Addicted

Beads of sweat were forming on Doctor Evans’ face, though he was quite calm indeed.

The man opposite him was similarly slick with perspiration, yet he looked the model addict; legs curled up, hugging his knees, rocking steadily. The cracked faux leather finish on the seat cushion creaked with each of his movements, adding a rhythm to the drone of the ineffectual air purifier.

The doctor pushed his wire framed glasses up his nose with his middle finger, leaned back and sucked his teeth.

“You can’t keep popping these pills like mints, Mr. Sanders” he scolded. “I told you they had a certain… addictive quality.”

“It’s Bolt doc, Steven Bolt” the nervous man spewed forth eagerly “and I know you told me, but I managed to lift the corner of a piece of paper with my mind the other night and I just need a little more-”

“Mr Sanders, please, you’re not making any sense” the doctor interrupted. He attempted a smile, but he couldn’t fight the disappointment suddenly weighing him down. He had only just gotten used to this city.

Steven Bolt’s last thought was one of disbelief as the laser sight mounted to the good doctor’s blaster blinded him briefly. It didn’t have long to sit in his brain before it was blown away with what remained of his wasted life.

Sweet

Pawpaw.

He smiled lopsidedly as he remembered the name, dredging it from so deep in his mind that he was afraid of drowning in the memories.

When he was younger, his mother would make him eat it. He never liked the smell of it, but he came to appreciate the subtle sweetness.

He looked down at her, still writhing, as he tongued the blood from his palm.

“Yes”, he decided. “Like pawpaw.”

Flashes of light amid the thunder of drums

With a flick of his hand, he sent man after man flying out over the ridge. This was no challenge. They were but fruit flies against his might and yet they continued to charge, blind hope leading them to their death in the chasm below.

He grew more bored than tired.

‘Hold them off’, he commanded. His trusted second nodded, tightened his grip on his sword and grinned manically before taking up position ahead of him.

The shaman raised his arm and twisted his hand into a claw as if trying to tear a hole in the very fabric of the air itself. His gigantic muscles bulged and strained, causing his blue skin to ripple. His mouth was open in a scream of rage, his teeth bared, but he produced no sound. He held his pose upon the unstable ground.

Dark grey clouds appeared and began to swirl above him. This battle, if anyone would remember it as such, would be over soon. The familiar numbing in his fingertips began to spread across his hand as the crackling of energy grew.

Tonight, he would hold. He would hold until his entire arm was numb and he would unleash a fulmination so devastatingly shattering, that it may just split their entire world in two.

He was the one, true shaman. The bringer of life for his tribe and the agent of death for all others!

When the numbness spread down to his shoulder, he pulled his arm back and down, took a deep breath and-

‘Jack? Bryce? Dinner!’ came the call from the kitchen.

Jack jumped down off his bed, scruffed his little brother’s hair and said ‘race you, loser!’, already half way to the stairs.

 

Directions

‘Level B4, column C, fifth row…’

She mouthed it silently under her breath as she ducked and weaved between the hordes of weekend shoppers.

‘Level B4, column C, fifth row…’

She had to find an elevator, fast.

For a brief moment, she thought she saw a PeeVee drone stop along its patrol route and turn in her direction. Maybe it was paranoia, though that wouldn’t be unjustified.

In the split second she glanced at it, she made a mental note of the variations in the cooling vents. ‘Jesus, that’s not a one-one’ she thought, referring to the model number. ‘They’ve upgraded already!’

About the size of a football and frustratingly quiet at all but the closest range, the Perpetual Vigilance™ series of drones could hang in the air relatively unnoticed, analysing the movements and body heat of each person within view for potentially suspicious activity.

She swallowed past the lump in her throat and attempted to look nonchalant, lightly hopping between shoppers, smiling and apologising in as friendly a manner as she could muster as she bumped a lady with her elbow here or nudged a security droid there.

She noticed a second drone ahead as she neared the elevator platform. They tended to stay no more than 100 metres apart, but any closer and you could guarantee that they were watching somebody.

She did her best to ignore it and pressed her identification card against the sensor. It chimed cheerfully and a disembodied voice stated that the elevator would arrive momentarily.

‘Level B4, column C, fifth row…’

Author d’érotisme

As she leaned back on her assistant’s office desk, her blouse fell open slightly, revealing her smooth chest and stunning cleavage.

He swallowed hard and squirmed in his chair. Was she out of her mind?

Her patent Manolo Blahnik dangled from the toe of her crossed leg, teasingly close to his now bulging groin.

Her smooth pantyhose, coating her legs like silken paint, glinted under the…

‘Under the what? The “cool glow of the office neons”?’

He sighed, then mashed the backspace key repeatedly, frustrated and aroused.

Killer of pests

It was a brilliant cover. The only profession that could drive freely, anywhere, without anybody questioning what was blatantly advertised on the side of the van.

Pest Controller
– All areas. Call to arrange interstate appointments.
– Fully licensed.
– All quotes honoured as is.
– First time, done right.
– Guaranteed results.

To people in the know, it reads like this:

Contract Killer
– Nationwide. Worldwide by negotiation.
– All weapons and techniques. Suicide? Holiday accident? Business hit? No problem.
– Make sure you’re absolutely certain you want the target erased. Once the contract is agreed upon, I go dark until the job is done.
– One time only. Once confirmation of contract completion is delivered, no further contact will be accepted.
– FIGJAM.

Regret

“Do you ever think of those things you should’ve done way back when? Stuff you know would’ve been a money spinner?

I’m not talking your ‘Oh, I should’ve started washing cars in my neighbourhood as a kid’ or ‘I thought of this website where you could connect with old friends, but Facebook got there first’.

I used to live in Japan in the 90s and back then, I bought so much crazy stuff because it was gimmicky or rare and very cool. So much collectible stuff that nerds like me would’ve killed for. I could’ve started a website and sold it to customers back home. I had the skills and I definitely had the time.

Son of a bitch…”

Somebody that I used to know

The ball of the pen pressed against the paper, indelibly denting it the longer it sat. He never was good with diaries.

“I don’t need you. I know that. I don’t believe any fully functioning adult truly needs somebody.

I was me before you and I’ll be me without you, albeit a different me, because of you.

But, I do miss you… or the idea of you. As time goes on, I’m less sure of which it is.”

 

Pressure

The air began to taste metallic.

*beep* sounded the piercing alarm from god knows where.

Five seconds.

That’s all she had left. How did it come to this?

*beep* – four seconds.

Now wasn’t the time for a critique.

*beep* – three seconds.

“You son of a bitch, TURN!” she demanded, grabbing the rusted metal bar with both hands and throwing all her strength into a twisting motion that she felt throughout her entire body.

*beep* – two seconds.

Determined not to die there, she grit her teeth and tried again.

*beep* – one second.

The cry of metals forged together over aeons and now pulling apart with impossible ease, began to assault her senses.

She pressed her hands to her ears as hard as she could.

Over the rising cacophony, she nearly missed the last

*beep*.

She began to scream.