Foam on the Range

Felicity Gabdod left her keys on the drianboard next to the plump wads of armadillo foam and shrieked into the intercom.

“Poonfaff, you puss-ridden possum-humper! Get your Crisco-packed protoplasmic envelope down here this instant and get this ‘dillo foam off my drainboard! And don’t you dare hologram. I want your ass in person!”

The velocity of the pressure differential that formed her words at transduction blew all of the silicon in the hapless intercom. As it shuddered into discorporation, a feeble error message escaped its bandwidth and made its way to the cave of the Stoned Brainger.

“Ah ha!” exclaimed the Stoned Brainger. “Food for Thought! Here, Thought, here boy,” he whistled.

Soon, Thought, in a clatter of toenails, rounded the corner and slid to a stop on the smooth limestone floor. He wagged his mighty tail mighty hard and waited patiently for his master to offer him the tidbit. After he’d dogged it down and decoded the message, he and the Stoned Brainger began to lay plans for the revenge they would take on Ms. Gabdod.

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The Heatures of Crabit

They are a small people, really, these Heatures, with sturdy wide torsos and truncated legs that resemble small stout trees. Most of their time is spent alternating between food gathering and wool gathering of the humorous kind. Their laughter is heard often in the forest and is reassuring to travelers, although not many travelers brave the forests these days. This is because the Heatures, while being devastating warriors in their own right, can’t be everywhere, and because they are so happily boisterous, it is easy for the Fargs to know exactly where they aren’t. The Fargs, as has been well documented, take their pleasure from females, travelers mostly, of the human kind. Many an unwary party loses all of their females to a fate only made worse by Farg romantic poetry. It must be said that some of the females reunited with their human community say that they enjoyed their captivity, but no study has been attempted in order to discern how they felt about their lives before capture. The Fargs, being dirt eaters, are no match for the Heatures and it usually takes several hundred Fargs to kill one Heature. Needless to say, travelers love to hear Heatures nearby. No one really knows how the Heatures feel about humans, although is has been reported many times that when in close proximity, the Heatures will laugh while holding their noses with one hand and their genitals with the other.

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Bingo’s Travelrama

Bingo Nudelfug was in Awe. In fact, he had driven all night to get there. Standing loosely in the middle of a broad avenue, he looked out of place in his high-tech fusion sneakers. It was at that moment Bewanda Dipdowne hit him with her bus. Bingo was everywhere at once. At twice, he was rapidly discorporating. At thrice, Bewanda knew he was the man for her.

After squeegying him into a large plastic bag, she carried him home to meet her mother. Before the introduction, of course, she tossed him into the reincorporator.

When the restoration process finished, Bingo was a tad disoriented. After exchanging pleasantries with Bewanda and her mom, he casually changed the discussion.

“Am I still in Awe?” he asked.

“No,” they replied sweetly, “now you’re in Trouble.”

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Three Bens and a Maybe

It began, as adventures often do, on a regular day with normal weather. It was a Tuesday, I think, and the weather was damp and cold. Great low-hanging clouds drifted up the mountain from the ocean and ripped their bellies open on the cliffs and trees that surrounded our little community of Sunova Beach.

I was walking up the hill to the post office that morning, hoping against hope that a long-awaited check would be there for me. It was already spent, of course, but I was still entertaining fantasies about what I would do with the money. I was passing Hoohocker’s General Store when Hiram Hoohocker opened the door and intercepted me.

“Mornin’ Beamish,” he said.

“Hiram,” I nodded.

He looked up and noticed a particularly eager cloud, eager in the sense that it wasn’t going to make it far up the mountain before impaling itself on the forest.

“Looks like we’ll be awash in cloud blood before too long,” he commented philosophically.

I sighed inwardly and turned to follow his gaze. One of the troubles with being a writer is that people can take a phrase you’ve committed to print and mercilessly beat you over the head with it for years. Hiram meant well. I don’t think he was even aware that he had been saying much the same thing to me most every day for the last six years. It was a little too late to nip it in the bud, so to speak, but this morning I was going to give it a try.

I studied the cloud for a moment.

“No,” I finally said, “I don’t think so.”

“No?” Hiram asked. He was a bit confused. I’d never picked up the conversation like this before.

“No,” I restated emphatically. “I think, instead of ‘cloud blood,’ we’ll be hit with some cloud plasma, or maybe cloud earwax.”

I snuck a glance at Hiram, whose face was beginning to twist nicely.

“Lord knows we’ve had enough cloud urine, lately, so I hope it’s not that,” I continued reasonably.

Hiram was beginning to catch on. He moved closer to me, cupped his hand conspiratorially and said “cloud snot, maybe?”

I nodded approvingly. “Maybe,” I said.

Hiram was delighted. He lit up like a salesman’s vest. I could’ve warmed my hands in his glow. I began to edge past him, hearing my check at the post office beginning to call again. I told him I’d drop back by for a cup of his infamous coffee as soon as I finished at my mailbox. I left him mumbling contentedly. I’m glad we were the only folks on the street that morning because anyone happening by might have become alarmed had they heard Hiram reciting a litany of body fluids.

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Excerpt: The Talons of Quantum

Riffhawk went to the broad open window and stared out over the valley below. He sighed deeply.

Hearing a rustling behind him, he turned to see a small grey falcon emerge from his pack. She flew to his shoulder. He winced slightly as her talons gripped his sinew. Their minds met in the Talking Place.

“You know I do not like being cooped for so long.”

“And you know it was necessary. In fact, Bronwyn, you should not have shifted now. We are probably being watched.”

“We should never have secrets to keep. I will never understand humans.”

She lifted from his shoulder and flew around the rooms, her eyes missing nothing.

“There is a place for someone to watch the bedroom, but not where the desk is.”

This news surprised him. As the falcon returned to his shoulder, more gently this time, he picked up the long staff and went to the study, where he leaned the staff near another broad, open window.

He never tired of the transformation. The roundness of the wood blurred and, as if a flower were opening, a large eagle emerged into the room and sat on the stone sill of the window, the breeze ruffling her rich brown-and-white feathers. She stretched her wings wide, their breadth more than a grave’s length. She seemed to yawn and shook her head, swaying the corona of deep amber plumage. Her yellow feet, each a fistful of black knives, gripped the stone where she sat. Soon, she too was in the Talking Place.

“I am famished. Even you two are looking pretty good.”

Riffhawk grinned.

“I am thinking you should both fly to the north and reassure Famdas and Felicia that I am not lost, just delayed, and that I will be along as best I can.”

The eagle cocked her tasseled head at him. “We cannot leave you alone. You know that. One of us must stay. For us both to go would break the promise.”

Of course, she was right. She was right more often than she was not.

The falcon looked up from preening her chest. “Melda, you should go and I will stay. You can move more air than I and small is probably best for this place.”

The eagle raised her magnificent head. Her golden eyes softened and she seemed to smile around the fierce curve of her beak. “So be it.”

She turned and launched herself from the window ledge. Climbing rapidly, she was soon a dark speck in the fading cloudless sunlight.

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Bug, You Man Me

“Man, you bug me!”

This comes at the apex of my focus and I pay it no mind. She has a history with me, sometimes special, sometimes maddening. The maddening part doesn’t involve anger. She just knows exactly how to drive me crazy.

But only if I am unfocused. As long as I stay focused, she is a mosquito, a lovely mosquito to be sure, but I can wave my frontal lobes at her and she flies off to circle where I cannot hear her.

She is hungry, though, and always comes back seeking blood. Sometimes she gets it without my noticing, until I have to itch the welt. But sometimes, she times it perfectly, with a Rolex precision, and flies straight into my ear. When this happens, the vacuum in my head sucks her straight to my hypothalamus and my focus shatters like plate glass in a hurricane.

She does not do this out of spite, she does it because of her obsession with me. When we are just regular people, we laugh, have fun, and lie abed until all hours of the day or night. We make love and then talk incessantly, our topics ranging from the origin and application of dopamine in our brains to early Twentieth Century literature. We are both insatiable, addicts to stimulation and to ideas that we’ve never before considered.

One of her favorite topics, as we lie wrapped in our pleasantly moist sheets, is Franz Kafka. At these times, she often calls me Gregor and laughs at my sudden frown.

“When you focus so deeply, writing whatever you write, you are like Kafka’s dung beetle, always running up the walls and across the ceiling. You are like the naked dreaming doctor on the back of an imaginary horse, flying away to who knows where. You are so far gone that I am compulsively compelled to bring you back to me. I can’t help it. And then we are like this and I am happy. Is my behavior so hard to understand?”

While she is telling me this, her soft hand is stroking my belly and I understand that it will be hours before I again work on my writing.

“But Gregor dies,” I say. “I don’t want to die, I’m not ready. I have too much to do.”

She stretches herself taut beside me until the bed quivers with her effort. I smile and suddenly understand that her obsession with me matches my obsession with what I have to do. We are balanced when we are in the same place. When I am off into deep focus on my work, she finds herself drifting toward the cavern of boredom, which terrifies her.

This epiphany lights me like the bright side of the moon. I roll to her side and kiss her nose.

“You can bug me all you like.”

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Flowerhead Flow

He rode a dendron out to the Frontal Lobes. The track was wild and thought wind buffeted him mercilessly clear to the Optic Chiasma. Blue sparks snapped around him as he negotiated the unique terrain. Rounding a particularly treacherous wad of plaquengew, the dendron panicked and bucked him off. He was aboot before the bloom was off the day.

“Great Azalea,” he muttered as he fumbled for his goomkit. Sparks crackled and snapped around him, but his hands were steady. He was worried about the dendron and hoped it would find its way home okay.

He’d known that they were heading into a storm. Storms were always in the Frontal Lobes and only increased at the Chiasma. There was too much routine activity to ignore and it was an iffy proposition at best to hope that a dendron would be able to handle the extra volumes of current.

Finally, the charged goomkit in his hand, he began the careful walk up the Chiasma, hoping he could hold his ground. He was headed for The Pit and wondered if he was up to the task. The goomkit reading was good, so he relaxed his shoulders and moved up the pulsing path.

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From: History Was, History Is, History Will Be

It began as a joke, but swiftly escalated into an intergalactic incident the likes of which had only been seen some eleven billion times before. It was in this spirit that R.T. Alloyfibre approached his meeting with a most esteemed client.

“It began as a joke,” said the well-heeled woman from within the voluminous folds of her layer suit.

“The Narrator just said that,” growled Alloyfibre. “Tell me something I don’t know.”

She was taken aback. “Who said what?”

Alloyfibre sighed heavily and looked at the rough textured ceiling.

“The Narrator. The guy telling this story. Some people call him the Creator, but I don’t buy it. He’s more of a manipulator if he’s anything. But he does know just about everything about you, or me, or anybody that pops into the story.”

Her even white teeth worried her full lower lip for a brief moment as she tried to measure what was being said.

“Preposterous.”

Alloyfibre sighed again. “Look lady, the guy knows stuff about you that you don’t even know. I mean, get with it. Say hello to reality. Come on.”

“You can’t prove this!”

“Of course I can. Hang on a sec.”

R.T folded his hands in front of him and appeared to wait for something. After a few quiet moments, the image of a smooth cream-and-coffee back swam across his inner vision. Finally, he looked up and smiled at her. She hadn’t realized it yet, but the smile had stopped her expensive Carian crystal watch.

“You have the image of a flaccid phallus tattooed just above your left buttock. I know this because it just swam across my inner vision.”

She laughed outright. “Sure, I have a tattoo. But it’s certainly not flaccid!”

“It is now.”

“This is ridiculous.”

But she did excuse herself to go check. When she retured, she was a much subdued woman.

“See?” Alloyfibre asked gently.”

She nodded. “What can I do to make it…uh…get it…change it back?”

“I dunno. That’s between you and the Narrator.”

“Figures.”

“Yeah. He hates it when we characters take him for granted. My great-great-great-great grandfather, M.T. Ironwood, was very clear on that when he wrote it all down in this plane. He claimed that the guy was just a benevolent goofball living in a reality with a vibration that controls our reality. Sometimes I feel sorry for the guy. At least we know who’s yanking our chain.

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