Story Horde

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Posts Tagged ‘Matty’

The Playground II

Posted by fictionforum on June 10, 2008

“So, all this…” Matty gestures expansively, vaguely, around his spot on the slide. “You just chasin’ tail, or what?”

“Can I assume that by ‘this,’ you refer to the gathering, all of us making our way here (seemingly of our own accord), here of all fucking places! To the absolute boonies, where our diminutive little Ashley has been tucked away for so long, hiding and waiting in turnsand now it’s as if some swirling vortex beckons us closer with soft words and garish lips?” Dyon’s eyes sparkle unreadably, though he may be amused at the surprise and dawning derision on Matty’s face.

“You are exactly the type of right bastard to destroy the known universe for a quick lay, aren’t you?”

“Well, whether I am or notwhich, of course, I amthat hardly matters now. Because this is much more than that, dear Matty, much more.” Saying this, he wears a somberly sinister face, voice deep and slow with hidden meaning. But the mask buckles, his mouth spreads wide in a chuckling grin. “Are you trying to look glad or reproachful? You know you’re incapable of those. And obviously,” he rolls his eyes, “obviously, I’m only joking.” He wanders off a few steps, towards the all-purpose sports field, empty save for a cartwheeling redhead. He murmurs under his breath as if talking to himself before calling over his shoulder, “Just checkin’ up on friends, man, just checkin’ up on friends.”

Matty frowns and shakes his head. “I feel like I need one of those little kids’ spy decoders around you. I never know when you’re outright bullshitting or when the world’s lies are your truth,” he comments, taking uncertain steps after Dyon.

“Silly Matty. Do you think I could tell the difference, much less tell you? I have no plans and no foresight, and am seldom on speaking terms with reality.”

From the top of the swing set, Cardea’s voice calls out, neatly preventing a response from Matty. “I’ve been thinking, and it may be it wasn’t Calla that woke Ashley up. I think she’s just here to catch the fall out.”

Dyon walks over to the swings in a slow but determined beeline and stands on the swing directly beneath Cardea. “Yeah, Card? And who do you think woke little Ashley up?”

“I think it was you. Ashley had everything closed and quiet and sealed, until the first night you came back. You could have known what would happen, but you did it anyway, with that accordion, and everything came spilling out.”

Matty folds at the base of the swings, glances between the two backlit by the setting sun and whispers to himself, “I keep thinking that if I just spend enough time around him, it’ll all start making sense someday. But… no. No, not at all.”

“Interesting hypothesis.” Dyon squints up at the balancing boy, now walking improbably along the top rail. “But where does it come from?”

“We can’t go pouring our whole self into something, into someone, and then have that snatched away and be just fine. You know that. And especially if we go back home, back to our haven and base and it’s gone…”

“Is there a thought you’d like to finish up there?”

Pursing his lips, Cardea gazes down, examining Dyon’s frankly questioning face. “I’m not here to get myself involved.” He rocks back and forth in the wind whipping through the tree tops.

“Too late for that. Might as well give up.”

All three turn their heads as a deep bark melts into a resounding howl. A dog, like pale butter, trots out from the thickening shadows rimming the field; a whoop shatters the tense fog hanging between the men on the swings. Dea’s teeth shine in a freckled smile as he clambers and slides to the ground. Words float back behind him to the remaining twoone bemused, one perplexedon the playground: “Lovely seeing you boys, gotta go!”

The dog runs now, too, muscles bunching under red-dusted fur, runs alongside Dea until, as one, they turn, lunge, wrestle. Scallion flashes a white-blaze stomach, growling and rolling gleefully in the ankle-high grass.

Matty stands, casting a long, twiggy shadow across the ground. “Feel like filling me in?”

“Not a chance,” Dyon laughs, hopping down beside his grim companion.

In struggle,
Bargain Puppy

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The Playground I

Posted by fictionforum on May 27, 2008

[AN: This will be continued, probably in about a week.]

A man—far too long, inconspicuously lanky—lounges at the bottom of a macaroni yellow slide. His bony kneecaps throw the rest of his black-clad legs into obscurity; a backwards collar blends into his silken black shirt, hidden by the shadow falling from a high, sharp chin. The dimming sunshine casts him in a rare glow, orange and nearing rosy.

The man wrinkles his otherwise unlined brow, glaring into the sun as if the milkweed clouds skirting it hid some secret from him. “Always, always late. Such a forgetful bastard.”

The footsteps crunching on dry woodchips surprise him in the one instant his watchful black eyes are closed. He—Dyon—appears as he always does, walking around the swings and making the seated man jump. The purple top hat perches high on his forehead and his eyes are newly awake, open and bright above a steaming cigarette which hangs loosely from a wide smirk.

“Catch some cancer, Matty?” he demands of his friend cheerily, pulling a purple pouch from an unseen pocket.

Matty takes the proffered cigarette—rolled and lit and everything put away in the blink of an eye—with a resigned sigh. “You know, I never smoked these before…”

“When you had fun?”

“Yeah. Now, people ask me why I smoke and I can’t answer. I derive no pleasure. It satisfies no void. I just don’t feel like quitting.”

“I smoke because—I can.” Dyon’s eyes are even wider now, challenging and contradictory, but he settles back with a laughing grin and half-hearted eye roll as his attention flicks suddenly to the pile huddled beneath the jungle gym’s child-sized steps. “And how about you, Card? Wanna bumma stoge?”

The reply comes in a warm, even, content tone. A voice with no demands on its time. “I’m just here to watch, thanks.” And then in a murmur, “And anyways, I don’t smoke. Least not now.”

“Ah, yes. How could I have forgotten your constant switches? However, back to… Matty.”

“Speaking.”

“Your voice is positively joyless. If the powers that be ever decide priests should cease meeting with colorfully charactered hedonists at the playground after hours, you could always be an aging cubicle secretary. Or a greeter at one of those dreadful box stores!”

Matty, used to Dyon’s digressions and tangents and unhurriable speaking style, says nothing but sucks the cigarette.

“What I mean to say is, why did you want to speak with me? Oh, don’t look so surprised—of course I’ve been checking up.”

“That black chick’s… well, she’s been around again.”

“Hn. And what might she be anticipating, I wonder?”

A lilting voice wafts over from the far set of monkey bars, the ones intended for people under four feet in height. “Everyone’s been gathering. Ashley told me Drah-zil’s been talking again.”

Dyon’s neck spins inhumanly fast, blue pupils contracting on the pinpoint of his interest. “Which means, of course, that Ashley is talking again.”

“My guess? It’s the, erm, ‘black chick’,” Cardea pipes up, upside down, from the monkey bars. Dyon stares, taking him in. A blue shirt flaps in the growing wind and his brown pants sag mid thigh as he crawls back and forth, every segment of his body practically prehensile. Hair the color of a dying sunset tangles around a pink, freckled face willfully ignorant of whatever Dyon might be unfolding.

“You were always painfully astute,” Dyon murmurs at Cardea’s retreating form, running off like an airplane towards the sliding triangle. His lips purse in uncharacteristic thought and he drops into an uneasy silence even less like himself.

It’s Matty who interrupts.

In struggle,
Bargain Puppy

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