Evan Quinlan

Archive for the ‘Fiction’ Category

Impulse Buy

In Drabbles, Fiction, Short Stories on January 9, 2011 at 4:28 pm

Precision-engineering of humans revolutionized the world.  The problem was, everyone was too perfect.  Lifespans skyrocketed and too little genetic diversity stunted the species.  Nobody took chances on imperfect babies.  The solution came from Nickel Games, Inc., a manufacturer of antique entertainment devices.  Like old-fashioned intercourse, the innovation was simple, fun, facilitated by alcohol, and—most importantly—it produced random results.

“Look, it even takes old-timey metal coins!”  Kell slurred.

“Win me a cute one!”  Ayla said, sipping her margarita.

Kell fed the machine and the claw whirred to life.  Behind the glass, a dozen canisters lit up, waking the babies inside.


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Evil’s Best Shot

In Fan Fiction, Fiction, Short Stories on January 2, 2011 at 8:01 pm

I want to go back.

Lou could see so much.  Concentrating, he rummaged through the gigantic haystack of living souls that pulsed in his mind.  Some of them called out to him sweetly.  Some of them shrank away from his clairvoyant eye like frightened animals.  Those ones would be saved.  Lou wished he could see his own fate so clearly.  The knowledge of whether his path led to salvation or damnation—or, somehow, both (he still heard the words of Ari and Uzi when Lou had told them he wished to serve Father again: “You are, still… in your own way”)—escaped him completely.  He could not win the game outright, he knew.  He could only weight the dice.

At once a pattern emerged from the haystack and Lou turned his mind’s eye upon it: a pure soul in distress.  For what reason it suffered, Lou could not tell—that which Father deemed “pure” was opaque to him by definition.  But the pattern fit what he was looking for.  It was, unmistakably, the oh-so-common archetype found in the thousands of human stories he had heard, read, and finally watched: the figure of the damsel in distress.

“Bingo,” said Lou to the afternoon air.

“Excuse me, you got a dollar I can borrow?” said a man next to him.  Instinctively, Lou’s hand shot out toward the man’s neck.  Three-and-a-half millimeters away from contact, his hand stopped.  The man jumped back and uttered a cry of indignation.  He was dressed in dirty, tattered clothes; too many layers to suit the weather.

New leaf, Lou reminded himself.  “New bills,” Lou said, and with sleight of hand that, if televised, would have forced Criss Angel into retirement, three crisp, one-hundred-dollar bills appeared in his hand.

The man stared.

“Seriously, take it,” Lou suggested.

“I don’t want no trouble, man.”

“I realize that.  Take the fucking money, please.”

The man eyed the money greedily but did not budge.

“Fine,” said Lou.  He turned to the nearest passerby.  She looked like a college student.  “Want three hundred bucks?  This guy won’t take it.”

“Alright!” the man cried.

“Ooh, already offered it to someone else,” Lou apologized with decadent sarcasm.  The college girl had stopped but seemed too interested to move on.  “Now I’ll lose a gold star if I deny either of you the money.  Hmm.  Tell you what: I’m in a hurry, so each of you grab an end of this stack; we’ll do this Solomon-style.”

***

It was approaching dusk when Lou found his soul-in-distress and the scene was almost too sweet to believe.  A cat up a tree, Lou mused.  I couldn’t have asked for a more obvious opportunity. Lou needed obvious; doing good did not come naturally to him.

The kid was already up in the tree.  One short arm grasped a large branch jutting from the trunk; the other reached coaxingly toward a shaggy, red cat hanging perilously from a limb that bent with its weight.

“Come on, Jim,” Lou could hear the kid pleading with the cat.  Ah, the fur-balls still control the humans, Lou thought. Hilarious.  Why do humans love pretending animals are human?  Well, I’ll never understand and it doesn’t matter.

“Hey, kid!” Lou’s voice rang clear, winning the attention of both boy and cat even from 50 yards away.  “Better get outta that tree!”

From his branch, the kid could see the yelling man give an enthusiastic thumbs up.  Then the man began to run.  He moved impossibly fast and directly at the tree.  At first the kid just froze, trying to understand what was happening.  Then instinct kicked in and he swung down, stumbling about ten feet and turning just in time to see the man running headlong into the trunk, arms raised in front of him like a linebacker.  But instead of hearing the crack of the man’s skull, as the kid thought he would, the crack came instead from the tree.  Splinters seemed to fill the air like a mist.  Dirt erupted as roots tore out of the ground.  As the tree fell, Jim the cat howled and leaped from his limb, landing as a tangle of wood and leaf-matter crashed around him.  The kid didn’t realize until it was all over that he was screaming.

Lou teetered above the jagged stump, nearly losing his balance.  Finally he shifted back onto his heels and, before he could stop himself, gave a triumphant whoop.  It was undignified but the adrenaline in his human body nearly demanded it… so he gave in to temptation.  That was something that came naturally to him.  Turning toward the kid, he smiled.  The kid was screaming.  Well, no wonder.  Mortals didn’t often knock over trees with their bare hands.

“Kid, shut up,” Lou ventured.  To his surprise, the kid did.

The cat. Lou scanned the arboreal wreckage.  The cat, Jim, was scrambling out from beneath the maze of cracked branches.  “Ah, ha,” Lou said, and he lunged at the animal, snatching it up.  It howled again, scratching at him.  Blood seeped out of Lou’s arms.  The thought of stigmata crossed his mind and he nearly chuckled.

“Alright, kid, here’s your—”

Where the child should have been stood a man.

Not a man.

“Oh,” said Lou.  “Hello, Raph.  What’s up?”

“What the fuck are you doing.”  Not so much a question as a statement.

Lou felt the energy drain out of him.  The fun was suddenly over and the reality of the situation—his situation—began to seep in.  When Lou replied his voice was dry and resentful.

“What’s it look like?  I helped this kid get his cat out of a tree.”

Raphael’s level gaze remained unchanged.  A long moment passed.

“And,” added Lou, “I’m helping out the Park Commission with its timber management.”

Without warning Raphael drew his firearm, a massive, gleaming semi-automatic, and leveled it at Jim the cat.

“Fuck!” Lou said and tossed the cat into the air.  Raphael fired a single shot—a blinding light issued from the barrel of the gun—and Jim exploded into a red soup.  Lou did not close his eyes as gore spattered one side of his face and clothes.

Raphael lowered the gun, slowly.  Lou glared at him.

“Fuck,” Lou said again.  He tried to sound upset, righteous, even, but the word came out sounding more like childish fascination.  What had just happened was something Lou had seen many trillions of times before, but each death has its own unique circumstances—its own flavor—and for whatever reason contemplation of each demise never ceased to give him pleasure.  He glanced down at the cat’s remains and became transfixed.  Blood still gushed from the separated halves of the animal, its organs still individually alive although the whole was dead.  The eyes of the cat bulged, as if the force of the bullet had pushed them nearly out of their sockets.  On the grass was a network of entrails, fur, and strange shapes Lou recognized but had no names for: the parts of life that made more sense to him separate than together.  God lived in the machine, he knew, and to disassemble the machine made it no longer God’s.  Pain was the currency of Hell and death the financier.  Lou thought of Death for a moment and smiled.  He could almost see, now, though Jim was not human, the Godliness leaking out of Jim’s entrails, seeping into the earth, the dirt becoming one with the blood, the life and the divinity fading like a sunset into darkness, which held, itself, more colors than the human eye could perceive…

Lucifer looked up.

“Ah,” said Raphael.  “And there’s the truth.”

“Shut up,” said Lou.

“You haven’t changed a bit.  All your gallivanting around like some newborn savior of mankind and you still lust after the sight of fresh, steaming entrails.”

“Fuck you.”  Then, without thinking, “You murdered it.”

Raphael laughed—a sardonic, penetrating laugh that fanned embers of hatred in Lou’s gut and made him clench his teeth.

“I murdered it, did I?  The cat?  Fucking Jim the cat?  Oh, Lou.  Heaven forgive me.  What have I done?”  He laughed again.  Lou’s fists squeezed so tightly that his knuckles turned white.  After a few moments, he could not contain himself.

“What the fuck do you want from me, you self-righteous asshole!”  he exploded.  Raphael’s laughter ceased.

“That’s just it, pal,” Raphael said.  “I don’t want anything from you.  I don’t want anything to do with you.  And moreover, I don’t want you here.”

“You’re here.”

“Indeed.  And I don’t want that, either.  I want to be in Heaven, where I belong.”

“Then go.”

“Not until you leave.”

“I’m not leaving.”

Raphael’s eyes narrowed.  He tipped his face forward in an angel’s best better-not-mess-with-my-righteous-fury-on-the-cover-of-Vogue look.

“You think there’s something you can do, here… something that will tip the scales of God’s will in your favor.  But you’re wrong.  Father may love you still, as he loves all things, but after several billion years of opposition there is nothing you can do in a day, a year, a millennium, nor an eon of time that will heal the gaping wound between your existence and his.  And certainly rescuing a cat from a fucking tree means so little that you might as well never have done it.  What a pathetic display, Lou.  Ask yourself: how badly do you really want to come home?  How long were you really planning on keeping this up?”

“I can’t win the game outright.  I can only weight the dice.”

“That’s great.  Did you hear that in an Eastwood film?  I’m highly amused.  But I’m afraid I can’t let this arrogant little crisis of yours continue.”  He smiled acridly.  “It wasn’t going to last, anyway,” he added.

“What are you going to do about it?”

“Turn around.”

Lou did.  The sky was a dark blue, and the city skyline rose above the dark silhouette of trees that lined the park’s entrance.  At first Lou saw nothing out of the ordinary.  But then he saw something—three things, in fact—that made his heart stop beating and then, shamefully, caused a stirring in his loins.

Looming above the horizon were the shadows of three crosses, each supporting, in their center, a mass that Lou recognized as a crucified human form.

“Jesus,” Lou said.

“No,” came Raph’s voice, sounding distant, “Just your handiwork.  Goodbye, Lou.”

Lucifer would have turned around but he knew Raphael was already gone.  He strode a few paces toward the crosses and then stared upward.  In the darkness his supernatural vision could discern three corpses: a homeless man, a female college student, and a young boy.  Everybody he had encountered today—everyone he had attempted to help, albeit badly—destroyed by the wrath of Father’s little crew of self-righteous thugs.

For the first time in billions of years of life, Lucifer felt a tear coalesce beneath his eye.

It was well within Raphael’s right, he knew, to destroy humans at will.  It was not their lives that mattered, but their immortal souls, and those were judged by Father above.  Besides, if asked, Raphael would probably spout some nonsense about these people being tainted by evil upon interacting with Lou.

The taste of failure, familiar to him, filled his mouth, making him want to vomit.

He turned away.  So, Raphael was going to try his hardest to thwart Lou’s efforts planet-side, eh?  Lou could respond with anger.  He could respond with wrath.  He could get hit by a truck and return home, where he would sit on a throne and rule over the fiery pits of souls, passing judgment on an infinitely long waiting list of the damned.

Or.

Yes, or.

He didn’t know what came on the other side of that conjunction.  Or. Or what?  He could work in more subtle ways.  Of course he could—he was the devil, for Christ’s sake.  He could find new ways to usher mankind into the arms of Father—ways that might go unnoticed by Raphael and his posse of winged deuchebags.

Why not? he thought.  I have until Armageddon to experiment. He thought of Death.  Maybe I should pay her another visit.  Yes, that would be nice.  And maybe Gabriel, too.  I think he’s got a soft spot for me.

In the darkness, a man who was not a man stuffed his hands in his pockets and whistled a merry tune as he walked away from the scene of several terrible crimes, all of which would be announced in the city newspaper the following morning.  Men and women would weep, lawyers would flock to victims’ families, and journalists would scramble for interviews come daybreak.  And beneath the surface of human society, an underworld would prepare for battle with an overworld as it had for billions of years.  But between both worlds one immortal would surf the tumultuous waves of holy war, repulsed by one side and repelled by the other, fighting for the salvation of a soul that had long ago cast its fate in opposition to the home it truly loved, if it could love at all.

I want to go back, he thought.  I will go back.  They’ll see.


This story is a fan sequel to a screenplay written by Kyle Johannessen.

The Mercy of Lions

In Drabbles, Fiction, Short Stories on December 31, 2010 at 10:39 am

Inside it was dark, hot, and damp.  The air smelled of blood and meat.

“I need your help,” the man said.

From deep inside, two eyes shone with a green light.  “The offering is made,” the eyes whispered.  “Plead with us.”

“The boy in the front row… he looks sick.”

“Slow and weak.  Ours soon,” then, Purr.

“Please, spare him.”

The eyes closed slowly.

“Very well.  We shall not hunt him.  But the hour draws nearer when our jaws close around your neck.”

“Thank you,” the man said.  He pulled his head out of the lion’s mouth.  The audience cheered.

To Quote Pooh at Christmas

In Fan Fiction, Fiction, Short Stories on December 13, 2010 at 10:56 pm

“There we are,” the Eleventh Doctor declared, “It’s the perfect Christmas present.”

“You’ve left a gift bag at someone’s door,” his companion observed levelly.

“It’s Hallmark, Amy.  Hall.  Mark.”

“Exactly,” said Amy.  “Would you say that qualifies as ‘perfect?'”

“Humbug.  It’s not my fault Hallmark insists on continuing to send retail shipments through the Bermuda Triangle.  Every few years I end up with a boatload of kitsch and gift-wrap.  Inconveniently, the downstairs toilet shares a dimensional rift with the Bermuda Triangle.  Imagine my surprise when Amelia showed up down there. The other Amelia. Earhart.  ‘No smoking in the lavatory,’ I said.  We had a laugh.  She ended up in a quiet cabin on Europa.  Back to the point.  This bag does contain the perfect gift—perfect for the person who lives inside this house.”

“And that is…?”

“I have no idea.  But I know people.  They like things.  And this bag definitely contains a thing.”

“You should do this more often.  You could take over for Saint Nick.”

“Who says I don’t?”

Amy’s eyes lit up.

“You’re not…”

“No, of course not.  Not all the time.  Every few decades I’ll pick a Christmas to leave at random about, give or take, seven-hundred-million and six presents.  It’s a hobby.”

“So you are Saint Nick.”

“Yeah, I’m Saint Nick.  But I don’t give people what they ask for.  What’s the point of giving people something they ask for?  You can’t change people that way.  You only satisfy them.  Not that there’s anything wrong with satisfaction.”

“Chocolate is satisfying,” Amy suggested.

“You’ve had enough, Pond.  No more trips to Belgium.  The point is, remember Eeyore.  He wanted an inflated red balloon but he got a deflated red balloon and a pot and those were even better.  Remember that.”

“Okay.  So do we have to do the other seven-hundred million and five houses tonight?”

“We are doing them.  Right now.  Well, parallel versions of us.  Multi-threading one moment of our lives through multiple points in space.  I call it shuttlecocking.”

“Sounds questionable.”

“Oh, it is.  In fact, we should go rather soon.  Implosions.  Space-time.  General badness.”  The Doctor started down the stairs.

“Wait a moment!”  Amy stopped the Doctor by his bow tie.  The Doctor teetered over the remaining steps and made a sound in his throat that sounded like “gwok.”  Upon recovery, he turned.

“Yes, Pond?  Mind the tie, please.  Attached to my neck, you know.”

“Sorry, but I was thinking: all the other Amys will probably do the same things I do, right?”

“So your plan was to strangle me seven-hundred million times.”

“No, but listen.  Am I right about the multiple mes?”

“Most likely.”

“Do you think half a billion people have ever said ‘Merry Christmas’ all at once?”

“I think they just have.”

“Good point.  So let’s double the number.”

The Doctor smiled.

“Alright,” he said, and adjusted his tie.

Amy ran to the nearest window and pushed it open.

“What are you doing?”

“I want to hear us shout it.”

“Pond…”

“Oh, it’s me!  And me!  And me!  We’re all doing it!”  Amy began to wave frantically out the window.

“For goodness’ sake, Pond!  Don’t wave to yourselves, you’ll end the universe!”  The Doctor froze at catching the tail end of the duplicate word “universe” uttered in his own voice from several places outside the window.

“Oh, hush, you,” the Doctor could hear Amy, and at least three more Amys across the street, retorting.  “You’re always worrying about ending the universe and it hasn’t happened, yet.”

“Not that you can recall.”

“Alright, ready, Doctor?  On three.  One, two…”

Amy stuck her head out the window.  The Doctor raised his face to the ceiling.  And they shouted it.  Merry Christmas. The sound rang from shingles and street lamps and mailboxes throughout the neighborhood.  Dogs barked.  A car alarm went off.  And in the very distance, like a gentle sigh, Amy and the Doctor could hear the reverberations of a million more voices, all their own, caroling the words into the December air.

“Well,” said the Doctor, after a moment.  “That was magical.”

Behind them, the door opened.  The Doctor turned to see a girl of about six standing in the doorway wearing footed pajamas that sported pictures of Winnie the Pooh engaged in various pastimes.

“Pooh!”  The Doctor exclaimed.  “We were just talking about him!”

“Are you Santa?”  The girl asked.  Behind the Doctor, Amy swooned.

“No,” said the Doctor.

“What.”  Amy’s tone was dangerous.

“I mean, yes.  Of course I am.”

“Why are you here so early?”

The Doctor looked at his watch.

“It’s not early, young lady.  It’s well past midnight and a certain someone should be in bed, I think.”  And then he added, “Ho, ho… ho.”

“But Santa,” said the girl.  “I mean, why are you here before Christmas?”

The Doctor blinked.

“Come again?”

“Christmas is two weeks away.”

Silence.  Broken by Amy.

“You.  Nitwit.”

The Doctor tapped his watch, then dropped his arms to his sides.

“Um,” he said, “I suppose there’s nothing to say except… oh, bother.”

Let Down Your (Boom)

In Drabbles, Fiction, Short Stories on December 2, 2010 at 3:47 pm

The old enchantress arrived at the foot of the tower, enraged to see Rapunzel’s hair already hanging down through the window.

“There’d better not be a man up there!” the witch called.

Silence.

She tugged fiercely on the golden braid and to her surprise, it began to fall into a loose coil beside her feet.  She glanced upward to see the other end of the hair tumble over the windowsill.  And what was that small object tied to it?  Dark, with a gridded texture.  It landed beside her.

It seems to be made of metal, she had time to think.

Deus Ex Billiards

In Fiction, Short Stories on November 30, 2010 at 10:01 pm

Sunday mornings I go to the pool hall.  My mother calls my cell around noon to talk about how much she enjoyed the service at church.  It breaks her heart that I don’t go.  I tried once to tell her I play billiards to see the universe through God’s eyes but it came out sounding like cheap sarcasm.

The atoms of the universe crowd tightly around a dark, dense center.  All is stillness.  Then, in an instant, all is chaos; matter separates and scatters to the farthest limits of space.  Colored spheres collide with one another, sometimes aligning, sometimes forming patterns that seem too perfect to be the products of random chance.  Indeed.

White is the color of My divine will.

Running the mechanics of the universe is great fun.  I live for it.  But a time comes when all things must end.  One by one, the white strikes each striped or solid mass from the fabric of reality.  Each disappears into the void, unreachable even by My hand, until all that remains is the dark matter; the black hole to which all matter clings in the beginning.

White is the color of everlasting miracles.  White is My avatar.

I call the pocket; I shoot.  Yang strikes yin and the number eight disappears from my view.  I hear it roll away beneath the surface.  Now the table is empty.  I check my right pocket for quarters.  Nothing.  The cue ball and I stare at each other blankly.  Is this God’s fate?  Eternal boredom?  My thigh vibrates.  Ah, yes.  Of course.  God will never be lonely so long as his mother calls him every Sunday.  I reach into my left pocket for the phone… and discover five quarters I’d forgotten I’d received from a faulty vending machine last night.  NO VEND, it had proclaimed.  Splunk, splunk, splunk, splunk, and splunk.

My mother has long since gone to voicemail.  My phone vibrates once, signifying that she has finally finished talking to nobody about church.  I lift from the table a holy shape: the plastic Trinity that has just shaped the form of a new, unborn cosmos waiting before Me.

The game begins again.  It always begins again.

Let there be white.

The Santa Scale

In Drabbles, Fiction, Short Stories on November 17, 2010 at 5:21 pm

A major toy retailer almost made an incredible discovery.

Hidden scales and microphones were installed beneath the chairs of mall Santas in demographically similar locations across the country.  By subtracting the weight of the chair and “Santa,” researchers could calculate the heaviness of each lap-faring child.  Recordings were made of the children’s wish lists.  If any correlations emerged between weight and requested toys, the company could more effectively market to children discretely weighed in their stores.  On the verge of identifying one such trend, an elated research team failed to notice that one mall Santa in Nebraska weighed nothing at all…

Goodnight, Lucky Girl

In Drabbles, Fiction, Short Stories on November 12, 2010 at 8:05 pm

He sat on the bed and leaned close to her.  Her breathing sounded regular.  Gently, he ran his fingers over her hair.  Warm.  Sound asleep; good.   She would need her rest tomorrow.  Quietly he went to her dresser and opened each drawer, scanning the contents.  In the third, the room’s second-hand moonlight disclosed small, glittering objects.  Ah, she was lucky: he’d found what he wanted.  Then tomorrow would indeed be a big day for her.  Police reports.  Press hounding her for details.  At last, the killer had spared another victim; someone to tell a story.  He left with his prize.


Thank you, Erin, for the inspiration.

The Last Ride of the Prince

In Drabbles, Fiction, Short Stories on November 8, 2010 at 9:25 pm

Headlights after headlights after headlights pass; comets in the dark.  Someone next to me is screaming, trying to tear my hands from the wheel but I am lost in a private philosophy lesson.  Today’s topic?  Power and consequence.  The stuff of Machiavelli.  Machiavelli would have known not to pass judgment on someone who wields power, not to “fail” someone who controls the outcome of fate.  They mustn’t be told they “cannot have their drivers’ license” because they “lack discipline.”  Discipline?  It takes discipline to navigate this one-way highway, dear instructor.  Headlights after headlights after headlights.  Which will be the last?

My Secret Coauthor

In Drabbles, Fiction, Short Stories on November 6, 2010 at 7:14 pm

This week a book made the New York Times Best Seller list.  I’d call it “my book,” but that would feel dishonest.  I wrote the words, yes, but I cannot remember writing the notes from which I worked.  I find outlines—extensive ones—scrawled in my own handwriting on paper scraps or my bedroom wall.  Brilliant stuff.  But among the plot twists and story arcs I find messages:  “Bury it,” one reads.  “Hidden beneath the straw,” says another.  “Pray,” advises a third.   Needless to say, I enjoy the fruits of my royalties from my home and no longer venture into the barn.