Sunday, July 22, 2012

Found these recently.

Yet more fragments from my mind. Here is a short story I found that I had started in an untitled document.


The man stumbled through the thick undergrowth of the rainforest. The slick mud and rotting foliage made traction nearly impossible. The bullet in his left hamstring burned with every step and fire shot through his leg. Infection was a surety, the moist air, the pained nights of restless sleep, and lack of medical supplies made it an eventuality which he did not relish.

Rick knew he was finished. The operation went to hell in a hand basket before his team landed. The discjet had barely touched down when a rocket screamed into their staging area. The aircraft was a complete loss. Ambushed, the surviving commandos fought with everything they had. Rick had been shot in the leg, when he fell he was knocked unconscious after his head collided with a stone on the ground. The lone survivor of his team, the guerreros must have thought him dead when they left the remains of the discjet and the corpses of his comrades behind them.

There was wildlife that defied comprehension in this jungle. The genetic engineering projects of the past three decades had made creatures that were incredibly well adapted to survive. The most bothersome of these were the hunter moles. Their sharp digging claws and incredibly powerful jaws made them gruesome to contend with. It was rumored that the moles were hybridized with wolverine and mongoose stock to create a half blind predator with little regard for the size of its intended victims. Rick had knifed three his first day in the rainforest. They were quick and his pants were shredded around his shins and calves.

Hour after aching hour he trudged through the jungle. It had been at least a week since the discjet was lost.

Here is a first draft poem fragment I found in my Google Docs.

Do not be obsessed with death
It is unknown and unknowable
Rather be concerned with life
Live fully, happily, and waste no breath

We are not strangers
Death and I are well acquainted
Our first meeting I was five
Still unaware of the dangers

Of my own body, attacking
Itself on many levels
It is varied and ever causing strife
And compassion it is certainly lacking

Do what you love, there is little time
Follow it thoroughly, do not quit
Of pleasure, yourself do not deprive
Every incursion on your enjoyment

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Fredly Adventures

Fred sat at his desk and hanged his head sadly, his hands rested palms down on the surface of his worktable, as the sigh escaped from his gullet. The scorching summer sun he saw through the window contrasted bleakly with the bluish hue and low hum of the T8 fluorescent tubes above his head. The conflicting parts of the light spectrum made Fred nervous. The reddening light of the stretched out sunset and the blue tubes were battling the energy drink, the jay he smoked at lunch, the craving for nicotine, and his antidepressant: he felt like a dreidel on an uneven table. The constant air conditioning made the call center smell stale and the air dried out the back of the throat.

The man had dirty blond hair, a florid complexion, drab brown eyes, and pale skin. His wardrobe tended toward khaki with an accent of brown and his unkempt appearance was a combination of an aversion to razors, allergies to laundry fragrances, and laziness. The bulk on his short, wide frame gave the impression of a barrel that had grown skinny cartoon legs and arms. Not one for floral scents, the cologne that effected his personal space was spicy and some might have said it smelled somewhat angry. Fred looked to his right and saw Rudi two rows down, This whole place would be better without Rudi.


Fred thought this little refrain at least once a day. Two weeks ago when she asked which ocean New Mexico was closest to he smashed his forehead into the wall by his desk repeatedly. Every time she spoke with the customers and asked them to hold while she had to speak to a supervisor Fred cringed. Even though he was no where near a supervisor's pay grade she would always ask the taciturn man for confirmation of details or even for information that had been communicated to the rest of the team weeks ago. Reading comprehension seemed to be beyond her capabilities. At first Fred wondered if she was interested in him because she constantly assaulted him with stupidity. Hopeful that she was using her questions as segues into deeper conversation he tried to coax her into talking about herself. Rudi was on a completely different wavelength though and after a few weeks of her ignoring his awkward attempts at banter and small talk Fred concluded that she was mentally deficient.

"Hey Freeed?" Rudi asked after she gophered above her cubicle. The beautiful brunette intoned the last part of his name to such a high pitch that Fred ripped a paper off his cube wall and crumpled it into a very small ball. If her visual appearance were not so attractive Fred may have murdered her months ago as a favor to the general population. Rudi was a petite Italian woman in her early 30s, with a long patrician nose, almond shaped chocolate eyes, olive skin, an hourglass figure that made every straight man's heart in the building race, a chest that was not too big for her frame, and a butt that could only have been described by a word that rhymes with rubble. Unfortunately for our hero's taste this combination of physical beauty and a skull filled to 40 psi placed her on a special area of the womanly number line. She had exceeded the scale and sat firmly at both 0 and 10 simultaneously. Some of the nerdier fellows called it the Rudi quantum state of hotness.

Fred gritted his teeth and stood up. He was so short in comparison to his coworkers that he was only slightly visible below the shoulders when standing at his cube. "What do you need Rudi?" the man let the words grind out of his throat like grist being turned to dust. After she had outlined an issue that newer employees typically mastered within 3 weeks of training's end Fred dolorously responded and provided her with a full and correct answer. He then assumed an almost identical position of despair that he had assumed before Rudi had asked her question. What a wonderful existence for 9 hours a day. Fred pondered that tomorrow will be Friday or "Monday plus four" as he called it when he grumbled on his walk to the bus stop after work and on Fridays we dance.