Saturday, July 30, 2011

Beginnings vs. Re-Beginnings

I've been in the process (for quite some time) of trying to rewrite the early chapters of my book. It's pretty brutal work, and has proven rather daunting on more than one occasion. However, I recently managed a breakthrough, and would like to share with the world the new introductory chapter of my novel.

~~~

Elegy

“I have chosen you, --.”

He held a thin steel chain. It slid between his fingers with a softly undulant rasp. He caught it as it escaped his palm, and the ring of links traced a pendulous arc.

A stone shone. Gripped in a plain steel setting opposite the clasp. His eyes watched it move.

“From every species, race, and kind; you alone were my choice.”

His horse, an old grey draft, huffed a weary breath past its bridle. He glanced up at the beast, and put his hand to his knee. A breeze caught the fading vapor of the campfire, and cast the few remaining embers at his feet. The smell of smoke lasted only a moment.

She held his face in her hands, “I did not make this choice lightly.”

The moment passed and the scent of blood, sweat, and offal pressed thick into the air as suddenly as it had left. His eyes went to the stone.

“What you have given of yourself has inspired me. Inspired those you have led.

You are a legend to your people. And now your name will never be forgotten.”

Bodies were scattered and broken around the campsite. Bandits. They had no sentry, had set no guard. Their massacre had been quick. Better than they deserved.

She was beautiful. Beautiful as only Crane could be.

He found tears in his eyes. Not from her words.

From the sight of her. She slid her hands to his shoulders,

“You will be my heritage.”

He stood.

“And I will be your sacrifice.”

He sheathed his sword.

“You will grip this world. You will never let it go.”

The grey draft accepted his weight, plodding back to the road with little encouragement. The bodies were soon lost among the trees. The scent suffocated by the fragrance of pine, oak, and maple. He hung the chain around his neck and tucked the stone beneath his shirt.

“I have chosen you, --. You will be my Guardian.”

*

The road was dry. Cobbled stones covered in a gloss of fallen dust. The tread of his old grey sent up plumes that gave a sour metallic taste to the air. He glanced at the road ahead. Another hour and they’d pull even with the rearmost wagons of the caravan.

“You cannot be serious.”

Guardian shook his head, “This is one island, Raven. One. And there are five guardians here. Not counting myself. This is a small war, and I intend to find what caused it.”

“To what purpose?!”

Guardian ground his teeth as he looked down at Raven,

“We used to work well together.”

A shadow passed across the other man’s face, “Those are not my fondest memories.”

“Nor mine.”

He began to walk away, but Raven caught his arm, “Maybe I am not the man I once was, --. But the Kemp started this war. You must fight them with us.”

Guardian looked coldly at Raven’s hand, and the younger man let his arm go, “I know that there is an enemy.” He stepped closer to Raven, “And that enemy is not the Kemp.”

He walked away.

“Who will you fight for? Baylock? The Chiid?!

You abandon your own people, --!”

“Are you listening to me?”

The man called Guardian blinked, and looked up. He had caught up to the caravan.

“Wonderful.” His employer ran a hand across his face, “This is unacceptable. What if bandits had stopped us while you were away? Do you realize what that would mean?”

“Yes, Soyer.”

The stout man pointed along the caravan, “I have, among others, ten women and three children in this caravan. Understand?”

Guardian said nothing.

Soyer took a deep breath, “That constitutes a significant financial liability. The bandits stop me, and I don’t have enough guards, and the toll goes up.” He sighed, “I am not all that wealthy a man.” He set his aggrieved eyes on Guardian, “And I dearly love my money.”

Guardian met the eyes of his employer and the man pointed at his face, “That’s exactly what I’m talking about. You’ve seen things. The bandits can tell the gorillas from trained soldiers. And that’s why I hire you. When it comes down to hard bargaining, you save me as much as the rest of my guards combined.”

He looked away. Soyer flushed. “Well then. Let me make it a little more clear. If you disappear again, you don’t get paid.”

Guardian watched him jerk the head of his mare around, and canter back up the line of wagons.

He watched Raven gallop back to the army. He tasted the sour, metallic

flavor in the dust tens of thousands had pounded into the air.

*

The west gate of Tray Minor was a ramshackle pretension. The frame crooked, the wood warped, the lock rusted through. The town matched the gate. The grey draft blew out an especially loud breath, and Guardian glanced up to see what had caught his mount’s attention.

Smoke hung over the town. A grainy midday nightfall that kept the far side of the town in shadow. No flames. Just a smoldering vapor that thickened by the moment.

It leered over his company. Blue and white flame flashed over his body

and sword as he met the onslaught. A roaring laughter preceded its howl of pain

as the flame pierced its void. It flung itself further into the mountains.

Two figures, wreathed in flames, flashed after it. Two more leapt from mountain top to mountain top to the east. A hand gripped his arm and pulled him to his feet.

He hadn’t realized he’d fallen.

“We’ve almost got him.” Raven clapped him on the shoulder, “Hurry.”

Guardian steadied himself, and glanced back at his company.

The old grey was gaining speed. Its heavy steps thundering along the caravan, past a gaping Soyer, and the dozen or so guards surrounding him. The sounds of their shouts were lost in the power of the galloping draft.

Most were dead. The few that had survived were drooling blood and sputtering nonsense. They were lost. He’d seen it before. He took a step back from the broken bodies of his men, turned away from them, and left them behind.

*

A force of men and Vade swarmed a small party of defenders. Guardian drew his sword and urged more speed from his mount. The beast hit the press of bodies without slowing, and in that one moment the crack of bone was louder than the strike of steel on steel.

The dwarf seized the Juit’s head in his thick hands and beat it against the stone wall.

Blue and white flame sputtered and flowed across the ground as the guardian tried to free himself. His skull cracked, and even with the madness, chaos, and

violence surrounding it – it was the only thing Guardian heard.

An arrow struck deep into the neck of the old draft. It tossed its head, lost its footing, and crashed to the ground with the sound of a thunderclap.

He had leapt from the saddle. He was killing the men and Vade. Defending the gate. Driving them back up the pass.

He drove his sword through the dwarf. Watched the heavy body fall upon the sturdy elegance of the Juit corpse. Raven pulled him back as two Chiid soldiers and a Kemp guardian lunged for him. The Eloora guardian throttled the Kemp from behind,

dragging her back into the deep pool in the corner of the room. One of the Chiid screamed as his bones imploded at the wizard’s word, and Raven cut down the other.

Guardian slipped on the blood, and fell into the dead arms of the Crane.

*

A few of the defenders had followed him. A soft man stayed close behind them, feeding them orders with a calm practicality. Guardian moved too fast to kill all of the men and Vade in the pass. A blue and white flame grew on his body, and moved across the steel surface of his sword.

The town dwindled behind them as he pressed on, higher up and further in. The defenders panted behind him, their numbers steadily dwindling. Blood soaked through the sleeves of his tunic, a stain he felt more than saw. He cut them down, the bodies of both men and Vade littering the pass beneath and behind him, and he wondered if there had ever been a difference. A hulking Vade loomed before him, and brought him to a sudden halt with the brutish power of his blows. The creature’s sickly grey skin bulged with muscle, and its polished white hair was braided in the style of chieftain.

He knocked his enemy’s arm wide, and drew a deep cut along his bicep. The Vade grunted and tried to close the small distance between them. Guardian struck the creature on the temple with his pommel, kicked his feet out from under him, and held his blade to the Vade’s throat.

It spat out a laugh, “If there was two of me you’d be dead by now.”

Guardian met the creature’s eyes and shifted his weight.

“Wait!” A man emerged on a ridge overlooking the pass. “Don’t kill him.”

Nervous footsteps shifted the loose stone of the pass as the soft man crept to him. Alone.

*

It was darker. Colder. The Sighe had left with the Crane. The other races,

thousands of souls, stood together in the fortress and watched upward as the third sun burst apart. The fragments pirouetted across the sky, some growing smaller, others growing larger. His hand sought out Raven’s, and she gripped it tightly.

A wild, convulsing fire consumed the fragments that grew near, their size colossal. Hypnotic. And following close behind them, a Rook blotted out the remaining sun.

Its void convulsed then bloated outward, and the air it touched, the light and sense of it, became a twisted image of what it had once been. The Rook expanded, laughing, howling its pain and delirium until it burst – like the sun had burst –

and a vapor filled the sky where the Rook had once been.

He felt it then. His soul changed. He would never be the same.

*

He turned and thrust his sword through the chest of the soft man. The Vade at his feet blinked. The man on the ridge gaped.

The man called Guardian rested the tip of his sword on the ground, “Let me tell you what has changed.”

*

Friday, July 22, 2011

Stuff Has Feelings Too

You know the feeling you get when your computer keeps on crashing? When your pencil punches a hole in your test? When your red shirt dyes everything in the washer pink? When the toaster burns your toast?
Life can be rough when you count a major appliance as your enemy. But even though giving an inanimate object human characteristics is fun and provides excellent stress relief, I thought it'd be fun to see what would happen if we took the idea just a tiny bit further.
This story clocked in at 260 words, so I'm aiming to put out some more material for you guys soon.

*

Material

“I don’t think it’s too much to ask.” Donny ran his hand through his hair and paced in front of the dining room table.

“I’ve invested in this relationship, okay. I’ve spent time with you. I’ve been supportive. I’ve been affectionate.”

He stopped and thrust his jaw at the sky, “Who gave you a UV protective coating? Who has,” he put a hand on the edge of the table, “buffed each of your delicate contours?”

His bloodshot eyes rolled to watch the center of the table.

“It was me.”

“And the only thing I have ever asked is that you hold my coffee!”

He held his breath as he shrugged, “That’s it. Just, you know, hang on to it for a while.”

“A lot of mugs would appreciate what an easy life you have.”

“But do I get any thanks? No. You betray my trust."

"And on Darlene! She's such a beautiful shag carpet. I love Darlene.”

Donny pulled out his Smith and Wesson 460XVR. “I’m sorry. I thought we could work things out. But you’ve betrayed me for the last time.”

A tear slid down his face as he pulled the trigger. The barrel roared with flame and smoke, and the mug shattered, the table cracked in half, and the bullet pounded a small crater past the linoleum and into the concrete foundation beneath it.

Donny fell to his knees and buried his face in his hands. “Why would you make me do this?”

“You were the world to me.”

*

Monday, July 18, 2011

Excerpts and Apologies

Hello everyone.

Been working on the book. Trying to get stuff written, experiencing difficulties and breakthroughs alike. I have a handful of new short story ideas I had hoped to share with you, but haven't had the chance. My apologies. For now, enjoy this excerpt from A Blade Like Destruction.

*

“Morgan!”

His eyes blinked open to contemplate the blurry wood he had been resting his head on, “I’ll take another,” he slurred, lifting a hand that knocked over his half-filled mug, spilling it on the table.

A voice muttered a curse, and small hands seized his tunic and pulled until he slid off his chair and fell heavily onto the floor.

“Ow.”

“Get up, Morgan. You’ve got a job.”

Morgan turned his head just enough to glare at the girl scowling over him, “If I wasn’t drunk I’d tan your hide.”

The girl sniffed her disdain and kicked him, not quite hard enough to hurt, “And when are you ever not drunk, Morgan?”

“I sleep sometimes.”

“You pass out.”

“Well,” Morgan paused reflectively, “That’s when I get sober.”

“Get up, you’ve got a job.”

Morgan attempted pushing himself to his knees; failing the first time, succeeding the second, “Is it my imagination, or are you getting meaner by the day, Sissa?”

She took a deep breath, “It’s a big one this time, Morgan.”

“Who?”

The girl looked over her shoulder and nodded her head to the corner of the room. Morgan heaved himself upright and tottered behind the girl as she nervously moved as far away from the window as the small room allowed.

Morgan shook his head and laughed, “Who’s gonna spy on us, Sissa? You’re the Ear, kid. And if that wasn’t enough, I’m the Knife.”

“Not just any Knife, Morgan. You’re the oldest. The best.”

“Kinda my point, kid.”

Sissa lowered her voice, “You know this guy.”

“I’ve known a lot of people I’ve killed,” Morgan shrugged, “It comes with the job.”

“People like Zhiul?”

Morgan cocked a smile and looked down at the girl, “Are you testing my loyalties, Sissa?”

“Maybe,” she crossed her arms, “You weren’t the same after you killed Zhiul.”

“Your father met your mother a few years after that happened, so you don’t really have any idea at all what I was like before I killed Zhiul.”

“You didn’t drink.”

“Did to.”

“There’s a difference between having a few mugs of ale, and making yourself a walking inland sea of rotgut, Morgan.”

“Maybe I was working up to it.”

Sissa smiled, but just for a moment, “There’s some strangers in town, staying at the Open Hand.”

“All of them?”

“Yeah, but one has priority.”

Morgan rubbed a hand over his face and tried to clear his head, “Which one?”

“Male, you’ll know which.”

“Fine. Anything else I need to know?”

She paused, “Be careful.”

Morgan looked at her sharply, “What’s that?”

“Nothing.”

He slapped her hard and grabbed her by the front of her shirt, “Don’t you dare cross that line, kid. The Ear doesn’t give a damn about how careful I am,” he towered over her, watching the blood flush over her cheek as it began to bruise, “Or have you forgotten that our mommy ain’t the type to tuck us in at night?”

“The Lady is good,” Sissa whispered.

Morgan spat and let go of her shirt, “I’ll be back when they’re dead.”

*

Thursday, July 7, 2011

A Story for My Darling Wife

I asked her what she would like to see me write a story about. She replied, "A pond."

~~~

Ontogenesis

Source / n.

The fountainhead of water from which a stream or river is created.


Creek / n.

A small stream. The fourth cousin, twice removed, of river. See: Pariah


Tired / adj.

A state of being. Where one is weary or exhausted. Drained.

Tired / v. [transitive]

The process through which one becomes modified by Tired / adj.


Pond / n.

A collection of water grown still. A place of reflection and peace.


Life / n.

Vitality. The condition of finding oneself surrounded by unrelenting change.


Fish / n.

The creatures that live in Pond, and give of their life to ornament its own.

Fish / v. [intransitive]

The occasional attempt to capture and remove Fish from Pond.


Willow / n.

A friend and constant companion. Who drinks from the shallow bounty of Pond, and who faithfully watches over it.


Contentment / n.

The state following a realization of an idyllic Life. The place in which a lasting joy might be found.


Drought / n.

A sudden lack of change.


Famine / n.

The death that follows a lack of change. When Pond is drained by the animals that come from far distant places. When the Fish living in Pond die for want of water.


Loyal / adj.

Willow. The friend that endures.


Populate / v. [trans.]

When People come to stay. When they block off Source, and cut down Willow.


Pariah / n.

When Pond is nothing more than rock, dirt, and sand. When Willow can no longer watch over Pond.


Storm / n.

A violent change.


Storm / v. [intrans.]

When heaven scrubs clean the face of the earth. When a new Source tears a path through the ground and finds Pond. When Pond fills with fresh water.


Love / n.

The way Pond feels for Willow.

Love / v. [trans.]

When Pond gives of its life to sustain its friend.


Healing / v.

The slow restoration of Contentment

Healing / adj.

The effect Pond’s care has on Willow


Bloom

*

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Birthday Waits Not for Sweet Inspiration!

May and June birthday cards for work. I had fun.

~~~

X,

Did you know that the word “birthday” comes from an ancient Viking word for hockey puck? It’s true. Several hundred years ago, before fire but long after synthesized plastics, Vikings celebrated great victories by playing hockey.

Apparently you could only eat dinner after scoring a goal, and when you did everyone would shout, “Happy Birthday!”

It caught on, and the world’s never been the same.

I hope that your variety of Viking tradition is every bit as earth-shattering as it was back then.

Dan

~~~

X,

It’s a little known fact that when someone is as good a student as you are, birthdays count for double. So instead of just getting one year older, you’re actually gonna be TWO years older.

But you’re not just a good student, you’re a really good student, and really good student birthdays count for five.

And pretty frequently you’re an amazing student – which are worth twenty.

Occasionally you border on spectacular, and spectacular student birthdays are the same as fifty normal birthdays.

Happy Birthday, buddy. You’re a LOT older than me…

Dan

~~~

X,

So, I was looking for fun things to get you on your birthday. I checked out a fun rumor, listened to a fun song, rode a fun horse, read a fun book, pealed a fun potato, and lived in a fun house. But nothing was quite fun enough until I found the Fungus. I know what you’re thinking, ‘cause I thought it to – is the Fungus anything like the fun bus?

It’s not.

Does the Fungus make a fun fuss?

It doesn’t.

So I shredded the Fungus, turned it into fun paper, and constructed this fun card. Because you should have the very funnest of birthdays.

Dan

~~~

X,

A birthday haiku:

Science agrees that

Luca is older than the

Ninja bug assumes.

~~~

X,

So I was planning on giving you a special karate belt for your birthday. Maybe the daring duckling or outrageous ostrich belt. I browsed the various shades of blue balloon, yellow yak, and red radish belts.

I even briefly considered the purple, polka-dotted, pleasantly plump platypus belt!

But I couldn’t. You’re just too advanced.

Dan

Monday, July 4, 2011

Personality Classification

Introvert vs. Extrovert.

Ostensibly, the idea is that all of humanity can be split into two classes: those that are inwardly focused, and those that are outwardly focused. As interesting as that idea is, its not really thought of that way anymore.

These days, it means that either you like people. Or you don’t.

I’m an introvert. So I don’t like people.

You can see why I dislike this system.

I’ve been thinking about the two types of people out there and came to conclusion. Extroverts love this system. Who’s seen as the quintessential extrovert? The social butterfly. The girl (or guy) who loves to be around people, who everyone tries to be like and tries to be around, and who always has the best jokes and conversations at the party.

And who’s the quintessential introvert? The homebody: unkempt, unfashionable, agoraphobic, antisocial , and most likely a serial killer.

But what irritates me the most, is that the underlying assumption is that social interaction is the single most defining attribute of one’s identity. Or at least, one’s personality. To an extrovert – this makes sense. To me?

Not so much.

I thought about what a system would look like if it was based on a person’s movement – both physical and metaphorical. This story is the product of those thoughts.

~~~

Victoria

“It is such a beautiful day!” She grinned and twirled, skating ahead in a rush of ecstatic energy before rushing back to him as he critically examined the clear blue above them.

“Yeah.” He agreed. “It’s nice out.”

“Thanks for going on a walk with me.”

“Well,” he smiled wryly, “you can’t stay in all the time.”

She laughed, “Nope.”

Her figure flitted ahead, disappearing among the mingling victorias. There were a few pedestrians, one pushing an elderly inert in a wheelchair. He slowed and sat on a park bench, and looked back up at the ascendants pirouetting across the sky.

“They’re so beautiful.” She was back, leaning against him. Watching the ascendants fly.

“A bit too light on their feet, for my taste.”

“When we die and go to heaven,” she smiled, “I bet everyone there will be an ascendant. Not a fud like you.” She laughed to show she was joking. Mostly.

He blinked when one of the flying forms swooped down and landed before them. She sat straighter and ran a hand through her hair. “Hi.”

“I noticed you watching. Would you like to come with me?” The ascendant didn’t look at him. They didn’t often notice pedestrians.

“But…” She glanced at her companion, “I’m just a victoria. How -”

“I’ll carry you.” He stretched out his hand, and she took it.

A moment later they were together in the sky. The ascendant spun her around, and she laughed for the joy of it. She didn’t look down.

Back on the bench, the pedestrian looked down at his feet. He stood and walked back home.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Explorations in Not-Quite-Steampunk

Hello everyone,

I'm thinking about making this a series. Let me know if you think I should.

~~~

Intersection

Sand tapped the side of his glass as he stared out the window. He glanced at the clock set into the center of the table, then turned a gear on its side to check the barometer.

Mercury was falling. Nightfall soon.

The crystallized gas in his drink leaked globules of luminescent green and orange, a sulphurous shade that changed depending on how the light hit it. The crystal itself glowered at the bottom, shrouded by the thicker veil of darkness between its surface and the glass holding it.

He downed the near black fluid, grimacing at the watered down taste.

“Another?” An aproned man asked him from behind his counter on the other side of the coach.

Sand shook his head, and stood to give the man a few amber coins. As he reached the counter, a small device spluttered and clicked beside the bartender. The man turned and pulled out a narrow piece of paper fed to him from between two rollers. “The conductor says we’ll be traveling through nightfall.” He looked up from reading it, “Should be a fresh morning twilight by the time we reach Woodburn.”

Another coin dropped onto the counter, “Then have yourself a drink. To nightfall and the day that follows it.”

“Thank you, sir.” The man grinned, “To daybreak it is.”

*

“Dammit, Timmy!”

“My observations show that your projected frustration has an eighty-nine percent chance of indicating agreement with my preceding deductions.” Timmy coolly replied, brushing soot from his polished bronze casing.

The healthy black sclera of Captain J’s eye flushed a deep purple, “You just blew up a second pelluciphage!”

“Something I warned you would happen. Just as I mentioned a moment ago.”

“And I told you, and Cass, to deal with it!”

“Of course. You wanted us to blow it up then. My mistake.”

“We have a nightfall about to hit below us, you tin can.”

“Copper. Tin is merely an additive.”

“ – and we’re losing altitude. Which means if this doesn’t get fixed, and soon, we’ll be in the thick of it.”

“It is fortunate my moving parts have a protective coating. It isn’t likely that I’ll rust.”

Captain J turned to Cass, “Get it done.”

She sighed, “We’ll do our best, Captain.”

The big man stormed out of the boiler room, and Timmy let some steam out of a facial valve with a sigh. “It’s his fault.”

“He knows.” Cass patted the automaton on the shoulder, “He’s just worried about the storm we’re flying into. It looks to be a bad one.”

“Typical male response. You should have flogged him for the way he spoke to you.”

The corner of her mouth quirked upward, “Maybe when we get back in town.”

*

“Where’s the nearest Berc settlement, Kioja?” Captain J joined the Lightbender at the helm.

“The city of Woodburn.” The grey-skinned man’s accent lay thick across the calm of his voice, “If we didn’t lose too much fuel, we should make it easily.”

“And provided nightfall doesn’t blow us too far off course.”

“How bad?”

“Cass kept things pretty small. We only lost the fuel that was actually in the pelluciphage at the time.”

“Didn’t Timmy say –”

“Yes, dammit. He did.”

“Ah.”

The steady descent of the airship gave them a good look at the billowing darkness below them. The captain sighed. “Better go below, Kioja. This’ll be a rough one.”

*

Sand hung outside the coal car, shining a luminesce to check the charges he had placed along the bottom edge next to the wheels. Assuring himself they were secure, he pulled himself up and gripped his way along the side of the car, carefully avoiding the wide brass steam pipes. A massive droplet of darkness fell on his forehead, and he cursed, forcing himself to move faster. His luminesce hung from his neck, but he could still only barely see the metal no more than an inch in front of him. If he didn’t make it into the locomotive in a few moments, the nightfall would wash him from his perch.

Another drop hit his face and he began to feel moisture sliding down his fingers, the water tracing voids across the back of his hand that his dim luminesce couldn’t penetrate. Thunder snarled above him, and he fought the trembling in his arms. He reached the corner of the car and pulled himself onto the narrow platform between the coal car and the locomotive. Only one deep breath later he slid open the portal and stepped only a few feet from two stupefied conductors.

“You’re not -” The words stuck in his throat as Sand shot him through the eye, the yellow and brown metal of his flintlock pistol reflected by the light of the furnace. Smoke drifted out the barrel as Sand struck the second conductor in the throat, and slammed his head against the thick glass of the window, sending a wide crack across the middle. He flipped the gun in his other hand, gripping it by the barrel, and struck the man on the temple with the butt of the pistol. The second conductor slumped to the ground, and Sand tucked his flintlock into the holster hidden under his vest.

*

Hope Fitzgerald kept herself from sneering at the other passengers. Most were Bercs. The few other Aubadeans were hardly worth mentioning. Her companions shared her distaste, but failed to realize the importance of concealing it.

“This whole mission is ridiculous,” Natalie hissed; her voice a bit loud for Hope’s taste. “Everything we’ve learned from science shows that –”

“Keep your voice down.” She met the eyes of the tall azure calmly.

Parthena, who managed both beauty and a dazzling mane of pure white despite her low bloodline, sniffed disdainfully at her caution, “The Bercs are not remotely intelligent enough to understand the conversation of an airborne woman.”

Hope simply met her eyes, and the two younger women lapsed into a disgruntled silence. She wished, not for the first time, that she had been sent alone.

*

The sail was furled. Kioja had checked fuel levels and closed the gas release valves. Cass and Timmy had fired up the propellers, and the temperature of the third and fourth pelluciphage engines was stable for the time being.

Cass stood beside him, watching the distance to the cloud bank below them diminish. “How bad will it be?”

Captain J cast a sidelong glace at her, “How high up does your family live?”

“Nine and a half kilometers.”

“So you have what? Two, maybe three dozen nightfalls a year?”

“That sounds about right.”

The captain nodded, “How long do they last?”

“When I was six years old there was a nightfall that lasted a full cycle.”

“Nights are longer on the ground.” He moved the wheel slightly, and the airship turned smoothly in response. “The storms can be worse, but they often aren’t. Most cycles hover somewhere between day and night.” He shrugged, “We’ll be blown about a bit, but we should be fine.”

He glanced at her, “Best go below now, Cass. It won’t be long now.”

“Aye, Captain.”

“Be sure to latch the door behind you.” Captain J flipped on the nightlumen.

A heavy bar thunked into place a moment later, just as the hull breached the midnight vapor.

*

Sheets of darkness rushed across the tracks ahead, as Sand eased the throttle forward. A sharp crack of thunder punctuated the pounding drone of the nightfall. He glanced upward. Still no sign of daybreak. He took his hand off the throttle. No point in derailing prematurely. He left the control panel and began wrestling the two dead conductors into the furnace.

*

Hope tensed.

“We’re accelerating.”

Parthena grunted, “Wonderful. Maybe it will get us through this blasted storm quicker.”

Hope forced away a grimace, “It’s against rail policy to accelerate in a nightfall.”

“Sabotage?” Natalie raised an eyebrow.

“Inquire.” Hope replied. “Discretely.”

*

Captain J didn’t bother checking the lifeline tied to his belt. He bent close to the altimeter, struggling to see through the pouring darkness obscuring its glass cover. He wiped the surface clean.

1500 meters

He began leveling the ship allowing it to jerk erratically from side to side with the chaotic winds of the storm.

*

Cass watched the altimeter. “We’re dropping below 1000 meters. Why are we still descending?”

“He’s attempting to exit the cloud bank. Visibility is marginally better below midnight than within it.” Timmy didn’t interrupt the vigorous polishing of his casing.

“Isn’t that dangerous?”

“Very.”

“What are our chances?”

Timmy continued polishing, but looked up at his mistress. “Captain Jedediah Marcellus is one of the most gifted Aubadean captains alive.”

It took her only a moment to realize the automaton had avoided her question.

*

Kioja sat cross-legged in the observatory, staring through the window below him in the hull. He watched for the ground, or for the darkness to diminish.

The ship shook from the turbulence, veering wildly from side to side, but they never dropped too rapidly. Kioja smiled and turned to his formulas. As beautiful as the motion was, a window was never much help during a nightfall.

He began computing the maximum variation advisable from the course to Woodburn given the amount of fuel they carried and power they produced.

He waited for daybreak.

*

Sand lounged in a corner of the locomotive, dozing. His repose was deceptive, but it helped him rest his body. The assassin had few opportunities to sleep, so he had to make do with less potent alternatives.

His eyes popped open when he realized he could see across the small room. He glanced up out the window.

The huge billowing shapes of darkness in the sky could be seen. Sand found himself grinning.

*

“None of the women I spoke to knew what was going.” Parthena threw herself into the seat, “The wretched creatures seemed surprised I spoke to them.”

“Did you speak to a man? One who works in the train, perhaps?” Hope glared at the woman, and forced herself to form her words calmly.

Parthena looked surprised, “Why would I ask a male? It would only have been a waste of time.”

Hope bit back a reply, as she caught sight of Natalie walking up the aisle towards them.

“Please tell me you have some solid information.”

Natalie nodded, “The train wasn’t scheduled to accelerate at all for the rest of the trip. When I told him it was against rail policy, the bartender reassured me that the conductors must have a good reason for doing so.”

“‘Him’?” Parthena wrinkled her nose in disgust. “Why would you talk to a male?”

Hope slapped Parthena, and the Aubadean woman jerked across her seat, striking her head against the back of her chair. “Things are different here, child. Among the Bercs we will treat males with courtesy and respect, because these filthy creatures allow men to hold power.”

Natalie put her hands in her lap, watching the exchange without expression.

Hope composed herself, “Go to the locomotive. Demand to know what is going on. Report back to me when you know.”

The two women rose quickly from their seats, and both were careful to avoid her eyes as they left.

*

Kioja looked down, just as the clouds finally broke, and sunlight streamed through the fast-widening gaps to the ground below. Dark green grass, trees with wide branches and many colored leaves. He frowned.

A train hurtled across the countryside below them. A passenger train.

He rose to get Timmy.

*

“You! Why is this train going so fast?”

Sand froze in the act of shoveling more coal into the furnace. Then slowly turned, “One of the passengers is pregnant. We’re trying to make Woodburn so she can give birth in a hospital.”

Two Aubadean women, one with deep blue hair draped across her black skin, the other with brilliant white.

Sand gauged the distance carefully.

“Slow the train down.” The white-haired one said, “We will not be endangered for the needs of a Berc woman. Have one of your employees tend to –”

The coal shovel crashed into her head, and she fell senselessly against her companion. The tall azure jerked behind the body as Sand fired his pistol, and the ball buried itself in the chest of her companion.

The woman hurled the corpse at Sand, and then charged him.

He narrowly avoided the body of the white-haired woman, but stumbled back when the azure struck him viciously across the face. He let her beat him, stumbling further back as she did.

She closed the distance, and kicked him in the stomach. He folded over her leg, seized it, twisted her around, and flung her into the furnace. He kicked the door closed on her screams.

*

Hope watched the clouds break, and blinked at the form of an airship keeping pace with the train. She glanced at the clock in the center of the table. Ten minutes.

Her fingers tapped the wooden surface of the table, then she stood and walked to the rear of the train.

*

“It is going far in excess of the Rail Alliance’s speed regulations.”

Cass, Kioja, and Timmy watched the train from the observatory.

“How much faster?” Cass asked.

“Easily greater than twice the maximum speed.” The gears on the side of Timmy’s head kept sluggish pace with his calculations. “It could derail at any moment.”

“I will tell the captain.” Kioja rose to his feet.

*

Sand strapped himself between the wings of the flying device he had hidden atop the first passenger car. One small pelluciphage engine thrummed against his stomach, and lifted him into the air. He kept pace with the train for only a moment, then raced away, dropping so that his craft was only a foot above the ground.

He brought it to a halt several hundred feet away and watched the train until the boiler exploded. Then turned and fled to Woodburn.

*

She was standing on a platform behind the caboose when she heard the explosion, then a secondary explosion, and felt the train jerk as the first few cars derailed. She leapt.

And felt the bones in her legs and one of her arms crack as she hit the ground.

*

Cass gaped as the train derailed, hurling the huge boxes of metal along its length into rabid tumbles across the flat countryside along the rail.

The smoke from the explosions obscured their view for a moment, then they sped past. The train disappeared in moments from the limited vantage of the observatory, but the airship slowed, then turned around.

Cass and Timmy shared a glance.

“Interesting,” said Timmy.

*

Hope tried to pull herself away with her left arm when she saw the Berc man running towards her. He reached her in a moment, and she pulled a knife.

He knelt over her. “My name is Kioja. If you let me help you, we will see that you receive medical attention. If you prevent me, you will die.”

She glanced at the mangled shape of her legs, and felt the small motion of her breath shoot waves of pain across her chest and back.

She sheathed her knife. “Very well."

*