Sunday, September 25, 2016

For Percy

He lies upon a bed of glass,
In the broken shade of a blackened tree,
As demons shake the ground
With gouts of flame
And the world turns upside down.

He lies upon a bed of glass,
Undisturbed by the discord of war,
Where bullets burst from powder flares
And sinful rains
Howl with deathly showers of red.

He lies upon a bed of glass
And doesn’t see the skirmish’s end,
Nor hear the rallying cry… “For Percy,”
When their nemesis fell
Beneath the grim wheels of vengeance.

He lies upon a bed of glass
And cannot feel the trembling hands,
Of tearful allies, who sob, “Come back,”
Yet find their anguished pleas to go
Unheard by stagnant ears.

He knows not that he left them behind,
Nor cares where he goes from there,
He abandoned all worry
As his soul spilt upon the battlefield,
Where he lies upon a bed of glass… asleep. 

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #55

Spiraling pillars of dusty, leather-bound tomes climbed the cavernous hall like struggling giants, grasping for the ceiling. Even in the lightless chamber, their gold-leaf lettering sparkled like starlight and I could hear animated whispers, calling out from between the pages… inviting me to play.  

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #54

No sooner had Jasper filled his swimming pool with silver dollars, when he had done a graceful arc off the diving board, intent on making a luxurious splash. Trussed up in his hospital bed, several hours later, he was forced to concede that he wasn’t Scrooge McDuck. 

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #53

Unnatural dread jolted down Hank’s spine as the ground beneath his feet quaked with reverence for the colossal being who had inexplicably materialized before him. Its vast eyes flared with the light of an ancient sun and, as Hank tearfully met its harsh glare, he recognized the fury of a wrathful god.

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #52

Titanic swirls of withering light coalesced around a perilously gyrating blot, struggling against the suffocating grip of unbeing. The light glittered feebly as it faded into the darkness and the universe around it had continued its onward march, completely oblivious.  

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #51

He had chased his thoughts around the acreage of his mind, hoping to ensnare something resembling a good idea in his nets. Little did he know, his good ideas were all snickering from the brush, watching him struggle in the desperate pursuit of cleverly-disguised mediocrity. 

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #50

            As aspirations go, some people strive to plant their flags upon the mountaintops while others won’t rest until they’ve reached out and touched the stars. For Harry, he was winning at life if he could afford a victory dance on the knoll across the street.

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #49

            Zane had closed his eyes and, taking a deep breath, opened his mind in a way he had previously never thought possible. In that moment, his consciousness expanded beyond the boundaries of his fleshy shell and he could feel the boundless heartbeat of the universe, itself, beating within his chest.

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Just Another Saturday Night

I met a girl down by the station,
On my way to a swank celebration,
Said she “wanted to talk”,
So we went for a walk,
Now I’m feeling a burning sensation.

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #48

            Tidal waves of boredom slapped Geoff from one side of the room to the other, as he waited by that infuriating telephone, chanting for it to wake the hell up. When the silence was broken and Tara’s name finally flickered across the display, Geoff could have danced, or sang, or ran a marathon, or climbed a mountain, or done any other Herculean feat the world might toss his way… except actually pick up the phone. 

Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #47

Owen relished those special moments when he could put on a set of headphones and shut out the rest of the world. The Beatles were always a particularly lush vacation from the ambient clutter that usually made his eardrums bleed. 

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #46

“Is this really it,” he asked, mournfully grimacing.


“I badly wish it wasn’t,” she confessed, her hand on the door knob. 

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #45

“What the hell am I doing with my life,” I groaned, driving away from my latest disappointment.


“I wouldn’t worry about that,” a voice whispered from the backseat.

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #44

            Each day felt like an exercise in patience for Carl, as he sat there watching the clock smugly mocking him with every grating tick. Some days, it was all he could do to not rip the little bastard from the wall and punt it off the roof. 

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #43

           Everyone remembers the night the skies burned. How often do you see threads of tangerine flame winding through obsidian clouds? 

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #42

            Kevin deliriously wrote Alicia a Hail Mary of a love letter, penning every awkward confession he had been too afraid to say aloud. As he read through his completed missive, shameful stabs of cowardice had pierced Kevin’s heart and he hastily crumpled the note into a ball before tossing it into the trash. 

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #41

            “Have you ever seen so many dead eyes in one place?” Jason whispered, his glance wandering around the room.


            “Well,” Mick hissed, “we are in the DMV.” 

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #40

            “I’m not sure what’s real, anymore,” Kara moaned, desperate for something to cling to.

            A familiar kiss had unexpectedly found her beyond the veil of her lament and the voice connected to those lips whispered, “That… was real.” 

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #39

Nobody in the world celebrated mediocrity quite like Ethan did. He prided himself in his ability to give the barest minimum of fucks possible, any time an opportunity for greatness might happen to show its ugly face.

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #38

            Ava had opened her heart to the taint of dark magic and, with it, had lain waste to everything she was. Shivering, she wiped away the heaviest tears she had ever shed before leaving the wreckage of her past to smolder into ashes. 

Thursday, January 28, 2016

The Song of Owen's Lament

           Owen was a brilliant singer/songwriter, struggling to make a name for himself. On weekday evenings, he had refined his craft as the house musician at a grimy, after-hours dive, playing to the same six or seven drunken patrons who had permanently reserved their stools at the bar. It was hardly glamourous; he had no delusions that any of the drunkards were actually cognizant of his performances, but their ignorance hardly bothered him because Owen was sure of at least one true fan in the crowd. Every penetrating note Owen had plucked on his guitar strings and the beautiful honesty of each lyric were at least enough to keep Emma, the bartender, entranced, night after night. Owen was more than okay with that.

Offstage, things were adorably awkward between the pair. For weeks, they made uncomfortable attempts at playful banter and when things had finally clicked, they had decided that perhaps they might expand their relationship beyond the confines of that dingy little bar. They went out on a first date, which had led to second date, and that brought them to their third, and with every meeting, they became increasingly enamored with each other until they were all but joined at the soul. After a matter of months, the fiercely passionate couple had grown almost recklessly certain that they wanted to spend the rest of their lives together and it had come as a shock to everyone when a positively glowing Emma had turned up at the bar, one day, with a modest ring adorning her finger.

            Yet even as Emma had given Owen her heart, she was almost equally as in love with her own volatile lifestyle. Somehow, Owen failed to notice the visitors who happened by at odd times of the day or the hours when Emma would inexplicably disappear. However, who could miss her mercurial turns when she, looking pale and deathly, would show up, acting strangely manic and irrationally shouting at Owen through shivering blue lips? He was hardly without worry when she would then lock herself in the bathroom for an hour, only to walk back out as though nothing had happened. And then there were the phone calls, all from the same person… Viper. Emma practically jumped at the mysterious Viper’s frequent calls. Who could that person have been to have had such unrelenting sway over Owen’s bride to be?

Emma’s erratic ways had come to a disastrous head when she had gone out with her bridesmaids for her bachelorette party. Late in the party, the maid of honor had found Emma in the stall of a nightclub bathroom, unconscious and choking on the foam dripping from her lips; a needle clung to her arm and a half-empty bag of heroin was lying at her feet. She barely survived the overdose and her parents had wasted no time in sending her into an involuntary rehabilitation program. Owen met with Emma’s doctor, Hayden Parkinson, about her recovery and while Owen wanted nothing more in the world than to see his fiancée be healthy and happy, he was unable to conceal his broken heart upon learning that the doctor’s treatment plans had prohibited Emma from having any contact with the outside world… not even her fiancé.

            “We, at the Underhill Institute, believe it essential to prevent our patients from being swayed by toxic influences into falling back into their destructive habits,” the doctor explained. “It is, therefore, essential that they be properly sheltered until they’ve built up a resistance to their unhealthy chemical dependencies.”

            Owen had trusted to the wisdom of the doctors to see Emma safely through her addiction but as the weeks had passed, Owen’s pangs of longing for his absent beloved had grown unbearable. The only salve he could manage was to take his longing and his heartache and let them spill out of him in the form of a song, though even that had failed to ease his pain but instead brought it inexorably into stark relief. It was like a constant kick in the stomach, beating him down until, in sheer desperation, he climbed the walls of the Underhill institute, armed only with his guitar, and played his song on the lawn of the facility:

“If sunrise never came, you’d be my candle in the dark,
And when my world drops out, you give me wings that I may fly,
I offer you my everything to heal your wounded heart,
And take away the heavy pains that tear you up, inside…

Emma… the goddess of my dreams,
Forgive my missing all your cries for help into the night,
I’ll breathe again, once you’ve come back to me,
And when your world’s gone wrong, believe I’ll help you make it right…”

Owen envisioned that his words and melodies might somehow reach Emma behind the institute’s hermetic walls and remind her of how much she was loved. He had no idea what might happen from there, but what he absolutely didn’t expect was that the universe would suddenly become fair and find Doctor Parkinson inexplicably moved by Owen’s heartfelt display of devotion. The doctor had decided that Emma was far enough through the woods that someone as willing and able as Owen would be more than capable of helping her find her way. With that, he had magnanimously offered Emma an early release into Owen’s custody and soon, the pair was on their way home with the Underhill Institute shrinking in their rearview. As Emma sat nestled in the passenger seat, Owen was delirious with joy and he knew that everything was going to be alright.

“I’ve missed the hell out of you,” Owen said, glancing over to take in her smile.

“OWEN, LOOK OUT!” Emma suddenly called.

Owen had only taken his eyes off the road for the briefest of moments but it was long enough to miss the changing lights. A rumbling garbage truck had oozed across their path and the world became a dreadful cacophony of crying tires, distorting metal, shattering glass, and piercing screams. A sudden spell of darkness had consumed Owen, during which he knew only emptiness, but then the world was quickly wrenched back to his senses as the blinding flare of an electric torch pierced his confused eyes.

“Sir, are you okay?” The paramedic asked. “Can you tell me your name? What’s your name, sir?”

“It doesn’t matter,” Owen mumbled, blood and tears stinging his eyes as his mind embraced his surroundings.


Next to the hectic flashing of lights, the triage on the street, and the excited chatter of gathering bystanders, Owen’s name had seemed utterly insignificant in his own shell-shocked mind. Likewise, the agony of his two seemingly broken hands and the notion that he might never again play his guitar had landed upon his head with all the devastation of a single raindrop, when compared to the unfathomable carnage of his nearly flattened car, embedded within the side of the mangled steel behemoth that was unnaturally parked in the middle of the intersection. And he was as far removed from okay as was humanly possible, because the all that meant anything to him was lying still and silent upon a shrouded gurney at his right… how could he ever be okay again? 

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #37

Under the electrified gaze of a global television audience, the spacecraft’s intrepid crew had charted the inaugural course to break in their exciting new warp technology. In a blinding flare, the vessel had rocketed light-years across the universe, where, due to an overzealous navigator’s misplaced decimal point, the craft had unexpectedly pounded a cavernous crater into the frozen surface of the planet, Glaceus 12.

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #36

The Buick’s hood groaned and popped as Tom slouched lazily against it, wiping the sweat from his sunburnt brow. His sluggish, overheated mind drifted longingly to thoughts of ice-cold beers on a misty shore and he cursed his landlocked address. 

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #35

            Every time she watched the golden morning sun climb the horizon, she was crazy enough to believe that anything was possible. Whenever she had watched that weary sun set, however, she couldn’t help but feel she had been wrong.  

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Two Sentence Tuesday #34

            His clock chimed “GO TO SLEEP!”, as he stared sorrowfully at his computer screen during a fruitless scavenger hunt for anything resembling a good idea. Spectacularly failing that, he sought meaningful words of encouragement from his truest friend, Johnnie Walker. 

Saturday, January 2, 2016

The Druid of the West

Born to the Nackle clan in the village of Willowil, Nim had always been uncommonly mischievous, even by gnomish standards. He cherished nothing in the world so much as he did his little practical jokes and there was scarcely a Nackle, a Knobhobben, or a Floom in the entire village who didn’t sleep with a wary eye open. That was hardly surprising, though. For most of them, the memory of a certain summer festival was still vividly fresh within their minds. By the end of that day’s festivities, the sweet, balmy evening of food and merriment had taken a bizarre turn, filled with visions of melting trees and strawberry-flavored sunsets. Of course, Nim had only offered his neighbors that salad during the great feast; they didn’t have to eat it… and what self-respecting forest gnome doesn’t recognize the Daymare Mushroom, anyway?
One fateful night, one of Nim’s pranks had gone terribly awry and the village was awoken by the hiss of angry violet flames spewing from the windows of Dreeble Knobhobben’s hut. The village elder, himself, was soon spotted erupting through a mountainous plume of black smoke, howling in agony as he attempted to snuff out the blaze that had engulfed his treasured beard. Miraculously, the aftermath of the fire had found the elder mostly unharmed but the shameful young Nim was punished with permanent exile from Willowil for his reckless and destructive behavior. Morgo, village druid and the patriarch of the Nackle clan, had taken pity on his disgraced son. He had imparted unto Nim a weatherworn tome containing the ancient teachings of forest druids, in hope that it would calm his son’s reckless spirit and teach him to survive in the untamed wilds.
Alone for the first time in his life, Nim had paid little mind to his father’s offering but had instead set his sights on adventure, leaving the great forests of Eradas behind and wandering into one of its seediest villages, the harbor town of Wydale. Bombarded by the underhanded promises and phony smiles of the pirates and brigands, who had made that moldy port their home, Nim had found the pleasures of excess amongst the big folk. Barely had he time to shake the pine needles from his coat before he had become enamored with generous plates of exotic foods, overflowing casks of spiced rum, and the beguiling wiles of shameless women who were twice his size. However, two or three back alley attacks and a run-in with a cutthroat gang from the docks had quickly convinced Nim that Wydale was no place for a gnome and so his journey had continued, deep within the solitude of the Western Woods.
Hiding away in a simple hut in the quiet forest, Nim had reached for the dusty text, he had previously ignored, and had learned to open his heart to the natural world in ways he had never before imagined. He learned how to see the spark of life within a single leaf and how to feel the fury of a coming storm upon the breeze. And he had realized that the forest wasn’t quiet at all but teemed with all manner of beast. He found he could speak with them and they soon became his dearest friends. Through decades of practice, he had also learned to unlock the magic hidden within the natural elements until he was able to create fire in the palm of his hand, make plants bloom and blossom by his will, or cure the sick and dying with a single touch. Nim had breathed a sincere thanks to his father for such an important gift as he had honored Morgo’s generosity by acting as healer and protector to that small corner of forest.
Still, while Nim had grown into a wise and peaceful druid, his youthful restlessness had remained a smoldering ember in the depths of his heart. Over time, his longing for excitement and for the companionship of peers had grown stronger and stronger until Nim had seen it as his destiny to close the door on his little wooden shanti and venture off back to the world of men. Night fell on the fifth day of his travels and he wandered into the tavern in the village of Stowick. As the enchantingly familiar aroma of pipe smoke and sweet mead ensnared his senses, the temptation in his soul had compelled him to stop for the night.

“You never know,” he thought, smacking his lips as he stepped up to the bar. “Perhaps someone around here is in need of a druid…”