Tag: revenge

  • Blessed Omeka

    Omeka dreamed, and in her dreams she was entirely her own.

    Omeka dreamed of dancing in the clubs to swirling, skirling music, joining hands and parting them to the rhythm of the music, of lifts and flourishes and twirling.

    Omeka dreamed of Duc, who ran all the extralegal establishments in this District, waving her over, bending down to murmur in her ear, giving her an assignment, an errand, a name, a task to complete.

    Omeka dreamed of dressing in her colorful draperies of synth-silk, of dying her hair in many hues, of giggling with the other women as they prepared for the evening’s labor.

    Omeka dreamed of drugs, the drifting bliss of jollie, the bubbly jitter of hopp, the sweet drowse of resin.

    Omeka dreamed of hard lips and gentle hands, of the press of a body against her own, of the noise and sweat and rhythm of sex.

    Omeka dreamed, and in her dreams she was entirely her own. (more…)

  • The Fastest Thing

    I remember a joke of when I was younger. With younger, I mean really young. I don’t remember how old but like, maybe 10? It was definitely in elementary school, that I remember. We used to think we were so cool, my friends and I, telling dirty, “adult” jokes. The premise was simple, a school with kids, just like us, and the teacher asks a question. What is the fastest thing in the universe? Weird question to ask a bunch of eight to ten year olds, when you think about it, but jokes have little logic I guess.

    Frank had always been an asshole. He is the kind of smug and wise cracking co-worker that loves to dish it out but takes it terribly when someone goes after him. He is the kind of opportunistic boot licker that always agrees with the boss even when everyone thinks they’re wrong. Frank has been known to cut people off in meetings, but even worse, to steal ideas from others and take full credit for them. He is also bad at taking blame, even when his actions are directly tied to a poor performing project. Worse, he is the office’s resident prankster. And not a good one. God, Frank is such an asshole.

    I knew a lot of jokes growing up, the dirtier the better. My friends and I were a bit of a misfit group, humor was the only thing that glued us together. And it was definitively that kind of low-brow humor that we shared, the Adam Sandler in his forties type of humor. There was this classic three act set-up I loved when I was a little kid. The set-up is: authority figure (usually a teacher) asks a question. Act 1 – the teacher’s pet answers the question with what could be the right answer. Act 2 – another smart kid answers with a more creative, equally likely to be right answer. Act 3 – Pepe answers the question. I don’t know why, but the name of the third kid was always Pepe, or “Pepito” as we used to call him. Sometimes the answer itself was the punchline, other times it required an explanation. Either way, Pepe would give an unrelated, clearly wrong, and so despicably crude answer that people would burst out laughing out of sheer shock. We used to think we were such bad asses, all the way back in grade school.

    I always got along well with everyone at work. I am a bit of an introvert and kind of shy, so it’s not like everyone’s best friend, but I get along just fine. I am most comfortable at happy hours, tie undone and a cold beer in my hand. Not too many beers though, I was never much of a party person. I enjoy the casual conversations, telling blue jokes and such. The people I work with are, for the most part, the same. Casual, good-mannered people, most of them a bit older than me, with mortgages and young kids. My future selves I suppose. I even liked Frank at the beginning, but we are just too different of people. He is the outgoing one, the I-can-do-this-my-first-try kind of guy, the go-hard-in-the-paint kind of guy. I am a bit more of the, I-like-me-a-quiet-night kind of guy. I think I fit better in the company in general too, but I am not sure. I always found that to be a bit weird. (more…)

  • Electric-type Revenge

    Ash sat in his beat-up silver Honda, waiting. The prison parking lot was mostly empty at this time of day and he’d parked inconspicuously amongst some employee vehicles.

    Twenty-five years they’d been locked in this dance, Ash and Team Rocket. Twenty-five years of lies, and kidnapping attempts. Sometimes it felt like they’d met on a weekly schedule. Ash was always told to laugh them off. That they were harmless. They were inept. Everyone brushed them off as bunglers, not even worth their time.

    Ash had read an article online that they were getting out today. Bunglers! They’d put him in the most abject danger as a kid. The kind of stuff he couldn’t tell his mother about when he called home. She had worry lines around her eyes when they talked, her big boy running around the world without her. She didn’t need to know. He only ever got out of it because he had the best friend in the world. (more…)

  • Closure

    “I’m –

     

    “I’m Done,” he said and set the glass down on the painfully white bar in the more painfully white and other wise featureless room. “I’m finally well and truly done.” He turned the glass around completely twice.

    He couldn’t recall having put on a white suit yet he wore one now. In fact, he’d never owned a white suite in all his one hundred and seventeen years.. No tie, though. Disappointment welled up in him at that. He should have a tie. No one wore ties any more, they’d all forgotten what it meant to be businesslike. Now they all wore business casual.

    Something blue, maybe. He liked blue ties.

    Are you?

    Surprised, he answered without thinking. “Am I what?” He moved away from the bar and tried to take in the entire room.

    Are you capital-d Done?

    “Oh.” The question was aggressive in a way he hadn’t expected. The voice was unfamiliar, too. He considered the question. “Yes.

    “Yeah, I’m Done. I drank the whisky. I’m finished with all that.”

    And the people you’ve hurt in the process? What about them? Don’t they get to say goodbye?

    “They’re being well-compensated.” He frowned. “Who are you? What are you doing here?”

    This is the Waiting Room. Everyone here is waiting for something. (more…)

  • Life and Limb

    My brother Tommy had always been twitchy. He was born wound tight, and growing up in our house hadn’t done the kid any favors.

    But when Tommy stumbled into Momma’s kitchen that day, pale faced and clutching the crumbled paper bag under one arm, the look in his eyes told me something was seriously wrong this time.

    Tommy hesitated in the doorway when he saw me. His eyes darted from me to Momma, but the old woman wasn’t going to be any help. I’d been sitting in her kitchen for going on half an hour now, and she’d only said a handful of words to me. Even now she kept her back to us, washing dishes in the sink, the scalding water turning her arms a bright, angry red.

    “Hey, bro,” Tommy finally said. His voice had a slight tremble in it, like he was fighting to keep it under control.

    “You coming in or not?” I asked.

    Tommy looked toward Momma again, but she was still deep in her own world of crazy. With a look of resignation, he closed the door and joined me at the table.

    (more…)

  • Clowning Around (Flash Fiction)

    Sometimes, when it’s quiet, I can remember what my life was like before the circus came to town.

    Don’t get me wrong. It sucked then too, but nobody had died yet, so there were advantages.

    Now I know you’re probably thinking, “Oh, God. Not another spooky carnival story.”

    Well it’s not. So shut up.

    I’m sick of that crap too. If this was one of those tales, I would’ve rolled over and died already rather than face the idea that I might have to write about it one day.

    I promise you, no carnivals.

    This is more of a creeper clown kind of thing.

    (more…)

  • Pigtails & Bows (Flash Fiction)

    Look, I’m not a bad guy. I’m not the first hot shot to come through these halls. Bernard isn’t the first dude who ever got roughed up because he had a D&D book in his bag. It’s just the rules, you know?

    I actually like Bernard, in an indistinct sort of way. I don’t know him. He’s shaped sort of like a green bean — skinny and curved into a protective hunch — but you can tell he’s pissed off and passionate behind the eyes. No one else in our school has perfected the cold disdain he has when he talks, and he just talks himself right into my fist week after week. I wish he would quit it already.

    Bernard can’t throw a punch. He tries — man, you can tell he really wants to hurt me back — but his form is all wrong and he has shitty follow-through. Sometimes, I just want to stop mid-fight and give him some instructions. I almost did once, but I really didn’t want to embarrass the dude anymore.

    So I play it up. I hit the ground harder then necessary, ham my way through a couple hits. Whatever. He gets bloodied by the end of the fight and I get to crow around like I own his ass. My teammates jeer and shout like we’re gladiators or something.

    You gotta understand, Bernard has been Carson’s target of choice for as long as I’ve lived here, ever since my parents bought a house on the hill when I was in fourth grade. I have no idea what the story is — it’s one of those old cliches that goes something like we were kids and when we hit middle school — but because I’m the Big Guy On Campus, it’s my job to do the actual dirty work, while Carson yells encouragingly from a safe distance. (more…)

  • What Is Best In Life (Flash Fiction)

    “Anything else, Boss?”

    He looked up from the screen and shook his head. It was past midnight, and his very attractive secretary had plans with her boyfriend of the moment. “That’s all, Carly,” he said. “Have a good time with Jordan.”

    “Jordan said he had to find himself in some cave in Africa or something,” Carly said with a devil-may-care tone. “Whatever.” She came over to him, leaned in so he could admire her cleavage and kissed him on the cheek. “Tonight’s Bart. We’re going to that new discotheque on forty-seventh.”

    “Well, have fun,” he said. He smiled at her.

    Carly stood up and put her hand on his shoulder. “You’re thinking about it again, aren’t you?”

    He nodded.

    “I can stay if you like. Bart’s pretty flexible, and he’s got plenty of offers.”

    “No. You’re sweet to make an old man feel wanted, but no.”

    She frowned and ran her hand through his hair. Carly was way too young, and she was an employee. A bad mix, especially for a dinosaur like him. “Erik,” she said with disapproving tone. “Stop dwelling on ancient history.” (more…)

  • Blockhead (Flash Fiction)

    “…I’ve got nothing.” I stare at the blank screen in front of me. Blinking cursor, taunting. I tangle my fingers in my hair, tempted to start pulling. “Two weeks past deadline, less than 24-hours to publication, and I’ve got fuck-all for a story idea. This revenge assignment is a nightmare! It’s like it’s tailor-made to–”

    “Drive you crazy?” I say, from across the desk.

    I release my hair and glare at my doppelganger. He’s sitting comfortably across from me, grinning. “Something like that, yes,” I say.

    “Think it’s intentional?”

    That gets a laugh from me. “What? The editors handed out this assignment just to spite me?”

    “I do cause trouble. Always submitting late, always questioning the rules. I’m a rabble-rouser and a delinquent. Maybe they’re fed up with me.”

    I push my chair back from the computer. “Let me back up a minute. Give your ego a bit more room to swell.”

    My reflection gives me the finger from across the desk. “It’s not ego. I’m right. The topic couldn’t be more difficult for me. It’s the perfect tool to drive me crazy And it’s working, isn’t it? I’m seeing a perfect copy of myself sitting in the chair next to me. I’m conversing with myself, out loud. And I haven’t felt this frustrated about writing in quite a long time.”

    I haven’t felt this frustrated in a long time. You feel nothing.  You are just a fever dream. Stop confusing pronouns.”

    “Still, I…sorry! You can’t help wondering if the assignment is meant to flush you out.”

    “How? Either I write the story, or I don’t. It’s not that big a deal, is it?”

    “If you write the story, are you being true to your principles? Revenge is antithetical to your person.”

    “So what? It’s just fiction. Shouldn’t matter where my personal feelings lie.”

    My mirage points to the screen in front of me. “So why are you struggling so?”

    I pinch the bridge of my nose, trying to release tension. Trying to regain some semblance of sanity. “I don’t know,” I whisper.

    “Yes, you do.”

    I nod. I know myself quite well, it seems.  “ I’m scared. It feels like writing this story, dwelling on the concept of revenge, is…dangerous somehow. It’s stupid, but that’s how it feels. It’s terrifying.”

    “You find yourself tottering on the precipice. Peering into the darkness.”

    “Melodramatic, but yes.”

    “And if you don’t write it? If you don’t submit a story?”

    A sigh dribbles out of my lips. “It should mean nothing. But it feels like I’d be admitting defeat. It feels like they win. Even though that means they’re out to get me. Which they’re not.” I grind my teeth. “I feel trapped.”

    Across the desk, I look smug. “So…?”

    “So? If you have a solution, please tell me. Hiding ideas from myself is truly insane.”

    “Write this.”

    I raise an eyebrow. “Write…what? What’s ‘this?’”

    My reflection waves his arms about judiciously. “This. You, talking to you. Struggling with the assignment. Avoiding the issue. Not writing about revenge.”

    “Write a revenge story about not pursuing revenge? That’s stupid. Besides, it’s a bad idea to write about having trouble writing. It’s in poor taste.”

    “Fuck that! Who cares? Since when did those kinds of rules and guidelines ever inform your writing principles?”

    It’s my turn to grin. “Never. But what does writing this ridiculous, batshit-crazy banter with my imaginary self accomplish?”

    I just stare at myself, not providing an answer.

    “Oh,” I say. “Now I’m just me, talking to myself? Switching to a singular internal monologue all of the sudden?” Still no response. “Asshole.”

    What does writing down this fever dream accomplish? It’s not a tale of revenge, at least not exactly. The protagonist (and that’s…me? How odd) isn’t seeking it. The protagonist is actively avoiding the topic altogether!

    But…this tale, it is about revenge, at least tangentially. I’m no expert in existentialism, but I appear to be trodding all over it right now. Just talking about revenge means I’m addressing the topic at hand, right? And if this assignment is some nefarious, circuitous attempt by the editors to drive me out or drive me crazy with frustration (which it simply cannot be, even I’m not that paranoid or egotistical), then by not writing the story I’ve been assigned, but still writing an effective story, am I–?

    “Revenge in absentia? Revenge via cowardice?”

    I shake my head. “I don’t know. It hurts too much to think about.”

    “So, stop thinking. Start typing. Time’s wasting.”

    “You’re an asshole.”

    I smile at myself. “Yes. You are.”

     

    Disclaimer: This is PURE FICTION. I do not believe, in any way, shape, or form, that anyone at Confabulator Cafe is out to get me. On the contrary, I had a great time finally writing this story (although getting to that point was agony). I want to thank the Confabulator folks for challenging me, and getting me to write things I normally would never imagine or attempt. Also, I do NOT see doppelgangers of myself sitting across the desk. At least, not that you know of.

  • Prized Collection (Flash Fiction)

    “Revenge is a dish best served cold.” ~ An old Klingon proverb

    Throughout SpiralConXIII, from the registration tables to the dealer hall, a congregation of geeks gave homage to their respective pantheons. The major religions (Star Trek and Star Wars) were well-represented. As were newer flavors of geek chic, from Firefly to Stargate to the newest incarnation of Battlestar Galactica. I even spied a couple of fans kicking it old style, wearing the Colonial Viper pilot outfits from the ’78 series.

    And there were superheroes. God help me, they were everywhere. It was like walking into a spandex factory. Ever since Tobey Maguire had suited up in Spider-Man, superhero cosplay had slowly taken over conventions.

    Once home to only the nerdiest of the über-nerds, sci-fi and fantasy conventions used to host masquerade competitions featuring Tom Baker lookalikes, space troopers, elves, and dwarfs (back when The Lord of the Rings was a book, not a movie).

    Over the past couple of decades, cosplay had morphed into a cross between a fashion show and a fetish porn website. Girls and guys who looked more likely to be hanging out at the gym or the beach rather than a comic book store paraded around in outfits that showed off their boobs and/or butt-cleavage. I resented the hell out of them.

    The pre-registration line was already long. I tried to be patient, but I had waited all year for SpiralCon. I had a roll of hundred dollar bills in my pocket and an entire room filled with memorabilia just waiting to join my collection.

    Last year, I had been on a quest for a 1974 Mego 8″ Superman action figure. They were rare and I hadn’t seen one since I was kid. I heard through a friend that a vendor had one still mint in its original window box. But another SpiralCon regular — decked out in full-on Iron Man armor — refused to let it go. Every time I raised my offer ten bucks, he went up twenty. It was frustrating as hell. In the end, he raised the price to a place where even my sizable discretionary spending could not boldly go. I walked away humiliated and without my prize, determined to do better next year.

    I finally made my way to the front of the pre-registration line, grabbed my lanyard with all-access pass, and made a beeline for the dealer hall. Every inch of the hall that wasn’t filled with foot traffic was lined with tables and booths hocking every kind of collectible prized by fans. There were books and comic books, new and rare; DVDs, vintage videotapes, and bootlegs; action figures and vehicles; t-shirts and costumes; and original artwork. I could have blown my entire wad (of cash) before getting five feet into the hall.

    Everywhere I looked were a variety of fanboys and hardcore collectors. I pitied the fanboys, who came to the con with fifty bucks or so, hoping to buy that one rare comic for their collection or a limited edition action figure. When it came to the real deal — the vintage, high-dollar memorabilia — they could look but could never touch.

    I used to be one of them, forever wanting and never buying. But after my failed marriage last year, I decided to forget about keeping up with the Joneses. Instead of buying a big house, a new car, and two-week vacations in tropical paradises, I saved my pennies for this opportunity to reclaim a piece of my childhood.

    I Jedi-Forced my way through the shifting crowd, even as a variety of geek treasures caught my eye. Here was a vintage Star Trek lunchbox.  There was a Six Million Dollar Man Steve Austin action figure — mint in box! I paused at an original signed Alex Ross painting of the Justice League. But I steeled my resolve and forced my way to the far north corner where this year’s coveted prize awaited me.

    The vendor who had been selling the Superman figure last year promised me a special treat. He had secured an exceedingly rare Star Wars Boba Fett action figure prototype.

    Originally, the Boba Fett figure was supposed to have a rocket that fired from its jet pack. Before it went to mass production, it had been redesigned because it had been deemed unsafe for children. I was one of the millions of kids who pre-ordered it by mail only to find the rocket was firmly secured into Boba Fett’s jet pack. As a kid, it had been a huge disappointment. But now, as an adult, I was on the verge of scoring the real thing.

    I found the vendor’s booth nestled into a corner. Not a great spot for drive-by traffic, but plenty of room to showcase his one-of-a-kind merchandise. I re-introduced myself and asked him if he brought the Boba Fett prototype.

    “Sure thing,” he said, sizing me up. “But it’s not going to come cheap.”

    He went behind a make-shift wall and returned with a small box no bigger than his hand. He carefully opened the end and slid out a small, gray figure in a plastic bag. I may have involuntarily moaned.

    “The real deal,” said the vendor. “Working rocket-firing mechanism. You push in the little projectile, click the lever on the back and POW! — the thing shoots out your kid sister’s eye.”

    “It’s a beauty,” I said. “I’ve heard prototypes exist, but I’ve never seen one. This is like … ”

    “Nerdvana?” he offered.

    I nodded in reverent silence, and was about to ask him how much he wanted. I would have sold my car to own the damn thing, but I didn’t want to tell him that.

    “Is that a Boba Fett prototype figure?” I heard someone ask from behind. The vendor looked up and nodded, going into his spiel again.

    I looked over my shoulder and saw Iron Man. Not just any guy in Iron Man armor, but the same SpiralCon regular who had outbid me for the Superman figure last year. I felt my stomach drop, knowing that this guy would likely do it again.

    “How much?” asked Iron Man. He pushed his way through the crowd and was now standing by my side. Somewhere in the pit of bowels, something gurgled.

    “I can’t sell it to you,” said the vendor. “This guy’s buying it.”

    Iron Man turned and contemplated my existence for the first time. He didn’t remember me from the Superman bidding war.

    Dismissing me out of hand, Iron Man turned back to the vendor and said, “I’ll give you five thousand for it. Right now.”

    The vendor seemed tempted, but I could easily see he wanted to sell it to me. I had been hoping to score the figure for less than three thousand. Five was out of my price range. There had to be a way we could both win here.

    “Five thousand seems fair,” I said, giving the vendor a conspiratorial wink. “I could go that high.”

    The vendor cocked his head, ever so slightly to the side, like Cmdr. Data from Star Trek: The Next Generation trying to process some new piece of information.

    “I’ll give you six,” said Iron Man.

    “Seven,” I said.

    “Eight.”

    “Nine.”

    Iron Man turned to me and growled. “You’re killing me, fanboy. This is my entire stash for the convention. I blow this here, now, and I’m done for the year.”

    “The offer is nine,” said the vendor.

    “Ten,” said Iron Man, and from the hushed crowd surrounding the booth came a collective gasp.

    “Too rich for my blood,” I said. “I can’t go higher.”

    The vendor walked off with Iron Man to work out the particulars for payment and the crowds dispersed. I made my way to the next table, feigning interest in a mint set of all 12 issues of the Watchmen mini-series. When Iron Man left, I walked over to the vendor.

    “I know I promised it to you,” he said. “I’m sorry, I just couldn’t turn down that kind of money.”

    “I understand. It’s business. I didn’t want it that bad.”

    “You drove up the price, though. That was pretty mean. What do you have against that guy?”

    I told the vendor about the Superman action figure and last year’s bidding war.

    “Oh, yeah. I remember that! That was you?”

    He went back behind the wall to his hidden stash and returned with a bag.

    “This is for you,” he said. “No charge.”

    I peeked inside the bag and saw a vintage 1974 Mego 8″ Superman action figure staring back up at me through its windowed box. A little piece of my childhood, coming home with me.