WOLFE
Johnathan is in a fragile place. Imagine a sleeping bull in a china shop. If the bull is plagued by nightmares, he might stampede in his sleep. This will also happen when someone wakes him. Right now, Johnathan is blinded by denial. I suggest some coping therapies and medication.
DETECTIVE WELSH
I suggest we get more guns. But you know as well as I do that the Warden is as cheap as a back-alley Rolex. He talks like he supports us, but we know where the money really goes. The boys have been saying that he wants to cut funding for your psychiatric facillity. Hopefully the case of your friend Johnathan convinces him otherwise. I would hate to see you lose your job.
WOLFE
If the warden had his way, I would be. But you’re right: I’m sure once he meets Johnathan in person next week, he’ll have a change of heart. Speaking of our mutual friend-
DETECTIVE WELSH huffs. WOLFE laughs lightly.
WOLFE
Well, my friend. Your acquaintance. First impressions can be forgiven.
DETECTIVE WELSH
Yeah, the impression of a spork in Reacher’s arm
WOLFE
Would you mind bringing Johnathan in? It’s time for our two o’ clock appointement.
DETECTIVE WELSH nods and exits. WOLFE gets up from his desk and opens the blinds. He takes a breath.
WOLFE
In the end, all will be well.
JOHNATHAN enters. WOLFE turns around to adress him with a smile. JOHNATHAN also smiles slightly.
WOLFE
Ah! Hello, Johnathan.
JOHNATHAN
Looking for UFOs, Doc? You haven’t been taking my prescription, have you?
WOLFE
Oh no, I’m not that crazy. I was just admiring the light.
JOHNATHAN
The light?
WOLFE
Yes. It illuminates everything with a celestial-like glow. The reflection of light in leaves, the presence of light in the grass blades, even the light living in your eyes.
JOHNATHAN
Uh-huh. Not crazy. Well, this isn’t a poetry reading, Doc, so why don’t we get started?
WOLFE chuckles and pats JOHNATHAN on the back and holds his hand out in the direction of the chair.
WOLFE
Of course. Why don’t we get started?
The pair sit down, WOLFE in his chair and JOHNATHAN in the patient’s chair.
WOLFE
How was your day, Johnathan?
JOHNATHAN
Well, let’s see. The canteen served fish tacos today, I was only threatened by five people, two of them cops, and I wasn’t shanked. All in all it seemed alright.
WOLFE
There’s something that you’re hiding from me. You know that you can trust me.
JOHNATHAN frowns. He looks at his hands, and then back up to WOLFE.
JOHNATHAN
I killed my wife’s murderer today.
WOLFE
See? Was that so difficult? Who was he?
JOHNATHAN
Officer Reacher. He didn’t even try to put on a facade. The straight second he looked at me, it was in disgust.
WOLFE
What did you do to him?
JOHNATHAN
I stabbed him in the chest and arm. Five times. With every strike, I felt more and more satisfaction.
WOLFE
What did you stab him with?
JOHNATHAN
A long pair of scissors. It was sharp as a razor. The guy must have been wearing body armor. He hardly bled at first.
WOLFE
Johnathan....
WOLFE pulls some scissors out of his desk.
WOLFE
What is this?
JOHNATHAN looks at the scissors queerly.
JOHNATHAN
A... A spork?
WOLFE grins.
WOLFE
Very good. We have much work to do, Johnathan.
Greetings fellow fiction lovers and friends of all ages! This is a place where Dickens meets discussion! Where Austin is never ostracized and opinions are let free! I do ask that you refrain from naughty language, lest it be essential in your story or critique. Anyhow, enjoy your stay, feel free to browse the original pieces I have written, and please be polite and accepting. Thank you!
Sunday, April 13, 2014
Wolfe In Sheep's Clothing Part 2
WOLFE
If you don’t talk to me, I don’t have a job. And I’m not
really qualified for anything else.
JOHNATHAN
More like overqualified- But I bet you’d flip a mean burger.
WOLFE
So what happened today?
JOHNATHAN
I had the feeling we’d come back to that soon.
WOLFE gives JOHNATHAN a concerned look. JOHNATHAN inhales
deeply and looks at WOLFE afterwhich JOHNATHAN quickly averts his eyes and studies
the floor as he begins speaking.
JOHNATHAN
DeSantos…He made comments about my wife today.
WOLFE
What did he say?
JOHNATHAN
It started with cell inspection. DeSantos was the officer
assigned to search my cell today. There’s a picture I keep of my wife under my
pillow. The pig snatches it and puts in is his pocket, saying that he’ll “save
it for later.” He said that such a “fine piece of ass” didn’t deserve to be
saddled with a screwball like me.
WOLFE
Hmm. What did you do in response?
JOHNATHAN
I warned him not to dehumanize my wife by reducing her to a
sex object. He laughs in my face and wraps a hand around his baton. He dares me
to try something. Unfortunately for him, I’m a risk-taker.
WOLFE
And this is when…?
JOHNATHAN
Yeah. That’s when I started choking the life out of that son
of a bitch.
WOLFE
That isn’t a healthy way of responding. He may have wronged
you, but he is still a human being.
JOHNATHAN
Yeah? Well I’ll probably get an extra twelve years added to
my sentence, so I can care less about your morality.
WOLFE
I understand your frustration, especially since he exhibited
such deviant behavior, but violence is never the answer.
JOHNATHAN
Do you think I don’t know? Do you honestly think that after
my wife and children were murdered that I wouldn’t fucking know that?! I don’t
even know what the fuck I’m in here for, so maybe nearly killing that asshole might
at least justify my being here!
In frustration, JOHNATHAN sweeps the objects on WOLFE’s desk
onto the floor. JOHNATHAN is standing and panting heavily. WOLFE calmly looks
at JOHNATHAN. JOHNATHAN, surprised by his own anger, sits down.
JOHNATHAN
Jesus… I’m sorry Doc-
DETECTIVE WELSH, POLICEMAN 1 and POLICEMAN 2 burst through
the door as JOHNATHAN lowers himself into the chair.
DECTECTIVE WELSH
What’s going on?!
WOLFE
It was nothing, Detective, just an outburst. You can return
to your posts; I can handle it from here.
DETECTIVE WELSH
I don’t think so, Dr. Wolfe. I know you trust your patients,
but I don’t. And given his track record, you’re in no position to be defending
him. That episode this with Officer DeSantos this morning should be enough to
prove that. We should get him out of here.
JOHNATHAN
The man’s right, Doc. I don’t want to hurt you. I don’t
really want to hurt anyone. I just want to understand what’s going on.
POLICEMAN 1 and POLICEMAN 2 look at JOHNATHAN somewhat
confused, and then look to each other. DETECTIVE WELSH just frowns and holsters
his gun.
DETECTIVE WELSH
Alright boys. Let’s get him back to cell block C before
curfew.
DETECTIVE WELSH and POLICEMAN 2 leave. POLICEMAN 1 lingers
and looks to WOLFE.
POLICEMAN
1
What did he mean that he didn’t understand what was going
on?
WOLFE
Johnathan suffers from memory repression. You see, he
believes that his wife and children were murdered.
POLICEMAN 1
What? But… But wasn’t it-
WOLFE
Johnathan who killed his wife? Yes, it was.
POLICEMAN 1
Oh my God… D-Did he kill his kids too?
WOLFE
No. Detective Welsh was in charge of the investigation
regarding Johnathan. He found clues while I tried piecing together a motive
based on evidence. Surveillance showed Johnathan’s wife and children were at a gas
station on the twentieth of March last year. Johnathan’s children were hit by a
car while their mother was purchasing gasoline.
POLICEMAN 1
Jesus… But why would he kill his wife?
WOLFE
It is my belief that Johnathan blamed his wife for their
passing and killed her out of grief.
DETECTIVE WELSH
Officer Brandon?
POLICEMAN 1 jumps at the sound of his/her name.
POLICEMAN 1
Coming, sir!
WOLFE closes the door behind her and reclines in his chair. WOLFE
picks up a pill bottle from the miscellaneous objects strewn on the floor. WOLFE
chuckles softly and pockets the pill bottle.
Cue light fading
As the lights come back on, we see DETECTIVE WELSH standing
in the psychiatric office. WOLFE is at his desk, a book is in his hand, though
he politely disregards it while conversing with DETECTIVE WELSH.
DETECTIVE
WELSH
I’m serious, Edwin. This “Johnathan Bard…” Edwin, he already
has two strikes.
WOLFE appears baffled for a moment.
WOLFE
Pardon me, but this is his “second” offence?
DETECTIVE WELSH shakes his head grimly. He sighs and rubs
his eyes.
DETECTIVE
WELSH
Last night at cell inspection, he broke into some kind of
rant about how the guards had something to do with his wife’s death. When
Officer Brown came to inspect his cell, Bard-
WOLFE
Johnathan?
DETECTIVE
WELSH
None other. He glared at him with such intensity, I thought
that the bars would melt. I just walking by his room when all of a sudden I
hear a yelp.
WOLFE
Did he attempt to…to kill him, Richard?
DETECTIVE WELSH
He stabbed Officer Brown with a plastic spork. So needless
to say, it wasn’t a particularly fatal wound
WOLFE
(chuckling) As I would imagine.
DETECTIVE WELSH
I know. It was pretty funny. It would be funnier if he
hadn’t had that incident with Officer DeSantos two weeks ago, but unfortunately
he did.
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Isle of Bone
Hello everybody! Isabel here! We got another unfinished piece here. Enjoy! :D
Kent Henderson was just an average
man caught in the midst of a war, like so many billions of others. He sat in a
white tiled room, where the air was still and chilly. He grimaced at the
ambience of the hall he sat in. It consisted of pens clicked by anxious hands;
chaste whispers of large, Latin words he assumed had to do with medicine, and
the rancid smell of various chemicals.
Shifting on the faux leather bench,
Kent could not help but feel misplaced at the scene. After all, he was only an
undertaker. He never went to college, nor did his family prior to him. This
rave about neurology baffled him. He silently regretted that. If Kent had
become at least someone adept in the art of such skills, he would at least
learn how to ward off his splitting headache.
The insistent beeps of the machines
around him gave unsettling, echoing pings in his mind. They ricocheted
unbearably in the vast concoction of irksome sounds. Kent grumbled low, cupping
his hands and covering his weary head with them. Four hours. That was how long
he had sat there, stagnant and stiff. And on top of that, he couldn’t leave
until the doctor approved the body for examination.
Kent’s eyes shifted from his palms
to the bench beneath him. It was an atrocious shade of green. He grimaced upon
setting his eyes on it. Just the sight of it made him feel nauseous, not that
the entire institution did not make him feel nauseous enough as it was. Kent
snorted. He had grown so bored and grouchy he began to criticize the furniture. The doctor needed to hasten,
or he would outright leave to go home and sleep, regardless of whether or not
that was morally apropos.
The lights in a cracked door across
from the bench in which Kent sat became brighter and blinding as the door swung
open. Kent shielded his eyes, not expecting it to move for at least another two
hours. A man in mint-colored scrubs and a mask held the knob firmly with his
right gloved hand while his left tentatively clutched a clipboard.
“Mr. Henderson?” The nurse called.
Kent rubbed his eyes with his thick forefingers. He yawned as he contracted his
left shoulder and rolled it back. The nurse turned to him with impatient eyes,
almost lecturing him to stop wasting time.
Kent muttered as he parted from the
bench. “ ‘Bout time someone got me…” He was just loud enough for the nurse to
be in earshot. Kent expected the man to narrow his eyes, but he simply stood
there looking, daresay, quite visibly shaken by something.
Kent paled slightly at this. As he
approached the door, Kent addressed the man in the walkway.
“What’s the matter with you, lad?
Looks like you’ve just met a ghost.” The nurse shook his head, but said
nothing. This only confirmed Kent’s skepticism on what the subject of interest
was. Kent himself felt a knot forming in his throat, though he dismissed it
with an edgy gulp.
Frankenstein: A New Beginning
Isabel Babel
FRANKENSTEIN: A NEW
BEGINNING
The numbing cascades of wind were
the first things that roused him from his slumber, or rather, his
unconsciousness.
He heard the echo of baying hounds
mournfully suffering the pain of northern sleet. And the moment he woke he
realized that hope was running on slim rations. Soon this raging bull of a
storm would cover the tracks of the man-no, the monster- that he was pursuing.
The man groaned into his fur-lined
overcoat. He had seen the horrid things that the haggard, tethered beast was
capable of committing, the atrocities that reflected his bitter past and
appearance. And now he was made to rampage, destroying villages and terrorizing
towns without remorse or mercy.
And he, Frankenstein, remained
responsible for this creature’s crimes. The blood that the monster spilled
would paint the punishment of guilt and exile for Frankenstein, and
Frankenstein would be left with no path of redemption. He would be a helpless
babe, mewling and whimpering for a chance for something that would forever be
unknown to him, God’s mercy.
Attempting to stand, Frankenstein
merely fumbled once more and stumbled until his weary legs gave in. He landed
harder than a comet, rolling cinematically down a steep slope on the icy
tundra, and was now profusely bleeding from his punctured lungs.
Frankenstein glanced down at the
snow he now lay in. The ice was now tainted by the crimson blood that spurted
from his mouth. He clamped his jaw shut at the harrowing sight, and tore his
eyes away. But the very instant his jowls closed, his lung capacity was filled
to the brim with blood. Frankenstein’s mouth went agape, in both pain and in
fear of drowning in his own blood.
My
bleeding must be caused by a slight puncture wound in my lungs. I’m guessing
that it is a result of a cracked rib, Frankenstein assessed. He put a hand
to his side and wheezed. Perhaps more
than one, he amended.
Littered around were his dying
canine companions, or at least the ones that remained were dying. By the looks
of it, around a quarter of the twenty dogs he had commenced traveling with had
disappeared in the vast expanse of the snowy plains.
Frankenstein decided not to share
their fate. Whether he lived or died, it now made not a sliver of a difference
to him any longer. His sheer will to exist, his muse, his lover, passion,
pride, serenity, had been shattered like a looking glass. And it had caused it.
Frankenstein, driven by this new
fury, wandered aimlessly for what seemed like years, though they were mere
hours. Previously, he had seen a light, the hue of gold shimmering on the
pristine ivory of the snow. And now, as the pink haze of dawn approached, he
found himself staring at the glare of the golden light again.
In such a long period of hunting,
of scouring and searching, he had never seen such a gilded sight. An
outstretched hand grasped his own, and he soon found himself being hauled onto
the mighty vessel, fading into unconsciousness with a grin.
He had a chance.
Everest: An old sixth grade project
Journal of
Isabel Babel
Entry of
Everest
Day 1
This
is really it! I stand here, at the start of the journey. It took it’s time
and-well…money to come out here, but just imagining the feeling of standing at
the top of the world with my crew is enough for me!
We
had to take two planes, one to Katmandu, and the other to Luka. From here, we
must start our hike to base camp. We here are all excited! Jim’s heating up our
thermoses, Tom is helping put the supplies in our knapsacks. And Mike, well,
he’s mainly giving encouraging comments.
Still, I
can’t help feeling a little vulnerable compared to this massive landform. For
goodness sake, this could be Mount Olympus! And looking at the full view of the
thing even when we’re hundreds of miles away, I can’t help but seem to shrink a
little.
I
better man up. Tomorrow, we start our voyage to base camp.
Day 2
We just
stopped climbing as we saw the outline of base camp. Just climbing this small
distance makes me realize why no animals really care to live here. This weather
is nasty! When we approached the camp Mike had this insane grin on his face. He
urged us to hurry as he sprinted off to the building
Typical
Mike.
Our older
climber, Rick, told him not to venture far without the team. He’s a cranky old
man, but he has more experience in a lock of his curly, gray hair than we have
in our entire bodies.
Jim smiled
his famous ‘Oh-you-guys’ kind of smile as he rushed to catch up. Considering
the fact that Tom was a perfectionist, this wasn’t according to the plan.
Needless to say, he rolled his eyes and led on.
I just had
to grin at the boys. But as they say, boys will be boys. I’m just happy to be
with them. Either none of us go, or all of us do.
Day 3
We said our
prayers today. It’s about a quarter past noon. I find it rather hard to believe
that over 180 people died on Mount Everest. I’m not sure, though, if I was
expecting more or less deaths.
We knelt by
the graves, placing down flowers even though we knew that they would wither.
Even Mike sobered up for the time being.
I cannot
help but shiver at the thought of an icy death. Falling into the crevices as
darkness swallows you whole.
As we
started climbing towards Camp 1, we had to walk athwart these pits about 30
feet across. Let me tell you, it wasn’t fun. Each one of us trusted or lives to
a rusty old ladder. We also had the threat of being crushed by two-ton icicles.
After we
crossed, Mike took a snapshot and cleverly said, “You know, I’ve heard that if
you fall in one of these, you’ll end up on the other side of the world.” Tom
snorted and replied, “Way to lift our spirits, Shutterbug.” Did I mention that
Mike was a famous photographer?
Only a
couple hundred miles to go. No sweat, if you’re a polar bear, that is.
Day 7
It’s
been a while since my last writing. I currently am sitting in the camp right
now, eating soup with the crew. One of our men has frostbite on his thumb.
We…had to amputate it.
I feel
pretty horrible. About a dozen more of our crew, including Jim, now have
hypothermia. We’ve reached camp three so far. Mike insists that we keep moving,
confidently and kindly.
I will have
to put off writing entries for a while until further recovery of the team.
We will
make it to the peak. I know we will.
Day 10
A snowstorm
blew in last night. Worse than any that we’ve seen so far. Contacts were down,
and four of our men were blown away. Things have calmed down a bit now, and the
sun is illuminating through the veils of sleet. We sent a search party out.
Unfortunately,
we couldn’t find anybody. One of them was Rick. He went out last night in the
hopes of finding the lost men. We haven’t seen him since.
Things are
harder than we could have imagined. I hope we can bind together the survivors
and pray to see home in person again.
Day 15
Blinding
and stinging. Even as I write this entry, that’s all I can feel. The rest of me
is numb. An avalanche crashed upon our camp leaving a dozen wounded.
Jim is
coughing up blood from his ribs. Apparently he broke them by coughing. I never
imagined that that was even physically possible!
He and Tom
had been friends for a little more than ten years now. Tom was sitting there by
his side, crying. There was no noise, but I could see it in his eyes.
Jim always
calmed Tom down when his easily aggravated temper burst. The two were
inseparable. Like the constellation Gemini. Tom was probably afraid of him dying.
Quite
frankly, I fear that too. Even Mike has practically given up on the encouraging
speeches. Yet we’re close. So close.
Day 17
WE DID IT!
I write to you from the peak of Mount Everest. I think its strange how for a
dying hopeless moment ago, I could hardly move a muscle. Though my body tells
me not to move, my spirit feels like soaring.
I laid a
Babel memoir, a collection of pictures of my family. I helped Jim set up his.
Mike just keeps repeating the same word, “YES! YES! YES!!!” We all practically
feel like dancing.
Tom
grins at Jim who’s thrown his arm around his shoulders for support. Jim returns
the favor with a “Wooohooo!!!” Tom chuckles and hugs him.
I’m
just taking the moment in. I only wish that the lost members could see this.
Somehow I feel Rick’s presence. And he’s smiling.
Mike
runs over to me, beaming, and gives me the biggest hug humanly possible. My
laughter was muffled as I bury my face into his jacket.
We
did it! And now we can go home. The three boys and me.
Earthquake: An old fifth grade project
“The
Most Amazing Stories Have a Twist, For Better or Worse”
By
Isabel Babel
Isabel Babel
“The most amazing stories have a twist, for better
or worse…” I said as I composed my thoughts.
It was a lifeless dawn. But, as I reached for my friend, my typewriter, I would soon
enter into a place filled with bliss, adventure and more. I loved the feeling of the keys at my
fingertips. Going into my writing was like going forth on a new and exciting
journey each and every time. As my
day began it was running smoothly, but little did I realize then that some of
the same type of horrific moments, similar to some of those found in my books,
would actually occur. I would soon
begin a brand new adventure of my own, and not one I would ever have hoped to
experience.
As I was writing I suddenly heard a rasping, rumbling
sort of noise. “Thunder, perhaps?”
I thought, but as I glanced out of the window, the sky seemed quite clear. Suddenly, the Earth underneath my feet
rocked and swayed violently. I
tried keeping my balance as the ground buckled. Cracks and creases formed in
the ground below me. Luckily, I
managed to reach the door. With my
typewriter under one arm, I heaved myself outside as my house fell down behind
me. Another jolt slammed, and I
lost my footing. I had a pang of
pain in my left flank as I heard the sounds of shouting, collapsing, and
crushing. I could hear the distant
ring of church bells-roaring like angered beasts. These sounds rang and echoed in my ears.
I got off the cobblestones, and I sprinted as best
as I could to get out of harm’s way.
I was able to avoid crushed cable cars that had smoke pouring out of
them as I forged ahead. I quickly
glanced at the nurses and police fighting hard to move the critically wounded
people and find safe shelter from the ravished landscape. As I soldiered on through the streets,
the rumbling grew ever more fierce.
I tumbled and tasted the rising dirt but still hung on to my typewriter. It was all I had left in the
world. Others that had tried to
rescue items from their homes had not been so lucky. Some never made it out.
That moment, I realized that every second wasted
meant life or death. I began to
think, “I have lost much, but at least I’m alive.”
At last I had reached shelter, grateful that my
typewriter had not had any severe damage. In that long day, people grieved over
death, home loss, and even for each other.
As I looked at my typewriter, a glimmer of hope
shone brightly in my heart. I knew how I could help. I told stories, tall tales, folklore,
and fables to the survivors. I
told myths of brave heroes to inspire them to not give up. The adults applauded, kids giggled and laughed,
and older children gave kind comments. I then knew once we came together, we could again achieve
happiness.
Then I smiled.
The brave deeds of the heroes of old would pale in comparison to the
bravery I saw as the simple people of this devastated town worked to rebuild
the lives they lost in the rubble.
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