Punkmetheus – What’s Left Of Me? (Official MV)

*Lyrics by yours truly.

The Madd Fictional Video Jukebox presents Punkmetheus rocking that Monster Mash live from the laboratories!

Breaking News: Punkmetheus Takes the Stage!

In a shocking turn of events, Punkmetheus, the reanimated rock star with a heart of electricity, has burst onto the music scene! Created in a storm of mad science and heavy metal, this monstrous performer is set to electrify audiences across Europe. Here’s the scoop on his upcoming tour:

Ingolstadt, Germany: The birthplace of his creator’s madness, Punkmetheus returns to the University of Ingolstadt, where Victor Frankenstein’s wild experiments first brought him to life. Expect a thunderous performance that’s sure to raise the roof—literally!

Geneva, Switzerland: Punkmetheus will bring his electrifying energy to the tranquil shores of Lake Geneva. Get ready for a night of shocking revelations and heart-pounding rhythms as he performs at the Villa Diodati, the legendary site where Mary Shelley first conceived his tale.

Chamounix, France: Nestled in the shadow of Mont Blanc, Punkmetheus will rock the serene alpine village where he once sought solace. His performance promises to be as powerful as an avalanche, echoing through the valley and leaving fans in awe.

Orkney Islands, Scotland: In a twist of fate, Punkmetheus will return to the remote Orkney Islands, where his creator attempted to fashion a mate. The haunting ruins of the laboratory will provide a fitting backdrop for a concert that blends gothic ambiance with electrifying rock.

Arctic Circle: Closing his tour in the icy wastelands of the Arctic, Punkmetheus will deliver a chilling performance that promises to be as intense as his final showdown with his creator. Bundle up and brace yourself for a concert that’s sure to melt the ice caps!

Don’t miss out on this once-in-a-lifetime tour. Punkmetheus is more than just a monster—he’s a musical legend in the making! Follow his journey and stay tuned for updates, exclusive backstage footage, and more shocking surprises.

Disclaimer: No villagers were harmed in the making of this tour announcement.

Never Kiss The Unknowable

The room?
Dimly lit and adorned with peculiar artifacts and flickering candles.
The air?
Thick with the scent of incense and anticipation.
The volunteer?
Twenty-one if he's a day, his aura a virginal hue.
The facilitator?
In appearance, matching the age of the volunteer. But in the eye, older by leaps and bounds.
They stand toe to toe, face to face, their silhouettes dancing on the walls like ancient shadow puppets.

“Is this your first kiss?” Her voice echoes through the chamber, a siren’s song luring the unsuspecting sailor into uncharted waters. “Be honest.”

“Why?” he stammers, his heart pounding like a tribal drum in the depths of a forbidden jungle.

She leans in closer, her breath hot against his skin, her words dripping with a mixture of seduction and cryptic wisdom. “Because I do it like nobody else,” she whispers, her fingers tracing the contours of his face, mapping out the territory she is about to conquer. “So, if this is your first time, we will need to be blindfolded.”

He hesitates, his mind reeling with a kaleidoscope of thoughts and desires. “Wait, is this some kind of kink thing?”

A smile plays on her lips, a Cheshire grin that holds the secrets of the universe. “No…and yes. You have heard of the third eye before, correct?”

His voice trembles, a leaf in the wind of her presence. “The spiritual gate that leads to the inner realms and spaces of higher consciousness?”

She nods, her eyes glinting with a primal hunger. “What if I told you that I have discovered a fourth eye that can only be opened through the unification of two souls? When I kiss you, your third eye will open and there is nothing you can do to prevent it. Then my kink, as you call it, will come into play and I will open your fourth eye. Reality as you know it will slip from under your feet, and you are likely to experience vertigo and nausea. I cannot run the risk of you vomiting in my mouth.”

He swallows hard, his throat suddenly dry as the desert sands. “What happens when the fourth eye opens?”

She pulls out two silk blindfolds, black as the void, and hands one to him. “You will see colors you never knew existed, hear sounds that defy description, and feel sensations that will rewrite the very fabric of your being. Are you ready to take the leap?”

With trembling hands, he ties the blindfold around his head, plunging himself into a world of darkness. “I’m ready,” he breathes, his voice barely a whisper.

She leans in, her lips brushing against his, and in that moment, the universe implodes. Colors burst behind his eyelids, a supernova of sensation that threatens to consume him whole. He feels himself falling, spiraling down a rabbit hole of ecstasy and madness.

And then, silence. A stillness so profound it seems to stretch into eternity. Slowly, he removes the blindfold, blinking in the dim light of the room. She stands before him, a knowing smile on her face.

“Welcome to my world,” she whispers, her voice a distant echo in the vastness of his newfound consciousness.

She leans in and parts his lips with her tongue. He is being entered, but not from the place he expects. It is painful in a way he cannot describe and he is horrified by the fact that a small part of him enjoys it.

The room begins to shift and warp, the walls melting like Salvador Dali’s clocks, dripping into pools of iridescent madness. He staggers, his mind struggling to comprehend the surreal landscape that unfolds before him.

She breaks the kiss momentarily, her lips curling into a smile that is both inviting and terrifying. “Let me in,” she purrs, her voice a siren’s call amidst the chaos. “Let me take you deeper. Give me consent to unravel the threads of your reality, to weave you a new tapestry of the bizarre and the beautiful.”

She reaches for him, her fingers grazing his skin, and suddenly, he is falling again, tumbling through a kaleidoscope of fractured images and disjointed sensations. Her lips find his once more, and the world explodes in a cacophony of colors and sounds.

Whispers fill his ears, a thousand voices speaking in tongues he cannot understand. He sees visions of impossible cities, where buildings twist and bend like origami, and the streets are paved with the shattered remnants of forgotten dreams.

She kisses him again with that tongue that both terrifies and delights, and he feels his body dissolving, his molecules scattering across the infinite expanse of the cosmos. He is everywhere and nowhere, a consciousness untethered from the bounds of flesh and bone.

In the distance, he sees a shimmering portal, a gateway to a realm beyond comprehension. She takes his hand which is no more than a scatter of atoms, and leads him towards the threshold, her touch electric and alive.

“This is only the beginning,” she whispers, her words echoing through the corridors of his mind. “I will unlock within you a new layer of existence, a new facet of the infinite. Are you ready to embrace the unknown, to let go of everything you thought you knew?”

He nods, his voice lost in the maelstrom of sensation that engulfs him. Together, they move through the portal, into a world where logic is a distant memory, and the only truth is the sublime madness of her kisses.

The universe shifts and resets, a kaleidoscope of possibilities spinning out of control. He is lost in the labyrinth of her love, a willing prisoner in the asylum of her affection. And with each kiss, he falls deeper, the boundaries of his reality crumbling like sandcastles in the tide of her passion.

In this brave new world, where the impossible becomes the everyday, he surrenders himself to the chaos, embracing the beautiful insanity that flows from her lips. For in her kisses, he has found a truth that transcends understanding, a love that defies definition, and a reality that is forever changed, one breath at a time.

As he descends further into the abyss of her kisses, the fabric of his sanity begins to fray, unraveling like a moth-eaten tapestry. The visions that assault his mind become increasingly alien, incomprehensible to his fragile human understanding.

He sees vast, cyclopean structures that defy the laws of geometry, their angles and curves bending in ways that should not be possible. Gargantuan entities, ancient beyond measure, slumber in the void, their dreams seeping into the cracks of reality, tainting it with their eldritch essence.

Her lips, once a source of pleasure and wonder, now become a portal to the unknowable, a gateway to horrors that no mortal mind was ever meant to witness. Each kiss is a revelation, a glimpse into a realm where the rules of logic and reason hold no sway.

He feels his identity beginning to erode, his memories and experiences draining away like sand through an hourglass. The boundaries between himself and the cosmic horror that surrounds him blur, until he can no longer distinguish where he ends and the madness begins.

She pulls him closer, her lips brushing against the new thing that is his ear, her whispers a discordant symphony of eldritch secrets. “Do not fight it. Become one with the infinite,” she breathes, her voice a sibilant hiss that echoes through the chambers of his fracturing mind. “It is madness, yes. Embrace it. It is the only truth in this realm of chaos and despair.”

He tries to scream, but his voice is swallowed by the void, lost in the cacophony of unearthly shrieks and gibbering chants that fill the air. His body twists and contorts, his flesh rippling like the surface of a stagnant pond, as the taint of the unknowable seeps into his very bones.

In the depths of his rapidly deteriorating consciousness, he realizes the true nature of her kisses. They are a corruption, a violation of the natural order, a union that was never meant to be. Her lips are a blasphemy against the very fabric of existence, a profane communion with the unspeakable horrors that lurk beyond the veil of reality.

Yet even as his mind shatters and his humanity slips away, he finds himself craving her kisses, yearning for the twisted ecstasy that only she can provide. He is lost, a plaything of the elder gods, a puppet dancing to the tune of their mad piping.

In what surely must be the end, because how can it go any further, as the last vestiges of his sanity crumble and the abyss claims him as its own, he understands the terrible truth. Her lips, the unknowable, the never-meant-to-be-kissed, are the key to a realm of nightmare from which there is no waking, no escape. And in that final moment of mortal clarity, he embraces the madness, surrendering himself to the void, forever lost in the labyrinthine depths of her eldritch love.

But unbeknownst to him, his descent is far from over…for she will never stop kissing him.

The Hauntening Ch: 3 – The Shadowed Wing

A Penny Dreadful Style Tale

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Part 1 HERE * Part 2 HERE

The abandoned wing of the academy loomed before Miss Evilene Wraithsyde, its once-grand visage now marred by the creeping hands of decay and the weight of a sorrowful past. The moon, a silent sentinel in the heavens, cast an otherworldly light upon the forsaken annex, its pallor reflecting off the broken windows and casting shadows that danced like wraiths upon the walls.

Evilene’s breath formed clouds of vapor in the chill air as she ascended the creaking staircase, each step a mournful note in the symphony of the night. The ancient tome lay heavy in her arms, its pages fluttering as if agitated by the proximity to the unrestful spirits it spoke of.

At the top of the stairs, a corridor stretched into darkness, its end lost to shadow. The whispers of the dead were more pronounced here, a tapestry of tragedy woven from their unending laments. The air was thick with the electricity of unseen energies, and the hairs upon Evilene’s nape stood on end, as though charged by the anticipation of the specters.

Summoning her courage, Evilene ventured forth, her own supernatural essence responding to the call of the spirits. The mark upon her skin, a sigil of her ancient lineage, glowed with a light not of this world, a beacon in the oppressive dark.

The rooms she passed were like mouths of the abyss, gaping and silent, save for the occasional skitter of a rat or the flutter of a disturbed bat’s wings. Evilene’s destination was the heart of the wing, the Founder’s Study, where the pact had been struck and the curse had been born.

As she entered the study, the air grew colder, her breath now a frost that lingered before her lips. The room was a mausoleum of knowledge, with books and scrolls scattered haphazardly, a testament to the chaos that had reigned at the curse’s inception.

In the center of the room stood a desk, its surface a map of arcane etchings and alchemical symbols. Above it hung a portrait, the founder of the academy, his visage twisted into a smirk that bordered on the malevolent. Evilene felt the eyes of the portrait upon her, as if the founder himself were watching from beyond the grave, mocking her efforts to undo what he had wrought.

With the ancient tome as her guide, Evilene began the ritual. She spoke words of power that seemed to resonate with the very walls of the room, the language arcane and otherworldly. The sigil upon her flesh blazed brighter, casting the study into a realm of half-light, where the boundaries of time and space became blurred.

The spirits, drawn to the ritual, began to manifest. They were phantoms of every shape and hue, some clothed in the garb of teachers long passed, others the uniforms of students whose laughter had long since been silenced. They encircled Evilene, a vortex of the damned, their eyes pleading for the release they had been denied for centuries.

As the ritual reached its zenith, a tempest of supernatural force filled the room. The portrait of the founder writhed as if in agony, and a scream that was not of this earth shook the very foundations of the academy. Evilene stood firm, her voice unwavering as she completed the incantation.

And then, silence.

The spirits, one by one, began to dissipate, their forms becoming motes of light that drifted upwards, passing through the ceiling and into the night sky. The mark upon Evilene’s skin dimmed, its purpose fulfilled.

As dawn broke over the academy, the sun’s rays pierced the darkness of the abandoned wing. The oppressive atmosphere had lifted, and the air was filled with the sounds of life once more.

Evilene Wraithsyde, her strength waning, descended the staircase of the shadowed wing, her heart lightened by the knowledge that she had freed the souls bound to the academy. Yet the portrait of the founder, with its twisted smirk, remained a sentinel over the study, a reminder that some secrets are never fully unraveled, and some shadows never fully banished. The Hauntening had been quelled, but the tale of Evilene Wraithsyde and the cursed academy would live on, whispered in the annals of penny dreadfuls for generations to come. For in the world of gothic horror, the end is never truly the end, and the specter of the past can always rise once more.

The End (for now)

The Hauntening Ch: 2 – Whispers in the Walls

A Penny Dreadful Style Tale

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Part 1 HERE

As the silvery disc of the moon ascended to its nocturnal throne, casting an ethereal glow over the cobblestones and ivy-clad walls of the academy, Miss Evilene Wraithsyde found herself drawn to the heart of the labyrinthine library. Its towering shelves, laden with tomes of forgotten lore and forbidden knowledge, seemed to beckon her with a spectral finger, as if entreating her to uncover the secrets that lay within their leather-bound breasts.

The air was thick with the dust of ages, and the scent of mildew clung to the air like a desperate spirit. As Evilene’s candle cast dancing shadows upon the walls, she could not shake the sensation that the very books themselves were regarding her with an air of ancient expectation.

With trepidation lacing each step, Evilene ventured deeper into the literary catacomb. It was here, amid the silence punctuated only by the distant tolling of the clock tower, that she chanced upon a volume most peculiar. Its cover, adorned with symbols arcane and inscrutable, seemed to pulse beneath her fingertips, as if it contained a heartbeat of its own.

As she opened the book, a gust of wind snuffed out her candle, plunging her into darkness. Yet the pages before her were illuminated by a phosphorescent gleam, casting a ghostly light in the gloom. The words within spoke of rituals and powers beyond the ken of mortals, of a founder whose soul had been twisted by the pursuit of immortality.

The founder, it was said, had made a pact with a force dark and eldritch, binding the spirits of those who perished within the school’s domain to its very foundation. These lost souls, the volume revealed, could be freed only by one who bore the mark of the ancients, a mark that Evilene felt burning upon her own flesh as the truth dawned upon her.

As the night deepened, Evilene heard the whispers grow louder, a cacophony of voices that pleaded for release, for salvation. The walls themselves seemed to shift and groan, as if the building was a living entity, pained by the centuries of sorrow it had absorbed.

With the book clutched close to her breast, Evilene resolved to confront the spectral forces that roamed the school’s hallowed halls. She would seek out the places where the veil was thinnest, where the echoes of the past were loudest, and there she would perform the rites that the ancient tome had described.

Her journey would take her to the abandoned wing of the school, where the shadows lay thickest and the fabric of reality was frayed and worn. It was there that the boundary between the living and the dead could be traversed, and where Evilene would find herself face-to-face with the tormented specters of The Hauntening.

With each step, she felt the pull of destiny tugging at her soul, leading her towards a fate that was inextricably linked with the dark history of the academy. The next chapter of her tale would be one of either redemption or ruin, and as the clock struck midnight, Evilene Wraithsyde crossed the threshold into the unknown, her heart aflutter with both fear and a grim determination.

Not. The. End.

The Hauntening Ch: 1 – Old Stomping Grounds

A Penny Dreadful Style Tale

In the shadowed heart of a quaint and secluded township, lost amid the undulating moors of Victorian England, a tale most bizarre and chilling unfolds. A visage of gentility and grace, our heroine, Miss Evilene Wraithsyde, a maiden both fair and learned, with a lineage as mysterious as her striking amethyst gaze, arrives at her alma mater, seeking to impart wisdom as its newest governess.

The school, an imposing edifice of Gothic spires and countless panes of stained glass that capture the dying light of day, whispers of its ancient past and secrets untold. As Evilene steps through the iron-wrought gates, a chill not born of the wind snakes its way down her spine, a prelude to the darkness to come.

Days pass, each marked by the tick of the clock and the turn of the calendar’s page, yet time itself seems ensnared within the school’s walls. Evilene, with every lesson taught, feels the eyes of the unseen upon her, an audience spectral and expectant. She hears the faintest of melodies, a pianoforte’s lament, from the music room long sealed, and the softest of sobs behind the walls of her chambers in the night’s quietest hours.

The students, pallid and wide-eyed, whisper of the Hauntening, a term coined in hushed tones to encapsulate the strange malaise that has befallen the institution since before their time. Books fly from shelves with no hand to guide them, and portraits, those stoic guardians of history, shift and sigh in their frames.

Evilene, though unversed in the world of the occult, cannot deny the stirrings of power within her, a latent force that answers the call of the school’s enigma. She senses the weft and weave of a cosmic loom, its threads the fates of all who dwell within the school’s reach.

Our tale crescendos as Evilene, through courage and the awakening of her own supernatural essence, peels back the layers of reality to reveal a tapestry of torment. The specters that roam the corridors are not mere echoes of grief but the ensnared souls of those who have walked these halls, bound by a curse most vile, spun by a founder whose ambitions trespassed into realms forbidden.

To save her charges and free the spirits, Evilene must navigate the labyrinth of her own burgeoning abilities and confront the darkness that hunts and haunts with equal voracity. The battle is not only for her soul but for the very essence of the school, a nexus of otherworldly power that calls to her, recognizing her as the key to its salvation or its eternal damnation. Thus, the stage is set, and the players assembled, for a story of gothic horror, where the veil between worlds is thinnest, and the truth lies buried beneath layers of deceit, waiting for the light of discovery to shine upon it. Will our heroine prevail, or will the shadows claim her as one of their own? Only time, that fickle scribe, shall pen the final verse of this penny dreadful, ‘The Hauntening’.

Not. The. End.

Rules of Visitation (Revised)

I almost missed her visit. My disbelief in ghosts had fortified a stubborn veil over my perceptions, making me almost immune to the spectral. But tonight was different. The rain was falling in torrents, its ceaseless hiss drowning out all other sounds, and then there it was—her voice.

“James,” it whispered, woven into the tapestry of rainfall, each drop a syllable of her name. “James.”

At first, I dismissed it as an auditory illusion, a byproduct of my loneliness. But she persisted, her voice cascading with the rain, and my eyes, driven by an inexplicable impulse, moved toward the window.

She was there, a fragile wisp of memory made visible, pressed against the glass. Rainwater dribbled down her translucent face, like tears shed by the sky itself. My heart surged with a blend of love and sorrow, a cocktail of emotions I hadn’t tasted since the day she was taken from me.

I rushed to the window, hands trembling, but it wouldn’t budge. An invisible tether held me back, a boundary I couldn’t cross. My fingers barely touched the cold glass, craving the warmth her presence used to offer.

“Rosalyn,” I mouthed, my voice choked with regret and questions. “How? Why now?”

Her spectral eyes met mine, brimming with a serenity that could calm even the fiercest storms. “There are rules, James,” she began, her voice emanating from the fog of her form. “Rules that even love can’t bend.”

“What rules? What are you talking about?”

She floated closer, her form illuminating the darkness of the room. “Our love, pure as it is, must now abide by the laws of my new existence. I can only visit you when it rains, and only on days that are sacred to us—our birthdays, our wedding anniversary, and today, the day my earthly journey ended.”

The weight of her words settled over me, anchoring me to an altered reality. As quickly as she appeared, Rosalyn began to fade, her form dissipating into the mist outside the window, becoming one with the rain.

“I love you,” she said, her voice gradually swallowed by the falling drops, becoming a silent echo that only my heart could hear.

“And I you,” I whispered back, pressing my palm against the cold glass, a poor substitute for her touch. But it was a touch nonetheless, a fleeting connection that would have to sustain me until the heavens wept again on a day we once celebrated. Then, and only then, could our sorrow reunite us, even if just for a moment.

Strong Roots Amongst The Clay

Clay Boy

Content Warning: This story contains violence and relationship abuse. Reader discretion is advised.

Once there was a kindly woman who was known all about the town as Lovely Lucy, not so much for her appearance, for she was endowed with plain features—which wasn’t a bad thing at all—but she was called this because she was arguably one of the sweetest people who ever walked the face of the planet. The only parts of her life that suffered were her love life and her inability to bear children.

One morning, Lucy went to market and spoke with the town sculptor, who made statues large and small, some for himself and some which he sold. Lucy hadn’t much money so she explained what she wanted to do and begged the sculptor to spare some clay and promised to pay him another day. The sculptor remembered how Lucy had brought soup and sat by his bedside when he had taken ill, and gladly gave her as much of his special clay as she could carry, free of charge.

Thanking the sculptor for his kindness, Lucy rushed home and began working on a life-sized statue of a boy, aged five. She made the little boy perfect. His reddish-brown features depicted an unblemished beauty and innocence such as no real boy had ever possessed. Although she had no skill at sculpting, she crafted the statue with such love that upon first glance it seemed to be a live boy standing still. She took great care in painting her little angel, making his eyes blue like the sky, his lips and cheeks pink like the sunset and his hair black as twilight.

Lucy marveled at her creation. She held his little clay hand, kissed his rosy cheek, and told him many times a day how much she loved him. When she went out to market, he was always in her mind, and she searched for presents for him – flat, smooth rocks for skipping across the lake, seashells for tooting like horns, and twigs and vines woven into a ball. She bartered her baked goods for hand-me-down children’s clothing and dressed him in different outfits each day. She even brought him a puppy from the neighbor’s litter for company while she was away.

Lucy was not able to manage the other part of her suffering as easily. For reasons unknown to anyone, she attracted the wrong sort of suitors and was far too kind of heart to dismiss them, despite their many transgressions against her. It pained the townsfolk to see a woman so intelligent in all other respects remain so foolish in love.

Her most recent failed relationship was with a traveler who suspected her of being unfaithful one day when she had gone out to market, so he barred her from her own house and drew obscene pictures of her and posted them about town. Lucy begged and pleaded with the traveler and after a week or so, he changed his opinion and let her back into her home to be reunited with her clay boy.

That evening the traveler fixed her dinner and his mouth was sweet with words of love and a possible reconciliation. Cautious at first, Lucy finally let her guard fall, assured that his feelings and his intentions were genuine. That was the last thing she remembered before she awoke the following afternoon, face down in her bedding. She felt groggy and her body ached in unspeakable places as though she had been violated. She knew she had been drugged.

Lucy reported the incident to the authorities. The traveler confronted her in public, on the road from the market, after the authorities questioned him. Wishing to avoid an argument, she simply turned to walk away. Her next waking recollection was being bound to a chair in her home. The traveler had struck her a cowardly blow to the back of the head. She was helpless as he raged against her with rock and branch. But fortune smiled upon her when a neighbor heard her cries of anguish and contacted the authorities. This time, he was imprisoned.

From his prison cell, the traveler requested an audience with Lucy, and she, having a forgiving nature, went to visit. And his tongue was dipped in honey and he spoke sweetness and there was yet again talk of a possible reconciliation, which she honestly considered.

All was calm and happy between Lucy and the traveler when he was once again a free man. They sat together and talked, went out to the seashore and walked, and the traveler also lavished attention on the clay boy. All seemed right with the world and Lucy’s life was as close to being perfect as it had ever been.

Until one night she bolted upright out of a sound sleep and found the traveler standing over her, eyes doused in rage.

“I know you play me for a fool!” He spat through gritted teeth. “I know you have taken a lover! Who is it? The neighbor? The sculptor? Tell me who it is or you will never know a moment’s peace ever again!”

When she did not answer, he stormed out of the room and Lucy hoped he would leave the house but instead the sound of his thunderous footsteps headed in the direction of her private room—the room where the clay boy lived.

“No!” she cried as she dashed from her bed.

In the private room, she found the traveler with the wood axe resting over one shoulder. He stood next to her perfect little boy.

“Shhh,” he said. “If you wake him up, I will have to kill him.”

Lucy hadn’t a clue what to do so she started begging for the statue’s life, whispering as not to anger the traveler.

“What can I do?” she kept asking him. “What can I do to make this right?”

The traveler commanded her to her knees and she did this without a second thought. “Down on all fours.” And she complied. Then he made her crawl from the room backward, back into her bedroom.

“Now, on your knees,” he said, closing the door behind him. “Close your eyes and smile.” She was nervous, of course, but she obeyed. The next thing she felt was the ax handle as it smashed into her mouth, shattering her front teeth.

“Your life is mine! Your sad statue is mine! You both will cease to exist if I so wish it!” the traveler ranted.

She felt his foot on her shoulder, pushing her over, toppling her flat on her back. She wanted to look at him but was afraid, so she squeezed her eyes shut as he straddled her and beat her. Her head swam with pain, but Lucy knew she couldn’t scream for fear of this madman destroying her little boy, so she took the beating until she passed out.

Lucy dreamed that she was an eagle soaring through clouds misted with morning dew above a river where children frolicked and although she was too high to hear the sounds of their tiny voices, she knew they were happy and having fun. But something tugged at her tail feathers like a dragging weight, pulling her back down to a place she did not want to go, a place of pain and sorrow—

When she woke up, regaining consciousness piece by piece, she was surrounded by the sharp claws of searing pain that pawed at her like a hungry animal. As her mind struggled for clarity she wondered where she was. In her bed? But how did she get there?

All around, the walls were covered in blood, so much blood. Too much to be her own. Then she saw the bits and pieces. Parts that belonged at one time to a whole, red soaked clumps of the remnants of the traveler. Divided from one another and from life itself by the wood ax buried in the man’s severed head.

She looked at her hands. Had she done this terrible thing? Then she heard a voice, tiny tingly, that chirped in song, “Not to worry, not to fear, everything is fine, Mama, I am here.”

She stared at a living boy whose eyes were blue as the sky, cheeks the color of the sunset and hair as black as twilight.

He hugged her neck and kissed her cheek and whispered, “I love you, too.”

About Strong Roots Amongst the Clay: As a kid I never had much interest in fairy tales. In fact, I hated them. My mother told me that someone had given her a book about Squanto, also known as Tisquantum—the Native American of the Patuxet tribe who assisted the Pilgrims after their first winter in the New World—thinking it was a book of fairy tales. And where Mother Goose and The Brothers Grimm failed to put me at rest at night, the adventures of Squanto did the job nicely.

And I wouldn’t fully appreciate the cultural richness and power of fairy tales until revisiting them in the 1980’s. For the longest time I searched for something to spark an idea for a fairy tale story that I probably would never bother writing—there’s a difference between the wanting of a thing and the doing of a thing.

Then one day a violent true story was relayed to me by a coworker at a retail job that I absolutely hated (the job, not the coworker) and the first thought that popped into my mind—after showing proper concern for my coworker, of course—was to incorporate elements of her story (with her consent, naturally) to give my fairy tale story a spin.

At the time I wrote the story, I wasn’t a fan of the fairy tale narration. I didn’t like reading it and I didn’t like writing it. I’m still not a big fan of a lot of the story’s voice,  but finally sitting down and writing a fairy tale piece taught me appreciation of it.

I’m still not sure if I like the ending or not. There’s a fine line between chilling and cheesy and I’m not sure which side I’m on.

One Hell Of An Offer

Modestine was aware of the gap in her memory, the section of consciousness that had been removed, and two separate events seamlessly spliced together in a non-jarring, dream jump-cut fashion.

The first partial memory was of Modestine stepping out of the shower. Her petite foot missed the rubberized shower mat by inches and instead slid along the wet tiled floor. Her vision shifted up toward the ceiling and her eyes locked on the one hundred watt energy-saving fluorescent light bulb. The next instant, at the point of the splice, she found herself standing inside a pair of pearlescent gates, waiting as patient as the lamb she was in life.

She was dead, of this there was no doubt. There was also no cause for alarm. She had no memory of either fear, pain, or the precise moment of her death. That was the portion that had been mercifully removed from her awareness, no doubt to aid in her acceptance of events.

Modestine watched the hubbub of nervous yet joyous chatter and a flurry of feathers as angels tested their wings in the air above her. They flew from structure to structure—she hesitated thinking of the impossibly tall spires as buildings because their various shapes defied her limited perceptions of architecture—getting the lay of the land. Though no one told her, she somehow knew this commotion was normal for the first day of new arrivals in Heaven.

While she waited, Modestine’s eyes drifted over to an ornate pulpit offset to the right of the gates. This, she assumed, was where the welcoming saint was supposed to have been stationed, but Peter was nowhere in sight. She noticed a few pages had fallen from the ledger on the pulpit, so she spent a little time laying the leafs out, deciding the order they should go in, and locating the exact spots in the book they had fallen from.

Finally, an angel arrived. He was tall and thin, wearing black horn-rimmed eyeglasses he obviously no longer needed. It was a remnant of his physical life that he clung to, a misconception that it was a permanent part of his appearance. A trapping that would fade in time. This was yet another thing Modestine had known without being told.

The glasses made the angel look bookwormish and out of place in their surroundings. Then she felt guilty for judging his appearance. Who was she to do this? She, who had always been short and mousy in the physical world, what her mother affectionately called the unsundertall and unassuming. She wondered what she looked like to him and if the same rules of beauty still applied here.

“Hi, I’m Modestine,” she offered a hand and a smile simultaneously.

Bookworm eyed her head to toe and back to head again, before taking her hand for two firm pumps. He opened his mouth and let out a high-pitched screeching noise, intense enough to rock her celestial molars.

Modestine, who graduated magna cum laude in never let ’em see you sweat university, replied, “Pleased to meet you,” and she tried her best to match the noise he made…but came up a little short. A lot short, actually.

Bookworm let out a burst of short laughs like a semi-automatic weapon. “Just messing with you. My name’s Phil. Welcome to Heaven!”

Modestine didn’t really get the joke but smiled anyway. “Are you here to give me the guided tour?”

“Heavens no, that’ll come later, once all this dies down. Saint Peter sends his apologies, by the way…”

“Oh, that’s no problem at all.”

“I’m here to take you to class,” Phil said and with a single flap of his wings, shot into the sky.

“Oh, okay.” Modestine imitated Phil’s action and was understandably a little unsteady on her wings, but through sheer determination managed to keep up.

Phil led her past fields of flora and fauna, the likes of which she could never have dreamed existed and finally into a structure that housed a vast amphitheater that was unmistakably set up like a classroom. Packed to capacity, its seats were filled with the most grotesque and vile creatures imaginable.

“Here you are,” Phil gestured in the direction of the amphitheater and was about to fly off.

“Wait! Wait!” Modestine caught his forearm and pulled him down to eye level. “Where do I sit?”

“At the podium, where else?” Even in Heaven, the duh-look carried a sting.

“What? Why?”

“Don’t tell me no one let you know?” Phil looked at the class with his best can you believe some people look. “You’re a teacher, right? Or were, before, you know…”

Modestine nodded, “Underprivileged kids. Twelve years.”

“Well…” Phil swept his arm in the direction of the class as if to answer.

“Oh, no…no way. I’m not qualified for this. I barely know what I’m doing here.”

“The information will present itself as you need it. Heaven’s cool that way.”

“But, this class…” Modestine whispered. “Not to be rude but what are they?”

“Our version of underprivileged students. They’re bussed in every day.”

“From Hell?”

“We tend not to use that term in front of the students. We call it The Basement.” Phil checked the invisible watch on his bare wrist. “Well, I’d love to stay and chat, but I’ve gotta run. Too many new recruits and not enough ushers. You’ll be great. I’ve got a feeling about you.” he smiled and shot into the sky, leaving Modestine’s jaw swinging on its hinges.

The once and now future teacher straightened out her ethereal robe, cleared her throat, turned, and faced the class. “Pleased to meet you, class. My name is Modestine. Welcome to Introduction to Heaven.” The name she took off the lesson booklet on the podium. The completely blank lesson booklet. Beside it was the roster. “Hopefully you’re all in your assigned seats because it’s the only way I’m going to learn your names with a class this size.”

Modestine went through the attendance sheet and called her students one by one, each responding with a grunt or bodily noise that she assumed translated as “Present!” When she completed her check, surprisingly every student sat quietly or whispered inaudibly to their neighbor.

“Well, class, as some of you might have figured out, I’m new here, but don’t let that stop you from asking questions. My goal is to teach you everything about heaven, which means I’ll be learning it as you do, and if I don’t know an answer to your question, I’ll do my best to find out as quickly as possible. Today, though, I’m going to outline my expectations of you, and how you’ll be graded.”

The time passed swifter than Modestine had anticipated. Quite frankly she was surprised to be aware of the passing of time at all. For the most part, her students were orderly. A few class clowns, but nothing she couldn’t handle. She’d straighten them out before the course was over.

The entire class watched her closely, she never felt so scrutinized before, and a good deal of the period was spent answering questions about Earth. It wasn’t long before she realized these students were born in Hell, and Earth was like some mythical place to them. When the earth questions began dying down, she introduced several ice-breaking games before the class broke for recess.

As the class filed out of the amphitheater, some by flight, a few in a puff of eye-watering brimstone, and the rest on cloven feet, one student hung back.

“Miss Modestine,” the young demon said when all the others had left.

“Just Modestine, and yes?” she searched the attendance sheet for the section he came from, hoping one of the names would jog her memory.

The demon shook his head. “You won’t find me on your list. I’m not one of your students.”

“You’re not? Then who…?”

“Many names have I, from those who live and those who die, but for you, I wish to be known as Mister Thatch.”

Modestine frowned, looking down at this creature who straighten itself in an odd regality. “All right, Mr. Thatch, what is it you want?”

Thatch pulled a file folder from seemingly nowhere and opened it. “Interesting session today. I’m assuming you taught the class off the cuff, as I am unable to identify any of what was discussed in the pre-approved syllabus, correct?”

“As I stated at the beginning of class, this assignment was thrust upon me at the last moment, so if you have any objections…”

“No, please, you mistake my meaning. I’m not here to condemn you, I was simply assessing your performance. It’s what I was hired to do.”

“By whom?”

“Your superiors would call them Basement Management.”

“And do my superiors know you’re here?”

“They should. It would make for a shoddy operation if they didn’t. Now, as to my assessment,” he pulled a document from his folder, stapled in the top left-hand corner. “Here is an offer from my employers for you to teach your course to a larger audience of underprivileged students. Please study it carefully and feel free to contact me with any questions or concerns. Please be aware that agreement to the terms as stipulated in the contract will require you to abandon your post here. Out of curiosity, are you willing to relocate?”

Modestine stared dumbstruck at the professionally worded document in her hands. An immediate and instant “No” rested on the tip of her tongue but never quite made it past her lips, because, in her quick scan, she found a list of perks that tickled each and every one of her many interests, as any temptation worth its salt should have done.

“I’ll need to read this more closely, Mr. Thatch, before I can respond, of course.”

“Of course. I think you’ll find the compensation quite reasonable. If you have questions, you may summon me at any time. We have high expectations and we’re positive you can fulfill them, Miss Modestine.”

“Just Modestine, and why me?”

“You’re new and, as yet, unjaded by the caste system. We look forward to working with you,” Thatch held out a hand, which Modestine took. It was remarkably soft, despite its texture. “Enjoy the rest of your day.”

Modestine watched as the demon simply evaporated from the room. She looked at the contract. Am I willing to relocate? she asked herself as she walked over to her desk, sat, and read the agreement more thoroughly.

Again, she found it difficult to verbalize the word No. Chiefly because she loved working with underprivileged students and they didn’t come more disadvantaged than the denizens of The Basement. The second reason was she’d always preferred warmer climates and there was an odd constant chill to the air in Heaven.

Wanna Succeed as a Writer? Buddy Up to Failure, it’s the Best Friendship You’ll Ever Make

failure-is-awesome-a-manifesto-for-your-20s-so-you-dont-suck-at-life-1-638

Far better is it to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure… than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much, because they live in a gray twilight that knows not victory nor defeat. — Theodore Roosevelt

The act of screwing it up, getting it all wrong and falling flat on your literary face is the worst, most evil thing that can be thrust upon the fragile ego of a creative person. No writer ever wants to be standing hip-deep in a congealing bucket of epically proportioned failure. Not only does it cling to you, branding you with the scarlet letter of incompetence, but the fumes from it seep into your pores and attack your confidence, enthusiasm, and self-esteem.

And even worse than failing? Atychiphobia:

From the Greek phóbos, meaning “fear” or “morbid fear” and atyches meaning “unfortunate” atychiphobia is the abnormal, unwarranted, and persistent fear of failure, often leading to a constricted lifestyle, and is particularly devastating for its effects on a person’s willingness to attempt certain activities.

But “fear of” is getting kicked to the curb in this post because—if you haven’t guessed from the title—I’m actually advocating for failure, which in my insolent opinion, gets a bad rap.

When you first begin to write for an audience, or writing in a genre that’s new to you, or in a different format, etc., your first attempts will most likely not be optimal. No two ways about it, no getting around it. Why? Because your life isn’t a movie, wunderkind wasn’t conveniently inserted into your backstory, and greatness isn’t DNA-encodable at this point in time, it still has to be strived for.

You. Will. Fail.

Fail to connect with your audience. Fail to notice logic issues in your plot easily spotted by a reader. Fail to end a story properly (if you even complete it at all). Fail in your use of words to convey the intended images. Fail to make a sale. Fail to impress your literary heroes. Fail to please everyone (always), the majority (on occasion), and anyone (trust me, it happens).

The only surefire way to avoid writing failure is to either never commit your ideas to paper—let them swirl around in the magical kingdom of your imagination, living their Peter Pan existence, as you vegetate in front of the TV—or never put your writing out into the world. If either of these sounds like a viable solution, good on you, and go for it. I’m not here to judge.

If, however, you’re not satisfied with letting ideas fester in your gray matter as you wait for the opportunity to unleash your genius in that perfect moment that never ever seems to swing around your way, you’ll need to look disappointment square in the eye and accept the fact that the outcome of your writing endeavors will not always line up with your expectations.

And though I’m not here to judge, should you actually consider never committing your ideas to paper, one possible adverse effect is that idea can metamorphosize into a bloated squatter that takes up an unnecessary amount of mind space, thereby blocking the arrival of new ideas. If it were me, I’d serve it an eviction notice and make way for a new tenant. But that’s just me. Still no judgments.

Once you’ve wrapped your noggin around the simple truth that you will fail and have given up feeling hopeless, weak, and belittling both yourself and your talents, you’re finally ready to accept the fact that failure plays a very important, incredibly positive role in your writing life. In fact, it offers you a chance to grow and learn.

The first step in learning how failure breeds success is to let yourself fail a few times. Experience it in it’s totality. When you discover that it does not, in fact, destroy you, feel free to brush yourself off and climb back on the horse. All successful writers have experienced failure (and a great deal of the time the success/fail ratio favors the negative) but what made them successful is they weren’t afraid to fail and if they did, they just learned from their mistakes and moved on.  They didn’t allow themselves to be defeated by rejection, hurt, or disappointment.

There will be those of you who poo-poo (yeah, I said poo-poo, deal with it) the notion of getting accustomed to failure because you personally know someone whose first-ever novel made the bestsellers list, whose first draft screenplay became a Hollywood blockbuster, whose tweets became a TV series, blah-blah-blech. There’s a professional name for that phenomenon. It’s called a miracle. Right place, right time, all the planets fall into alignment. This is great when/if it happens, but you shouldn’t factor it into your overall game plan. It’s akin to being dirt poor and signing the deed on a mansion just because you’re sure you’re gonna win the lottery.

Well, writing calls, so I must be off—I’m sure I’ll speak more on this topic in the future—but before I go, let me leave you with a list to help you on your way to palling up with failure:

  1. Read.
  2. Write.
  3. Fail.
  4. Learn.
  5. Repeat.

It’s as simple, and as difficult, as that.

Sally forth and be failingly writeful, you intrepid writer, you.

Can You Keep A Secret?

Walton had done the calculations. The building stood twenty-two stories tall which was approximately two hundred and forty feet and his freefall wouldn’t last longer than four seconds, reaching seventy-five miles per hour on impact.

That should do the trick, he thought as he closed his eyes, held his breath, and stepped off the building ledge.

A hand caught the crook of his arm in a vise-like grip and yanked Walton violently back onto the roof. He was confused when he opened his eyes and saw…

A ghost?

No. Although she was so pale she almost looked faded and thin to the point of anorexia, skin stretched over bones, the woman standing over him was definitely corporeal. Walton wasn’t one to judge a person’s appearance but she wasn’t attractive. Her hair was baby-fine and lifeless and it collapsed onto her shoulders. He was in midair when she grabbed him but there was no way this frail, bony woman could have yanked him back onto the roof.

“I didn’t mean to manhandle you like that. I just didn’t know your story,” the woman said. Her voice was mousy but her tone was strong.

“Are you insane? What are you talking about?”

“I wasn’t the one about to swan dive into concrete, so let’s not judge anyone’s sanity here, okay? And I’m talking about your story. Everybody’s got one and it would be a shame if you did what you were about to do and nobody knew your story.”

“Wait, you stopped me because you wanted to know my story? Not because I was going to kill myself?”

“Let’s be honest here, if you aim to top yourself, you’ll find a way to do it, and there’s nothing that I or anybody else can do to stop you. I’m just curious to know who you were.”

“You mean are.”

“I mean were. You’re going to kill yourself after all.”

“You really are crazy.”

“There you go again, with that label. Hello, pot, meet kettle.”

“What are you doing up here anyway?”

“I could ask you the same question.”

Walton pointed toward the building ledge. “Isn’t it obvious?”

“Oh yeah, right.”

“Look, I don’t have time to waste talking nonsense with a stranger,” Walton said, rising to his feet and dusting himself off.

“Vonda Darleen Honeycutt,” Vonda said, extending her hand.

“What?”

“My name. We’re not strangers anymore. And you are…?”

“Not interested.” Walton walked past her to the roof’s edge.

“I’m just going to go downstairs and rummage through your gunky remains until I find your ID, so why not save me the trouble?”

He let out a sigh of exasperation. “Walton.”

“Got a last name there, Walton?”

“Summers, all right? Walton Mayson Summers, are you happy now?”

“Hey, we got something in common, you’re a three-namer like me. Ever wonder why middle names went out of fashion?”

“No, now if you’ll excuse me…”

“Uh-uh, not so fast. I still don’t know your story. It must’ve wrapped up in a shitty day to bring you to this.”

“How about a lifetime of shitty days?”

“That would certainly do it. Wanna get it off your chest? You may not know it to look at me but I’m a helluva listener. Besides, I’m only gonna keep snatching you off the ledge until you tell me.”

“Then I’ll take you with me,” Walton said.

“Are you a murderer?”

He wasn’t. Walton sat on the ledge and asked, “If I tell you my story, will you let me do what I came here to do?”

Vonda made the sign of a cross over her left breast. “Cross my heart and hope to…well, you know.”

And with that, Walton told her the story of an unsuccessful author whose work failed to connect with an audience of any kind, who turned to alcohol, an addiction that chased away his wife, his family, and his friends, relationships he wasn’t able to repair even though he had been sober for almost five years.

“Not exactly a life worth living,” Walton concluded.

“What if I could show you something?” Vonda asked.

“Let me stop you right there, I’m not religious, never have been, never will be.”

“I’m not proselytizing, not trying to sell you on a cult, but what I have to show you will damn sure feel like you’re having a religious experience.”

“What have I got to lose? This will all be over in a minute, anyway, so go on, show me.”

Vonda began feeling the air. looking like a mime trapped in a box. Walton rolled his eyes and was about to swing his legs off the side of the building when the odd woman found what she was looking for. She traced her fingers down an invisible seam in the air and dug her fingers into it. With a bit of effort, the bony woman pulled back a piece of reality.

Walton’s eyes grew wide as saucers as he looked upon a sight that altered his perception of himself, his life, everything. It was similar to the overview effect reported by astronauts who viewed the Earth from outer space. What stared back at Walton from the rift in the space/time continuum allowed him to see, for the first time with his mere mortal eyes, the big picture: his life in relation to the universe at large.

Vonda closed the rift, making sure it was sealed tight. Walton walked to where the rift had opened and felt around. He had to see it again but his hand touched nothing except air.

“I never knew,” he said.

“And now you do,” Vonda said. “But there’s a catch.”

“What sort of catch?”

“What you just witnessed has to remain a secret.”

“I’ve just had a cognitive shift in awareness, how can I not scream this from the mountaintops?”

“Them’s the rules,” Vonda shrugged. “In exchange for this experience, you can never tell anyone about what you’ve seen. You can’t even write about it, not in a story, journal entry, email, or text. You are forbidden to utter or issue a single word referring to it.”

“Then why show it to me?”

“You’re about to kill yourself, who are you going to tell?”

“Well, I don’t want to kill myself now, do I?”

“I don’t know, do you?”

“You know damn well I don’t, which is why you showed it to me!”

Vonda shrugged again and held out her pinky. “So, do you promise to keep this a secret?”

“You want me to put it on a pinky swear?”

“It’s universally accepted as a binding contract,” she smiled.

Walton locked his pinky with hers and agreed to keep the secret.

Then something occurred to Walton. “Wait, if this is such a big secret, how were you able to tell me?”

“I have special dispensation, you should have been able to work that out on your own by my ability to peel back reality. Besides, I didn’t tell you anything, I showed you. Big difference.”

“Will I be able to do that, too?”

“Learn to crawl before you walk, pal.”

It turned out that Vonda had been sleeping on the roof since she had no place to live. How could Walton not allow her to crash at his rundown apartment? She was the keeper of the greatest secret unknown to mankind, after all.

Sheer proximity to one another and the sharing of a perception-altering experience led them to become involved in a serious relationship and through her encouragement, he sold his first short story. Vonda turned out to be his good luck charm because published short stories turned into published novellas and Walton’s life soon improved as his struggling writing career became wildly successful.

The couple eventually married and had two beautiful children. The years rolled by as years were wont to do and Walton’s career continued to blossom, however, he had written so many books that he exhausted all of his ideas. Yes, he had earned enough money and invested wisely enough for him and his family to live comfortably for the rest of their lives, and if he needed to work there was always the lecture circuit or he could have sculpted aspiring author minds by teaching a masterclass, but a writer in the pit of their soul wanted to write, wanted to be read, and if he was being honest with himself, fame was a difficult thing to let go of.

Walton had written forty novels at a rate of four books a year and on the tenth anniversary with his publisher, his agent thought it would be a spectacular idea to mark the occasion with a new release. He agreed, even though his new idea well had run dry, because he felt he owed it to his fans to attempt to put out at least one final book before announcing his retirement.

The road to hell was always paved with good intentions.

He wrote in secret, and Walton’s conscience should have plagued him to no end but he somehow convinced himself that what he was doing wasn’t a breach of his promise because he wasn’t detailing the wonders his wife showed him ten years ago. He wrote a fable in allegory and metaphor, craftily altering elements and tweaking details until they in no way resembled the precise details of the truth. But the moment he put the finishing touches on his manuscript, Vonda and the children appeared in the doorway of his study.

“All you had to do was keep one secret and the world would have been yours,” Vonda sighed heavily, letting her head drop. Her teardrops beat patterns on the hardwood floor.

Vonda held out her pinky, a reminder of the vow he made, and Walton watched her pinky fade into nothingness. She screamed and clutched her two daughters tight, who emitted a heartbreaking wail as they began to unravel corporeally and dispersed into so much stardust.

And after they were gone, his current reality followed suit. Films and television programs based on his books became unmade, audiobooks were unspoken, novels melted away from bookshelves, his words vanished from the minds of fans and his publishing company, deals were unsigned, his house unbought, all the positive things that paved the path to his success were undone and time reversed on itself, speeding faster and faster until he was back on the ledge of the building again taking that first big step off.

But this time there was no hand to pull him back onto the roof and gravity did what it was designed to do.