Worldtree, D’halia

            Sleeping quarters were odd and sparse. David felt like a gypsy boy, walking here and there without much defined direction; observe, the elderly woman said, but do not interfere, and he had listened. The seller’s stalls were of little interest, although the merchants themselves were intriguing enough: some were not human. Or not definably so. Here there be monsters in hats? He had asked himself.

            He walked by a waif of a girl, barely taller than him and dressed sparsely in leather. What skin he saw was discolored in black tattoo patterns. She leaned on a black stick that reflected the purple light outside. She sat silently, looking into the room of sleeping kids, and her presence reinforced his calm.

            But his eyelids were thick and heavy, and he found his bunk among several. He untied his shoes, pulled them slowly off and placed them on the trunk at the foot of his bed.

            Clothes for the next day were set on the same trunk beside his shoes, a matching set of the comfortable clothes he wore today, only with a slightly different color. Green instead of red, still with highlights of gold.

            His bed was soft, pleasantly warm, and he slid in quicker than he had done in a very long time; there was no fear of nightmares tonight. He had seen no sign of Jack the entire day, as he had walked through darkening and ambient purple lights.

            He wanted to talk to Constance more. She seemed much more interested in the circus games. Why wouldn’t she? He asked. They were free, and you could win candy, toys, knickknacks. And, again, they were free!

            His thoughts dissolved into mist as he settled on the shape of the walls in the Leviathan greatroom, a soft and smoothing slope he couldn’t help but touch as he walked past. He slid, as softly as he had gone to bed, into a dream of shallow waters.

            He followed a crow on the beach, a large black thing, that hopped over the sand and rhythmic waves to peck at shells and eat the tiny crabs. It was well aware of David’s path behind it, and as he passed some of the empty shells, he saw mirrored reflections within them. Like staring at the sky, he surmised, through the sand.

            A wave came and washed the mirrored shells away. And he walked.

            From a copse of trees beyond the beach, a woman with dirty hair ran toward him. He felt sluggish in this place, as if moving deliberately and slowly in spite of what something inside his head told him to do.

            Run.

            She stopped in his path, the crow flying off, heaving. “The storm became at a quarter past ten,” she said with trembling voice. “A stark drum thrum and a broken-key dirge. And it grew through the forest with night-jaunt speed a violin’s timbre and jagged trills—it became a sculptor’s hands and the crowd awoke trembling.”

            She nodded once as if looking for his acceptance, and ran into the surf. She dove, and in diving, she changed into a dolphin. The waves accepted her, and as she splashed in, the waves turned dark as if an ink spilled from her skin. She disappeared, and the setting sun cracked on the horizon.

            No! He cried in.

            The sun split open, cracked in several pieces, and sank into the water. The sky darkened. Behind him the crow-picked shells glimmered in the water like a single constellation. It looked like an oblong star with one point longer than the rest. Being the only light, he turned and walked into the center of it.

            The sand parted. The sky disappeared. And he fell with sickening heart. He fell into incredible darkness. Yet he did not wake.

            He felt cold stone floor beneath him and echoes of his breathing in a great chambered room. It felt familiar after a fashion, but he could not remember from where. A single light flickered down a tunnel to the right of him, and he saw he lay in a pit. Stairs surrounded him, but he could not see above them.

            Then, a sound. An echo of a growl, an echo of a distant sound. He remembered some of them from previous dreams, from when he was scared to look under his bed, when Jack sat beside him, between him and the nightlight. Scratches of bone on stone, and he knew what was coming.

            It was sickly, as candles lit down corridors he did not know existed and he stumbled to the stairs. He clambered up, growls of a hundred unseen things reaching his frightened ears. It felt so real. It was so real.

            Creatures rose like shadows, hints and reminders of his unforgotten dreams. His heart raced, his nostrils filled with sharp sting and a sickly stench of decay. Decay, yes, this was what he feared. That smell. That smell of thousand-year rot. The decay that did not dissipate to time.

            Yet he knew. He knew. This was not hell. This was not darkness intangible. This was a gutter of ancient places. This was their home; the outcasts. The ones forgotten but not removed.

            He saw he held a single shell between his trembling fingertips.

            A towering thing stood in front of him; he could not see it, except for the lightness of space beside it. He stumbled back down the stairs as the thing reached for him, missing his face by inches. All around him things crawled, stepped, even fluttered toward him. They spoke odd sounds, a language perhaps—to each other or to him, he did not know.

            A thing beside him pushed a shaded finger into his shoulder, puncturing skin and sliding in as easily as if he were shadow. He cried out in agonizing pain, his eyes pulsing with his heartbeat, and stumbled back. And all it had done was try to touch him.

            A crack like rolling thunder over the plains, and the room was briefly illuminated. It was filled with demons, perhaps, or simply monsters, or forgotten nightmares. The last thought made more sense than the other two. Forgotten, voiceless. Rotting.

            “Huuuuuuh!” something hummed. It was unmistakably female. Unmistakably human.

            Or, perhaps he mistook it for being unmistakable. It was still a something to him. A girl sailed through the air above him, a pair of blades pulled, a lantern hanging from a stick at her back. Her hair was black, tied back, and her shoulders were covered in thick leather. Her face was tattooed on the right side, a pattern of black bars that ended in points near her lip, a single long tattoo extending the left side of her mouth into a grin.

            Her blades met the towering thing that had scraped at him, sliding through shadow. The creature made a sound like a tree falling, and others hissed. David held his shell out, hoping to use it as a flashlight to the creatures at her back. The light burned through the air and wrinkled shadow to bubbling pits where it touched creatures’ flesh.

            The girl veritably flew through the oncoming creatures, sliding swords through shadow. Running to his left, she danced between attacks and parries, through sounds of releasing death and confused finality. The rotting invited the blade, he saw with confused disgust.

            She downed seven in the span of seconds; they seemed to have no defense against her weapons—and they did not even get close enough to brush by her skin. They were simply creatures of the sewage of the mind, he imagined, but dangerous and powerful nonetheless.

            They were unwavering in their onslaught. To the left of David were nearly fifty, and the hallways were filling with a considerable amount. The girl sliced through the legs of one, sliding her right weapon up between them, halving the thing as it stumbled down. David ducked as she came close enough to him that he could smell her sweat, ran past him, and impaled a small thing skittering across the floor.

            Sweat? His head was swimming. It smelled sweet, but he didn’t want to think about it. Didn’t want to think at all. He dropped to his knees, holding his shell to his face. He looked in and saw only a blue lagoon within it. A blue lagoon? It was a strange thing to see in a shell, he thought, and it seemed he watched waves on a distant shore.

            She pulled him up, her face inches from his, her eyes calm and entirely soft, her irises a darkening red. Her grin tattoo confused his slurrying thoughts. Everything was falling to mist. Everything was darkening. “Stay with me,” she said with a strong accent. The nightmares were closing in. He could see nothing but the light of his shell, and only when he concentrated hard. She dragged him several feet, and with a grunt she flipped him on her shoulder, sheathing one sword.

            He held onto his shell as if it were the last thing he would ever do, and she cut a path through the creatures to the left and right and ahead. He saw her legs, saw the ground behind her, saw all the muck from all the dying things, and saw one single creature running up behind them.

            Using his free left hand, he reached down and pulled out her second sword. The creature leaped, and he lifted the blade to intercept its arc. The blade slid in its mouth, half-formed eyes growing wide with confusion. His right hand clenched on his shell so tight it cut through his skin.

            He glanced up, and the lantern blinded him.

            He was in his bunk, gasping with a heavy breath. He was groggy, dizzy, confused. A lantern blinded him as several people stood over. The tattooed girl stood beside him, sweat and dark liquid on her clothes and arms.

            “He fell into the Atrium?” A man asked, squinting at him. David barely understood the words. “How in the hells did he get there?” The girl remained silent, staring at him with her calm eyes. “Get him to the hospital. Get that wound looked at. What on earth is in his hand?”

            “A shell,” he whispered as another woman tried to pry his hand open. It was red with blood. “A shell.”

            “It seems a gift,” the woman said. She cocked her head to one side as David fought to hold onto consciousness. “Curious.” She looked at the girl across from her. “Make sure he does not dream again tonight. And D’halia, good work.”

            The girl nodded. “I won’t fear love,” was her simple reply.

            It confused David considerably, and was his final thought before dropping away.

 


NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS!

Not really.

SO!

While everyone else is posting their New Year’s Resolutions (I never got that tradition/fad, by the way. It’s like a diet of the mind? Why does the new year mean changing something you don’t change normally? If I find something I want to change, I do it. I don’t wait until January… Heh. But to each their own!), I will be posting every writing project I was dedicated to right here. I will give a brief description of what it is, and how far I got before I stopped working on it.

2000: Mindgames. Young adult. A harrowing story about five high school strangers who have to work together to survive the terrors of their worst nightmares. Literally. This was my Eragon-era book. Status: Finished, rough draft. 158 pages.

2001: The Reverberant. High Fantasy. A seven book series of a cast of nearly 80 characters leading up to the fall of a meteor to the planet Lorcalon. Develops the legend of the seven-stoned Reverberant, a mysterious symbol that not even the oldest scholars remember where it came from. Consists of an entire world and fourteen sentient races. Breakdown of individual books:

One the Thistle - Standard format Old Wizard picks up an Apprentice and goes on a Relic Quest. The wizard has alzheimer’s, they pick up some more wanderers on the way due to the destruction of the apprentice’s town, and they are in charge of a five year old child who can read ley lines. They are tracked (and hounded) by an assassin versed in the arts of necromancy. Status: 2/3 finished.
Two the Whistle – Surrounds the exodus of six Slethe, a magical race that undergo a physical change around when they turn sixteen years of age. Armies lay waste to the countryside behind them, and they trek from town to town trying to make it to their Mecca, The Gathering, an island far to the south. Of course, all of them are near sixteen years of age, and one-by-one they change into incredible creatures. Status: Halfway finished.
Three the Candle – Chronicles the sixth voyage of The Blue Life, a nautical ship that converts into a lighthouse when the winter hits the far south. They find ruins in the deep sea that has never been accounted for. Of course, several on board have nefarious plans, and several on board weren’t supposed to come at all… Status: Four chapters finished.
Four the Cradle – Focuses on the warrior caste of Noben, a nomadic dragon-esque race that migrates across the unforgiving wastelands in search of food and shelter. A message was intercepted to find their way to their ancestral homeland; great forces are at work, and the queen is summoned to power. Status: Two chapters finished.
Five the nightsurge – The book on hunting demons. When a badly beaten and abused Slethe slave falls into her sixteen year old change a month ahead of time, the castle she lives in becomes a castle of nightmare. When all of the castle falls into her projected and continual nightmare, its inhabitants begin to die. It’s up to a Troglin demon hunter to enter and end the nightmare, one way or another. Status: Layout only finished.
Six the Sunscourge – The book on a town reviving a dead language. While debating the implifications of speaking/learning a dead language, the Reverberant prophecy is found. A boy dies and the town becomes under seige. The city falls, and the survivors must find a way to take it back. With the help of the dead language as communication, they build an archaic weapon from its words. Status: Layout only finished.
Seven Setter
– Bringing the previous six books together, chronicles the crash of the meteor, the great wars, and the appearance of a strange boy with a flying machine strapped to his back who finds out he’s the god of the Reverberant prophecy. Status: First two chapters only.

2003: Inhabitability: Of the Human and Humanity. Science Fiction. Book one of two focuses on a boy on Earth who finds out his planet is about to be destroyed by a civilization of aliens. On the positive side, he is given the opportunity to join the alien race. He’s stuck with a dilemma: die with honor beside all those he has grown to love and cherish, or watch it all burn beside a race of great creatures. He chooses to join the aliens’ side. The more he knows about them, though, the less he feels his decision was the better one. Status: Ten chapters from finished.

2005: Infallibility: Of the Human and the Humane. Science Fiction. Book two delves into the boy’s punishment for returning to Earth to try and save his family. His mind is wiped clean, and he is given a second chance; only he doesn’t know it. Walking around stunned on a commerce ship, he slowly begins to realize the truth. After meeting another human, they mistakenly decide they must find a way to get back to Earth, a planet they don’t know was destroyed. A space chase ensues only for the boy to find his father and learn the truth. They must try and escape the civilization in a seed ship–capable of cultivating life on a new planet–and a prototype space fighter through a black hole. Status: First four chapters, excerpts finished only.

2007: The Acorn King. Fantasy? A novel that surrounds the death of a mother, and the two sons’ reaction to it. One son is a child of war, while the other pursues academia; both are pulled inextricably into a complex web of myth, legend, politics, and intrigue, only to find secrets they couldn’t dream possible. Status: Rough draft and first rewrite/edit finished. 83k.

2008: i, pawn dreamer, stare. Horror. A book that envelopes the underlying connection between seven seemingly unrelated people. Haley thinks she was once a pile of organs, James is running from a past that never leaves, Darion is kidnapped and thrown into sleep deprivation, Melody must leave her bubble of comfort and friends behind, Soren is a drifter with a laptop and incredible insight, Catherine must depend on a seemingly godly person, and Okembe must hold his company and himself together in spite of his obsessive-compulsive needs. And beneath the characters, a dramatic comedy unfolds between chess pieces and two cults that have remained unnamed for a very long time. Status: twenty pages from rough draft finished.

2009: Worldtree. Modern Fantasy. A boy is accepted into one of the seven legendary schools of magic. This book follows his footsteps into the hallowed halls and all the great creations man has made due to the Library of Alexandria not burning. Oh, and the planet is host to eight trees that spread two miles into the sky that have been there since before man existed. Status: Layout, first chapter finished only.

2009: Philosophy of Unlife (working title). Fantasy play. Two brothers find themselves on a deserted island. After spending much time trying to find out how to get back to the mainland, they are given a chance to escape, only to find the mainland has been irreparably changed into a thing of horror. They must change their survival tact in order to escape the seemingly random infestation of undead, and survivors are just as apt to kill them as those who did not. Status: Two chapters and layout finished.

Of course, include with this a staggering list of poetry.

 


We woke to the bang of waves

 I had an idea a little while ago to write dialogue between myself and my brother Brian. Although we have very different personalities, we agree on so many things. That being said, I’m not certain if I’ll be writing much on this project in the near future. It might be a focus for something after publication of my first book. Or something.


            Brian opened the wallet and looked despairingly inside. As was with everything on that beach, white sand fell out in single grains, and saltwater discolored the leather. I would have done the same thing, I think, given the chance, if I had found it first. It was a semblance of real life, of the larger world. A driver’s license from Georgia. Fifteen bucks, with a single bill covered in people who had held it before. The irony, some part of me, way back near the unconscious side, laughed.

            I was still dizzy from waking up floundering. If it wasn’t for him, I certainly would have drowned. He was always the stronger one of the two of us. I believed his logic would win out regardless of the situation. It is logical to keep my head above the water, he would monologue. Therefore, keep your head above water.

            Logic just worked for him like that. He sat on the beach with his cargo pants, worn and faded, his t-shirt covering his upper body was soaked and sandy, the words, “Everybody Chill. I got this,” Quickly fading in the sun. He squinted, frowned, looked at me while I tried to focus on him, saying, “I hate the sun. You know how easily I burn.”

            It slowly dawned on me that he might be finding ways to deal with what happened the night before. Or. Three hours ago. The sun had barely rose.

            As a waking brain tends to do, odd questions came with instant answers: What did happen last night? How are we alive? Where are we? What the FUCK?!

            The last one came when Brian plucked some woman’s finger from the sand and investigated it real close before throwing it away. The dude had to be in shock. Had to. That kind of calmness does not come from an individual entirely in control of his faculties.

            “Where are we?” I asked in rasped voice. The salt had dried my throat out nicely.

            He shrugged. “On a beach.”

            Yes, Brian. On a beach. “How did we survive the crash?”

            “Beats me. I think it was because we were nearly landed when a large wave knocked out the engines. Otherwise, we would never have made it.” He scratched at his bald head, looked up and down the beach, and then back at me. “Are you alright?”

            “Recovering. But yeah. Why are you so calm about this? I mean you just tossed a woman’s finger into the waves.”

            “No point being all retarded about it. I’m alive. No point wasting energy on making sense of it just yet.” He shrugged again. Yeah. Definitely in shock. I had never seen him so calm before.

            Well. He was always this calm. But. Given the circumstances. Yeah. Unnatural even for him.

            “Tropical island,” I said, giving the obvious. “Or peninsula. Uninhabited. Reminds me of Castaway a bit.”

            He chuckled. “No volleyballs though.”

            “No volleyballs. Morning. I need water. Food. I must have drifted on that chunk of plane for hours. How’d you get here so clean?”

            “Saw the island in the morning sun. I just kinda… floated to it.”

            “Any gear?”

            “I got my wallet. A saltwater soaked phone. Um. I still have my wallet knife.”

 


Melding of Ideas

I’m loving the thought of re-igniting my old writing flame; the Chosen story that is. I believe they’d fit in perfectly with the Worldtree scenario, and it’d be a great introduction to the world at large. How better to pull the reader in than through the eyes of high school kids looking to make a difference in the world? I mean, we were all there at some point or another. Right? Or was it just me?

So… John, Marcus, Delphi, Renie, and Tym will all be joining the cast of Worldtree, and although it’ll take some serious retconning (even if it’s not canon… I have to redo the Mindgames book), I’ll be removing the seemingly omniscient Orbs of the fourth dimension and placing aspects of the school in their place. Ajax will still be present. And the machines will still be present.

I’m kinda excited. At the same time, I really, really don’t have time to be writing on this. Right now or in the near future. I have to get my job off the ground, continue working at Dick’s, take school classes, and pray to God I can get something published. You know. Like a book.

Acorn King OR i, pawn dreamer, stare.

Whatev. Anyway. Off to find family and turkey.

 


Worldtree

As far as I can see… More of the same? Hahaha

 


Project One

Working title is i, pawn dreamer, stare, but I call it Project One because that was what it was back when I sent the first chapter to Marty. It was to be a collaboration nearly three years ago. And nothing happened, so I dove into it as I am wont to do. Anywho.

I’ve decided that it would be most beneficial if I rewrote it. Most of it. And not in the way that I remove what I wrote before, but wrote over it. Another layer. Perhaps, a more masculine layer. Or, a more tactical, logical layer. I’m giving this serious consideration, given the fact that I’m nearly finished with it and still feel it is quite unfinished.

Beyond the current project, I believe I will go on a writing haitus until A) Acorn King gets published, B) Project One gets published, C) Anything/all of the above gets published, D) I get my writing business off the ground, or E) I graduate. Or any combination of the above. I want to be published. I want my name out there. I’m slowly working toward it, and I think I’ll have a solid foundation by Christmas, but I’m not yet ready to drop things and pick things up.

Besides, I don’t know if I want to be ready for a Worldtree/Deserted island with brother book idea. More to come.