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Blame, w. 2014
He found her sprawled across the floor, arms stretched in either direction. The bullet wounds were plain to see. He trembled as he brushed aside the matted hair to kiss her deathly face, and in so doing made a pact to see the murderer dead.
The sun bore over him as he dug the grave. Isolation removed the need for ceremony. He sweat both in agony and strife, bellowing at the dust that rose into his eyes. The covering was more suitable than ashes.
At last the bed was finished and he touched her canvas shroud in farewell, letting her fall from his arms into the ground where she would stir no more. The cicadas of the field made deafening chorus as he worked to fill the wounded earth.
"I will catch him," he swore aloud," and kill him where he stands! You will have peace, and so will I, when his soul burns in hell!"
There was silence from the locust tree as witness to his curse.
He found no one lurking within his property, though his search was thorough. It occurred to him that rope and pistol would better serve his aim. He placed them both about his waist and kept his hands at ready, pushing aside the cabin door to see what lay within.
The stained floorboards gave off the expected stench, but there was something else on the air that smelled sweetly foul. He stooped to wipe away the mess and discovered a broken bottle. The match he lit revealed several more. He put them on the table and counted half a dozen, not sure of what role they had played. They twinkled in the flickering light and were strangers no more.
"I didn't!" he gasped, as he remembered his drunken stupor. The shards of glass looked up at him and revealed a twisted man.
The trigger he pulled to stop the flooding memory, but his body fell without him and he stood, eyes open wide. He ran into oblivion, still hoping to be dead, and found himself at the locust tree beside the victim's grave. He cast the rope across a branch and tied himself a noose, intending to hang himself, if he could, and end the torment there.
The wind still catches the kicking ghost that strangles forevermore.
Trident Media Group Wants You
All writers looking for an agent. Trident Media Group, the literary agency of Deepak Chopra, Jude Deveraux, and others, are have issued a challenge at The Prose.Â
Details of the challenge are below. Â Iâve also added the link.
https://theprose.com/challenge/5613
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Description
Please include the following information at the end of your post: title, genre, age range, word count, author name, why your project is a good fit, the hook, synopsis, target audience, your bio, platform, education, experience, personality / writing style, likes/hobbies, hometown, age (optional)
this face
behind this face there is power however strong and heartache and longing
behind this face there is whit wonder and wisdom
behind this face there is cruelty and the hard fought unlearning of the same
behind this face there is flesh fat muscle and bone and the soft squish of a brain synapses firing and electricity trying to spark thoughts into wants into life
behind this face there is grief belief systems and opinions on systemic oppression depression and the wish for relief
behind this face there is joy that sometimes bleeds through and paints this face faster and more skillfully than this hand can
behind this face there is a universe a journey more wonderful than you can imagine a path to wander and wonder at a river to swim if you ask politely before you dive in a street your feet can find a place on and yet you trip up and can't get past this face.
Trees
Jack walked home between the quiet trees lining the street. He idly wondered, perhaps for the thousandth time, what kind of trees they were. Heâd googled it before, but the different varieties all looked the same to him.
 He pulled his leftovers from last night out of the fridge and stuck them in the microwave. He sat down at his ham radio while he waited. âDanny? You there, buddy?â The microwave dinged. âIâm here, if you wanna talk.â The radio remained silent. Jack sighed and got up, hoping that Danny was just out of the house for a bit.
 As he ate, Jack went through his usual routine at the computer. He logged onto his online game to see if anyone else was on. As usual, it was empty. Jack shook his, wondering why he bothered. It was just him and Danny, the only ones left in the whole world. Sometimes he was glad he was still alive, but today the loneliness was stifling.
 He went outside and watered the tree in his backyard. It always made him feel better, as if the tree could hug him like his mother used to.
 When he went back in, the radio was squawking. Jack rushed over to it, eager to hear another personâs voice. âDanny! Danny, are you there?â Static. âCome on, Danny. Talk to me.â More static. Jack sighed, and grew annoyed with the radio. It was his dadâs old radio, and it sometimes picked up static like that. And every time he got excited for a moment, only to be let down. It looked like Danny wouldnât be on the radio today.
 Jack logged back onto the computer. He quickly stifled one of his more common wonderings: how did the electricity still work? For that matter, how did the internet? But, as always, he shut those thoughts down, deciding that they were mostly automated and didnât really need people around to manage them. He didnât dare think about it too much because the last time he had, heâd had a panic attack.
 So, instead, he googled the symptoms of the parasite. He did it every day, waiting for the day when he would finally begin to exhibit the symptoms. He didnât need to bother, he knew them by heart. But he did it anyway, wondering whether heâd freak out when it started. He didnât know.
 When the parasite first appeared, the conspiracy theorists had a field day. Out of nowhere, people began showing strange symptoms: itchiness, loss of appetite, muscle aches, hardening of the soft tissues, listlessness, and a weird desire to be out in the sun. By the time an afflicted person was spending his days and nights outside, he was already mostly made of wood.
 And everyone had a theory about why it was happening. Some blamed aliens, others blamed secret government projects, and still others blamed global warming. The truth turned out to be far more mundane. Scientists discovered a parasite that integrated itself with DNA. After leaving a host, it carried scraps of DNA with it to the next host. No one was ever able to figure out quite how it found itself in the human population. But as soon as it did, it spread like wildfire. No containment could be found.
 And now, Jack walked down the street surrounded by vaguely human-shaped trees, and watered what used to be his mother.
 As he read through the list of symptoms, for the millionth time, he realized that he was scratching his face. And that heâd been scratching his arm on the way home. And his leg while he was eating.
 âDanny,â Jack said into the radio. âDanny, itâs started.â Jackâs voice was remarkably calm. âIâm turning into a tree Danny.â Jack scratched his knee. âPlease answer me Danny.â Jack scratched the top of his head. âPlease, Danny.â But Jack heard only silence, and, as he scratched his backside, he knew that Danny was standing outside.
A Random Story
Alec stood on the bridge of the fleet command ship trying to look defiant, but suspected that he looked just as nervous as he felt. He couldnât help his wandering thoughts; he wasnât a military commander after all, he was a colony administrator who had read Sun Tzuâs The Art of War for a class in college. But he was all they had, and he refused to let them down.
 âDek, get me a fleet check,â Alec ordered. He had to stop himself from laughing out loud at the thought that their small, ragtag group of refitted cargo vessels could be considered a fleet.
 After a few moments, Dek spoke. âAll ships in position, and weapons prepped. Well, prepared as possible, I guess.â
 âItâs a fair point, Dek.â Alec turned to see Clint, his engineer, on a view screen. âThe repurposed mining lasers are powerful, but these old fusion reactors are going to have a hard time powering them and the engines at the same time.â
 âIâll keep that in mind. Weâll try to sit still while we shoot.â
 âProvided a plasma conduit doesnât blow first. These cargo haulers werenât haulers werenât built for speed,â Clint chuckled.
 âYouâre a regular ray of sunshine, Clint.â Alec pressed a key, and the view screen winked off.
 Dekâs instruments flashed. âWeâre approaching Earthâs outer defense grid. Contact with attack drones estimated in eight minutes.â
 âAlright everybody, stay calm,â Alec ordered, silently praying heâd be able to stay calm himself. âThis is what weâve practiced for. Weapons stations, power up the lasers. All scanners set for maximum gain.â Alec sighed. âDek, open a commlink to the fleet.â
 Dek pressed some keys. âYouâre on, High Commander. Weâre all ears.â
 Alec took a deep breath. âAlright, this is it. As soon as we fire on those defensive drones, thereâs no going back. Make no mistake, weâre in for a hard fight. Our ships are old cargo haulers with crude armor plates bolted to the outer hull. Our weapons are repurposed laser drills. Our enemies have us outnumbered, outmaneuvered, and outgunned. And we will not back down. The tyrants of Earth gone too far. Theyâve demanded too much from us, and ignored our rights. Theyâve increased our quotas while sending fewer supplies, and treated us like second class citizens. And they think that just because we were born in the asteroid mining colonies, that we wonât fight back. Today is the day we prove them wrong. And though the odds are stacked against us, we have our resolve. We stand today as one, and in righteous fury we will fight. And we will fight until we win or die. And we will do so together!â
 For a moment, Alec thought that the speakers on the bridge were malfunctioning, until he realized that the static he was hearing came from hundreds of people cheering aboard the other ships. He couldnât stop himself from grinning as Dek closed the communique; heâd practiced that speech a hundred times.
 âSir, weâve breached the outer defensive perimeter.â
 âHow many drones on the scanner?â Alec asked.
 There was a pregnant pause. âNone.â
 Alec whirled around. âNone? Really?â He strode to Dekâs console and looked over his shoulder. Sure enough, there were no ships displayed on the scanner. âWait, whatâs that?â
 âSome sort of debris field, I think,â Dek replied. He adjusted the controls. âItâs debris, all right. Metallurgy confirms that the components are consistent with unmanned drones.â
 âDrones?â Alec asked. âMore than one?â
 âAt least five. Iâve confirmed with the other ships. No contact yet, but more debris fields are scatter throughout the area.â
 âAlright, signal the fleet. Letâs push forward, cautiously.â An uneasy feeling grew in the pit of Alecâs stomach. He could sense the same trepidation from his crew.
 Twenty minutes later, the big blue orb that was Earth loomed on the main view screen. âStill no contact?â
 âNo,â Dek said. âNo ships, no communications.â
 âWhat about the satellite network? There should be several communication and defensive satellites in orbit, where are they?â
 âGone. But Iâm picking up more debris fields.â A beep sounded from the console. âWait, thereâs something coming up from the planet.â
 Alec turned toward the screen, and watched as an enormous ship lifted itself from Earth. âWhat type of ship is that? Iâve never seen anything like it.â
 âScanners canât penetrate the hull, sir. Thereâs some sort of energy field blocking them.â The strange ship paused for a few seconds, as if considering them, before Dek continued: âSir, my instruments have gone haywire! Gravitational readings have flown through the roof!â The ship on the screen seemed to stretch before vanishing in a flash of light. Silence enveloped the bridge for a split second before a beeping shook them back to reality.
 âDek, whatâs happening?â
 âSeveral ships have powered up their lasers. Comm traffic is a little hectic.â
 âSignal all ships to stand down,â Alec said. âHave everyone calm down before someone does something weâll all regret.â Dek tapped some commands, then nodded. The beeping stopped. âGood. Now letâs figure out whatâs going on. I want a full scan of Earth. I want a population estimate, and try to find some sort of signal.â
 âOn it.â There was a tense moment as Dek worked. What the hell is going on down there? Alec wondered. âSir, scans indicate about eight billion life forms.â
 âEight billion? It should be closer to eleven.â
 âIt doesnât stop there. At least a quarter of the life forms arenât human.â
 A gasp worked its way through the bridge as everyone suddenly realized what had happened. Alec sat heavily in his chair. In a rush of horrible realization, he knew what had happened. âIt all makes sense. The demand for more resources. The withholding of provisions. Earth wasnât oppressing us. They were fighting a war.â
 âIt looks like they lost,â Dek said quietly.
 Alec had hated the people of Earth all his life. But, suddenly, it didnât matter. They were human, like him. And they need help. He stood. âDek. Signal the other ships to form a defensive perimeter. I also want maximum scan of the surface, I need to know everything thatâs going on down there. Engineering, power up the weapons. I expect weâll have hostiles coming at us any second.â
 The bridge exploded into action. Determination mixed with fear, and Alec was glad that determination was winning out. Because his rebellion had just become a rescue mission.
This story was written for a challenge on Prose. It was actually written in six parts, so there might be weird jumps here and there.
This Story Takes Place In The Warhammer 40k Universe
 As the sky darkened, fingers of pink and orange stretched up from where the sun was setting. The gentle breeze carried the sweet scent of fruit from the orchards to the south. The grass was thick and soft, and wildflowers provided spots of color here and there. Caffus hated it.
 The entire planet was beautiful, and cloying, and nothing at all like home. Caffusâ nose and throat were itching without any smoke or oil in the air, and he felt chilly despite the warm evening. Worst of all was the horrible openness of it all. Back home, in Gunmetal City, Caffus had never seen the sky and never been outside of the cavernous steel walls that made up the enormous hive.
 Caffusâ only comforts on this saints forsaken world were his guns. Their familiar weight was the only thing that kept him from falling up into that big open sky. Those six pistols were his pride and joy, and heâd built his life and reputation around them. He had purchased or scavenged each one and lovingly cleaned and restored them until they were fit for fighting, dueling, and killing. He knew each one, itâs strengths, weaknesses, and which situations they were best for. They were Caffusâ only friends, and the only ones he trusted completely. And a strange sensation in his gut told him that heâd need them tonight.
 A deep chuckle sounded behind Caffus. He turned and saw Lug watching him, amusement dancing behind his dark eyes. âFeeling a bit uneasy, Caff?â Lug was, in a very literal sense, an enormous contradiction. He stood at least four inches taller than the others, and his muscled frame was so wide he had to turn sideways to fit through the average door. He carried the biggest machine gun Caffus had ever seen with ease. Yet he seemed to be the most jovial of Caffusâ new companions.
 âJust feeling a little⊠exposed.â The others chuckled, even Ishta. The diminutive woman hadnât made a sound since Caffus had met her; she hadnât spoken a single word in the five months since heâd met her, not so much as a cough. Far more disturbing, Caffus hadnât heard a single footfall or rustle of clothing. Tonight, she wore a tightly fitting, matte black body glove and he had a hard time keeping track of her in the rapidly darkening evening. For the first time, Ishta seemed like a true human.
 âI remember my first time offworld,â said the usually stoic Ravion. âI come from a desert planet and the plant-life of Fedrid gave me a rash so bad, I sprained my wrist trying to scratch under my armor.â
 A quiet hiss from Caffus left made him jump, and pure reflex brought his autopistol out of its holster in a flash of cold steel. He quickly turned it away, however, when he saw that it was pointed to Ishta. The small woman had a curved short sword in each hand, both sharp as sin, and Caffus had no idea sheâd even been carrying them. She gestured up the rise toward their destination.
 Caffus took in the ruins at the top of the hill. The ancient stones had been crumbling for centuries, and whatever carving or ornamentation they may have had were long erased by the elements. At first Caffus couldnât figure out why Ishta had drawn her swords, but as they drew closer to the moss covered ruins he heard it.
 A low chanting was drifting toward them from the far side of the ruin. Caffus couldnât understand what was being said, but his companions looked grim. The drew, as stealthily as they could, around the ruin.
 âThereâs our entrance,â Ravion said, indicating a large hole in the ground at the base of the ruin.
 âLooks like someone beat us here,â Lug pointed out. All the joviality had left his attitude.
 âAny chance they didnât find the book?â Ravionâs question was directed at Ishta. The little woman shook her head, her hard face a grim mask. Ravion swore. âWhat are the odds that chanting isnât related to the book?â Everbody knew that the odds were slim, but no one wanted to say it.
 They moved around the side of the ruin. An orange flickering light grew in intensity, providing light to the now dark world and casting dancing shadows all around them. Caffus could see impossible shapes in the shadows, things that shouldnât, couldnât, have been there. Once he nearly pulled the trigger on a bush.
 As they drew near the chanting grew in volume, and with it a strange sensation in Caffusâ skull. It was as though the words were living things, burrowing deep into his head and dancing about. They were words no human was meant to speak, they were all certain of that. The little group rounded the ruins.
 Caffusâ group rounded the corner and stopped dead in their tracks. At the center of what had once been a courtyard, an enormous bonfire flared bright with flames so red they seemed to bleed into purple. Around it was a ring of men and women chanting strange words that carried insanity with them. They werenât robed and hooded, but stark naked. Around the ring were dozens of other people, all engaging in horrible activities.
 Some were performing hedonistic acts so depraved that no human mind could have possibly conceived them, and Caffus couldnât decide whether he should be excited or disgusted by the twisting, writhing, and moaning.
 Others were engaged in all manner of sadistic torture. Blood poured from a hundred small cuts, flowing over bruises and broken bones. Caffus knew, inexplicably, that those being tormented had volunteered for the treatment.
 The coppery smell of blood wafted through the air, mingling with the smells of alcohol, obscura, and bodily fluids. It was utterly disgusting, and through it all the horrible chanting grew louder and caused blood to leak slowly from Caffusâ ears. The whole scene was wrong.
 For a brief and horrifying moment, Caffus felt something inside him break. Ravion cuffed him on the back of the head, and brought him back to himself. Caffus knew that there was only one thing to do. He surged forward, his pistols spitting death in all directions. Ishtaâs blades carved through limbs and necks with deadly efficiency. Lugâs heavy weapon spewed fire in short controlled bursts, each deadly. Ravion levelled a precision rifle at one of the chanters, but before he could pull the trigger a shockwave emanated from the bonfire, knocking over everyone still standing.
 Caffus picked himself up, despite his ringing ears and aching muscles. As loud as the area had been, it was now completely silent. All around him people were picking themselves up. Lug reached down to help him, but they paused when they noticed the lighting had changed. The bonfire had gone out, and been replaced by a sphere of light floating high in the sky. It was like a tiny purplish sun, pulsing with cold light. Where the fire had been, three figures stood watching Caffusâ group.
 For an instant Caffus thought he was looking at three beautiful women, but as the light from the sphere grew they resolved into something else. Each⊠creature stood a full foot taller than Lug, with vaguely female forms but these had clearly never been human. Their heads sported horns, their arms ended in oversized crab claws, and they moved with a grace and purpose that any dancer would envy.
 They surged toward Caffus, and he couldnât tell whether it was lust or murder behind the creaturesâ eyes. The most intense fear Caffus had ever felt washed over him, and he knew that he would die. These misshapen, yet somehow beautiful, creatures would destroy him. They would rape him over and over until he begged for death, then torture him a thousand different ways. And they would laugh the entire time. Caffus was going die, horribly.
 Lug stumbled toward the creatures, desire for those profane forms overriding his good sense. âLug!â Caffus call didnât stir the big man. âLug, stop!â One of the creatures reached for the big man with its razor-sharp claw. Caffus reacted, and put a bullet through each of the creatureâs eyes. Caffus ran for Lug, to pull him back to reality. He could hear Ravion and Ishta fighting, but he was focused on Lug. He didnât see another of the creatures coming for them. It came from nowhere, hissing and spitting, and with a flick of its wrist Lug was gone, replaced by red mist.
 Caffus sat on blood soaked grass, surrounded by carnage. Ishta was using a pict recorder to capture images of the battle ground. Ravion was searching for the book, the foul artifact responsible for the death and depravity that had occurred that night. The book that had killed Lug. The cold purple sun had gone out with the deaths of the daemons.
 While his companions worked, Caffus sat there cradling what was left of Lug. Caffus hadnât known the man long, but he knew that Lug deserved more than he got. Lug had accepted Caffus, been a friend to him.
 But Caffus mourned for more than a fallen friend. A part of him had died that night as well. Everything he thought he knew had been wrong. He thought that mankind was powerful, that men were the rulers of the galaxy, and that their enemies couldnât stand before them. But after tonight, he seriously doubted those views.
 Ravion sighed as he sat down next to Caffus. âFound the book.â He held up a small package wrapped in leather.
 âWhatâs going to happen to it?â
 âWeâre going to destroy it. Weâre going to make sure its evil never influences anyone, ever again.â Caffus nodded. They sat in silence a moment, watching Ishta finish her work. âI remember my first mission,â Ravion said. âA group of daemon worshippers was trying to open a warp portal and cause a warp incursion. If theyâd succeeded, the entire planet wouldâve been overrun by those things. By beings so powerful, the things we fought tonight would look like sickly dogs in comparison.
 Caffus stared at the stars. Heâd never seen anything like them before. Countless stars, and most of the had billions of humans living near them. And they were all in danger of falling prey to the carnage heâd seen tonight. He asked Ravion the question that had been bothering him since he first laid eyes on the debauchery heâd witnessed. âHow could they do that? How could they summon those⊠things? On purpose?â
 âThey fell astray,â Ravion replied. âThey succumbed to temptation. They werenât strong enough to resist.â After a pause, he continued. âThatâs why we do what we do. Because someone has to resist. Someone has to be strong. Someone has to stem the tide.â
 Caffus sighed, and stood. âI guess thatâs us.â Ravion smiled.