samuel doesn’t feel up to it, you got something to fall back on.”
“Oh my. You really do have the hump.”
Clara struck out with all her bottled-up fury. The side of her little hand connected high up on Alice’s cheekbone and knocked her flying into the wall.
“And don’t you ever talk to me like that again. If you are anything less than polite to me I will make sure that no man ever looks at you again.”
Alice bit down the automatic retort on its way to her lips. Clara was the bigger woman, and she had righteous fury on her side. Alice felt like she’d been hit by a brick. She also knew she had a mammoth black-eye on the way.
In the silence there bloomed a new-found respect for Clara. ‘The woman had balls after all,’ thought Alice.

Thursday, 22 September 2016

Episode 12



Previously…
 
“Hurry, hurry, the boy is here…I can smell him. The wind has changed and I have him here,” she said, pointing at her hooked nose, and looking towards the burgeoning east.
“We can’t let this one get away. Come on, come on, for Beelzebub’s sake hurry…hurry.”
“The devil’s always in a hurry,” muttered Carrapacchio under his breath. “Always seeking mischief to cool her boiling blood.” And then in a loud voice; “Why is this boy so important, oh gruelling one?” he said, more to annoy her with stupid questions than any real need to know. Who knows what madness drives this devil’s sow. He certainly did not care.
“Because he’s my ticket out of here. No more schlepping through the shit with you.”
“But how can the boy get you out of here?”
“Because he comes from the other land, you fool.”
“They all come from the other land, oh gloating one.”
“Yes, but this one’s not dead.” She hawked and spat into the morning dirt. “…………..not yet!”
A bloody red dawn spilt across the dunes as they mounted up and rode into the rising sun.

And now...




The old lady coughs, hunched over in the morning dew. This is not a good time for her. Her old bones ache from sleeping on the hard ground. She looks up at the boy. He is becoming excited by the prospect of the journey. He takes up his bag full of rock-salt, and the other of salted snakes, and stands waiting. Behind them the camel kicks up a hell of a moan. She is a spavined old creature and won’t get up easily. The messenger takes out his stick and whacks the lazy old thing on her rump, to which she gives an indignant bellow of protest and tries to bite him on the ankle, her long neck flying out with unaccustomed speed. She is a bad tempered old lady that hates to walk…and even more to run – god forbid – with her old splayed out toes. Her skin however is as soft as silk with bristly whiskers on her chin, and the longest tongue the boy had ever seen. Her big black eyes and beautiful lashes remind the boy of someone, but he can’t quite put his finger on whom.
It takes forever to get going, what with one thing and another, but finally they are walking in a single file along the ruined roads, between the broken houses with their blackened beams and shattered glass, half submerged in the encroaching desert sands. After the city walls had fallen the dust storms had swept in unopposed. Soon there would be no sign of the civilization that once existed here.
Occasionally the travelling band sees someone sitting despondently against a derelict and dusty wall – head hanging in hopelessness, or some couple doing a dirty deed in the dust. Dogs and thieves have made a home in these ruins…and whores like the old lady. Her cracked flat feet slap at the dust. She feels herself withering under the fierce glare of the sun, her torn parasol not much protection. On and on, one monotonous mile after the next they trudge, this little trio and their camel, seemingly going nowhere as the scenery never changes, broken buildings as far as the eye can see.
Sand and concrete dust cake around their lips…grit in their eyes. For the old lady it’s worse. Sand settles in her cracks and creases until she looks like a stone man. She coughs more and more with every mile. The boy is worried about her and walks close by her side.
“She isn’t well,” he calls to the messenger.
“I warned her,” he says without looking back. “This is no journey for old ladies.”
“Why don’t you let her ride on the camel?”
“The camel is weak. No water.”
“But she weighs nothing. Look at her.”
The messenger stops and surveys the old lady. She does look a sorry sight.
“Alright.” And in one movement he hoists her high onto the camel’s back, which sags dramatically.
“GAAARRRRRR,” comes the expected complaint, but the camel keeps walking.
They settle down into the sultry silence once again, but the boy is bored. He takes out a small salt rock and chews it for a while.
“How much further?” he asks.
“It is a journey’s length.”
“How long will it take?”
“It will take a measure of time.”
The boy ruminates on the wisdom of this.
“What’s your name?”
“My name is Senjur.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means nothing.”
Pause.
“My name is…..” he nearly had it then; on the tip of his tongue. “I don’t know.”
“Good. If you have no name you cannot be summoned. You are a free man.”
“You are not free.”
“No. I am not free. Everyone calls my name. I am always busy.”
The camel farts and the boy giggles.
“The camel testifies to what I say.”
They walk in silence for a while.
“Where do you come from,” he asks finally.
Senjur shrugs.
“Nowhere. I was called and I came. That is all.”
“But we saw you come out of the desert. Do you live there?”
“No one lives there. Not even me. I live only because I was called. More than that I do not know.”
“Who called you?”
“You did.”
“No I didn’t.”
The messenger doesn’t argue.
“What about your mother and father?” continues the boy, determined to get to the bottom of this matter.
“The desert is my mother and father.”
The boy looks at him with a suspicious eye, not quite sure what to make of his answers.
The camel farts again.
“You could say the desert farted me out.”
The boy laughs at the image this conjures up in his head. He knows he isn’t going to get a satisfactory answer out of him. He picks up a stone and throws it into the ruins, keeping a beady eye out for snakes and suchlike to salt and add to his collection.
“I’m hungry,” he complains to the messenger.
“It will soon be too hot to travel. Then we will eat.”

Without warning Clytemnestra sags to her knees and lays down in the sand. The old lady is nearly thrown over her head for she had been fast asleep in the saddle. They find some shade behind a kitchen wall and the boy falls asleep before the camel is unloaded.

The messenger and the old woman sit and talk in hushed tones by the fire. They are sharing a roll-up cigarette between them, the night a bubble over them. The boy wakes up and watches them for a long while, then he gets up and saunters over. They stop talking when he gets close, and look up at him expectantly.
“Hello, little worm,” she says, her face a beacon of love for him.
“What were you talking about?”
“Things.”
“What things?”
“How grown up you are,” she says.
He looks at her wrinkled face and her stained yellow teeth. He wants something. He doesn't like her talking alone to the messenger. He is jealous of her. All of her. She belongs to him. He needs to claim her back.
“I want to kiss you,” he says.
She laughs, but stops herself quickly.
“Sorry. It’s not funny. I didn’t mean to laugh. You just surprised me. No one wants to kiss me anymore.”
“What about those men,” he says, indicating into the darkness.
“They didn’t want to kiss me. They…I am old and ugly. They only want….”
“No, you’re not. I think you’re beautiful.” He stands defiantly in front of her.
There is a pause, and she looks at him with her calm face. She holds out her hands to him. “Please come and sit with me.”
With honour partially satisfied he goes and sits at her feet. He loves her feet. He loves looking at them. He would love to dare to touch them but she is a goddess…and he is only just a little boy.
“I still want to kiss you,” he says with one eye on the messenger. But his bravado sits uncomfortably on his shoulders. He feels…artificial, but he can’t help himself.
“Maybe later,” she says in his ear and his heart does a little flip-flop.
The messenger sits unmoved by this interaction, staring deeply into the fire, as if he can read the future therein. After a while he speaks.
“It is too hot during the day. We must travel by night.”
The messenger picks up a stone and throws it at one of the lonely ones who have ventured too close. They aren’t normally dangerous, but they don’t want to take any chances.
“The mad ones are becoming restless. We must move soon.”
“I thought you called them the lonely ones.”
“There is no difference.”

They walk one behind the other in the darkness; the messenger and camel in front, then the old lady, and then the boy. He feels happy with her familiar form ahead of him.
They walk in silence for many miles through the shadowy landscape. Unidentifiable outlines of shapes rise up and subside as they go by.
 The boy notices bits of fog and mist floating by in the corner of his eye. He rubs his eyes but the floating fog bits are still there. No one else seems to notice. Occasionally a bigger blob of mist detaches itself from a house they are passing and follows them, drifting just above the ground. He can’t see them if he looks directly at them and has to look away to the side to catch a glimpse of them. He shivers. There are many of them now….still no one else notices. The clouds or swirls of fog come in all sizes. But he still can’t be sure that he’s not seeing things, and like all children he doesn’t want to say anything in case the others laugh at him, or think he’s stupid…or scared.
The rags of mist are becoming more plentiful now and pressing in closer to the trio. Then, right before his eyes, one of the blobs attaches itself to the old lady’s back. She doesn’t seem to notice and just plods on into the night, her calloused feet automatically stepping in between the rubble and broken bricks strewn in their path.
Then another sliver of mist attaches itself to her…and another. Soon she looks like a walking cloud. She stumbles and the boy can see she is struggling to keep herself upright. The fog seems to weigh her down, but the boy finds himself strangely not worried. It has a kind of luminescence that mesmerizes him into not caring…almost, for his attachment to the old lady is very strong. The boy moves forward to help but the cloud pushes him back. The old woman’s breathing is laboured now.
“Hey Mr. Messenger…”
The messenger stops and turns and the old woman nearly bumps into him. She is clearly in distress.
“Something’s wrong with her.”
The messenger runs a critical eye over her. “I told her she would slow us down. She needs to rest for a while.”
“No!” shouts the boy, instinctively knowing that this is a bad idea. This is what the cloud wants, for her to lie down so they can take her.
“There is stuff hanging from her,” he points, but the messenger sees nothing.
“What stuff?”
“Like mist. Misty blankets hanging on to her. Can’t you see?”
“No.” He thinks for a moment. “They must be echoes.”
“What?”
“They are echoes of the people who used to live here.”
“You mean like ghosts?”
“Yes. That is another word.”
“Why are they holding on to her?”
“They are trying to claim her. You are right. She must not lie down, or else she is gone.”
“But how do we get them off her?”
“I don’t know. I don’t know much about echoes.”
The old lady’s eyes are closed and her head hangs limply on her chest. Once again the boy tries to approach her but the fog pushes him away. He sticks out his hand to grab her but it just turns numb and he withdraws it.
“Why do they want her?”
“Maybe she is close to death. Maybe she is dead already and refuses to go,” he shrugs. “I don’t know. There are many stages of death.”
“But they can’t have her,” says the boy frantically. “I need her.”
The camel makes a ‘Garrrrr’ noise in agreement. The old lady is on her last legs. It is all that she can do to remain standing.
“Water,” she croaks.
“We have no more,” says the messenger.
The boy stares at her, appalled at what is happening. But he has to save her. He just won’t lose her.
Then he does the only thing that little boys know how to do. He drops his pants and urinates on her.
As the drops of urine fall on her parchment-like skin, there is a flurry and flapping of ghostly forms desperately trying to detach themselves, first from the urine soaked parts of her body, and then altogether. Within a short while they have all fled in disgust. The boy stands looking at her…not quite sure what to do now.
The old lady’s breathing becomes easier and her eyes open. The boy walks to her and puts his arms around her. She doesn’t often touch him, because he doesn’t belong to her – so it’s a thrilling feeling when he puts his arms around her. They stand forever in the moonlit ruins. He doesn’t want to let her go. She infuses him with warmth and sensuality…and happiness – his body yearns for her
“You are right,” says the messenger. “They don’t like water. We must find some soon, for they will be back. We must also travel by day now, for they cannot touch us then, and sleep by night. They will not be able to find her when she is asleep – for our souls go elsewhere when we dream. I think we should rest for the remainder of this night. They will not bother us as you have anointed her so liberally, and as I say, they will not find her once she is asleep.” The messenger shakes out a blanket and places it on the ground. “We must also not speak of them anymore or they will be drawn to us. Echoes are very sensitive things.”

The next day, once they are on their way, the boy cannot help but talk about them again.
“Why do they want to take her away,” asks the boy again. The incident has upset him. He feels anxious and worried about the old lady now.
There is no answer from the messenger. The boy tugs at the old lady’s rags.
“Why do they want you?”
The old lady looks at him sadly.
“I don’t know. Maybe I’m dead.”
“But you’re not dead,” says the boy.
“The messenger has told you that there are many levels of death. Maybe I am half dead.” She shrugs her shoulders. “Maybe I have unfinished business. Maybe I am alive because I have been sent to help you…I don’t know.”
“What unfinished business?”
“Something I didn’t do when I was alive. Perhaps I’m getting a second chance. Maybe you’re my second chance.”
“And the messenger? Is he also dead?”
“No – not in that way. He doesn’t live here…in the land. He only comes when he is called.”
“And what about the lonely ones? The ones like you, who live here in the ruins?” He wanted to say ‘the ones you fuck for your food and tobacco’ but that would have hurt her. He still feels jealous of them though and it hurts him to think of her lying with them.
“They look alive to me.”
“I don’t know. Perhaps they are also waiting for their second chance. Maybe they also have unfinished business. Maybe the desert will send them someone to look after…like you.”
“And am I dead too?”
“No, I don’t think so,” she says after some deliberation.
“Then why am I here? And why can’t I remember my mother…and my family…and friends. Where are they?” The boy looks around him. “I didn’t always live by the gate.”
Still the old lady remains silent.
The messenger looks at him and begins speaking.
“You are at death’s door,” he says with finality. “Death cannot decide whether you are to enter the gate – or whether he will send you back to where you came from.”
At the mention of death the camel gives a snort and rolls her eyes rather wildly.
“All I know for sure, is that if that woman following us catches you, you will never go home again. So come. We must hurry now. Clytemnestra has caught a whiff of something ugly in the air.”
“And what about her…the demon lady?”
Once again it is the messenger who answers.
“She is a feeder – she stays alive, in a manner of speaking, by feeding on the energy left behind by the people who have died…like the echoes.”
“Then why is she after me?”
“Because you are in no man’s land and are fair game…and you have plenty of energy. If she taps you she will be very powerful. With all your energy she could live forever.”
This is also one of the reasons why the old lady refrains from touching the boy too much, especially when she needs comfort. It is alright if he touches her, but she knows that every time she touches him in need, she takes energy away from him – his life force. Skin touching skin is the most powerful way of exchanging or transferring energy – especially the palms of the hand and the lips where all the nerve endings are. One kiss from that demon lady and the boy would die within moments.
“GAAARRRRRRRRRR,” roars the camel, and begins to prance around as if she’s on hot coals.
“Mount up,” says the messenger to the old lady. “We must move swiftly now, she is closer than we think. The echoes have been speaking to her, and giving her directions.”


Thursday, 15 September 2016

Episode 11


Previously…


Alice and Joshua had a bit of history which no one knew about. When they had been younger, Alice would often persuade him to play certain games with her (mostly with sexual-satanic overtones). But eventually she went a bit too far in one of her games and Joshua had freaked out. He threatened to tell his mother, and Alice, to keep him quiet, had scared him half to death by saying that if he did, she would wait until he was asleep then creep into his room and suck out all his blood. She was only joking, but Joshua saw no reason to disbelieve her. She looked every inch the vampire with her pentagrams and piercings. Joshua wet his bed for six months after that visit, but at least Alice was deterred from playing with him.
“Thank you for the coffee,” she smiled at Clara. “But now I would like to go and unpack and have a bath. If that’s okay?” She smiled sweetly at Clara. Clara didn’t answer.
“Sure. You can have Joshua’s room,” said Samuel, looking at Clara to see if this was okay. Clara shrugged nonchalantly as if she couldn’t give a stuff.
“Okay then,” he said, picking up her suitcase. I’ll show you.” He led them out the kitchen and up the stairs, Alice’s leathers and chains clinking as she walked, the dog following close behind, sniffing at her bum.
And now...
 

“Wooaaa Harm. Wooaaa Gore.”
Demona dragged on the reins-and-buckle to bring the large shaggy tri-peds to a lumbering halt. She and her sidekick rode in a tandem saddle suspended between the two great elephantine creatures. These were three legged animals, more used to trekking across the ice tundra’s of Tulwan than the deserts of Saih.  They had one foreleg apiece with a slit hoof to guide, and two powerful hind legs to thrust and push. Their broad flanks and easy lope made them ideal creatures for long journeys had it not been for their salivating jaws, which released such copious volumes of froth and foam that sailed back with the wind as they ran and created a virtual sheet of mucous and saliva. This is why they could only be ridden in tandem, two of them harnessed side by side, with a central saddle not in direct line of the slobber. Otherwise the passenger would drown in spit. Gravidores were not very fast, but they were untiring.
All of eight feet tall, these two were still only youngsters, and due to their exuberant wilfulness were hard to handle at times. They were immensely powerful and dangerous, and although they had a lot of respect for Demona (she could be very hurtful), they made Carrapacchio’s life a misery. He had to be very careful when mounting and dismounting to keep well clear of their ravenous jaws. He knew they’d like nothing better than to take a bite out of him.
“Hurry up you spineless sissy…help me down and stop dancing around like you have poop in your pants. Scared to death of my two little puppies are you? Call yourself a man…you and your mouldy little penis…...ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.”
The Gravidores began to fret and jerk at the reins, unsettled by her malicious laughing  
“Alright, alright, you can calm down now. I’ve had enough of you all today. Set up my tent Carrapacchio…and get that fire going. I’m starving,” she said, and marched off behind the nearest dune to relieve herself.

Carrapacchio began untying the heavy bags from the cross frames and dragged them to a sheltered clearing nearby. He was a sight to inspire horror and pity at the same time. Lurching along on crippled claws, he was a crass, craven creature with sad, mad eyes – full of swollen desires and choking resentments. This was Demona’s bastard son-lover. From birth he had been an ugly little monster, hard to distinguish from his afterbirth, and the result of her copulation with some unnatural creature she couldn’t even remember anymore.
“Am I always to be sneezed upon,” he complained. “Am I to be cast aside like an old fagot just because thou hast a vagrant vagina?” he grumbled to himself as he went about his tasks. “Am I thanked for my services? Oh no. I am to be pissed on at every turn of a whim that wanders through her bloodless body.”
“Stop muttering, monster.”
“Monster is as monster does. And what is thy pleasure tonight my mistress,” he curtsied sarcastically and oozed his way forward…
“Don’t you start that again,” she said, raising her stick. “You just see you don’t burn the food.”
She went to one of the sacks and took out a bottle of bloody liquor.
“What are we celebrating then tonight my mistress?”
“None of your business, creep.”
For a while he went about his chores with a dejected demeanour, cursing and spitting into the stew when she wasn’t looking, but after a while he let out a little giggle.
“I know how I shall have my revenge on her,” he whispered in his own ear, and was much cheered by it. “Tonight I shall sneak into her tent…….” but he went no further, for he was well aware of her powers, and the fact that she could, at times, read his thoughts. “Best not to let the mind know what the body is up to,” he thought sneakily.

Demona sat back against her plump Persian pillows in the door of the tent and stared out into the vastness. She was decked with the finest Arabian silks – diamonds and all sorts of precious jewels hung from her fingers and her long black hair, which in chains did fall about her shoulders bare.
Her lips were rich and ruby red
Her hips wide enough for the devil’s head
Charcoal eyes that pierced the night
Her chocolate skin, a satiny delight.

They say she fell, a falling star
And crashed into the East
They say that day mankind did weep
And eat a bitter feast.
Now the bottle is bare, no succour in there
And her bosom as barren as Cain
But she searches for blood from an innocent breast
That the devil may ride once again.

For her resurrection from the ashes of hell
Rise the cries of the battle of horn and bell
Forgive them all, some bravely said
In which fair book she never read
Of gentleness that ever bled
For all who hungered and would be fed.

She lived but half a life infernal, without blood, without tears, without glory.
The book of her life lay leafless and lost on some distant desert dune.

“Soon,” she crooned softly to herself. “Soon we will be at the city gates.” She took a deep drag on the bottle of palm wine and closed her eyes as the oily liquid burned its way into her stomach and set her veins on fire. “Best not to let the little bastard have any of this or else I shall get no sleep tonight,” she said to the wind. “But soon. Soon I shall not need him anymore. Soon I shall have legions of grovellers wanting to serve me. I shall dress and dine like a queen. I shall live in a beautiful palace and not have to drink this piss anymore for a start.” Then loudly to Carrapacchio she says, “See that you get to sleep early tonight. I want to be up before dawn.”

The night sky turned on a starry wheel
Above the quiet tent,
Where softly dreams like pageants fell
Until the silence was rent.

“Hurry, hurry, the boy is here…I can smell him. The wind has changed and I have him here,” she said, pointing at her hooked nose, and looking towards the burgeoning east.
“We can’t let this one get away. Come on, come on, for Beelzebub’s sake hurry…hurry.”
“The devil’s always in a hurry,” muttered Carrapacchio under his breath. “Always seeking mischief to cool her boiling blood.” And then in a loud voice; “Why is this boy so important, oh gruelling one?” he said, more to annoy her with stupid questions than any real need to know. Who knows what madness drives this devil’s sow. He certainly did not care.
“Because he’s my ticket out of here. No more schlepping through the shit with you.”
“But how can the boy get you out of here?”
“Because he comes from the other land, you fool.”
“They all come from the other land, oh gloating one.”
“Yes, but this one’s not dead.” She hawked and spat into the morning dirt. “…………..not yet!”
A bloody red dawn spilt across the dunes as they mounted up and rode into the rising sun.