• 09Jun

    Continued from part 2…

    Varn! Look above you!

    Varn! Look above you!

    Varn’s heart skipped a beat as the mongrel man-thing let out a shrill, throaty keen, and he suddenly became quite aware of how unfortunate his situation was. The entwined knot of sleeping mutant bodies on the other side of the shelf began to rouse themselves and yip in curiosity. Varn estimated he had perhaps 30 seconds before the newly awakened mutants realized that breakfast was in their midst, and it was making off with one of their treasures. Varn stuffed the NX-769 6 Way Ultra Performance Car Speakers into his satchel and braced himself as the sentry mutant leapt from its top-shelf watchtower. Varn barely had enough time to bring his curved metal club up to defend himself as the beast crashed bodily into him, shoving him against the shelves behind him. His helmed head slammed against a beam as the supports for the shelf creaked with the impact, leaning back several inches before righting themselves. As Varn jammed the club into the mutant’s gnashing mouth and gripped one of its warty claws with his free hand, an idea came to him. Using the shelf behind him for leverage, he let go of the mutant’s wrist, grabbed the other end of the club, and flung himself forward as hard as he could.

    Letting go of the claw was a dangerous decision, and it earned him several nasty gouges as the monster flailed at him with feral intensity. Once the pitiful wretch was slammed into the shelf, though, it ceased its onslaught for a stunned moment. The shelf separating Varn and his combatant from the now riled and whooping mutant clan gave a mighty groan and began to tumble backwards, popping up mooring bolts and snapping aged girders. Once that first end of the shelves started tumbling, the rest followed suit with increasing speed, resulting in a cacophonous meeting of metal shelves and unprepared mutant flesh.

    Most of the cannibalistic devils were crushed, though some were merely pinned. Varn took the opportunity to lay several vicious hammer blows to the nearby mutant’s skull before it could stand back up, scattering nearly a dozen needle-like fangs around the dusty floor. Without looking back Varn sprinted for the door, grabbing another small box from a countertop near the front. He didn’t know what it contained, but he figured that if he couldn’t use it, he could perhaps trade with it back in town. This trek had been treacherous enough that he felt deserved a little more compensation, even if it meant stealing more ancient artifacts from the Sacred Tomb of the Brothers Pep. With a final burst of effort, Varn threw his shoulder into the entry door, splintering the dry-rotten boards and bursting out into the welcoming sunlight.

    Feeling the sun-baked sand under his body, Varn blindly scrambled another thirty paces and vaulted behind one of the rusted metal shells that populated the fenced in ground before the Temple of the Pep Boys and waited for his eyes to adjust to the glaring light of day. The parcel he grabbed on the way out joined the spee kurrz in his satchel, and after catching his breath, Varn stood up and made sure he wasn’t followed. He could see movement in the doorway, and a few angry cries, but the wounded mutants didn’t seem to fancy their chances when not fighting on their own terms. Even though well-stocked temples of artifice were uncommon and deserving of respect, Varn removed his helmet and smiled to himself as he heard more shelves toppling in a domino effect. He really did hate mutants.

    *****

    Back in the town, all the folk cheered the bloodied hero’s return. A small girl ran up to him with a waterskin, which he thanked her for and drank from thirstily. He entered Fidik’s clocktower and upended his satchel on the sage’s workbench.

    “Fidik!” he bellowed in exhaustion before slumping into a hammock chair. “Fidik! I have your artifact! Yours, and one of my own.” The wild eyed wise man rapidly took each step down his wrought iron spiral staircase and ran over to study the contents of the boxes.

    “Marvelous, Varn! Simply marvelous! You truly are as good as they say! Oh, I know just the thing to do with your artifact, too. You’ll love it.”

    “I’m sure I will, wizard, but I still have a care to be paid for my trouble. These claw wounds didn’t come from horseflies, you know.”

    “Yes, yes, of course, the mayor should have your payment. See him when you’re ready to leave. Ah, Varn, you really have come through for us. These spee kurrz are even better than the NX-770 3 Way High Performance Speakers the town has relied upon for years. With these, I can keep the mutants farther away from the walls than ever before.”

    “That is good news, Fidik. By the way, the helm you gave me worked out very well. Had I not been wearing it, I would have been knocked senseless when that mutant landed on me, and I’d be in the stomachs of a herd of ghouls. So, what is the nature of the second treasure I obtained?”

    Fidik looked the smaller box over again. “It’s perfect for a man such as yourself. It’s called the NX-712 Mini Pocket Radio. It will allow you to hear the voices of men who are not present. Many of us wise men use similar magic to communicate over great distances. I will inscribe on this device the arcane coordinates and times at which you may find my voice, as well as those which will let you conjur the sounds that drive away mutants. I will not always be speaking, but the warding song that repels beasts can be found at all times, though I fear my magic can only project it as far as the red hills. I send it from this.” Fidik placed his hand on a strange looking contraption with a long, thin, metal protrusion extending from the top. “It is called the Hamray Dio.”

    Varn was intrigued, even though Fidik tended to babble. “Aye, Fidik, I do not understand but half of what you’ve said, but I trust it does what you say it does, and I am both grateful and impressed. Any magic that lets me avoid mutants is a magic I can learn to love.”

    “So, Varn,” spoke the sorcerer. “Now that you’re here, how long do you think you’ll stay? The town can always use a man of your skill and might.”

    “Oh, who can say, Fidik. Perhaps until my wounds heal. But not long. My legs will grow restless and my heart forever yearns to see the new and the miraculous. I hear that if one travels west from here, they can see so much water in one place that the eye cannot see the opposing shore. I should very much like to see such a spectacle, if it exists.”

    Fidik nodded thoughtfully. “And if it exists, Varn, I am sure you will see it.”

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  • 03Jun

    Continued from yesterday…

    The inside of the Temple of Pep was dark, and the few cracks in the boarded up windows cast solid beams of light through air choked with dust. Varn surveyed the grounds before him. In the gloomy half-light, he could make out dozens of tall shelves carving the area into narrow hallways. He didn’t like how tactically disadvantageous the layout was. He could walk right onto a killing floor without realizing it; run through with a score of spear thrusts through the shelves or coated in burning oil from above. With a heavy sigh of resignation and determination, Varn set one foot in front of the other.

    “Now where in this blasted place do they keep the spee kurrz,” Varn wondered. He could see all manner of sand-caked packages on the shelves. It would be the work of 10 men to go through them all in a day. With a stroke of luck, then, Varn saw signs at the tops of the shelves. He could not read the runes of the Old Age, but he did recognize one of the signs as bearing some of the same marks as his box top. He sheathed his club and pulled the parchment out of his satchel. Scanning the faded cardboard, he smirked at his own cleverness when he saw the symbols that matched the sign. He held the box top up to the sign to compare. Some of the symbols had worn off of the sign, but even with the missing runes he could see that “CA_ SPE_K_RS” was a reasonable match for “car speakers” on his box top, so down the hall he went.

    Boxes of many shapes and sizes littered the floor and shelves. Some were empty, some had their contents strewn about the ground in shattered fragments. As he searched the shelves for the closest match to his box top, his ears pricked up in warning. Breathing. He could hear the breathing of… several things. Gingerly, Varn pushed a stack of boxes to the side and peered through the shelf. “Of course,” he thought. “Of course the mutants are sleeping in a large pile on the other side of the one shelf I need to search. My luck would have it no other way.

    True enough, he could see almost 20 bestial, malformed bodies sleeping in a dogpile that stank of sweat and dry blood. They wore ragged tatters of stolen clothing if they wore anything at all, and gelatinous saliva oozed from slack mouths too full of gnarled teeth to ever close properly. Glossy, lidless, black fish eyes stared at nothing and everything while slow, shallow breaths were the only thing helping reassure Varn that they were in fact asleep.

    “This doesn’t change anything,” Varn told himself with some concern. “Just get the artifact and get out of here.” Quickly, he peered over the boxes again, moving a few with quiet precision. Finally, he found one that looked close enough and in decent enough condition that he could be reasonably certain Fidik wouldn’t ask him to come back and do this all again. The only problem was that it was on the far side of the shelf. The side the mutants were sleeping on.

    Varn unsheathed his hooked club and, bracing himself against the wobbly shelf, stretched it forward until he could catch the lip of the box with the hook. The package made a soft scraping sound as Varn slowly pulled it closer to him; every inch feeling like a mile, every scrape sounding like a lion’s roar. At last, with the box close enough for his fingertips to touch, he grabbed the box and exhaled a breath he hadn’t been aware he was holding.

    Had he been able to read the ancient sigils on the box, he’d have seen it contained the NX-769 6 Way Ultra Performance Car Speaker, a model even more impressive than the one it was replacing. With a thicker 30mm high temperature aluminum voice coil, 40 oz magnet, and 30-22KHZ frequency response, the NX-769 had more power and greater range with which to blast the frequencies that were untenable to mutant ears. The rubber butyl surrounded edge would ensure that this speaker kept the village safe for many more years.

    The artifact was in his possession, and all he had stirred was dust. Unfortunately, dust was still too much, and every muscle in Varn’s body clenched as he heard one of the mutants in the pile stir in a fit of coughs. With bated breath Varn stood completely still in the shadows of the hall, waiting to see if the creature would go back to sleep. After what felt like forever, he pushed himself onward in the hopes that silence meant safety. As he approached the last few feet of the hallway, something told him to look up.

    A mutant perched atop the high shelf, cocking its head and examining Varn with an appraising eye. Varn tightened his grip on his hooked club and the boxed artifact as the mutant reared it’s head back and screeched.

    to be continued!

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  • 02Jun

    Varn craned a shading hand over his squinting eyes and peered at the ruins baking under the midday sun. Gravel and salty earth crunched under his animal-skin and tire-rubber booted feet as he descended the hillside nestling the site. He had journeyed past this ruin many times, but since it lacked food and was said to be a hallowed place of magic and artifice by the sages who studied the Old World, he had never given it much notice. Simply another testament to the world that came before the one he lived in now; a scar from a long gone era of wonders and technology.

    This time, however, the battle-hardened vagabond had a reason to explore the dilapidated cube and the strange metal shells sprawling before it. He had been hired by a local village to retrieve something called “spee kurrz.” The village was fortunate enough to have a wise man in it. Such warlocks were rare, and incredibly valuable. They knew how to read the runes of the Old Age, which could be used to steal alchemical and healing secrets from ancient tomes like the legendary Manual of Merck.

    Varn surveyed the ruins with a wary eye. The windows of the aged structure were boarded up. This likely meant the place was sometimes used as a daytime refuge for mutants, who as a whole were quite dubious of the sun. Varn was safe enough under the boiling rays, but mutants were occasionally known to briefly leave their shade if food or loot was nearby and the opportunity was ripe. He drew his hooked, metal club, pulled his new helmet onto his head, and carefully, quietly crept up to the entryway.

    Varn liked Fidik, the town wise man who had this morning dispatched him to the ruins. Normally, Varn was immediately distrustful of sorcerers, but Fidik had a kind and helpful manner to him. He even gave Varn his new helmet, cobbled together from the headgear of ancient clan of sportsman/gladiators known as Raiders, and something called a Welder’s Mask. Fidik told Varn of Welders, an ancient caste of men who could shape fire and metal as easily as clay. Feeling his thoughts wander, Varn pulled them back to the task at hand, and the description of the item that Fidik had given him.

    “Varn, I will need you to venture into the Temple of The Pep Boys, marked by heads of the Brothers Three,” Fidik had said. “In this place, I will need you to find artifacts known as ’spee kurrz.’ I fear the ones we have been using here to drive off the mutants and their night raids are close to failing. The 3-Way High Performance Car Speakers, with their injection molded polypropylene cone and high temperature aluminum voice coil, have kept us safe for many more years than we could ever have hoped for. Unfortunately, they were damaged two moons ago in a mutant raid. Without their magic, I can not produce the sounds that cause the mutants to flee. Please, Varn. The entire community is depending on you returning with the spee kurrz.”

    Varn conjured to mind the shape of the objects, as well as the admonition that they may be hidden in some manner of package. The men of the Old Age seemed to be preoccupied with placing things in boxes, a predilection which had always confused Varn. He ran his free hand along the pouches at his waste, making sure he still had the front panel of the box Fidik had given him from the failing spee kurrz. Fidik said that as long as the box or its contents looked similar to that parchment, the artifact should work.

    Varn slid the protective plate over his face, gently pushed the door open, and with his instincts percolating in anticipation, entered the dark, dusty air of the Temple of the Three Brothers.

    to be continued!

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  • 27May

    You know those days when you wake up with a spring in your step, drive to your place of employment while whistling a happy tune, and settle in to your work rhythm before having your parade dampened with the realization that it’s not the day you thought it was? The scientific term for that experience is “Thursday.” Sorry if we’re the ones that are breaking the “Hey buddy, it’s not Friday yet” news to you, but it was bound to happen eventually. Or even worse, what if you didn’t figure it out all day and just never showed up for work tomorrow? That probably wouldn’t fly too well with your coworkers. You should be thanking us.

    What can you do, then, to stave off the crippling wave of betrayal that threatens to wash over you in light of such a terrible discovery? What in the world could possibly keep you from cursing the heavens that have forsaken you, weeping in the darkness, and defenestrating yourself? (”Defenestrate” is the actual word for “ejection from a window.” Yes, apparently this act was common enough at some point that it was necessary to create a word for it.)

    Well, it really boils down to having something to look forward to. Studies have shown that elderly folks can stave off the icy claw of the reaper for a considerable amount of time if they have some kind of obligation or goal, like regular meetings with friends at a community center, seeing a grandchild graduate, finishing a book, and the like. Having something to look forward to is pretty much the principle reason anyone gets out of bed, ever. Think how terrible life would be if every morning you woke up to the realization that the day can only be equal to or worse than the day before. Yeah, pretty bleak.

    So as you’re sitting here, feeling your willpower fade, think about some of the things you’re looking forward to at the end of the day. Thursday is, of course, a great day for TV. A lot of networks put their best stuff on Thursdays, so you can anticipate sitting on your comfy couch, flipping on your 26″ LCD HDTV, and unwinding. You can plan out what you’re going to make for dinner. You can look forward to playing some music and sitting in a bathtub or spa. You can snuggle your significant other. You can play with your dog. What you can not do is let Thursday win. That smug jerk of a day is always sitting there, like a lunchtime bully, waiting to pummel you a little bit before you get to Friday. Don’t give it the satisfaction of beating you.

    Don’t worry about Friday. Friday provides its own motivation. You just need to make it that far. We believe in you.

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  • 25May

    … life can be pretty ruff (Oh, hush. You’d have made that pun if you were in our shoes, too). For instance, do you know when the full moon is this month? Unless you’re an astronomer, an astrologist, or some other type of moon enthusiast, probably not. Werewolves don’t have the option of not knowing when the moon is full. They have to be super on top of that (it’s in two days, by the way). Otherwise they’re gonna wake up with a terrible headache, probably naked, with the worst case scenario being several unexplained murders and their best case scenario being something along the lines of that Michael J. Fox movie Teen Wolf. We don’t know if you’ve seen Teen Wolf, but it may be the only time in recorded history where the best case scenario is somehow worse than the worst case scenario.

    So what can you do when the full moon looms and your lycanthropic heritage threatens to burst forth, destroying everything you hold dear? Pretty easy, actually. Just do the same thing you’re probably doing a couple other nights a week already. Pull down the curtains, sit on the couch, and watch something on your HD LCD TV. Or pop in a movie, cause it plays DVDs, too. And no, don’t do the “Oh, hey, it’s pretty foggy out, I think I’ll risk it” thing, cause anyone who’s seen a werewolf movie knows that only ends one way, and it’s not well.

    Now, just because you bear a biological compulsion that transforms you into a hair-trigger wildcard every month doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy travel. Girls have been dealing with a similar process since the dawn of time, and you don’t see them complaining about it. It just requires planning, whether that planning is knowing which weeks to not wear a bathing suit or what steps to take to mitigate homicidal rampages. This is why studies have shown that RVs are the favorite method of travel for the werewolf community.

    RVs allow you to travel on your terms. You decide when and where to stop, as well as for how long. This works out great when you’re too far from town to reach a hotel before the moon comes out. Just do the same thing you would do at home; cover the windows and watch something on your 12 volt HD LCD TV/DVD Player. Bring some DVDs, for sure, just in case you don’t get reception where you parked. You don’t want to risk getting bored and peeking out the window.

    Yes, in this day and age of modern conveniences, lycanthropy is no longer the unbearable, life-destroying curse it used to be. With a little planning and dedication, you can go several years at a time without mauling and maiming frightened villagers. Hey, maybe you should try out for a professional ball team! If they’ll look the other way for juicing, they’ll probably look the other way for supernatural curses.

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  • 06May

    Okay, so we’re going to present a couple of scenarios, and you have to decide which one you’d rather be in.

    Situation the First:

    You slowly wake up as the midmorning sun peaks between your blinds and crawls across your face. Stretching, yawning, and pulling the pillow over your face does nothing to send you back to slumberland, and good thing, too. Your sleep-addled brain finally puts two and two together to realize that if the sun is in your face, you done slept in and slept in bad. Your eyes dart to the ticking wall clock and go wide when they see it’s a quarter past ten.

    “Crap,” you think. “I have to pick mom up from the airport in 15 minutes. My sister’s wedding is in three hours!”

    You proceed to leap out of bed, still wound up in your sheets, and crumple to the ground in a heap. After another minute of extricating yourself from the tangle, you grab yesterday’s clothes off the top of the hamper and throw them on while simultaneously brushing your teeth; one leg in your pants, the other curled up and attempting to work their way through twisted fabric.

    You dash out of your house in record time, slamming the door behind you and running all the way to the car before realizing that, in your haste, you left your keys and phone locked inside your house. As you frantically try to climb to the balcony in the hopes that you left the sliding door unlocked, you slip and your foot lands squarely in a deep patch of mud. This doesn’t help you gain traction as you tenaciously continue attempting an ascent. At last, after 15 minutes of trying, success! You pant a sigh of relief, only to find that the sliding door is, in fact, locked.

    Just as you’re about to desperately break the second floor window with a potted plant, you hear a voice from below speak.

    “Yeah, I wouldn’t do that if I were you.” The voice comes from a police officer. “We got a call regarding a potential breaking and entering at this residence, and it seems we’ve found it. If you would kindly come down from there, we have a few questions we’d like to ask you.”

    Your heart sinks. You already know what happened. You look over the fence and see your elderly, nearsighted neighbor standing in her upstairs window, clutching her phone for dear life and staring at you.

    “Officer, I can explain. I live here and I’m locked out,” you offer helpfully.

    He nods thoughtfully. “Okay. You got some identification to prove it?”

    “Ah… well…” Your posture slumps as you realize it’s on your kitchen counter. “I think I left inside.”

    “I see, I see,” the officer replies. “You know, I think we’d better continue this conversation down at the station.”

    Your face falls and you climb down from the balcony with a little difficulty. As you sit in the back of the squad car en route to the police station, it occurs to you that your underwear is on backwards.

    Situation the Second:

    Your mind sheds the fuzz of sleep as soft music slowly and gently brings you into the waking world. You sit up and stretch before pressing the “off” button on your CD player/radio digital alarm clock. Seven o’clock in the morning. Perfect. You slouch out of bed and into a robe and slippers, make some coffee and eggs, and read the newspaper. After a relaxing shower, you put on some respectable looking clothes to pick mom up from the airport. You have some extra time, so you swing by a flower shop to get her a bouquet of stargazers (her favorite).

    Today is your sister’s wedding, and you’re really looking forward to seeing all your family and dancing the night away. What a great start to a great day.

    Aaaand scene.

    The message here is simple: the alarm clock is the only thing separating the civilized human from the caged animal. Don’t let your lack of alarm condemn you to a life of misery and slapstick tragedy.

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  • 28Apr

    Ever heard of Arthur C. Clarke? He was a science fiction author, and a noteworthy one at that. One of his many claims to fame was the creation of what came to be known as “Clarke’s Three Laws.” They go like this:

    1. When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong.
    2. The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible.
    3. Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

    Pretty good stuff, right? Kind of inspirational, too. You should check him out. In any case, it’s #3 we’re interested in this time. Look around you. You can probably see several mundane things that every one of us takes for granted every day. A television. A computer. A clock. A cell phone. None of these things seem especially magical, in all likelihood. However, think about it from the perspective of someone born 100, 500, or 1,000 years ago. Those things would appear beyond rational explanation!

    Let’s take, by way of example, this Portable DVD Player/Stereo. Even by today’s standards, it’s got a pretty crazy amount of stuff going on. LCD screen, memory slot, takes USB, plays DVDs, is also a stereo… Nothing to sneeze at. Now let’s view it through the eyes of some hapless, flyblown dirt farmer from the Dark Ages.

    “Lo, I saw a man holding what appeared to be an oddly shaped silver stone. In its center was a crystal ball of some manner. The man ran his fingers over the runes atop the stone, and I saw it open itself before him! He placed a circular mirror into the opening, and the stone once again sealed itself. As he manipulated the arcane symbols on the stone, the crystal ball conjured images of tiny people! They moved about and spoke, as though this magic mirror were showing the events of some far distant place. Shortly after, he produced a small talisman, which he inserted into the stone. From a distance, he produced a strange wand and used it to summon the sounds of beautiful music from the stone. Believe my story or believe it a flight of fancy; I care not. ‘Twas the most astounding of magics I witnessed that day.”

    For those who couldn’t tell, this poor, toothless hayseed was trying to describe putting a DVD in the player and watching it, then plugging in a USB stick and playing music from it using the remote control. We probably blew his mind clear out of his head. No one will ever believe a story like that, and he’ll be shunned from his community as a heretic and possibly a sorcerer. Ha! Oh, the Dark Ages. What won’t you condemn as heresy?

    So take a minute and appreciate just how much magic you have around you! Even Merlin would be jealous.

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  • 16Apr

    Part 1

    Part 2

    Part 3

    And now: the finale!

    As you drive up a tall, wide overpass, the music on the radio goes quiet and the voice you were hoping to hear begins to vibrate from the speakers. You pull over to the side of the road, notice how pretty the night sky is when there aren’t a bunch of headlights going by, and breathe a sigh of relief as the voice begins talking about safe zones.

    “This is an emergency broadcast. The following counties have been quarantined.”

    Your heart sinks as you hear a laundry list of familiar places. This infection really came out of the blue, and it seems no one was ready for it.

    “If you are listening to this from inside a quarantine zone, find a secure location and stay there until further notice. If you are listening to this from outside a quarantine zone, and you have not already been evacuated by military personnel, report to one of the following safe zones as soon as possible. They are well fortified, well stocked, and checking for infection. They are, for the moment, the safest place you can be during this crisis.”

    The voice then proceeds to list off several locations -a few military bases, a few ranch houses, an outlet mall, a quarry- that are scattered about the region. You recognize the name of a base, and make up your mind to head to it immediately. You should have just enough gas. Hopefully. However, your train of thought is interrupted when a large RV careens by you, banking dangerously back and forth between the retaining walls of the overpass. Before toppling over the rail, it scrapes to a stop at the overpass’ highest point; the right side of the rig flush with the steep drop off. You throw your car into drive and quickly pull up to the vehicle to investigate. The RV has Auto Club and Good Sam Club stickers on it.

    You can hear the sounds of struggle inside the rig, and decide to enter. There’s a fellow that looks like warm-weather Santa Claus at the wheel, and he’s pinned down by a snarling man with pasty skin. The Santa Clause guy is managing to keep the beast’s snapping jaws from taking a chunk out of him, but just barely. He sees you and bellows (in the politest bellow you’ve ever heard) “Think you could gimme a hand!?” You look around for something solid to swing, pick up a nearby clock radio, and give the infected drone a full-force braining. Stunned by the blow, the ghoul relents just long enough for Santa to shove it out the open passenger window, where it enjoys a brief, exciting tour of gravity.

    “Whew! Thanks, partner! I need to choose my travel-mates better. Picked him up a few hours ago, said he just had a stomach ache. I knew he’d been in the bathroom too long…”

    You make your introductions, check yourselves for bite marks, and find out you were both headed to the same place. After siphoning your gas into his tank and bringing your gear in, you and Santa head down the road to safety. He says he gets satellite, so you flip on his 22″ 12 volt TV and flip around for news. From what you can gather, the contagion has pretty much been contained to the continental United States. You just missed the President speaking from aboard Air Force One, but pay rapt attention when an official begins detailing plans to get the crisis under control. You turn up the volume for Santa’s benefit.

    “…and so far, all of the secondary tests have confirmed what we’ve found in our preliminary research. We repeat: people infected with the virus can not bear to come into contact with large doses of sodium. Salt. If you have any salt, be it table salt, sea salt, some manner of chemical or industrial sodium processing agents, you can dilute it in water and provide yourself with a very effective defense. We’re currently working on manufacturing, distributing, and implementing large amounts of such a sodium solution.”

    You and Santa can barely believe your ears. Salt. Guess the infected won’t be visiting the ocean any time soon. It suddenly dawns on you that TV can be pretty useful sometimes.

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  • 15Apr

    First this happened.

    Then this happened.

    Now this is happening.

    You’re laying on your sleeping bag, listening to the music on the radio, when all of sudden you notice a gnarled, human silhouette framed by the still-open hatch. “How could I have forgotten to close the hatch!?” you think as you sit bolt upright. As soon as you do, the shadow is gone. You realize you’d been sleeping. The hatch is still open, you notice, but a look around with the flashlight tells you you’re still alone. How long have you slept? It’s night out, but you notice it’s still oddly well lit. Your watch tells you it’s past midnight, which means you missed the directions to the safe zone. Hopefully they repeat the information hourly.

    You go to close the hatch, but curiosity compels you to investigate the nature of the light outside. You take a step out onto the exterior walkway, and stop cold in your tracks. That wasn’t a maintenance building. It was a Ranger’s station, and there are bright spotlights pointing directly at your water tower, illuminating the name of the town. What was once the ideal hiding place has now become the most visible monument for thirty miles, and the dozen or so confused and sick looking people shambling around the grounds seem to back that theory up. You briefly wonder if they’re infected, and as one of them spots you and lets out an inhuman wail, you stop wondering. The others turn to face you and start clumsily ascending the scaffolding and ladder. You gotta think fast.

    You need to get to your car while simultaneously getting them away from it. You hurriedly look around the environment and formulate a plan. You see speakers on poles dotting the grounds, which means there’s probably a microphone inside the station. You run back into the tower, hastily pack up your B.O.B., and throw it over your shoulder. You remember to grab the keyring that got you into the tower, as it will probably get you into the Ranger’s shack. Your portable radio has served you well, but you need a distraction, so you take the headphones out, crank the volume as loud as it will go, and hide it in the corner. The spotlights cast some deep shadows on the back of the water tower, so you quietly climb down into a concealed area of the scaffolding and wait for enough of your pursuers to head into the hatch looking for the source of the sound.

    Once the ground below you has cleared a bit, you quickly descend the scaffolds only to see more of the lumbering ghouls around your car. You bolt to the station door, fumble with the keys until you find the right one, and slam it behind you. You maybe have thirty seconds before you’re noticed, so you frantically scan for a microphone. There, you spot it, right next the audio system. The microphones are wireless, which is good news, because when you spot a stereo, some gasoline canisters, and a large propane tank, you decide to alter the plan. But first things first. You flip on the audio system, turn on a mic, and hit the switch labeled “Outdoor P.A. System.”

    “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star” is all your brain can come up with, so you start singing it as you grab a random CD off the desk and pop it into the wall mounted stereo. The infected outside start looking around for the source of the voice, which keeps them from storming the station just yet. Now for the grand finale. After dumping a couple gas cans onto the floor and bashing the valve open on the tank, you are greeted by the high pressure hiss of propane escaping. You fish around your B.O.B. for a Zippo, light it, and leave it to burn on the highest shelf. You open the front door, max the volume on the stereo, stop singing, and hit “play.” Ear splitting decibels draw the attention of every creature in the area as you climb out the back window and run to your car.

    Infected press into the shack as you peel out down the road. Once you’re back on the main highway, you laugh with relief at your harrowing escape. You turn on your car stereo (only fifteen minutes before the next report, hopefully), push the speakers to the limit, and smile as your rear view mirror reflects a bright orange fireball next to a well lit water tower.

    (So just how the heck do you stop these things, anyway?)

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  • 08Mar

    What’s the difference between a musician and a crazed hobo yelling wildly on a street corner? The musician has the good sense to record what he’s doing. Also, probably amount of teeth and number of days since their last shower, though if you’ve ever been in a band with some really dedicated music guys, you know that the latter isn’t always true.

    The crazy thing, aside from the hobo, is that even when you’re flat broke, you can still afford some pretty awesome microphones to record or broadcast the avant garde stylings of your folk-techno-clogdance fusion band. Take this one, for instance. Dirt cheap, highly sensitive, cool looking, and comes with all of the stuff you need to rock out. Or, if you dig through your sofa cushions and find another couple bucks, you can go wireless. Think of how nice it will be to bust some Van Halen-style jumping splits during a high note without worrying about your mic cord snagging your band mate’s Jamaican steel drum set and knocking down everything in your garage.

    In this modern day era of music studios in a laptop and easy collaboration between musicians regardless of geographic location, you really have no excuse not to tap into that inner Beethoven (or that inner Johnny Rotten, whichever) and let your creativity out into the world. Or, you could go back to yelling on the street corner about the government agencies that used space lasers to steal your pants. Your call.

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