Archive for ‘fire’

05/29/2013

Actinal

by Pierce Nahigyan

The waves caressed the deck like a violent lover. The storm tossed the longship deeper into her arms, rain splattering the faces of the men on the oars, wet to the very roots of them, their bones soggy and their backs sore, deeper into the black sea, the black sky rolling over them like the ecstasies of a whore’s promises turned inside out. Lightning cracked and lit the faces of the men in the longship. Inside the sheets of wind and the ripped bedding of the flashing night, rose a howling, a gong, growing. Olaf pulled himself from his oar and vomited behind his bench; the sea slopped over the boards and flushed it away; he rowed, and vomited; the sea struck him, struck the deck. The man beside him vomited in his lap. Olaf grunted, and heaved, and rowed. They all rowed. The gong tolled on.

The longship crested a black swell. They glimpsed the mountain behind it only as a heap rolling forth from shadow, and when the lightning flared again it was no mountain but a wave, a coursing wave falling towards them, large as the long lost sky.

The men screamed. Their voices were added to the hail that smashed the deck, the thunder, the screaming gale, and the low of the gong. But the wave broke. It shattered to pieces, an explosion at its crest marking it not as a tidal force but the risen bubble of a monstrous fish. It leapt from the ocean, titanic, the electric night catching its metallic skin. A bolt of lightning tore the sky and found the beast, and turning, the men beheld its awful face.

Sparks showered off its silver tentacles. The ship caught fire. Lit by the flames, the leviathan’s eyes glimmered. The eyes covered its metal arms. A blubberous blowhole spat from either shoulder. Mouths gaped in its tentacles like puckered acetabula. Joined in chorus, the mouths resounded like a thrashing gong. And high above the ragged sail shined a monstrous smile, enclosed by incisors that dwarfed the largest of the men. The mouth was lodged in the center of its torso, where bright tentacles flowered from its lips like rubbery moustaches. The tentacles reached for their figurehead, the snarling dragon.

The men threw themselves into the water to escape the flame and demon. Olaf vomited into his mate’s lap and reached down into the salty pool around his ankles to wash out his mouth. He stood, as the ship tipped under the giant’s actinal grin, and drew his sword from his belt. He ran, the longship cracking, the fire parading past, and leaped into the storm, onto the metallic skin of the leviathan. The central jaws opened wide, and Olaf plunged his sword into the spongey gumline.

He sawed his blade down between the teeth and the beasts’s twelve copper mouths blared. A hand large enough to crush an elephant grabbed him and cast him to the sky, to the charged air. He vomited as he spun, and held onto his sword. Lightning struck the blade and sent him plummeting to the sea, hot as a falling star. He smote the demon in its largest eye, the green opal that stared from its throat.

His boots athwart its shoulder, his hands smoking, he dug his heel into the lip of its left blowhole and slashed open the vitreous humor. The jellied ichor erupted from the lens. The thunder rolled on, men drowning below. He hacked at the eye, the lid around it, and the monster beneath his feet spun in the battering waves. “Odin, see Olaf, son of Erik, son of Cuthbert!” Olaf bellowed. “Take me to Valhalla! For I die here, and take this beast to thee!” He stabbed through the pupil into the muscles of the throat. In its chest, the central mouth moaned.

The hand grabbed for him wildly, but he swung himself down the creature’s clavicle. The sword dragged behind him and caught on the metallic skin. The creature’s other hand ripped him savagely from its body. “Olaf? Son of Erik? Son of Cuthbert?” the mouths roared.

“Aye!” Olaf cried.

The monster shrieked loud enough to drown the pounding waves and began to crush him. But so loud did it roar that it missed the shattering of the king plank in the longship’s final demolition. Carried by the rising storm, the fiery ship sailed over the monster’s central jaw, ramming its throat with its splintering timbers. The flames broke deep inside its lungs. Its metal body aglow, it reeled, casting Olaf out into the waves and convulsing, its body twisting in the crackling thunderstorm, turning and collapsing. Olaf was unconscious and adrift and so he did not see, but the monster did not sink. It absorbed the ship and the pocket of ocean that girded its toothy belly, and tore down the sky behind it, falling out of the world and leaving the ocean to fill in the hole left by its frenzied escape.

05/17/2013

Acrotism

by Pierce Nahigyan

The fourth date is really the turning point. First date, second date, you’re getting into the groove, learning what she likes, hitting the night spots. The third date, if you get to the third date, is more fun, looser, more relaxed. Might even get lucky. Fourth date’s my wall.

See, the fourth date, not long after the third date, is a leisurely thing, a pre-planned picnic, a museum; it’s a weekend thing. It’s a daytime thing.

You can hide the paleness under bar lights, you can excuse sharp kisses with passion. In bed you can distract her from your acrotism with mood music of a bass-driven nature. Gone in the morning? Commitment issues.

Bursting into flames on the fourth date is a romantic faux pas.

Don’t say your heart bleeds for me. You’ll just make me hungry.

04/12/2013

Acrid

by Pierce Nahigyan

The bowel of the giant was a nasty landscape of gray tissue, polyps as large as wild mushrooms, and suppurating, cabin-sized ulcers. The spongey floor of the intestine was covered in worms of varying sizes, and varying temperaments. Dolph quickly learned that the thinnest, palest worms misliked being stepped on and would rear back and rotate a slimy ring of bloody teeth in retaliation. Thankfully (inside the giant, seldom could he use that word) they were blind. They hovered threateningly over the segment of their body that had been trod upon, and slashed the air above it, before giving up and descending back into the wriggling carpet.

Dolph held his torch aloft. It was black as pitch inside the giant. Letting the titanic oaf swallow him had not been part of his giant-slaying plan, but if he could find a way out that was not too unpleasant he could probably do much more damage to the monster from within. Though, and he waved his torch over the worms, and the nearest bloody ulcer, the giant was hardly a paragon of health.

An acrid stench blasted past his nostrils. It was awful, thick and deep. Was it the pus? he wondered. It smelled like the cattle fields. It smelled like a solid acreage of cows. That seeping, drifting, flatulent odor of sulfides…

In an instant, the torch became a star in his hand; the floor and walls and bloody ceiling became bowels flambé.

Dolph did not survive his own herculean triumph, but he was celebrated for centuries as the slayer of the ravenous giant, a martyr, a hero, a mensch, and a firebrand. The giant farted an inferno.

03/01/2013

Acierate

by Pierce Nahigyan

It was the late ’60s, American business was strong, and Jeremy came back from the war to a place already prepared for him in the factory. It was a riot of sound, and one color, molten orange, when everything else was black and ash. The hammer came down on the iron, the metal hot enough to twist the air itself, and as the foreman led him through the factory, the two of them garbed from head to foot in heavy protective suits, he was hypnotized by the sight of the men knocking the blazes about. He watched the acieration through thick black goggles, felt the heat on his face, a strong, bold heat, so unlike the wet fingers of Cambodia, all day long, all night long.

When he left the factory that first day he stopped outside the gates. The cold Michigan autumn kissed him, then made with the rougher stuff. And after the blazes, he was into it. He reached for the icy bars and braced himself in the gale.

A man on his break, ashes smeared across his forehead, was smoking a cigarette against the hood of his car. He pulled it out of his mouth to ask, “Are you all right?”

Jeremy nodded. “It just feels so damn good to be back home.”

The man flicked his cigarette. “What’s your story, kid?”

Jeremy just smiled. “This is it, sir. This is all it is. I’m going to marry Emily King. I’m going to work at this here factory. I’m going to come home to a nice warm dinner and give my wife a nice warm kiss and, God willing, we’re going to have us some wild little kids.”

“What about the war?”

He shook his head. “It’s still out there if you’ve got a TV. I threw mine away as soon as I got back.”

“My wife really went crazy for that new color TV.”

Jeremy smiled. “I’ll have to drive mine crazy the old fashioned way.”

02/20/2013

Achilles

by Pierce Nahigyan

Who remembers that low and unfurling sound, as had never been heard in all the lands where mortals pray, in anguish the depths no mortal prayer had stooped to, the roar of a great becoming, of a world rent of its last legend, and a single man, mourned by thousands of men. No women mourned Achilles in his poisoned heap. At the bottom of the scaling ladder, where he fell, hours passed before his swift-footed form was counted amiss. And hours more, till twilight’s fading shadows, till he was discovered. No woman mourned Achilles. It was the men, the thousand thousand thousand of Agamemnon, the men in their tents bereft of limbs and gods of mercy, men in the burning city, the men in the field who howled, the men of weary swords. The women of Troy had seen him thresh their husbands and brothers like a hot scythe in dry wheat. They had heard him tear their sons apart like a wild dog in a frenzy. They had tasted tears. The women of Troy wailed not for the Myrmidon King. They fled from their infested homes with curses for him and the Aegeans, fled from fire, fled from pain, fled from ransack and pillage and rape when able. Those that could not bit their tongues and drank their own blood.

Who remembers the cry of a thousand thousand thousand tired men ten years from home, and who remembers the sound of the women drowning, and who remembers the fire’s bite and the poisoned arrow’s sting? It was a song that ended an age.

And such a song survives it.

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