《Safe as Houses》To the Very Edge
Advertisement
A few seconds later, Sally shook her head to clear it. She couldn’t be making noise like that. Rolling over, she looked around. Same room she’d scouted: storeroom in an old, ugly building.
She took stock. She’d picked up a few scratches in that last jump and she felt a nice lump on her head from where the nurse had hit her. (Of course an old man would still have an encyclopedia!) She’d used up most of her prep except for one last trick. When she pulled out her phone and looked at the map, she knew that if that last trick didn’t work, she had no hope. She had two blocks to go and the next street to cross was Main Street, too wide to jump.
Slowly she picked up the crossbow she’d left in the corner by the door. This was where she would probably get killed. She had to break into an apartment facing Main Street, open a window, fire a rope, hit something usable and pull herself across fast. It didn’t sound likely.
The vampires on the fire escape called to her, their whispering voices unrelenting, maddening.
She thought about KerriAnne, her sister, and felt that uprushing of love and annoyance she always felt. KerriAnne, who was going to die if she failed. KerriAnne, always big-eyed and innocent, the one who had knuckled under to their father every time and yet found ways to rebel.
And thinking of her father, she burned. A little Hitler, a strutting martinet, powerless in the world but by God he ruled in their house. He’d dominated their mother and her sister but outside their house, she’d seen him smile and kiss ass. Until the day he fell apart. Cancer diagnosis and it destroyed him before the disease could. He’d died a disgusting drunk and she felt no pity for him.
As she thought about KerriAnne’s visit, just three days ago, she sank back to the floor, cradled the crossbow and trembled.
♦
KerriAnne, adorable and charming as always, was tense and unusually pale, her baby eyes haunted. She wore gold and red silk with slanting stripes and a jade bracelet but had an unfashionable metal band around her neck which must have nearly strangled her.
Advertisement
Sally made tea and they sat cross-legged on the floor facing each other.
On the wall behind KerriAnne’s head was Sally’s print of The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Hokusai. She’d bought it partly because she’d been exploring her Chinese heritage and, embarrassingly, hadn’t realized the artist was Japanese. But it also reminded her of Pearl Buck’s The Big Wave, which she’d loved in fifth grade. In the story Jiya’s family was killed by a tsunami but he built his new house by the ocean again. In the front room he put a sliding panel so that he could see the ocean and face the big wave if it ever returned. Sally admired that.
The Great Wave made a swash above KerriAnne’s head like a Tintin curl or a rooster’s comb.
“Master of all masters, how shall I call this cup?” KerriAnne began, referring to their old joke: Sally was the old sailor from the Hans Andersen story who had a strange word for everything and KerriAnne was the serving girl who had to learn each one. They’d played that many times, little Carrie Yan and Sally, but Sally was always the Master. She was better at making up odd words and KerriAnne was better at stringing them into a mouth-busting sentence.
“That cup thou holdest is not a cup but a, um, a Gondola-Ride,” she said, smoothly reaching for the silliest name she could think of. Kerri looked into the cup, murmured “Gondola-ride,” then asked, “And how shall I call the floor on which we sit because thou art too cheap to buy furniture?”
Sally was as easily charmed by KerriAnne as everyone was. “That is called Great-Silver-Flat my humble servant. And sitting upon it humbles the spirit, calms the soul and thy little tush art none the worse for it.”
KerriAnne pounced as soon as she saw Sally feeling the old affection. “Boss, I need a favor, bad.”
It hurt, slamming into defensive mode again. But KerriAnne turned her 300-Watt smile and lost-kitten eyes full on Sally and said, “It’s about my guy.” Nervously, she touched the band around her neck.
But when she explained what the band was and exactly what help she needed, it was Sally whose eyes went wide.
Advertisement
♦
Sally climbed painfully to her feet. Not knowing why, she walked to the window where the vampires still called. They hissed louder, reached claws up to the invisible barrier. She gave them the same blank stare she’d given Bunt.
Just a simple step and she would be theirs.
She imagined the agony and ecstasy of being alive one moment and torn into shreds of flesh the next. The choice was hers: until she took that step, she was safe. Like the icy sea they writhed and rushed before her.
She reached out a fingertip to the boundary.
They went silent. The gaps between them disappeared. Vampires from other fire escapes flitted over and crowded her window two, three, maybe four deep.
But she turned and walked out of the storeroom, ignoring the screaming, yowling rage.
Thinking about KerriAnne, she stomped angrily down the corridor. Doors on either side of the poorly lit hall flowed by in a dark stream. A right turn and down another corridor along the side of the building facing Main Street. She was tempted to just smash down somebody’s door, walk into their apartment like a demon of vengeance, and get shot as a burglar. (She saw the pretty nurse, so like KerriAnne, so terrified.)
Apartment 242. This one should do. Later she would try to think if anything special had drawn her to this door. For now, she knelt with her tool kit and in five minutes was carefully turning the doorknob.
The apartment was lit only by streetlight through half-open drapes. She saw hippy knick-knacks, peace medallions, photos of a dark-haired glum-looking young woman standing in front of a VW van with her arm around a gender-indeterminate biker type who smoked a cigarette, another of a dirty-faced little dark-haired girl with a big toothy grin.
The window wasn’t swarming with vampires so she kept away from it for the moment. No use calling their attention until the last second. If this was going to work at all, she had to know exactly where she was and then move fast. From the side of the rounded table in the middle of the room she could see the well-lit street. No traffic, of course, not until dawn.
A flicker of movement caught her eye. Through the slats of the fire escape she saw the sidewalk on the other side of the street. Something moved along it which wasn’t a vampire. She walked closer to the window. Was it Bunt, hopping along like a – there it was again! She almost had it, the image of a stiff white hopping man, but again it dissolved when she tried to see it.
Frustrated, she focused on what was out there. There was only time for a glimpse before white undead flesh blocked her view and the usual hissing and pleading started. What she’d seen hadn’t made sense. A tent, walking down the street, swarmed with maggot-like vampires?
And now the vampire voices brought someone in from another room, a sleepy woman in a white nightgown, her long hair in a tangle. Sally slipped behind the partially-closed drapes and held still. She heard muttering and feet padding. A horrible thought came to her: if she pushed the woman out the window, it might distract the vampires enough for her to aim and fire. She clenched her teeth and pushed the thought away.
Suddenly the sleepy woman pulled aside the drapes and she and Sally were face to face.
Sally was, of all things, embarrassed to be facing someone she’d just thought of killing. The woman jerked back like she’d touched an electric wire.
Sally saw her mouth open, heard the suck of breath.
She slapped her hand over the stranger’s mouth, spun her around and whispered into her ear, “I’m not a burglar, I’m a Home Runner, I won’t hurt you.” The woman burned in her arms, electric, intense. She shook her head: I won’t give you away.
Tentatively, Sally released her.
Just then they both heard a scream of anguish from outside. “Whuh the fuck?” muttered the dark-haired woman. She had a husky voice and a thick Brooklyn accent. They both ran to the window, the woman taking care not to let Sally get behind her. The undead pressed so thick against the window that nothing else was visible. But Sally knew.
“One of the other Runners just lost,” she whispered.
Advertisement
- In Serial7 Chapters
Toothpick
“Hello! My humble audience! I, the Bard of the North, am going to tell you a tale. Nothing new, nothing old. A story of a hero, some may say, others a poor boy who was hated by the world.” The storyteller paused as he waited, right timing was everything when telling a story. Pacing… Too slow and the audience became bored then left without tossing even the smallest of coins. If he spoke too fast and rushed the story. It would leave the audience confused and having no reason to be impressed. So like any good storyteller, the Bard has to do a balancing act of sorts. Not too slow, not too fast. Just perfectly in the middle. “In a shattered country in the south, a novice princeling has the ambition to mend a torn tapestry that is his birthplace. Struggling to fend off those who would usurp the throne in an unending civil war spanning centuries. A mercenary that left only death in his wake, unable to stave off the monotony and peace of life. He looks back at the path laden with bodies, wondering if it was all worth it. Wandering souls summoned by a madman, travel away from a wasteland in a foreign land, the first alone, the others as companions. A deity, ancient in her years, waiting to be freed from a duty she no longer enjoys. For all these people and their stories, none are the hero of this tale. No, the hero is not grand, not wise, not ready.. he was punished for nothing of his doing, who was an outcast that was unloved by many, including his father.” This was always the big reveal novices use to jump off into their story. He did not start here, instead, like any good fishermen, he set the bait and waited until the fish bit before pulling. As he saw the audience's eyes focus, he then started the backstory. The harness, that stopped the listeners from having metaphorical whiplash. The foreshadowing. “But that is not where the story starts. No, not even the hero's birth. Where the story begins, is the boredom of the deity, a deity many know of. She who hunts for the impossible, the guide for those who have lost the path, the Huntress of Mallon--” A small pause, a short breath. “--All old names for a single powerful being that has roamed the grounds of this continent longer than any line of kings or queens, lords or ladies. A being of worship for many an individual…” One last breath. And he began singing the first verse.
8 289 - In Serial6 Chapters
The Big Never
Stiggy has a problem. He accidentally took a bondage collar from Rupert King's sugar baby, and then he shit all over her parents' front porch. It's a long story, but now Stiggy needs Sully. Sully used to work with Stiggy and has a secret only Stiggy knows. Stiggy will continue to keep the secret if Sully cooperates. But things get complicated, and now both Sully and Stiggy are on the run from The Sandman. Seeking refuge with whatever motley characters they can temporarily rely on, Sully and Stiggy attempt to remedy their situation and achieve their only desire-- to get out of the business and live square, boring lives like everyone else.
8 105 - In Serial40 Chapters
The Demon and the Beast
As darkness descends upon the little town of Wadena, so does a hungry Demon looking for its next prey... Andrew Cross is one of the many police officers trying to catch the creature terrorizing his town. He has always led a simple life of trying to do what was expected of him and not wavering from the path that was set for him. But after he comes face to face with the Demon his life is forever changed. The line between good and bad suddenly becomes less clear and he is forced to rethink his morals and everything he has been taught. He is suddenly forced to figure out what he wants and who he wants to be. Will he find the Demon again? And will he still be himself when he does? This is M/M fantasy! There is only one sex scene though and the romance part is only a side thing. It is heavily story focused.
8 137 - In Serial16 Chapters
RE:tombdungeon
The main character gets reincarnated by a Godess, after getting killed by an drone.Now he has to survive as an tomb dungeon, in an empire that exploits it's own residents.
8 105 - In Serial48 Chapters
Ballerina Boy
Larry Stylinson Story (Completed) This is a story where a ballerina meets a fucked up quarterback. Rated R: language, drugs, violence, and sexual content Enjoy ;) (credit to the manip: larryspineapples)
8 80 - In Serial14 Chapters
[One Shots] : s.sj + y.sh
Yeh Shuhua x Seo Soojin"I'm single.. just thought you should know""When did you learn how to flirt?" : Different short stories per chapter : Just my thoughts: Fluff & Smut
8 177

