Parallel | Construction is a virtual artists' colony with two primary purposes:

1) to generate a storm of ideas that will widen our artistic experience and provide mutual inspiration to challenge us to keep improving our craft, and
2) to build an on-line working portfolio we can use to promote our art to publishers.

To Readers: Since we continue to grow each story, the latest additions are the most recently published. To go back to the beginning of a piece, look for its main title in earlier entries and start from there.

Thank you for traveling here.

Thursday, October 31, 2013

The Bookseller (in its short entirety)


Her hands laid out the three souls. Max Brand’s cowpoke permanently creased down the middle, Bradbury’s Illustrated Man rubbed clean of color, and a dirty, dirty girl masturbating behind a tiny black dot.

It was all she had come away with, but it was enough.

Scooping them up, the Bookseller turned back to the Sealy pillow-top stained and sagging and scattered with her gear. She lifted on her oiled coat and ran her fingers through her satchel. Three cans, bits of hardware and wire, tallow and wick, flint and steel, and her copy of The Illustrated Castle Book long since unbound, folded in quarters and wrapped carefully in thickly waxed paper. This she would never sell. Its colors were still bright.

She slung her blade across her back, then paused and glanced back through the broken Plaza window at the Smith Center across the tracks , its flanks scrawled and fire stained. Its dead spiked on rebar fasci. Waiting for souls.

She strode through the parking garage, scanning for trouble. Few lived here permanently: only a handful who catered to pilgrims who came during the Walk.

Then out into the open and over the tracks. The sun glared half-lidded, gray and hot above an omnipresent veil.

A pedestrian bridge stood over the tracks. A place for killers. The Bookseller stayed clear, rounding across the flat ground.

A clanging of scrap on scrap sounded as she crossed an unseen line. She stopped and turned her eyes to the tower, all symmetry and soot. A figure peeled itself from the shadowed doorway at the tower’s base and walked toward her, past the spiked dead. She waited.

He came, naked and thin and rubbed in fat and talc. A buyer-priest.

“Do you have them?”

“Yes.”

“And the price?”

“You know the price”

“Of course. Let me see them.”

The Bookseller pulled the cowpoke from her satchel.

“Is that all?”

“My payment?”

The buyer croaked once, then twice, then the third time loud.

Three rags carrying rags scuttled from the shadows and resolved into children, toothless and hunched and blessed with pain.

The buyer took the stracci strappati and held them out to the Bookseller. She took one and hefted it. The buyer split a gummed grin and nodded.

She tugged a corner, as if in disbelief. Rare, so rare. A grinder, a hearth coffeepot, and a vacuum-sealed bag. The Bookseller hurried them into her satchel. She handed Bradbury and masturbating girl over to the priest.

“Will you stay for the ritual?”

She never did. These books had souls alright, but they could no more raise the dead than could she. Stories from the east told of Lazarus tomes, and maybe they were true, but probably not. Books, she knew, help you quiet the walk to death, not stir you once you arrived.
Emily Kray copyright 2014

And tonight, like pictures she had seen in her dreams, she would sit over the city, sip coffee, and gaze at castles in the candlelight.



Sunday, October 13, 2013

Raised by Wolves #2: Play Date

Skye came over after school yesterday and wanted to play some ping pong. That caused a problem. Not the ping pong. She is a pretty good player, but not as good as I am, so we normally have some close games. I usually win, but not always. She is competitive and as self-motivated as a badger digging after whatever it is badgers dig around for. Hand-eye stuff just seems to come natural for  me.

Skye just dropped by, and that was the problem. I tell all my friends, or rather the few who are close enough and have known me for long enough to even be invited to our house, to always coordinate visits. Always.

I tell them my parents are anal about having everything planned ahead of time. My friends accept this, although more than once they've said some version of, "I don't know, Kevin, your mom and dad seem pretty cool. I think they wouldn't mind us coming by whenever."

"Yeah, but it might be your last visit," I usually reply. Let them think it's just hyperbole.

Anyway, I was in the kitchen, ours is an open floor plan ranch, and I thought I saw a shadow slant across the drapes, back lit by the late afternoon sun. Shadows that cut across drapes make me nervous, even when I shouldn't be.

I heard the thump-athump of sneakers on the porch, a quick rap of knuckles on the door, and Skye's shout, "Hey Kev, you in there jerkin' off?"

I cut around the kitchen counter and trotted to the door. I didn't want her to think I actually had been jerking off.

"Hi! I'm here to school your ass in ping-pong." She grinned and popped up on her toes, sliding her hips to the right and pantomiming a slow lob return with a paddle.

"Oh,come on Skye. You know I'll take you down. Besides, why didn't you call before you came over? You know . . ."

"It's all good, your mom and dad aren't home. I know 'cause you told me yesterday they were going to some kind of all day symposium thing and wouldn't be back until after dinner."

"Well, yeah, that's true, but still."

"Ohhhhh. I get it. You had a hot date with Rosie." Skye loosely curled her fist and made a vigorous stroking motion while squinting her face in comic ecstasy. "Don't worry, I'll leave you plenty of stroke time, after I kick your ass in ping-pong." She bounced past me and into the house and turned into the kitchen. "But first, a snack."

I sighed, shut the door and followed her into the kitchen and watched her root around for something to eat.

"Marshmallows!" Skye pulled the half-eaten bag from the cabinet and raised them over her head in triumph. "Let's go."

She stuffed a couple of marshmallows in her mouth and talked through them all the way down the basement stairs. "Ymph knomph Mmp Hanphommnu?"

"No. I have no idea what you are saying."

Skye jumped the last three steps, spun around and laughed, pointing to her stuffed cheeks. the light from upstairs formed a bright rectangle around her, like a spotlight on her own private stage. Skye liked being in the spotlight. Behind her, the basement was dark.

"Hey Skype, you need to reboot."

She rolled her eyes. "Somph" gulp "funny. Like I haven't heard that one, from you, before."

As I popped on the light switch, I remembered why I was still on edge, and it was far more than just being irritated at Skye for not having called before she came over.

 I hadn't gotten around to cleaning up yet.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Indigo Feed #2: The Leaving

Glya and I made disparate love last night. An act of disconnection. Pantil slept in her room.
Afterward, we walked naked to the kitchen together, our hands apart, and made beras on the stove.  We watched the steam whorls under the thin canister light and felt the dawn rise, proclaiming nothing.We looked up at each other. Her eyes, green and lost, abandoned me.

This would be easy if she hated me.

The silver shuttles seem silent beyond the broad terminal windows. Workers, small beneath the shuttles' bulk, are choreographed to the music of the daily launch cycle.  Around them, slow huffing steam condenses in the morning cold, coalescing into cumulus pillars then dissolving.

"NOW BOARDING orbital shuttle 0010 to L4"

My call.

I sit alone with only my small bag of things I cannot buy. I peel open the seal. Pantil looks up at me, her face painted by her hand. A self-portrait in tangible pigment on stiff clothboard. The smell of her hugs my coat.

I gather my things and stand. There are few others here for the early launches. I signal a passing cart and it tumbles over, perfunctory. I select breakfast. Another patron steps up and waits for me to finish. We glance at each other and nod. Her eyes are dark and her coat smells of Indigo.

I leave her at the cart and move along the terminal to the boarding area. A cluster of citizens gather and the screens over the gate snap on. A smiling, ethnically neutral host appears, his welcome prattle lost in the buzz of families and business travelers. The host slickers off and a view of the departure anteroom appears. The families look up now, exclaiming and waving and throwing embraces at relatives and friends on the screen. The relatives and friends exclaim and wave and throw embraces back.

Glya left me at the receiving station and said she would not see me go. But there she was, her hand covering her face, with Pantil at her side, near the back of the crowd. Pantil saw me, tugged at her mother and pointed at the screen on their side. She launched her hand in the air, waved, then pointed to her node device. I will wait for your ping, father.


I waved back to Pantil, threw her an embrace and mouthed a silent "I love you" to them both. Glya, removing her hand, mouthed back, "I know."

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