I know it's been a while since I've posted on here so I'm just writing to say that I am in work on a new post/project that's a little different than what I've written, so it'll take a few days and a few posts to actually do. So, that being said, please keep an eye out on the blog because I PROMISE a new post by the end of this week.
Teaser: the next few posts will all be linked together.
Monday, December 3, 2012
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Not a Poem this time, I swear
It's called Dial-Up Connection
-
The phone
always lay beside him.
It was
always off the hook, still on, husking the emptiness on the other end, broken
only by the slight breathing of somebody else. He couldn’t fall asleep without
the phone. He always needed it beside him with her on the other end, regardless
of whether she was awake or not. Some nights he woke her up with his phone
call. Other nights, he pitied her and spent the night tracing the cracks in the
ceiling. He used to play games with it and create his own night sky complete
with its own constellations. But soon, even that couldn’t help the nights pass
even faster.
His
stomach was always sick with nausea before he called her. He became nervous all
the time, tripping over thoughts and spilling endless garrisons of ideas into
his pillow just so he could focus. His simplicity was never the best, but his
brutality was never the worst. He could never understand why he called her
every night, only that she made him feel like no other and that gave him some
sort of comfort when the nights became too long, too dark, or never ended.
Tonight,
he traced an old ceiling constellation, one of the very first ones he ever
found in the cracked white sky. The phone lay on the stand beside him, inviting
him to call her again. But he resisted, trying to give her peace and calm for
the first time in a long time.
The constellation
grew boresome. He grabbed a tennis ball and started banging it against the wall
until his neighbor yelled at him to quit the racket. He flipped TV channels
endlessly but got lost in their infomercials and found himself even further
from where he started. He punched his pillows, switched them, dumped everything
that good possibly be in his mind on them, and still found no reprise in this
hollow night.
He went
for a walk, humming to himself, music playing in his head. It was always sad
music. He never understood why, but the sad music made him more at peace with
himself.
He came
back and collapsed on the bed, the endless ticking from the clock on the wall
ringing in his head. After about fifteen minutes of this, he wretched the clock
from the wall and broke it to pieces on the floor. When he was done, he
carefully and calmly picked up all the pieces and dumped it in the bin with the
rest of the broken clocks.
He was
trying to balance the tennis ball on his forehead when the phone rang. It startled
him and sent the ball rolling off to the other side of the room.
He answered
the phone.
“Hello?”
“Hey,”
it was her. The night was no longer a waste.
“Hi.”
Not a
lot of communication ever happened on these phone calls. Some nights he held
the phone to his ear, not saying a single word, before falling asleep. Other nights,
he placed the phone directly beside him and fell asleep. And even on some
nights, he fell asleep curled up around the phone, holding it as if he was a
small child and it was his teddy bear.
“You
ready?”
“If you
are.”
“I am.”
He
placed the phone beside him and stared at it. Her breath was drifting through the
phone, gently rocking his mental sense of being back and forth, as if she were
the ocean and he was just another stranded vessel searching for a way home. If so,
would that make the phone the lighthouse?
That was
his last conscious thought before he woke up the next morning, the phone still
beside him. It was quietly humming the dead tone noise. She must’ve woken up
before him and hung up.
He went
about his daily routine, much refreshed from the sleep he found last night. When
the end of the day came and the moon hung high in the sky, he called her.
She didn’t
pick up this time. A man did.
“Hello?”
“Hello,
this is the police.” Said the man. “Can we help you?”
Ice cold
fear bottled up inside his throat. He quietly asked the police officer if he
knew where she was.
There was
a long drawn out silence before the officer answered.
“She died
last night, sir. She fell asleep with her phone in her bed last night. It got it
tangled up in her throat as she slept, and the phone cord choked her to death.”
Saturday, November 24, 2012
It's called Time, Time, Will You Stay The Night
Here's to Time,
the natural event which robs us all
-
Time, Time, Will You
Stay The Night?
If I could ask you to
stay
If just for tonight,
Would a simple
bequest
Be enough to make you
stay, Time?
Because you’ve made
everybody wishing
That the grass is
greener on the other side.
The youth dream of
being old
And the old dream of
being young.
It shows that you
have no soul,
You cold hearted
mistress,
And begs me to
believe that your inner qualities
Are not what they
really seem to be.
Prudent and bold,
that’s what you are,
With no pity to
humble man and their ever present quest
To become something
more than just fertilizer to the Earth.
Great Caesar, Great
Alexander, Great Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle,
Ashes to ashes, dust
to dust,
Made into no more
than the clay beneath my feet.
So Time, Time, before
you go
Is one night to ask
for
So hard to
understand?
You can ask me to
reconsider
Or understand the
workings of a stable relationship.
But as far as I’m
aware
You make us too
short, too fragile, too unworthy of being able to waste time.
We don’t have petty
time to waste acting higher or better,
Acting like the rest
of the world does
As if you’re in their
pocket.
Their pocket? Their
pocket?
Really?
Can money or love or
any of the above be enough to persuade you
To stay, if even for
a moment?
Believe it or not,
All I am trying is to
fight the odds and hold on
Though everyone knows
it has to go.
Then why, might I
ask,
Are they so insistent
on acting like there is always a tomorrow?
Any second could be
their last, any breath could have no repeat,
Any simple step could
be their end.
So Time, Time,
You move too fast,
Am I just a favor
before your last?
Time, Time,
You have no worry of
growing old
And that leads to the
jealousy and hate in my throat.
But I just want you
to know,
Before you go and
decide to walk out this door,
That my request is
still open
For a one-night
stand, one for the ages,
With you alone, Time,
For if it was a
choice between Death and the eternal December I’m stuck in,
I’ll take you on any
night.
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
I Seriously Need to Stop with the Poetry; I Am NOT a Poet
It's called a Lonely Red Herring
-
It’s
because you’ve been thoroughly overthrown with disabandonment
And search
to make no amends of an empty carousel ride’s lonely conversation.
You’re
stuck on the floor
A pillow
keeping you fixated on the ceiling
As you
search for a wishing well to throw all your loose change in.
Unbeknownst
to you,
I’m
trapped, drowning in the next room.
An
endless cycle of screams, aimed at the most cynical of the two of us.
Broken jewelry
showers on the ground, the endless amount of Christmas tinsel pulled from a
rotted tree.
Attempting
to pick them up only scatters them more.
The current’s
rising and bearing wind with it.
My body’s
floating on an endless tide.
The vacancy
can’t be fulfilled with you by my side
Because
you’ve created the vacancy just by being there.
December’s
failing; the life support’s been pulled away.
I’m waiting for the rushing waters to turn
into snow
So maybe
that way I finally won’t drown.
Your disabandonment
has hit a heavy chord
Because
you’re never actually alone;
Rather,
you make those around you alone.
So I’ll
buy you some roses,
Or maybe
even more,
And let
you stain the sheets with endless dreams
Of what
everybody else but me wants in this life.
Sorry if
I’m being selfish,
Sorry if
I’m being prude,
Sorry
for all the negatory things that swim around and clog my thoughts
Preventing
me from saying all the bitter things that should be said.
I’ll
float back down
Down,
down, down, down
Falling
to the ground.
An
underwater escapade,
Oh, if
only I could fly.
Because
you’re still asleep, your pillow fixating you on the ceiling, the floor your
newly made bed
And I’m
still in the next room
Overwhelmed
and drowning at the harsh reality
That no
good comes out of nothing
But nothing
only comes out of good things.
So, I’ll
feed you more words
Give you
more ammo for your smoking barrel
And let
you fire your full arsenal.
Aim it,
Aim it
please,
At my
throat.
So all
these words can spill out instead of my blood
And all
my questions will finally be empty
And my
vented questions I shout at the world’s edge,
Where the
carefully crafted sky and painted landscape have reached their brink,
Will finally
be useless
And I won’t
get the same bitter answers in response.
So, now
I’ll go change the direction of the stairs
And let
you find another room.
I’ll
just sit here in this room,
Overwhelmed
and drowning the ocean of events I never thought through.
I’ll
stare out the window and wait for the sky to turn
And think
Because
they’ve parachuted down into my mind,
Escaped
the brink,
And filled
me with weights so that I will sink
Down,
down, down, down,
I’ve
fallen to the bottom of this endless pit.
Friday, November 16, 2012
Please Read the Full Post Before Forming an Opinion
I thought long and hard before posting this next poem.
All my work is incredibly personal and drawn on a number on influences I've experienced.
All my work is serious.
But the following poem was pounded out in about five minutes, no hesitation, just key after key after key.
Compared to my other works, it takes liberties. A lot of liberties.
So, that being said, to anyone reading this, I have decided to post this because this is my blog. I can post whatever I'd like (admittedly, to a certain degree).
If what I've written is what needs to be written, for whatever reason or motive, then it deserves the chance to go up on this blog.
For those of you who actually do know me, you'll know that I've had a pretty tough past few days due to certain previous extracurricular activities and events involving me currently, which have only been stressed and made worse due to previous events.
All my work is serious.
But the following poem was pounded out in about five minutes, no hesitation, just key after key after key.
Compared to my other works, it takes liberties. A lot of liberties.
So, that being said, to anyone reading this, I have decided to post this because this is my blog. I can post whatever I'd like (admittedly, to a certain degree).
If what I've written is what needs to be written, for whatever reason or motive, then it deserves the chance to go up on this blog.
For those of you who actually do know me, you'll know that I've had a pretty tough past few days due to certain previous extracurricular activities and events involving me currently, which have only been stressed and made worse due to previous events.
That being said, this poem deals with some of the stuff that's been going on.
You will find it darker and (possibly) more obscene than everything else I've done.
And for that, I apologize.
But as I said, I have written what I have written for a reason.
With that being said, I can no longer find any words to help explain this next post. So, without further ado, I present my next poem.
You will find it darker and (possibly) more obscene than everything else I've done.
And for that, I apologize.
But as I said, I have written what I have written for a reason.
With that being said, I can no longer find any words to help explain this next post. So, without further ado, I present my next poem.
It's called Gravity.
-
Fuck Gravity.
You’re
relentless, soulless, selfish, and so needy.
Everything
must be so close to you and always kept close to you.
You
never give us a chance to just stretch out our wings and go free.
I
need to float on a northern wind again.
Fuck Gravity.
You’ve
always held us down.
We
have so much potential, so much to reach for, so much to know.
But
you keep us glued to the earth, wasting precious energy just to move.
Can’t
you see we just want to float?
Fuck Gravity.
I need
some new chords of dissemblance.
I
need fresh air beneath my feet.
I
need a broken beat underlaying my feet.
I
need to ride the wind to a new and forgotten home.
Fuck Gravity.
I need
to escape this place.
The
broken sheets, the scattered ingredients, the torn and foolishly tossed away
gifts.
The
scars the memories bought and brought back.
This
place holds no more oxygen to me.
Fuck Gravity.
I’m made
into a long forgotten bed.
One
I needed to abandon.
I
don’t want to be brought back and I don’t want to stay here.
But
I’m stuck here because of you.
Fuck Gravity.
Keep holding
us down.
My
anger can only bear so long
Before
it turns into broken creeds of depression
Tainted
by infected memories of the one who laid beside me.
Fuck Gravity.
I want
to turn you blue.
And
then you’ll hopefully finally understand the semblance
Of
tracing the broken rivers lain inside in my mind.
You’re
the only one who forged them there.
Fuck Gravity.
I have
had my fill.
Other’s
words can no longer fill the desire to speak my own.
This
process has turned me old, ashen, and gray
And
now I’ve rotted from the inside out.
Fuck Gravity.
Why must
you persist?
I’ve
dug my own grave and laid down inside of it,
The
underside caked with yellow powder,
And
watched you toss the dirt over me as you laugh.
Fuck Gravity.
You’ve
finally won.
And
in the light that I swear I thought I knew,
Your
face was all that’s left
Poisoning
and darkening my final moments unguarded.
Fuck Gravity.
Because
of you, I now fear my sleep and dread the moments that I’m awake.
Metaphorical Story
Completely metaphorical story. More than one meaning.
My best suggestion: have someone read you the story, then read the story. You make more connections that way.
My best suggestion: have someone read you the story, then read the story. You make more connections that way.
-
My December
My
December is hallowed ground. He walks arm-in-arm with Dark and Desolate Days,
who each call out to him with cries of passion. His response is the uneven
snowfall on a cloudy day, slightly swayed towards one side but just barely
enough so he can blame it on the weather. His chilled breath hangs around his
face and clumps together to obscure his true intentions. He asks Dark Days out
one night for an evening spent along the seashore, where they trace insignia
into the sand and shout praises to the stars, only to show up on Desolate Days’s
doorstep, begging to kill the night. She lets him in, a hollow smile on her
face, only pausing to lock the door behind her.
My
December is a wishing well. He threw himself out into sea but could never touch
the bottom. He surfaced only to find himself alone again, the four leaf clover
on the pillow beside him laughing at his pitiful state. He traced her smile on
frosted glass and held the clover guiltily in his fist. He pulled the blinds
shut and sipped the bottle of February Air in his hand, hoping its intoxicating
effects will put him to sleep again. He held Hope’s clover close and thought
hard. My December then brings it out to his wishing well and considers who
would notice if he pitched himself in instead of the clover.
My
December is a robbery. He leaves nothing behind but only takes what he needs.
The warm touch, the soft embrace, the lips curled in pleasure, no one has ever
seen Dark and Desolate Days like he has. And no one ever will after he leaves them
dead in his wake, another heartless victim whose name is now splattered over
headlines. My December attends their funerals and refuses to talk to them after
they stare at him with hollow eyes hidden behind a white veil and dress. He
then takes the bottle of February Air and crawls his way back home, Hope’s four
leaf clover tucked away carefully within his pocket, searching for a way to end
a Hopeless night.
My
December is a nightmare. Every time he closes his eyes he sees her face. Every
time he stares at the sunset, bringing forth a new day, he feels her voice on
his ears, whispering to him what the new day should have brought. Every time he
wakes in cold sweat, Hope’s name on his lips, it’s because she just touched him
in his dream. My December tears the town apart, releasing his fury in a
blizzard. The townspeople cower in fear until he almost drops his bottle of
February Air. He drags himself back home that night, drunken and abused, to
place the bottle back on the fourteenth shelf, far away from his heart.
My
December is hallowed ground. He’s never walked it alone but no one is ever by
his side. My December dreams of being put to ashes, to just die and never
return. My December walked that day, the Moon leading him with a serious gaze,
the four leaf clover tucked in the pocket of his high school blazer. He stepped
through the yard, death and decaying frost following his every footstep, until
he found the marker he was looking for. My December stared, with hollowed eyes,
at where Hope was buried, her body, however, they could never find. He laid
down on the frozen earth, much comfier than his bed, and just when he thought
the nightmares would start, they all slipped away. For My December could hear
Hope’s voice:
“This
is My December. He is always so clear. His ice cold hands are mine to hold. His
frozen breath is mine to feel. And I always felt like it was something I
missed, but Hope knows best, to hold My December by her side.”
For
the briefest moment, My December felt himself change. My December was now Dark
and Desolate Days’ lover, and they would never leave his side, but then where
would Hope exist? In response, My December suddenly rationalized, as the snow
fell all about him, putting him at peace, My December can only exist with Hope
by his side.
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Some more fun stuff and probably one of my favorite short stories
-
“The Gentlemancy of Mr. Arthur Hemingway”
by: James Sabetti
William Gould swallowed the
piece of steak he was chewing before continuing.
“A simple job like that would
require three men, Mr. Hinaki, but I believe it will be discovered, especially
given the certain circumstances.”
Mel-do Hinaki, the grandson of
Hi-shon Hinaki, the celebrated founder of Hinaki Enterprises, put out his cigar
in the ash tray on the table. He picked up his knife and cut into his steak.
“What do you mean?” Hinaki
patiently asked, almost speaking perfect English, before putting a piece of
steak in his mouth.
Will put down his silverware and
pushed his plate off to the side, calling off the waiter who shot forward to
take it; the hotel ballroom they sat in was elaborate and fancy, with white,
silk tablecloths, bright lighting, and a chandelier hanging from the ceiling.
The wear was extremely formal and the tinkle of china and glass echoed among
the cleverly placed tables.
“Now, your plan calls for the
use of elevators – “
“ – I know what my plans
consists of,” Hinaki cut off William with a slight impatience, “I want you to
tell me what you think would work, Mr. Hemingway.”
Mr. Hemingway. The name
reverberated through Will’s head. Arthur Hemingway. A man sought after by many businesses,
the very best at corporate espionage, and always sold off to the highest
bidder. It was dangerous work, and Will created Arthur Hemingway to protect
himself. Almost all of his contacts in the world (mostly businesses) knew him
by this name and nothing else, including the girl awaiting him in the suite
fourteen stories above him.
It was the life, though:
traveling all over the world, enormous paychecks, and death-defying jobs. Like,
for instance, right now, the employer was Mr. Hinaki, owner of Hinaki
Enterprises. The target: Ryan Orchismodo, the owner of a Swedish company, Polar
Ice Lights, which was in a close race with Hinaki Enterprises, had information
about a top secret project his company was working on in his hotel room eight
stories above them. The price: 75 million dollars. A lot of money, but only a
scrap of what Hinaki would get if he got that information and eliminated Polar
Ice Lights from the playing field.
“Air ducts.” Will responded,
spreading out his napkin in front of him and taking a pen out of his pocket. He
began to draw a maze of thin lines as HInkai watched, interested.
“I’ve taken advantage of my stay
here this week to learn the air duct system – “
“ – And I’ve heard that’s not
all you’ve taken advantage of.”
Will looked up at Hinaki, who
was smiling light heartedly.
“She stays out of this.”
“Of course, of course,” Hinaki
said, waving his hand. “Please continue.”
“The air duct system leads right
to his room.” Will continued, leading his pen along the selected path. “the
duct begins in a hallway just outside my room.”
Hinaki took the napkin and
looked at it.
“It’s the perfect plan – “
“I want a demonstration.” Hinaki
cut him off. “To prove this works.”
Will watched as Hinaki took out
his wallet and called the waiter over.
“Mr. Hinaki,” Will said, a plan
forming in his head as the deal began to slip away, “tomorrow, when you wake
up, come by the suite for your wallet.”
HInaki looked at Will before
laughing. He wiped his mouth with his napkin and got up, saying, “Good luck,
Mr. Hemingway. Enjoy the remainder of your stay.”
Will watched him walk off. “Wrap
that to 1403.” He said to the waiter, gesturing to the two almost untouched
steaks. He gave the waiter a tip and then walked over to the bar.
Will took an open barstool next
to a lady dressed in a fancy blue dress with a long, flowing ponytail. The lady
disregarded Will with a cold look, causing him to smirk as he ordered a dry
martini from the bartender.
Will drained the martini and
then began drumming his fingers on the bar. After a few minutes, he turned to
the lady in the blue dress.
“It’s been a long time, Carlye.”
Will said, putting emphasis on the last word.
Carlye Rance turned to face him,
surprised. “So it has, William.”
TWELVE HOURS
EARLIER
Will woke to someone knocking on
his door.
He groaned and kicked off the
sheets, rolling out of bed very slowly. He walked over to the suite door,
disregarding the bathrobe draped on top of a chair; he was half-dressed, only
wearing pajama pants, and didn’t think it was necessary to cover them.
Will opened the door to find the
bus boy, a man Hinaki had put under cover to keep an eye on Will as he worked,
standing in the doorway, holding two envelopes. On the front of his suit, he
had a silver name tag reading TOMMY JONES. Will briefly wondered if that was
his actual name as he took the letters from the bus boy.
Will looked at the letters’
senders. The first one was from Hinaki himself, probably giving him the
information for tonight’s meeting. The second letter’s owner, however, had
written their name in a style Will had only seen a long time ago and because of
it, it took Will a moment to read the name. Curious, he looked up at the bus
boy, mouth open to ask him about the letter. He stopped instantly as he saw the
bus boy leaning into the room, trying to get a better look at the sleeping
figure in Will’s bed.
Will shoved the bus boy out of
the doorway. “Piss off,” he said, then slammed the door in his face. He turned
back into his suite and looked around.
The sun was still trying to
fight its way through the buildings surrounding the hotel, but pieces of its
light pierced through the buildings and into his suite. His kitchen was dimly
lit, with purely white countertops and a white table blindingly against a white
floor. The living area was a mess, however, compared to the perfectly clean
kitchen. Stacks of papers upon papers were littered across the sofa, tables,
and even around the 72 inch flat screen TV. Amongst the clusters of papers were
black gadgets used for scaling walls that Will had been toying with the night
before.
In the bedroom, however, was his
prize possession, if he could call her that. Alexandra LaGrounge, known
commonly as Alex, lay asleep in his bed, her mixture of fine, French Aristocrat
and American culture hidden beneath the sheets. All that was visible to Will
was her dark, exposed back and the back of her jet black hair, covering her
shoulder blades.
Will walked into the living
room, grabbing his electronic cigarette from the table where he had left it
last night. Will had regrettably started smoking while he was in high school
and had quit as he became aware that his current lifestyle required him to be
much healthier than the smoking had left him. However, like all people who quit
an addiction, he soon was searching desperately for something to fill the
newly-found void in his life. One day, while in New York due to travels, he ran
across a street vendor selling rechargeable electronic cigarettes. All the feel
and taste of a real cigarette, just not as harmful. Will instantly bought
almost all of the electronic cigarettes and filled the void.
Will sat down on the couch after
shoving some paper out of the way, turned on the cigarette and lit it, inhaling
a breath of beautiful smoke. He took a few more puffs of the cigarette,
watching the smoke float around the room before tearing open the envelope
Hinaki had sent him.
Inside was a solitary piece of
white paper with typed instructions on it, telling Will to meet Hinaki in the
ballroom at 8:30 tonight. Will memorized the instructions, then burned the
letter with his cigarette lighter. He watched the ashes fall to the ground,
already thinking about the other letter.
Very few people knew Will as
William Gould, the kid from the lower reaches of Vermont. And most of them were
either dead or wouldn’t recognize Will until he said something to them. Yet,
somebody had managed to get in contact with him and know his present location.
He ripped open the letter and took out the frail yet fancy looking card.
It was a wedding invitation.
Will opened it up, thoroughly confused. He was never invited to weddings; in
fact, he had never been to one. He searched through the card, looking for a
familiar name. Suddenly, he found it. It was the bride’s name that was so
familiar, a name he thought was long gone and that he would never hear again,
yet, would very soon never hear it the same way again: Carlye Rance.
After the shock of reading her
name set in, Will began reading the rest of the invitation. The blurbs ran
through his head as he read them: in a week….formal wear…please RSVP….here at
this hotel….open bar….what? Will scanned back through the invitation. He hadn’t
read wrong; the wedding was to take place here at the hotel.
He sat on the sofa, smoking his
cigarette, staring, lost in thought, at the invitation.
“You ok?” With a tremendous
effort, Will wrenched his thoughts from the invitation and looked up at Alex,
who was wearing nothing but one of his shirts.
“Yeah, I’m fine.” He said with a
smile. After she returned the smile, he asked, “How would you like to go to a
wedding?”
PRESENT TIME
“I almost didn’t recognize you,
Will.”
Will smirked. “I get that a
lot.”
Carlye watched him with a
devouring interest, as if he would suddenly disappear from sight the second her
focus slipped from him. Will nervously played with the empty martini glass in
front of him; they had been talking for about fifteen minutes now and his job
had not come up in the conversation, something Will hoped would stay that way.
Carlye knew all about his job, Arthur Hemingway, and the means by which he
lived, and Will knew she hated every bit of it. His fingers quickly flitted
through the pockets of his dinner coat as his nervousness grew. He cursed; he
had left his electric cigarette upstairs.
“What’s wrong?”
“Nothing,” Will said, attempting
to wave it off with his hand, “I just left something upstairs in my room.”
“You’re staying here?” Carlye
said, surprised. “The wedding isn’t for another week! I understand you may want
to partake in the pre-dinners and parties, but Will - “
“Um, Carlye?” Will meekly said,
cutting her off mid-sentence. “I was already here when I got the invitation…”
Will let the words hang in the
air for a moment and watched Carlye’s reaction as she digested the words.
“Already here…” she repeated,
shell-shocked. “already…” she snapped towards him, leaning in close. “Are you
working right now?”
“Um,” Will started, but was
instantly saved as a tall man in a black tuxedo walked over and placed his hand
on Carlye’s back.
“May I help you?” the man said
in a dark, deep voice, directing the question towards Will. The man was built
and imposing, with jet black hair parted to the left and dark, lazy eyes. With
a jolt, Will realized it was Carlye’s fiancé.
“John, I’d like you to meet
William Gould, an old school friend of mine. Will, John Davis, my fiancé.”
“Nice to meet you,” Will said,
extending his hand forward, still extremely nervous from the talk of his job.
John stared at Will, and then slowly took his hand into a firm handshake. After
a second, John’s firm composure shattered into an amused smile.
“Relax, Will,” John said,
relaxing his body as well as he tried to stifle his laughter, “I’m not that
type; I just enjoy messing with people.”
Will relaxed under John’s smile;
however, he glanced over at Carlye. She was smiling with the rest of them, but
Will could see something in her eyes that made him nervous.
Once he was able to regain
control of his laughter, John said to Will, “I’m surprised to see you here
already, Will. The wedding isn’t for another week.”
Here it was again: his job. Will
smiled, calm and collected. Making up his job was much easier than actually telling
people what he did for a living. “Yes, well, I was already here at the hotel on
business, and I just received the invitation this morning, and, by some
miracle, ran into Carlye here tonight after a dinner conference.”
Carlye’s eyes pierced him, but Will
held the gaze, no longer nervous; she could ask him no questions while John was
around. “Carlye did say you were a hard man to get ahold of, sorry the
invitation was so late.”
“No worries,” Will said to John,
smiling, “I get that quite a lot.”
“So what is it that you do for a
living?” John asked, leaning against the bar now.
“Boring stuff, really.” Will
said, waving his hand. “I’m an art curator, so I have to meet with potential
art owners and decide if what they have is worthy enough to put on display.”
“Sounds tedious.”
“It is.” Will looked at his
watch, seeing an open opportunity to leave; it wasn’t that he didn’t like them,
he just felt guilty about leaving Alex upstairs. “In fact, I should get going.
I’ve got a long night ahead of me with quite a few phone calls to people
overseas, so if you don’t mind, I will say goodnight.”
“Oh, we should walk you to your
room!” John said, jumping up from the bar. “We don’t want to be bad hosts.”
“Oh, no, you shouldn’t - “
“ - I think we should.” Carlye
said, a smile still upon her face.
Will gritted his teeth behind
his smile. “You two are so nice.”
“Thank you,” Carlye said, mock
curtsying.
Will told them that his room was
on the fourth floor, hiding from them the suite room that would ruin
everything. The suite was constantly under watch by Hinaki’s bus boy, and if
Hinaki saw them, he would instantly think that Will was betraying him or taking
advantage of him. Plus, if Carlye saw the room, she’d know something was up.
The elevator ride was awkward
for Will. He played with the cuff on his sleeve as they rode while Carlye
leaned against John’s arm as he tapped his foot to the elevator music.
DING! The doors slid open as
they reached the fourth floor. Will bolted out of the elevator, cutting off
Carlye and John while pressing the CLOSE DOORS button in the process.
“What room are you?”
“I think we should walk you to
your room.” Carlye said, her voice overpowering John’s first question.
Will stood in the doorway, his
arms spread out, preventing them from leaving as the doors shut.
“Goodbye, and thank you so much
for taking me to my room!” Will said cheerfully.
“Will -“
“Will!” Carlye’s last shout was
cut off as the elevator doors shut.
Will took a deep breath and then
shot down the hallway, looking for the stairs. He only had a limited amount of
time to get there before Carlye and John got the elevator back to the fourth
floor. He shoved open the door leading to the stairs and slammed it shut behind
him. He leaned against the door for a brief moment, nervous sweat making his
hands slippery, before walking up the stairs. As he loosened his tie, he cursed
himself for having a weakness towards girls in blue dresses.
Will shoved open the door
connecting the stairs and the fourteenth floor. His tie was loose, his top
button undone, and his dinner jacket folded over his arm, causing the bus boy
to give him a very apprehensive look.
“Elevators down?” he asked.
“Nope.” Will answered curtly,
removing his room key from his dinner jacket.
“Did you need the exercise?”
Will briefly paused from what he
was doing and looked at the bus boy. “Do I look like I need exercise?”
The bus boy blushed. “Sorry.”
“And if you must know,” Will
said after a moment’s silence, in which he managed to unlock the door and pick
up the tray holding the wrapped, almost untouched steaks from the floor, “the
elevator crowd wasn’t so nice.”
And with that, Will strode into
the room with the tray in hand.
“Room service!” he called.
“Is the waiter included?” came
the response from the living room.
Will threw down his dinner
jacket into an empty chair and strode into the living room, chin in the air,
chest outwards.
“Your dinner, madam,” he said,
bowing, extending the tray to Alex. She
sat on the couch in jeans and a short-sleeved fluffy blouse, her dark brown
hair thrown over her shoulders and her aristocrat-like features were easily
picked up by the light.
“Oh,” she said with a
mock-squeal of delight as she saw the steaks. “Cold steaks. Just what I’ve
always wanted.”
“Oh, ha ha.” Will said, pulling
the tray away from her. “I think I saw a microwave somewhere in the kitchen.
Let’s heat up these steaks and eat like kings.” Will walked into the kitchen, a
smiling Alex soon behind him.
They heated up the steaks and
lit candles on the table, watching the night life begin in the city below them
as they ate.
As they finished, Will said to
Alex, “I need to ask a favor of you.”
“Yes, sir?” came the response.
“I have to sneak into Mr.
Hinaki’s room tonight and steal his wallet. He wants a demonstration to prove
the air duct system works, so I’ll give it to him.” Will said, leaning back in
his chair, finished with his steak, as he judged Alex’s reaction.
She leaned back in her chair to,
crossing her arms. “And how does this involve me?”
There was a moment’s silence as
Will picked his next words carefully. “I need you to knock out our bus boy.”
Alex raised an eyebrow, amused.
“How? I’m not exactly a martial arts expert or anything.”
Will reached into his dinner
jacket and pulled out a small vial containing a clear, white powder. “Just drop
a small pinch into his drink and you’re done.”
There was a silence as she
contemplated the proposal. “Do you care how it’s done?”
There was another silence as the
question caught Will off guard. “Ummmm…how am I supposed to answer that?”
Alex laughed, getting up, and
took the vial out of Will’s hand, kissing him on the cheek. “Don’t worry,
Arthur. It won’t be anything bad.”
Arthur. Will sat in his
chair, unmoving and silent as Alex snuck out into the hall. His thoughts
flashed back to earlier this evening, when he had been called “Will” for almost
the first time in three years. He sipped his wine, not actually tasting it, but
tasting the bitterness of a life left behind.
A few minutes later, Alex’s
wrapped her arms around his neck from behind.
“It’s done.” She whispered into
his ear.
The clock read twelve-thirty;
Will just finished putting on his final pieces of his suit in the bedroom while
Alex watched from the bed. He tugged a ski mask over his head, completing the
suit; he was wearing an all black, static free cloth suit, generally used by
night-time special ops teams all over the world. Slung over his shoulder was a
duffel bag full of re-engineered cliff climbing equipment; instead of burying
itself into the cliff side, it was magnetic and stuck to the metal in the air
ducts and was capable of carrying over 20 tons.
Finished, he looked up at Alex.
Smiling, she gave him the thumbs-up, saying, “The warrior is ready to play.”
He nodded in response and then
left the hotel suite. As he crossed the passed out bus boy, he flashed him the
finger.
Further down the hall, he came
to a stop next to a janitor’s cart. He wheeled it down the hallway until it was
directly underneath a grate in the air duct. Will deftly climbed on top of the
cart and, after removing a screwdriver from his pants, unscrewed the grate. As
quietly as possible, Will lifted himself into the grate and started down the
duct, using the memorized patterns in his head.
After several minutes of
twisting and turning down the narrow, winding, tin corridors of the air duct on
his hands and knees, Will finally came to a large steel grate preventing any
small animals or objects from disrupting the fan it protected. He took an end
of a rope attached to his belt (the other end was attached to a small
pulley-like motor strapped onto his belt) and tied it around the grate. Once
finished, he backed up a few inches and then tugged on the rope as hard as
possible; the grate didn’t budge. Satisfied, he awkwardly turned around and
continued crawling through the air duct system.
After endless weaving, Will
reached his destination: the drop. In front of him, the bottom of the air duct
disappeared, leaving Will with a perfect, fourteen story drop to the hotel’s
basement. On top of it all, the drop was surrounded by gleaming, grey
frictionless walls.
Will loosed some of the rope
from the motor on his belt, took a deep breath, and then pushed himself over
the edge of the duct.
His heart stopped for a split
second as he fell about two feet, then the rope taunted itself. Will almost
screamed aloud in pain as the harness the motor was attached to caught him in
the crotch. He dangled helplessly in the air for a minute or two, cursing
himself, waiting for the pain to go away. As it did, he fixed the positioning
on the harness so that it no longer straddled his crotch area. Then he gritted
his teeth, and began his descent to floor six, where Mr. Hinaki’s room awaited
him, eight stories beneath him.
Six…seven…eight Will
counted silently in his head. He stopped pulling rope out of the motor and with
an effort, swung himself into the duct. He quickly unclipped the motor from his
waistband and dropped it onto the air duct floor. Crawling forward on his hands
and knees, Will carefully slipped through the duct system, the memorized map in
his head leading the way.
After several minutes of
silence, Will found himself directly over the grate leading into Mr. Hinaki’s
hotel room. Beneath him, in the darkened room, the jetlag had infected Mr.
Hinaki greatly. He was asleep in the only bed in the room, the guards around
him slumped over in there chairs.
Will quickly took out another
magnetic motor, stuck it to the top of the air duct, then took the rope, which
had a small fish hook at one end, and bent the hook around one of the grate’s
bars. Then he removed a small hand tool from his waist band and placed it around
one of the screws. The machine was specially designed to unscrew a screw from
its back end instead of its head.
Two breathless minutes later as
he waited to see if any of the guards woke up from the falling screws, Will
raised the grate using the fish hook line and dropped it beside him. He then
attached a solid metal hook to the air duct ceiling and took out the rope from
the other motor on his waistband and tied it around the hook. Then, with a deep breath, Will slowly slid
into the opening.
He dangled in the air, sighing
with relief as the line held him. Will slowly lowered himself into the room
until his feet touched the blessed ground. He released the motor from his waist
and straightened up; everybody was asleep still. Will quickly got over to the
desk, took Mr. Hinaki’s wallet from the table, and placed a blank business card
with his room number written on ink on it in its place. He re-attached the
motor to his waistband and rose himself back up into the air duct.
Will quickly raced back to his
room, re-tracing his path through the air ducts. Twenty minutes later, he
collapsed on his bed in his hotel room. He lay there, panting for a moment,
before hands touched his chest and long hair fell into his face.
“Did you get it?” Alex asked, a
coy smile on her face.
Will held up the wallet. “Hell
yes.”
THE NEXT
MORNING
Will snorted awake as someone
pounded at his door.
“Fuckin’ interruptions.” He
grumbled and then rolled out of bed. He stumbled, bleary-eyed, over to the
door.
Five seconds later, he had the
barrel of a pistol pressed against his forehead. “Shit!” he swore.
Mr. Hinaki stood behind three
burly men, one of which had the pistol pressed against his head. They barged
into the room, the man with the gun forcing Will up against the wall.
Alex woke up and screamed,
falling out of bed, unconsciously holding the sheet around her naked body. One
of the burly men grabbed her and pinned her against the wall.
“Don’t touch her!” Will shouted.
The burly man cocked his pistol in warning and Will froze.
Mr. Hinaki strode into the room,
his face calm. Behind him, a fourth burly man entered the room, dragging a
sobbing Tommy Jones by his collar. Mr. Hinaki came up in front of Will and lit
a cigarette. He took a puff and then blew the smoke in Will’s face.
“Did you know those things can
kill you?” Will asked through the cloud of smoke. The man with the gun slammed
his knee into Will’s stomach. Will almost doubled over in pain, coughing, but
he was forced to stay standing because of the pistol pressed against his
forehead. Across the bed, Alex gave a small shriek.
“I am only going to ask you
once.” Mr. Hinaki said after taking another puff from his cigarrete. “Where is
my wallet?”
Will opened his mouth to answer,
but before he could, the man with the gun slammed the butt of the pistol into
his nose. Will coughed through a thick stream of blood before answering; his
nose wasn’t broken, but it sure hurt as hell.
“Bedside table.” He said
thickly. The third burly man, who had been watching the scene, quickly strode
over to the table. He grabbed the wallet and showed it to Mr. Hinaki.
Instantly, the two men released Will and Alex.
“You said you wanted a
demonstration.” Will said as they made to leave.
Mr. Hinaki stopped. He looked
over his shoulder at Will, who had not made an attempt to clean the blood from
his nose.
“You have four days, Mr.
Hemingway.” He finally said after a pent-up silence. “Mr. Orchismodo will
arrive in two days and leave on the fifth. I want that information before he
leaves.” Mr. Hinaki took another puff from his cigar. “I will also be replacing
your bell boy.”
Tommy’s eyes widened at this.
“NO, PLEASE, NO, I SWEAR – “ he was cut off as the burly man punched him in the
face. Tommy struggled under the man’s grip, blood and tears dripping from his
face.
“What will you do with him?”
Will asked, his blood cold.
“That,” Mr. Hinaki replied with
a small smile, “is none of your concern, unless you fail to bring me what I
want.” They dragged Tommy from the room, screaming pleads of mercy, before
slamming the door behind them. Tommy’s screams were silenced shortly after.
Will looked over at Alex, who
was shaking, her face dead-pale.
“Holy shit.”
THREE DAYS
LATER
“Your turn, Will!” John said,
laughing.
Will sat nervously in the hotel
lobby, barely paying attention to the conversation at hand. He had his hands in
the pockets of his hoodie, the hems of his jeans muffling the sound of his heel
tapping against the floor. He had purposefully chosen a seat that was close to
the conversation but also had a good view of the front doors of the hotel.
“Sorry?” he said, tearing his
eyes from the doorway, focusing on the conversation. John, Carlye, and a few of
their closest friends (which Will was surprised to find himself a part of) were
seated in comfy armchairs and sofas around a large, low table with drinks and
photos on it.
“High school story from the old
days.” John said cheerfully. “Give us a funny one!”
Will racked his brains. He hated
his high school experience and he didn’t remember most of it. Thankfully,
Carlye saved him.
“Aw, look at that.” She said,
picking up a picture. It was of her and Will in high school, and Will had
bright red streaks in his hair while Carlye had yellow.
Will laughed when he saw it. “I
completely forgot I had - “ His voice trailed off as he saw a man walk in
through the doors. He had brown hair, glasses, and a meek composure, as if he
wanted to not be thrown into the spotlight. It was Mr. Orchismodo.
Will watched him get onto the
elevator as he struggled to finish his sentence. Mr. Orchismodo looked at him,
making eye contact as Will finished. “ - hair like that.” Once Mr. Orchismodo
entered the elevator, Will turned his attention back to the conversation.
Half an hour later, he politely
excused himself, saying he had art curator duties to attend to. Once he was in
his room, he pulled out his things and got dressed up in his black suit. Alex
was out shopping in the town right now, but she would be back soon. Will
quickly gave her a call with the hotel phone and left her a message saying that
he was on the job. Once everything was in place and set up, he left, nodding to
the new bell boy (a thick man with gorilla arms, but the same name: Tommy
Jones) stationed at his room.
Will leaned over the air duct gate
over Mr. Orchismodo’s room. The air duct was a little stuffy tonight and Will
was having some trouble breathing through the ski mask. His sweat was sticking
to the suit, making him very itchy. He scratched his palm as he watched Mr.
Orchismodo.
Mr. Orchismodo was watching
television, his eyelids slowly drooping shut. It was almost one in the morning.
Will sucked in a deep breath and resisted the urge to itch his side.
Will was monitoring Mr.
Orchismodo’s sleeping patterns so that when tomorrow night came, he would be
prepared. He had done the same thing last night, where Mr. Orchismodo fell
asleep at just past one. Tonight, it looked like it would be the same thing,
meaning that Will would need to be ready to go by two, allowing enough time for
Mr. Orchismodo to be fast asleep.
Will was going to steal the
documents tomorrow night because Mr. Orchismodo would be leaving the following
morning. If Will stole the documents tonight, that would leave a full day for
Mr. Orchismodo to discover the documents were gone. By stealing the documents
tomorrow night, Will ensured that Mr. Orchismodo would be unaware of when the
documents were stolen, or even where they were stolen.
Mr. Orchismodo let out a loud
snort as his head fell back on the pillow, finally asleep. Will watched him
until two-thirty (during which Mr. Orchismodo did nothing but sleep) before
going back to the main air duct and started working his way back up to his
room.
As if on an impulse, he suddenly
dropped himself on the sixth floor air duct. He had memorized the whole air
duct system and there was something he wanted to check. He weaved his way
through the air duct system before reaching his destination.
Below him, Carlye Rance lay
peacefully in her bed, her head tilted to the side as her chest slowly rose and
fell with her breathing. John was in the room across the hall (due to some
religious ritual that Will didn’t understand). Will quickly and quietly
unscrewed the air grate and lowered himself into her room. He stared at
Carlye’s sleeping body for a moment, her peaceful state infected him briefly,
before he started searching the room. He tore apart everything quietly but took
great care to put everything back where it was.
Finally, he found it: the
picture of him and Carlye in high school. Will stared at it hungrily, trying to
decide what to do next. After long consideration, during which Will had brief
images of his high school days flit back to him, he took the photo, folded it
up, wrote “For you only” on the back, and then placed it inside her wallet.
Then, with one last look at Carlye, he left the room.
“When does his flight leave?”
Will asked Alex as he paced the living room, puffing on his electic cigarette.
“Nine-twenty A.M.” Alex
answered, skimming through some papers. “Do you want his flight number?”
Will waved it off. “No, that’s
not important.” He blew out some smoke and watched it curl into nothingness in
the air. “He’s leaving early, so we know he’s going to go to be early with
everything already packed.”
“Except for the documents.” Alex
interjected.
“Yes,” Will said, continuing to
pace, “He doesn’t trust that too much. He’s kept it in the room safe – “
“Forty-eight, twenty-two,
thirty-nine.” Alex read off a piece of paper; Will had seen Mr. Orchismodo put
the documents in the safe on the first night of his stay and had luckily caught
the numbers.
“Exactly.” Will finished, still
pacing. “Which means that I should be back by two-thirty.” Alex nodded during
this brief pause of conversation. “Now, Mr. Hinaki wants the documents by nine
o’clock, which gives us a six hour window to set up everything.”
“We also need an hour window
period to throw him off the trail.” Alex reminded him.
“Yes, that’s what the wedding’s
for.” Will nodded. “Did you get the dress?”
“Yes.”
“OK, so you go down for
breakfast and then go to the car. Maybe about seven-thirtyish. I go down at
nine, give Mr. Hinaki the documents, and then head back to the room and then
we’re done.” He looked at Alex. “Got it all?” she nodded. “Good, then let’s get
to work.”
THAT NIGHT
Will sat on the sofa in the
living room, staring at the blank TV screen. In his head, he was going through
the plan over and over, considering every possibility. He was dressed in the
black suit already, a leaf of paper strapped to his back by Velcro. Alex sat on
the sofa beside him, dressed in a bathing suit, a laptop with a scanner hooked
up to it in front of her.
“It’s time.” She told him. Will
nodded and remained sitting on the couch for a moment before getting up. He
kissed Alex before pulling the ski mask over his head and heading out into the
hallway.
Tommy Jones nodded at him as he
left. “Cutting it close.” Jones said, tapping his watch. Will ignored him.
Will hoisted himself into the
air duct system and began the long process of getting to Mr. Orchismodo’s room.
He dropped perfectly down the main air duct and got to Mr. Orchismodo’s room
just after one-thirty.
Back at the suite, Alex walked
out into the hallway, a bag in her hand. Tommy Jones stared at Alex’s body in a
bathing suit as Alex gave him a coy smile before turning into the elevator.
She called out to the bell boy, “Gone swimming!” and waved at him as the
elevator doors shut.
Tommy Jones stood in the
hallway, mentally arguing with himself. He had strict orders to watch the room,
but he was also told to follow anything suspicious. He stared at the door as he
argued with himself. That wasn’t normal, was it? To go swimming at such a late
hour? And what was in the bag?
Cursing himself, he ran to the
stairs and bounded down them, racing to get to the swimming pool.
Mr. Orchismodo was already
asleep. Will silently cursed himself. Mr. Orchismodo already being asleep could
throw the whole plan off. Will looked around the room, looking for some sort of
sign that would tell him when Mr. Orchismodo fell asleep. Nothing, apart from
the fact he left the TV on. Will sighed and watched the TV, glancing at his
watch every few minutes to see where he was on time.
It was almost two in the
morning. The bell boy rubbed his exhausted eyes. He sat in the main hotel
lobby, staring through the window at Alex as she swam. He was very tempted to
try and see what was in the bags, but he didn’t want to blow his cover.
Sighing, he tore open the bag of chips in front of him and ate, his eyes never
leaving Alex.
Will lightly let his feet touch
the floor. His heart was racing as he watched Mr. Orchismodo. A single wrong
move and Will would be dead. Will quietly stepped over to the safe, wincing as
the floor creaked. He took his eyes off of Mr. Orchismodo only long enough to
open the safe, take out the documents (which were in a manila folder) and
replace them with the leaf of blank paper on his back.
He shut the safe and then
hoisted himself back into the air duct and rushed back to his room. The bell
boy was gone, skillfully taken care of by Alex. Will got into his room and
threw the documents down on a table. Time was of the essence, and he didn’t
have much of it. He grabbed the two suitcases and backpack that held all of
their belongings, which they had packed earlier that day, and left the room,
which now held none of their belongings, save for the laptop and the scanner.
The bell boy watched as Alex
opened up the bag. Finally, finally he would see what was in it. He stood up
eagerly and watched as she…pulled out a towel and started drying herself. The
bell boy cursed himself and quickly ran back up to the room.
Will walked down the hallway
from the direction of the air vent and turned the corner, almost walking
headfirst into Tommy Jones, who stood nervously by the door.
“Did you get it?” the bell boy
asked. Will nodded in response. “Good.”
Will entered the room and
quickly shut the door behind him. He waited for fifteen seconds, then re-opened
the door. “Have you seen Alex?” he asked the bell boy.
“She said something about a
swimming pool.” The bell boy answered, all nervousness gone.
“OK, thanks.” Will said and shut
the door.
Will quickly fired up the
scanner and was in the process of scanning the documents to the laptop when
Alex came back.
“Did it work?” Will asked her.
“Perfectly.” Alex answered. “He
followed the bait, just like you said.”
“Good.” Will said. “Save those
documents and call up Reyncon Incorporated. We don’t want just Hinaki
enterprises getting this or else we’ll lose a high profit.”
“Yes, Arthur.” Alex said.
SIX HOURS
LATER
Will handed Mr. Hinaki a yellow
folder with the documents inside. “The money?” he asked. One of Mr. Hinaki’s
men handed him a laptop, which was confirming the transfer of seventy-five
million dollars to Arthur Hemingway’s account. Will looked at Mr. Hinaki and
smiled. “It’s been a pleasure Mr. Hinaki.” He said, bowing.
“As to you, Mr. Hemingway.” Mr.
Hinaki bowed as well. “Please, enjoy the remainder of your stay.”
Will nodded, though he knew that
was a lie. What he did know was that Tommy Jones was preparing to kill him the
second he stepped off the elevator. He also knew that all of his possessions
would be cleaned out of his room and replaced with drugs so his death would
look like a drug war hit.
But what Mr. Hinaki didn’t know
was that Will knew this. Mr. Hinaki also didn’t know that Will had cleaned out
the room of all his possessions and then removed every trace of Will or Alex
ever being there. What Mr. Hinaki didn’t know was that Will would be getting
off at floor six instead of fourteen and would be headed straight to his car.
Will waved goodbye to Mr. Hinaki
and then headed to the elevator.
The wedding was beautiful.
Carlye looked prettier than ever. John looked so happy next to his bride.
Everyone commented on how perfect they were together.
It was finally Will’s turn to
congratulate the bride and groom. They were at a church just after the
ceremony, packing up to head back to the hotel lobby.
“It was nice meeting you.” John
said to Will, grinning at him.
“Same to you.” Will responded,
grinning as well as Alex held onto his arm. He turned to Carlye. “It was nice
seeing you again.”
Carlye hugged him, momentarily
breaking contact between him and Alex. “Goodbye,” she said quietly, kissing him
on the cheek, “Arthur.”
And with that, a smile on his
face, Alex in arm, Mr. Arthur Hemingway left the wedding.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)