《City of Roses》18.1: Water & Wine – Last Thursday
Advertisement
A glass of water, a glass of dark red wine on the formica table between them. “I know what this must look like,” says the woman who picks up the glass of wine. Cradles it in both hands elbows on the table. She doesn’t take a sip. She’s draped in a brown and yellow striped serape and her hair is short and black in the dim light.
“What’s that,” says the woman across from her, a hazy cloud of curls the color of clotted cream tied in a thick spray of a tail at the back of her head. A sheepskin jacket slung over the back of her chair. They’re up by the front windows, high dark narrow panes behind a slender wrought iron grill. The woman in the serape says, “When one person asks the other person out to a public place to talk about something important so the other person won’t make a scene when they get dumped or whatever, that’s not – ” She sips her wine then, cupping the glass in both hands. “I’m not kicking you out. I’m not asking you to leave.” Another sip. “But it’s unfair. It’s unfair to me, it’s unfair to Jason and Grace, it’s certainly not something we can ask them to – ”
“What is.”
Carol sets her glass back on the table. “I found your dope.”
“Dope.”
“Your drugs, Mar, I found your damn drugs when I was cleaning up the – ”
“I don’t have drugs.”
“Don’t!” Carol’s hands clench on the table, “try to, brazen your way out of this, okay? Don’t tell me it’s just glitter. Glitter doesn’t numb your gums.”
Marfisa drinks down half her water in a couple of deep slow swallows. “I don’t have drugs,” she says.
“I don’t know whether this has to do with your breakdown or what – ”
“Carol,” says Marfisa.
“Sorry,” says Carol. She takes another sip of wine. “It’s just,” she says, “it’s such a waste. You know what Streak did, the little shit?”
Advertisement
“Carol,” says Marfisa again.
“He uploaded a couple of tracks to I guess YouTube or something. Sent them around. The Mask Song, and that goofy King Arthur Star Trek thing you had us do?”
“Deedee’s Song,” says Marfisa.
“The Mercury linked to them. People are listening to them. People are talking about them, about us. What happened. Where’d we go. Is there an album, where’s the album.”
“Carol,” says Marfisa, firmly this time, and Carol bites her lip and sits back in her serape. “It’s over,” says Marfisa. “Even if I were willing. Even if I could, you would never get Otto or Wharfinger in the same room with me again.”
“Anne Thorpe,” says Carol. “From Anodyne? Is sniffing around. Wants to do a story.”
Marfisa drinks the rest of her water, sets the empty glass upside-down on the table between them. “You’re right,” she says, “it is unfair, to you, and Jason, and Grace. Your holiday.” Standing, pulling on the sheepskin jacket. “I’ve taken a week. I’m back on my feet. You’ve been.” She looks down. “Very helpful,” she says. “But. It’s not drugs.” Somewhere, outside, there’s a fluttering pop of drums, a thin and distant whine of flutes and whistles. “It’s more like,” Marfisa’s saying, stepping back, away from the table, looking out the windows, stepping toward the door. Carol stands. “Mar?”
Marfisa opens the door. A little bell chimes.
Under the blue and orange neon sign that says Alberta Rexall Drugs a little crowd is knotted all in raingear, dark wool and fleece, gleaming nylon and gore-tex and leather against the seeping rain. Flutes whirl around the ache of a melody over a growing growling drone as drums rattle and clatter closer and closer. Down the middle of the street through the haze of rain hung blushed by streetlight in the air a procession almost outnumbering the little crowd, at the head of it two young boys and an even younger girl in knee-length frock coats, the boys strutting with snare drums, the girl struggling with a clear bass drum strapped to her belly. Next a figure enormous in a crude suit of wicker armor, head hidden away behind a woven barrel of a helm, in one hand a long rattan pole. To one side of him a woman in a blue-black cloak over a gown of watery mail, her short hair gunmetal grey, and beside her trudges a clattering man, ducting and foam insulation clamped stiffly about his legs, a great stainless-steel pot lid hung over his chest, colander rakishly topping his head. Children the smallest barely a toddler wind laughing about their legs in rags and tatters, worn footed pyjamas, a filthy bib, a sodden wrap of fake blue fur. And behind them all a trundling black hulk of a car headlights dark the pavement beneath it lit up blue and green and purple the sides of it crusted with, with a teeming horde of dolls, doll heads, doll arms, jaggedly broken torsos and legs, all of them roughly painted black and glued and welded, bolted to the fenders, the hood, the doors, a coat of stiffly bristled fur combed back and up along the lines of the car, reaching toward the throne that squats on the roof, where’s slumped a black sack of a cloak topped by a tangle of dead black hair hung low, twined with dull white streaks.
Advertisement
“Some Last Thursday thing?” says Carol.
Marfisa’s eyes widen as that tangle of hair shifts, turns, tips back. She looks away quickly, down at the sidewalk, Carol’s heeled brown boots. “But it’s Friday,” she says, a crack in her voice.
“It’s November?” says Carol. “Last Thursday – yesterday – was Thanksgiving, right? Our holiday?” The drummers with flourishes drag their beat to a halt and the little procession stops just past the intersection at the other end of the block, those flutes and whistles still, for a moment only the seep of the rain. “So they do it on a Friday,” says Carol. She’s pointing. “They’ve got something going with Clown House, anyway.”
There in the street they’re all turning to face the house on the corner, peeling pink siding and mud-red trim, a welter of bicycles along the edge of the lot, tipped over onto the sidewalk, people spilling from its cramped front porch, coming out the side door gawking, wildly colored hair and faces painted white, a straw hat, a green and yellow cheerleader outfit, a grey uniform with red stripes, overalls and a plaid jacket, a ruddy round man in a leopard-print bikini and a purple feather boa his thin beard caked with white paint, and pushing to the front of them all is someone wearing a rabbit head with a metallic, skull-like face.
On the side of the car a bony man in a pinstripe suit is standing on the running board he’s reaching up careful of the dolls to take the hand of the woman slumped up there on the throne. He’s singing, a cold keen countertenor slicing through the murmurs of the crowds on the sidewalk, by the house, “Ní dhéanfaidh an ghealach solus d’éin-neach,” as the woman in that dark black cloak rolls out of the throne and he catches her, hefting her down from the roof of the car to the street, and all of them, children and toddlers, motley knights, drums still and flutes quiet, all of them singing along, “’S ní bheidh éisg ann air muir nó air tír – ”
“Is that,” says Carol, “damn, that’s Danny Boy. Spookiest arrangement I ever – Mar?” Marfisa isn’t beside her. “Mar?” Turning, looking back, the sidewalk, the street behind her empty, just the lights from a restaurant, a couple of shops a block or more away.
Advertisement
- In Serial10 Chapters
Sweetleaf Cultivation
If you’re reading this. Not cool Dude! Or Dudette. Hashtag Resist. Seriously though, it’s not nice to read other people's diaries. Yes, it's a diary, kind of. The only men who call their diaries journals have an issue with their own masculinity I think. Well, I guess I can’t be too angry, considering if this is in anyone else’s hands I’m probably dead. Or I lost it. I lose stuff a lot. Since you’re here, regardless of the reason, I guess I’ll tell my story, such as it is. I know, why tell my story when I could tell you about the Fall of Killianor, or the story of when Micha the Bold banded together with his underdog group of misfits to destroy the Pallantine Regime. Hell, even the tale of Tulsa and Gran’s star crossed love affair would probably be better. If you don’t think so after finishing this you more than likely have poor taste. Weird taste, at any rate. Hello RR! Welcome to the greatest work of fiction you will ever read! ... .... Did you believe that? Cause its not. At all. This is my first work that I will have published in any fashion, and to be completely honest is more to gain practice for my real story. That is not to say I do not care about it. I do. I will do my best to finish it in, if not satisying, at least a conclusive manner. I will warn you however that updates will be infrequent at best though chapter length will not be under 2000 words. I work third shift currently, and at over 40 hours a week I do not have much time to really devote to this at the moment. I DO have an outline for the novel complete, but currently only about 5 actual chapters written and edited. There will be mistakes, including grammar and continuity, plot holes, etc.. If you see these please either comment or feel free to message me directly, and I will get it updated asap. Aside from a fledgeling authors mishaps, expect to find a somewhat comedic slice of life, with a mish mash of xianxia and western fantasy themes, tropes and the like. There will be some gore, network tv levels of sexuality, and absolutely no harems. There will also be COPIUS amount of swearing and drug use and while I said there would be no harems already he may find people in polyamorous situations. I hope you enjoy this, and as a last aside I beg of you not to rate it super low without justification, and if you give a bad rating please leave an actual review so that i know what I need to work on. *Original cover as of 09/01/20. Mishmash of stock photos and edits. HAVE FUN!
8 121 - In Serial19 Chapters
The Sea Tower
Sea witches were monsters of legends, capable of routing armadas and wreaking havoc across entire realms by controlling the weather. It was rumored that even the mighty krakens were under the control of the sea witches. Who, what, or where these witches were, no one knew. But no one sought them out either. The avarice of a mad king leads to the folly of a kingdom. Only a single turret survived the catastrophe, a single tower which protrudes outwardly from a boundless ocean, rumored to house the very creature which wreaked havoc and devastation. Sailors are warned to give the relic a wide berth, for few who have seen the tower ever return to speak the tale, and none who have approached it ever have. Do not approach the tower, they said…
8 202 - In Serial12 Chapters
Kalyug - As told by Krishna
Kalyug, the final age of human generation, the destruction of the Earth- the book will tell you everything that you're wishing to know about the end of the world.
8 86 - In Serial27 Chapters
One of the guys
Cindy Torres is obsessing over Our2ndlife, she always watches every video, replies to every tweet, and stalks their twitters. But one day, one member changes Cindy life, forever.
8 159 - In Serial42 Chapters
Say I do
Adeline's life consisted of part-time jobs, college and gawking at a particular guy every now and then. Her life was going perfectly normal until a certain someone entered it. She was not prepared for the arrogant, handsome and feisty billionaire to get down on one knee and propose to her in front of 100s of people, specially when she has no idea who he is! How does the life of two strangers go about as they learn patience, friendship, midnight tantrums and the real meaning of love? Read to find out!
8 87 - In Serial1215 Chapters
Demon’s Diary
Liu Ming, since he was young, lived in a savage prison named Savage Island where the prisoners aren’t controlled by any guard or security. When the island sinks due to “mysterious” events, only a handful of people survive – those survivors are then pursued by the government. On the other hand at another place two practitioners are worrying about what will happen to them because the young master that they were supposed to protect had died. Their young master just so happen to looks nearly like our hero… What will happen? Where will Liu Ming ends up and in what will he do ? Thank you for reading Demon’s Diary novel @ ReadWebNovels.net Read Daily Updated Light Novel, Web Novel, Chinese Novel, Japanese And Korean Novel Online.
8 89

