《City of Roses》11.1: The light from the Television – what Time it is
Advertisement
The light from the television flickers over tangled blankets in the otherwise dark room. It’s a large flat-sceen model hung on the wall over the blond wood crates at the foot of the futon. On the screen a man in a white top hat and tails is dancing before a gospel choir as a couple of men in orange jumpsuits wheel about him on skateboards. If you don’t come see me today, says the television, I can’t save you any money. Someone’s snoring lightly. At the foot of the futon a tumbled pile of empty shoe boxes, a couple that say Converse, a larger one that says John Fluevog. An orange carton of cigarettes ripped open at one end. Djarum, says the label. 76. The commercial ends with a fanfare and the light from the television changes. A man in a dark suit’s scooping cat food from one can into another in a minty pastel kitchen. He’s humming along with the soundtrack. A shot of a marmalade tabby pawing and mewling at the louvered kitchen doors. The snoring hitches and stops and a bare foot kicks out from under the blankets as Jo rolls over on her side. Wrapped in a clean white fluffy robe loosely belted falling from one shoulder. Oh the cat’s hungry, right, right, says the television. I’ll fix you dinner just as soon as I get me a smoke. Jo takes in a deep fluttering breath and the snoring starts again. At the head of the futon a low shelf painted white, a glass ashtray with three or four butts, a low thick-bottomed tumbler, a slick of something amber left inside. A half-dozen DVD cases most still saying Security Device Enclosed along the side and three books lying flat, the top one with a receipt tucked inside. A sword in a plain black scabbard, its guard a glittering net of wiry strands about the hilt, its pommel a great silvery clout. Someone moans.
Advertisement
The bathroom door is closed. Inside it’s dark but for three candles on the back of the toilet. Ysabel on the bathmat in black lace underwear curled on her side her hair a great black tangle spread across the grimy tiles her arms shivering clenched about herself. Gasping. A sob, and another. Her lips move, and she licks them, swallows, her cheek against the tiles she says her voice a breath, “Could I enchant, and that it lawful were,” and maybe she coughs, or laughs, and then she says, her voice worn thin, “her would I charm, softly, that none should hear – ”
Standing leaning against the sink her hand held up before her reflection shadowed and colorless. Her forefinger and middle finger together, extended, glistening in the candlelight. She presses her fingertips to the mirror and with a squeak draws them across the bridge of her reflection’s nose leaving a smeared and blurry wake obliterating the eyes. “Fuck the sager sort,” she says, shaking her head, her reflection turning away, falling as she sits on the bathmat, the smear left behind, snagging the candlelight. Ysabel leans over to twist a knob on the baseboard heater and then wrapping her arms about herself lies down again her back to it as a mosquito-whine climbs a couple of notches and something somewhere inside it begins gently to buzz. She closes her eyes, her mouth set in a straight flat line. From a hook on the closed door hangs a clean white fluffy robe, the belt of it dangling from one soft loop to draggle on the floor.
The light from the candles caught in that smear on the mirror flaring, popping. On the floor Ysabel doesn’t stir. Four sparks, five, left glimmering on the mirror, pulsing a little against the candles’ flicker, fading. Falling away from the mirror three specks of glittering gold dust, four, drifting down and down to settle there on the edge of the sink. One of them and another landing in droplets of water still standing by a faucet, where they blacken and are gone.
Advertisement
•
“I don’t know,” says Jo in her white robe sitting on the futon, eating garish orange cereal from a yellow oblong plastic bowl. On the large screen on the wall behind her a cartoon girl in chaps and cowboy boots and a long white scarf soundlessly fires her outsized handguns at a giant robot.
“Is it ten o’clock?” says Ysabel. In her black underwear curled into one of the wrought-iron chairs, heels on the cushion and arms about her shins. On the glass-topped café table an empty pink oblong plastic bowl and an open cereal box that says OJ’s. “Half past ten?” Her cheek on her knees.
“I have no idea,” says Jo. Her voice rough and slow. “Maybe. We were out late.”
“Is it almost eleven?”
“Goddammit, Ysabel,” says Jo, leaning over, grabbing a glassy black phone from the shelf at the head of the futon. She thumbs the only button on its face. “Quarter of ten,” she says. “Okay? Happy?” Tossing the phone back onto the shelf.
“He said you could go back on Monday,” says Ysabel, turning her head, her chin on her knees now. Looking out the window. “And we didn’t go back on Monday.” Jo’s scooping up more cereal. “Or Tuesday, or Wednesday, or Thursday – ”
“There’s a point?” says Jo, thumbing some milk from her chin.
“You said you wanted to learn from him. You wanted to learn how to use the sword.”
“Are you hungry?” says Jo. “Aren’t you cold?” Ysabel’s resting her cheek on her knees again. “I was thinking,” says Jo, “I don’t know. Maybe it’d be smart if we both used a little time to cool off. Him and me.”
“Does he know that?” says Ysabel.
“Jesus, would you put on a fucking shirt?”
Ysabel doesn’t move, and Jo looks away, looks down, sets her bowl on the shelf. On the television behind her the girl in the chaps and cowboy boots is silhouetted by an enormous orange explosion. “As you wish,” says Ysabel then, and she unfolds herself stretching her arms and legs and still sitting bends to grab a plain white T-shirt from the floor, tugging it out from under the black spear-haft that lies under the glass-topped table. Jo’s leaning across the futon, digging through the clothing stuffed in the blond wood crates, sitting back with an armload of stuff, all black. Scooting off the futon holding the robe closed as she climbs to her feet. Ysabel watching as Jo walks past, into the little hallway kitchen, clothing bundled under one arm. “You never used to get dressed in the bathroom,” says Ysabel.
“You never used to sleep in the bathroom,” says Jo, closing the door.
Advertisement
- In Serial8 Chapters
"A Dream and a Book"
Books, legends, stories, movies, cartoons - all these are myths that we know they will captivate us and call us. Sometimes I want to be a private citizen there and in those battles that beckon us. I'm not a writer or a poet. But I will tell you this story.
8 62 - In Serial18 Chapters
(OLD)Play On! My Lovely Goddess!
Link to rewritten story: https://www.royalroad.com/my/fiction/20813 Will write another story with this LitRPG + Superstar thingy on another fic once im done with the rewrite.
8 194 - In Serial35 Chapters
Dawn of the Gods
[participant in the Royal Road Writathon challenge] Dean was a newb to dive gear, but it didn't matter. He was playing in a party with his three best friends, all experienced players in dive games, and he'd figure it out as they went along. Eventually, he'd get good enough that they could beat the game. He just didn't expect the only way out was to beat the game. Or a rogue update that disabled the pain suppression settings, make it harder to level up, and reset his character stats every time he respawned. With an unstoppable Orc invasion led by a Shadow Wraith bearing down on their spawn point, they're only hope of survival is founding a new city, building a new spawn point, and defending it from the Orcs. All as a level one character. **************************************************************************************** As a note, I'm starting to edit earlier chapters, so some chapters will have a [Revised] tag attached, indicating that they're an edited version.
8 141 - In Serial154 Chapters
Lost in the Shadows; Book 2 of the Blood Moon Series
Kierra finds herself nose deep in supernatural affairs while Faline delves into the underbelly of the underworld, both once more getting themselves into deep trouble. While Kierra tackles with commitments she probably shouldn't have made, Faline deals with problems that are dropped into her lap. They'd both made a choice though, they could have turned away, but they chose to go deeper into that rabbit hole. New perils find the sisters as they make their way through yet again more unknown territory as well as new people. Who is friend and who is foe? Who will leave and who will stay? A Blood Moon is rising, and those lost in the shadows will soon be revealed. Maturity Warning/Triggers: This story has within it language, violence & murder, blood & gore, themes of rape, child abuse, prostitution, mention/implied drug use, slavery, mental instability, sex, and other sensitive ideological scenes. If any of this offends you, please do not read this story
8 245 - In Serial9 Chapters
Right Hand of God
Ghosts, demons, and all things that go bump in the night crawl the Earth. Rarely, some people are born with the ability to see the supernatural no matter what form it takes to conceal itself, including invisibility. Even more rarely, some people are also born with the ability to exorcise any supernatural entity. This ability always manifests in the right hand and arm, and so in some circles it has come to be called the Right Hand of God. Jacob Davidson, a black seventeen-year-old living in Normal, Ohio, has been secretly fighting and exorcising ghosts all his life using this power. One night, however, a seemingly average job takes an unexpected turn when Jacob meets the sarcastic, suave, and ironically named Agent Mann, a revenant who hunts other supernatural creatures, and has his first encounter with the denizens of Hell itself. Now Jacob and Agent Mann must team up to stop all Hell from literally raising. But with the mysterious power known as the Left Hand of Lucifer also rising in Normal, Ohio, do they have any chance of success?
8 97 - In Serial28 Chapters
Peter Parker y Carol Danvers: Como Madre e Hijo.
Un año ya ha pasado, desde la victoria de Los Avengers a Thanos, gracias a la ofensiva, coraje y sacrifico de nuestros Heroes, el universo entero fue salvado. Teniendo como nueva Lider del equipo a Carol Danvers, Tony le deja como ultimo deber, guiar y cuidar del joven Peter Parker. El chico, aun afligido por la muerte de su mentor, ve en la figura de Carol, una nueva forma de seguir adelante, pero, no teniendo en cuenta lo que sus sentimientos, y los de la propia Capitana, formara entre ambos.Como Madre e Hijo, es una serie que toma a nuestros personajes del UCM y los mezcla en esta apasionante historia, llena de Romance y Comedia, aderezado con una pizca de Drama y Accion, al mas puro estilo del Sorprendente Spiderman. (Historia +18. YA CONCLUIDA)
8 88

