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Karen Payton Holt

~ author of 'Fire & Ice' vampire series – an epic ride into darkness.

Karen Payton Holt

Monthly Archives: August 2014

My Best Friend, Mort.

30 Saturday Aug 2014

Posted by Karen Payton Holt in Horror, Science Fiction, Short Stories

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Sci Fi, short story, Writer's Carnival Team

*ADULT CONTENT – SOME STRONG LANGUAGE*

The beacon of the Cardiff bio-dome reminded Barker of a mirage. After sustaining a forced-march for three hours straight, he felt no closer. The dome towered over him, but, like the end of a rainbow, the shimmering surface at ground level never seemed within reach. It’s huge. His ‘home dome’ of London was 200 miles to the southeast. Each gel-like structure glistened with the pearly sheen of a soap bubble. Varying the air pressure inside the bio-habitats maintained surface tension, although, on some days, the profile had a snub-nosed pointed appearance caused by the lower air pressure at higher altitudes.

Looks like I’m going to have to crash at the neighbors. Let’s hope they don’t shoot first. Barker laughed. ‘Crash’ being the operative word.

Ten miles south, the ditched Harrier’s landing gear remained buried in a dune, although the sand covered landscape outside the domes consisted more of rubble and pebbles of eroded glass than anything else. When the engines lost power, the plane’s vertical landing manouver had resembled a stone falling from the sky, the craft lurching sideways on impact.

The force of hitting the ground bruised Barker’s flesh, but, pushing through the pain, he gritted his teeth and kept walking. He set the bio-med setting to cool, but the aviator’s jumpsuit still clung to his perspiration soaked skin. The weight of the army duffle bag grated along his spine with each stride. The emergency medical supplies inside it were the reason for the mission. But the destination, outpost ‘Sega’, would have to wait. Barker hoped Lieutenant Crowe remained stable. Bacteria mutated faster than a man could spit in the constant warmth of Earth’s post meteor-strike atmosphere.

Arctic tundra took 300 years to heat up, but now they faced the dilemma of slow heat ascendance. Inside the city domes, humans were protected. Barker tapped the cuff-console secured to his forearm, rotating through the viewing options build into his helmet’s visor. His hair stank of sweat, overwhelming, even to his own nose, but losing the helmet was a no go. The retina scan fed information directly to his brain, cutting his reaction time by eight milliseconds. The difference between life and death.

With dusk falling, running out of time, Barker jogged along the bottom of a deep trench where railway tracks once ran; the salvaging of the metal tracks and wooden sleepers formed part of the first wave of missions scavenging for resources.

The escarpments rising steeply at either side could be a blessing or a curse. Nothing could see him, but he couldn’t see them either. Walking with his chin raised, Barker’s neck ached as he kept the crest of the dunes in view in case a carajaw scuttled over the rise. Nightfall made little difference to temperature outside the dome. The infrared lens Barker favored focused his attention on black spots — cold.

The electric blue tint of the carajaw carapaces glowed in daylight, but in darkness, their cold blood was all Barker could rely on. If you can call the yellow jello, blood. Digging into his pocket, his fingers closed around Mort, his grenade. Other Marines thought the nickname came from ‘morte’, the French word meaning dead. Or ‘mort.’, for immortality. In fact, it was named after Mortimer Mouse. Walt Disney sold out and called him Mickey, but Barker was on Mort’s side. You don’t change a winning M.O.

When landmines or Claymors were not readily available a grenade enabled Barker to blast his way out of more tight spots than he could shake a stick at. Mort was his last resort. Okay, I’m not gonna survive a carajaw encounter, but I’ll take the bastard with me. The fire service’ metal ‘jaws of life’ had nothing on the carajaw bite. Barker had seen one slice clean through a fellow Marine’s thigh bone. Mort had kept him company ever since. I’m not going out like that.

Reassured his ‘friend’ was where he needed him to be, Barker withdrew his hand, leaving Mort in this pocket. He flipped the safety on his rifle to off and scanned the banks on either side as he continued forward. The rifle had ammunition locked and loaded. Target practice was one thing, but firing an armor piercing round into the mouth of a moving carajaw required Barker to have nerves of steel.

Taking a compass reading, Barker left the trench, dropped to his belly and looked out over the crag-strewn landscape. The close proximity of the thick black line across the sand, where the shell of the dome disappeared underneath the ground, caught Barker by surprise. The abrupt switch from churned sand to fine glittering silt which had been leveled like icing on a cake proved it was not a mirage. I’m here.

Tamping down the surge of relief, Barker tapped the navigation setting on his cuff-console and picked up the beacon signal of the Cardiff dome. His display revealed that the bio portal into the dome was four clicks west. Nearly there.

As he turned to move, sweat erupted on Barker’s face. A chittering sound filled his earpiece. The light outside the dome was failing fast and precious little help came from the glow inside as it dissipated between the inner and outer skin. Shit, I can’t see a damn thing. A hiss of panic shunted his thoughts aside when the sand beneath his feet shifted, his boots quickly submerging in a collapsing crater. A mass rose up from beneath the undulating landscape some thirty yards away. Flicking through his viewing options, his retina display picked up the colossal black shape. Wet sand fell away and the glacier smooth finish of a carajaw shell gleamed. How many legs they had was a topic of constant debate. All Barker knew, was that once they were moving, the appendages were a blur and the creatures, about the size of a saloon car, moved fast.

Barker dropped to his knee, hefting his weapon up to his shoulder. He blocked out the shudder of fear and released his breath slowly. The cluster of wet black eyes gleaming in the blue tinted shadow beneath the upper-shell turned in his direction. The chittering sound that haunted him crawled inside his head as the mandibles vibrated open.

Okay, you can do this. Three sets of pincer-like jaws opened and closed on a rotating synchronised movement, yellow saliva pooling in the sand as the carajaw appeared to grin. Don’t be stupid, they can’t grin. In the split second of the third blade of bone shunting out, and before the first snapped in again, the chittering scream vibrated through Barker’s chest and he pulled the trigger.

The ear piercing crack accompanied a splinter of shattered mandible thudding into his helmet visor. He rocked back on his heels and when he focused again, the scowl beneath the electric blue shell was rushing in fast. Damn, I missed.

Turning to run, instinct jerked muscles into action even though he was already a dead man.

Razor-edged bones-like jaws snagged on his suit, the serrated mandibles hooking into the duffle bag. He hit the release mechanism in the centre of his chest and the webbing straps were torn from his shoulders. He catapulted forward, hitting the ground hard. The air left his lungs in a whoosh. His visor steamed up and he waited for the searing pain of the slicing blades to bite. Instead, a sudden blast flattened his jumpsuit to his back, and thick yellow fluid splattered his body. Endless seconds passed as globules of wet flesh made craters in the sand around him before he started to believe.

Rolling onto his back, Barker opened his eyes. Staring up into a sky where pink smears of dusk streaked across his vision, he took a deep breath, wincing as his ribs shifted and pain spiked inside his chest. That was close. Lifting his head, he looked straight into a chasm of what was once the carajaw’s face. The blue shell remained intact, but wisps of smoke billowed from holes where appendages had once protruded.

Sitting up, Barker scanned the jaundice-yellow lumps of tissue peppered around him. Grabbng his rifle, he rolled to his knees and put down a hand. He froze as a vibration stuttered up his arm. Shit, there’s more. Rising to a crouch, he drove his body forward into the gaping carcass. The pressure of liquified flesh made him gag. His bio-screen flashed red inside his helmet and a calm voice spoke. “Captain Barker, your heart rate is 178bpm. Turn your console to rescue mixture and breathe slowly.”

Damn. I would if I could. In the dark ash-grey space, he couldn’t feel his cuff-console through the viscous swamp of innards. He closed his eyes, and concentrated on the breathing thing.

Tapping and a chattering sound vibrated through the shell. How many are out there? He decided it was best not to know. The cocoon was sickeningly warm, and he surrendered to the urge to zone out.

When his eyes opened again, the sludge clinging to his body was cold. Shit, how long have I been in here. “Mother, bio scan.”

The automated voice in his ear said, “Vitals are good. Two broken ribs. Minor contusions.” The list was shorter than Barker expected. Swallowing down the bile burning in his throat, he wriggled backwards until his thighs grated over the lip of the carajaw’s shell. When he felt sand beneath his knees, he eased back into a crouched position. After clearing the egg-yolk colored slime from his visor, he did the same to his cuff-console and then clicked through the vision settings.

Turning slowly, he studied the immediate area, before sagging against the shell of the dead carajaw. Okay, I’m alright for now.

Pushing to his feet, he took Mort out of his pocket. Settling his thumb through the looped metal of the pin, he drew comfort from the familiar feeling of the deeply scored casing. He broke into an efficient run, and by the time he arrived at the bio-gate, his lungs were burning.

The Marines manning the bio-portal inside the dome jerked to attention. Barker flicked a switch on his cuff and hit ‘transmit’, and the Marine inside the dome studied a monitor until his narrowed eyed expression gave way to a smile.

“Captain. You’re a surprise, Sir,” crackled through Barker’s earpiece.

Barker nodded. “It’s a bit lively out here, permission to enter?”

His image, reflected in the gel-like wall, disappeared as the bio-portal opened. Stepping forward into the area between the two skins, the stillness of being cocooned between the two layers brought welcome relief as the portal behind him closed. The square marked on the ground indicated the confines of his cell.

“Activating decontamination,” the Marine’s voice erupted in his earpiece.

The fine sand beneath his boots shifted as ‘scuttlebugs’ poured out from between the grains. The bio-engineered insects were parasites, genetically programed to devour every particle of matter on Barker’s bio-suit. The thought of consuming the sludge-like innards of the carajaw made Barker’s gut churn.

As he closed his eyes, a tingling sensation shot them open again. His skin burned. Hundreds of scuttlebugs invaded the confines of his suit through a tear in the fabric. Barker realized he’d been contaminated when his skin began to bleed. The slick plasma feeling as the scuttlebugs stripped away the epidermis filled his chest with panic. The hot ash of searing pain clouded his brain. As he began to scream, he held Mort to his chest.

The Marine inside the dome jerked to attention.

“Do not pull that pin, Captain. We’re recalling the bugs. We’ll get you into quarantine.”

The words made no sense to Barker. He pulled the pin. As his helmet filled with blood, his body folded to his knees.

The explosion ripped through the dome. A blood-red bone fragment shattered a Marine’s cheekbone as the bio-portal failed. The sand beyond undulated like a storm at sea, glimmering with electric blue light. The harsh shriek of chittering mandibles filled the air.

Nature’s Touch

18 Monday Aug 2014

Posted by Karen Payton Holt in Poetry

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Nature’s splendor, a cloak woven, in shades from flame to bronze
Fall’s exuberant melody, orchestrates the gusting breeze.
The rich carpet of decay, wearing textures crisp and bright.
Celebrating a death of sorts, though it’s too hard to conceive.

The joy and promise beckoning, beneath Winter’s frosty glare
Spring cajoles with tenderness, her breathless touch banishes despair.

Summer’s embrace is warm and ripe, boughs laden with lushest green.
She basks in perfumed glory, her presence gentle and serene.

Haunted Hospital

05 Tuesday Aug 2014

Posted by Karen Payton Holt in Short Stories

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

short story, writers carnival

This story was a Halloween prose prompt challenge in Writer’s Carnival.

<><><><><><><><><><><>

I awoke to darkness, but I wasn’t scared. It had been dark here, now, for as long as I could remember. I had chosen ward B, hospital bed number 136, as mine the day I took up residence. I survived consumption, and although the cough still bothered me, there was no blood. So, things must be okay.

Swinging my legs over the side of the bed, I let them sway, stirring the layers of cotton skirts against my ankles. I never undressed for bed. It hadn’t occurred to me to do so for a few years now, but I didn’t seem to smell.

The unlit ward was gloomy, but the gaps in the wooden boards nailed over the windows letting in slices of light to cut across the floor told me it was dawn.

I laced up my sensible shoes. They were the last gift from the goodwill before my mother had died, here, in this very bed, in fact, and left me to succumb to the grips of tuberculosis.

I wished I, too, had died. Being an orphan in hiding turned out to be a lonely place.

The delivery man would be along soon. I only saw him once a week, and exchanging those few words became the highlight of my existence. His liveried van had seen better days, and I would hear it laboring up the long overgrown driveway to the huge gray building long before I could see it.

I never knew which entrance he would choose, so I couldn’t let him in. I usually waited in the white-washed, cobweb adorned reception area for him to appear. His suspenders creaked as he walked and his face, beneath his cloth cap, always broke into a smile, although, I could tell he felt sorry for me.

‘Get some sunshine on ya skin, lass,’ was his favored farewell as he loaded my arms up with cheese wrapped in muslin, a loaf of soda bread, and, joy of joys, a slab of fruit cake.

I threw away most of the food, more often than not. My anticipation of eating always outshone the experience. I would eat, and still feel hollow inside.

Sunshine, too, was a pleasant thought, but the reality was feeling only the biting cold of the wind which drove me back inside the hospital as dread cramped every muscle.

I checked my watch, and chuckled. The hands always said it was 3 o’clock, but the habit of looking remained hard to break. I just knew he’d be here soon, and I scuttled along the waxed floor, disturbing the carpet of talcum-powder fine dust into a misted dry ice effect.

On the ground floor, more light bled in between the rotting boards nailed over the windows. Some were damaged where kids had broken in over the years. And while it was not at all romantic to my mind, petrified girls were inclined to cling to sweaty boys, and one thing always seemed to lead to another.

Sound carried in the cavernous carcass of the hospital and my imagination provided the rest. I laughed, a coughing fit racked my body, and I sank to the floor.

What was that? Voices drifted in, riding on the motes of dust dancing in funnels of sunshine. Footsteps outside. I pressed my hands over my face. It was a long time since I had seen any ghosts. I thought they had moved on.

Their garb became more confusing with every sighting. The last ones had brought with them a weird contraption which filled the wards with lightning bolts, but there was no thunder.

Then there were the ones who came and sat in huddles with things covering their ears as though noise hurt them. They stared at green screens and whispered, and I was sure they had escaped from the insane asylum five miles down the road.

I hung onto the hope it was George, the delivery guy, but he didn’t talk much, so I knew I was wrong.

The front door creaked as the handle turned, and I dived out of sight. It was too late to go back upstairs. I found myself inside the office where filing cabinets lined the walls.

During moments of boredom,I had read every file contained within, and knew the fate of the rest of those who once lived in my village. My own file remained incomplete. I had sunk into a fever induced coma and no one had seen fit to record what happened after that.

The breeze gusting around my bare ankles told me they had gotten in. I took refuge under the large mahogany desk.  Folding my bony body into the space meant for the chair, I held my breath and waited.

The door handle rattled, and chains clinked menacingly. Perhaps these, too, were asylum inmates.

Lost souls seemed to always end up here.

“The door’s locked,” a female voice whispered.

The clinking chain noise scraped, grinding against the door, and then, slowly, it opened.

I fitted the image to the sounds as the rusted hinges creaked.

“Bingo,” whispered a male.

“Why are you whispering?” A man’s voice, thicker and older filled the room and I put my hands over my ears.

What do they want… not me? Please, not me. I’m not ready to die.

The girl laughed, a nervous tinkling sound which danced up and down my spine.

I peered out of my hiding space and saw three pairs of feet. Two sets were wearing weird, garishly decorated shoes. My mother said shoes only came in black or tan… I suddenly felt cheated. These had the silhouettes of two girls sitting back to back on the heel, and were white and silver.

The loud man had black shoes with laces, like my father used to wear. I missed my father.

Curiosity got the better of me. Does this man have whiskers like my father, too.

I crawled forward until I could see the ghosts. They were staring at the photographs on the wall. Doctors and nurses ranged in rows across the sepia prints, standing to attention with stiff smiles on their faces.

The patients not in comas were positioned in the foreground, sitting in bath chairs or on crutches. My mother was there, and my father. The glass covering their faces was clean where my fingers had rubbed over it a thousand times, as though I could absorb their memory.

The girl leaned closer and gasped.

What have they seen?

“There,” she hissed.

The young male nudged her aside, staring too. “You’re right…”

What?!

My curiosity burned like embers inside. It was a long time since I had felt warm. I edged forward, suddenly not caring if they saw me.

The girl abruptly rubbed her arms and made a ‘brrrrr’ sound. Startled, I stepped back as she swung around, walked towards me, and then she was gone.

From behind, I heard her hushed voice. “She is here. Amy is here. I felt her.”

I turned and absorbed the expression of wonder on a face which looked remarkably like mine when I was healthy, and she looked straight through me.

Amy?  My name is Amy…

‘Fire and Ice’ vampire series of five novels.

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