. . . page 8

Winter Rain, part 9

“Tiergan! Are you nuts?” she whispers loudly as she approaches.

I yip a greeting and wag my tail. I turn to look intently over my shoulder, towards the hill, then back to her. There is a dense bush around the other side that would give us some needed cover.

She rolls her eyes. “I am not fording the river in these shoes!”

Urg.

So take them off, I want to tell her, but . . . well, the only thing riskier than being a wolf out here during the day is being a naked human out here during the day. Talking is out, for now.

“Why don’t you head back to the house, and I’ll join you there?” she asks.

I feel my tail drop before she even finishes the question. I shake my head.

She nods sadly. “More trouble, eh?”

Nothing new there.

“Tell you what,” she says as she looks south along the path. “Meet me down by the old pump house. We can have some privacy there.

“And give me five or ten minutes, okay?” she adds. “I’m not running in heels. Not even for you.” She smiles at me—a sad, “I feel for you” smile—then walks away.

And I had been feeling better. Maybe this wasn’t such a good idea.

Okay, that’s unfair.

I watch her as she rounds some bushes and disappears from view. I head east.

The wind is coming from the side, now, and will be of no use at all in a minute when I turn south. Actually, it will be worse than of no use. There’s a bit of a ravine I’ll follow, which should keep me out of sight, but there’s a grassy area directly south of it where people walk their dogs. And the wind is going to be telling stories about me, now.

Hopefully, no one has their dog off lead. I’m not in the mood for either doggy love or doggy hate, right now. The former is embarrassing. The latter invariably ends in tears.

Definitely not in the mood.

Just in case, I pull out of the ravine a little early, and take my scent westward, back toward the river. It’s a risk, but I think it’s the smaller of the two.

Unless there is somebody on the bridge, looking north.

Damn it!

I get down low and slink up behind a small copse to wait.

And wait.

And wait.

Finally! He moves on.

Tara is already inside the pump house when I arrive.

“Took you long enough,” she says and winks at me.

“Well? Get in here!”

I step through the door and she pulls it shut behind me.

“It’ll be dark soon, we can go for a run, then.” She sits down and taps the ground beside her. “So come on. Tell me about it.”

I change. And immediately regret it.

“Can I borrow your sweater?” I ask. “It’s really fucking cold in here.”

Winter Rain, part 8

I stash my clothing at the back gate and abandon two legs for four. I need to run free for a while, to put the whole mess of family and home behind me.

The worn path feels good beneath my feet. The air is wonderfully cool, and smells of wet leaves and soft earth.

I love October.

With the trees bare, I’m taking a risk, running in the daytime. Very few people would mistake me for a dog. Things could get complicated. But so what? They couldn’t catch me anyway, and nobody carries a rifle in an urban forest. Besides, I know these woods better than any human. They stick to foot paths. I go where I want.

I race down the slope toward the river. I smell a squirrel up ahead and grin. I dart around a tree to avoid a loud patch of leaves and dive straight for him. He notices me at last and leaps up a tree. I snap my jaws at him for fun, but veer away to avoid catching him. I don’t want a hunt, right now. Judging from Faolan’s call, there will plenty of that tonight—and game worth hunting. For now, I just want to run. To move. To be.

I turn northward just before the river and run along the footpath. I’m not worried. This end of the forest is always pretty quiet. Besides, with the wind in my face, I won’t be startling anybody.

I can see the northern edge, up ahead. I turn east again and make for the big hill across the river.

The water is cold, but shallow. I splash across without pausing.

The hill is steep, but I want to go fast. I push harder.

I notice Tara’s scent as I crest the hill, and stop dead. She’s wearing human form, of that I’m certain. She’s outside of the forest, too—maybe 300 yards. Which is about 200 yards too far, given my current form. Still, it would be impolite not to say hello. I bark twice, then briefly howl.

I wait. And her scent changes, ever so subtly. She’s recognized me.

I’d like to see her. She’s my favourite cousin, and she might like to run together, for a while. Still, without a place to stash her clothing, she probably won’t come. But, there’s no harm in checking. I head back down the hill toward the path.

Halfway down and her scent is on the air again. I slow to keep pace with it. She is definitely heading west, toward the north entrance of the park. I stop just this side of the river and wait.

Winter Rain, part 7

“Now, get out!” he snarls. His hand has clenched into a fist. His knuckles are white.

I know I should go. Quickly. But I can’t move. I can’t speak. I can’t even look away.

A great disappointment. A great disappointment. The words ring in my ears.

The least member of this family.

Is that really what he thinks of me?

My eyes start to sting.

I struggle to stand. My legs don’t feel right, but they hold. I hear my breathing: it seems much louder than usual. Ragged, too.

The sunlight scatters through the beveled glass of the window, its light sharp and bright. And again, for just an instant, it isn’t Faolan behind the desk, it’s Father.

And I’m the least member of his family.

I turn and run to the door.

“Keaira doesn’t know anything, does she?” I hear Faolan ask as I pull it open.

Always one to twist the knife.

“No,” I mutter. But my anger swirls back to life.

I don’t want to get into it, but I need to defend myself. I turn to face him again.

“She thinks it was her idea. That’s why it took a month.”

I pretend to stare him down, but with him in sitting in a shaft of sunlight, I can’t actually see his face.

It gives me the courage I need.

“You’re wrong about me, Faolan. You’ve always been wrong about me.

“How did you think it was going to work? We’re together for a year an a half and one day, out of the blue, I tell her I’m done with her? And the next day you show up asking her parents for their daughter and an alliance? Is that what you thought?

“She loves me, Faolan!”

The lie stabs me like a knife.

“Or . . . she did.”

My eyes start to sting again. And I decide.

“Do you have any idea what I’ve done for you? How much it hurt to lie to her, day after day? Faolan, I made her believe I didn’t care any more!

“I hate myself for what I’ve done to her, but I did it. Because you told me I had to, for the sake of this family. Had you asked this of anyone else—especially Cormac—you’d have been in for a fight, and you know it.

“I have been nothing but loyal to you.

“And you’re right: I don’t have any respect for Cormac. He’s little better than a rabid dog. He alienates our allies and makes enemies of our neighbours.

“He hunts humans for sport, Faolan! For how long do you think that can go on?

“And I’m the great disappointment to you . . . .”

I reach back and grab the door handle, then step over the threshold.

It terrifies me as the words travel to my mouth, but I let them out, loud and clear: “Well fuck you, too.”

I slam the door behind me.

Cormac is at the end of the hall, grinning like a maniac. I turn and run. Thank all that is holy, he just laughs at me, and doesn’t follow.

Winter Rain, part 6

“What are you smiling about?” he demands.

Shit. I drop the smile like it just bit me.

“Nothin’,” I reply, shrugging my head to one side.

He lowers himself into his chair behind the desk and motions me forward. I keep my eyes on his as I stand.

“Nothing?” he says, and a hint of danger slips back into his voice. I instantly break eye contact.

“You forget how well I know you, Tiergan.”

He’s right, of course. He raised me, after all . . . after Mother and Father . . . .

I’d better come clean. A bit, at least.

“Cormac really wants to kill me.” I hope for a laugh. A chuckle at least.

I get neither.

“Of course he does,” he spits in response. “He’s my Second, and you pay him no respect at all!”

“I—”

He cuts me off with a sharp stroke of his hand. “Don’t talk, Tiergan. For once in your life, listen.”

I cautiously lower myself into the closer chair and set my eyes on a carving on the front of the desk. I’m not in the mood for a lecture. But I’m not in the mood to get hurt, either.

“You aren’t a pup any more Tiergan,” he says. The word “pup” drips with contempt.

“I grow tired of your selfishness, and your”—he thumps his fingers on the desk with each syllable—“dis, re, gard for our family. Not only don’t you respect your place, you actively defy both Cormac and me. And you go out of your way to goad Cormac. Do you have a death wish? I wouldn’t go into a fight with Cormac lightly, but you seem to beg him to come after you. You should be thankful no one else in this family behaves like you do, or Cormac would have killed you years ago!”

My hand starts to tighten on the arm of the chair, but I say nothing.

“Look at me,” he commands.

“Look at me!”

Maybe I do have a death wish. Because suddenly I’m angry, and against all better judgement, I don’t want to get it under control. I meet his eyes, anger for anger. Muscles grow tense.

I want to yell at him that he’s not Father. That he’s not and he’ll never be.

He knows it, too. Saying it would hurt him. Saying it would feel really good.

Yeah!

Really good.

At least . . . 

 . . . it would for the half a second it would take him to cross the desk and sink his teeth into me.

I force the anger down, away from my eyes.

Faolan leans in. His eyes glitter darkly. “I’m warning you now, brother—I am just about ready to tell Cormac he can treat you like anyone else.”

I hear myself gasp.

“You wouldn’t.” The anger abandons me far faster than I’d have thought possible, leaving nothing but a gaping, empty feeling in my stomach.

Faolan doesn’t blink.

“I will. Your disobedience is unacceptable, Tiergan. How, dare you think you are special. You are the least member of this family, and let me assure you, that is of great disappointment to me.

“I told you a month ago to end it with Keaira. A month! And now you have the gall to come in here today and act as if you deserve some consideration for finally obeying me.

“You are lucky you have me for a brother, Tiergan. Lucky! Any other First would have ripped your throat out long ago.

“And Tiergan?” His voice drops to a low, harsh growl. Every hair on my body prickles.

Believe me when I say this: if you push me any more, that’s exactly what I’ll do.”

Winter Rain, part 5

I study the pattern in the rug, and pray to whoever might be listening for the storm to pass. With Cormac at the door, I have no real options. I can feel his anticipation—it hangs in the air like a physical thing, egging Faolan on, all but certain that this will be that time, the time he’s finally rid of me.

Fuck! If only I hadn’t come in when he was talking to Rian. Rian always makes him so crazy.

Maybe he’ll just rough me up a bit. I hardly dare to hope. If I can just take it, if I can just hold out for a little while, he’ll remember himself, he’ll remember he doesn’t want to kill me.

He’ll be sorry about what he’s done.

Submission is my only way out. I know that so well by now. I won’t look up. I won’t run. Give him time, and the overbearing, overprotective older brother will remember himself.

I’ve done what he told me to do. Maybe it will be enough.

The tick of the mantle clock grows loud in the silence, but I hold still.

Ten.

Twenty.

Please, Faolan.

Thirty.

“Cormac?” He says at last. “Give us a minute, will you?” His voice is soft.

I glance up, ready to pull away again if I’m wrong, but I’m not—he’s my older brother again. I open my mouth slightly and exhale as quietly as I can. Best not to let him hear my relief. Nothing can push him back over the edge quite so quickly as him seeing me afraid of him. When he doesn’t want me to be.

Faolan turns away from me and I follow his gaze to see Cormac still at the door. His eyes are terrible, and I can’t meet them. I shift my gaze back to Faolan, but I feel Cormac’s focussed still on me, his hatred drilling into my head.

“Cormac!” Faolan says again, sharply.

Not today, asshole. It takes everything I have not to mouth the words as I think them. Not today. I can’t help but smile.

The mantle clock ticks again. Twice. Three times.

The door slams, and I’m alone with my brother. The one who cares about me.

There are a hundred places I’d rather be . . . but things could be a lot worse.

Winter Rain, part 4

The scent of the den welcomes me as we enter, an intoxicating mix of oak, leather, wood smoke, and old memories. Sunshine pours in through the leaded glass, and for an instant, I see Father’s shape silhouetted against it.

But it’s only a trick of the light.

Faolan is on the phone. His back is to the us, and he doesn’t turn. He just raises a finger over his shoulder and slowly—deliberately—points to a chair in the corner. His hand clenches into a fist as it drops back down.

Cormac shoves me toward the chair.

“This is not what we agreed, Rian!” Faolan growls into the receiver. “There were to be three jobs, not four, and you have yet to pay us for the last one!”

The familiar, worn leather of the chair does its best to put me at ease, but I can’t afford to be taken in. I sit down on the hard front edge and wait. I glance over to Cormac, then around the room. In a way, everything is exactly as it has always been. The chairs, the rug, the desk and tables, the lamps, the books—they have always seemed so much more permanent than anything else in my life. But, lately, more and more, I can’t help notice how tired they all look. It’s as if they are turning to dust, right in front of me.

Maybe that’s what happens when you try to stop time. You freeze everything in its place, but you only think it’s staying the same. In reality, it’s slowly falling apart from the inside out, and one day, you brush past it lightly and the whole thing just crumbles.

Is that what we’ve been doing? Is that what is happening to us?

“Fine!” Faolan yells into the phone, then turns and slams it down onto the cradle on the desk.

“Can you believe these fuckers?” he snarls to Cormac. “They give us bad information, bicker amongst themselves for weeks, and now are blaming us that Sullivan got away! And now they want us to do another job, instead. For the same money!”

I glance over to Cormac, but he stands silent. Definitely the smart choice.

“Sons of bitches!” Faolan yells and slams his fist into the desk. I flinch away from the force of it, and slide a little closer to the door side of the chair. I don’t stand a chance of getting past Cormac, but that doesn’t mean I won’t try.

“And you.

No doubt who that is directed to. I look back to Faolan.

“Tiergan, Tiergan . . . what am I going to do with you?” he says, his eyes narrowing sharply.

My heart rate jumps again, under his glare; but I’m caught, and there’s no changing it.

I drop my gaze to the floor and offer the only thing I’ve got.

“I did what you asked. She won’t be wanting to see me again.”

Winter Rain, part 3

He turns his smile back to me, but all I see are teeth. It’s what I’m meant to see. With him, I don’t understand how people could see anything else.

“One of these days,” he says, leaning in, “your brother’s going to decide you’re more trouble than you’re worth. When that day comes, I want you to promise me something.”

“Yeah?” I reply, and smirk. “What’s that?”

“Just this: Run.”

There was a time I found him terrifying. Okay, who am I kidding? I still do. But even a real threat loses its edge with overuse.

And it never pays to look afraid.

“Whatever,” I reply, laughing. Then, as derisively as I can manage: “I assume you didn’t come here just to spout your impotent little threats at me, so what do you want?”

His eyes blaze at the word “impotent”, and I mark down a point for me. But I know that he’s keeping score, too.

“Get up,” he spits as he pushes up and out of his chair. His smile has vanished. “We’re leaving.”

For a second I wonder if maybe I’ve pushed him too far; but no . . . as much as he wants to rip my throat out, he fears Faolan ten times more. He’ll bide his time. He knows he won’t have to wait forever. He’s right: Faolan and I are oil and water, and it’s only a matter of time before he gives up on me.

I get up and Cormac follows me out. Predator after prey. As it should be.

Winter Rain, part 2

I recognize his footsteps as he enters the café—hard, confident . . . thirsty for a fight. I’m glad of the warning. I wipe my eyes hastily and try to pull myself together.

He steps past me and drops down into the empty chair. Her chair, until a few minutes ago. I wonder if her warmth still lingers there. It angers me that he can steal even that.

“Is it done?” he asks. But it’s not a question.

“It’s done,” I mutter, and my jaw tightens. I stare him down.

He chuckles. “Your brother will be very pleased.”

“My brother can go fuck himself, for all I care.”

I know what’s coming—I knew it was a ledge before I stepped onto it. But, still, I’m surprised at just how quickly he is across the table, his hand tightening on my throat.

Up close, his breath is unpleasantly warm—it smells of fresh cinnamon and spiced meat, but underneath, there’s something older, fouler—something like decaying blood. He shifts more of his weight onto my neck as he leans in. Pressure begins to build behind my eyes. “You would do well to have more respect for your elders, cousin,” he whispers into my ear. I can hear the smile, the widening eyes. “A tongue like that can get you killed.”

He tightens his hand down a little more—slowly, carefully . . . rapturously. And a little part of me wishes he’d do it, too. For what I did to her. For what I let them do to me, too. And it’s not an empty threat.

But neither is it imminent. If he had permission to kill me, he’d have found an excuse to do it already.

“You are attracting attention, cousin,” I manage to gurgle out.

He looks around and releases me—reluctantly—and lowers himself back into his chair. He flashes his smile at the other patrons. Just a little rough-housing between friends, he says with his shrug. Everyone is reassured.

It’s for the best. He might have killed them all, just for the fun of being chased by the police.

Winter Rain, part 1

She watches me from across the table, her eyes pained, tired. They weren’t always so. When we first met, her eyes were full of joy and light.

I fidget with the handle of my cup and look past her—past, where it’s safe. I can’t meet her gaze any more. There’s too much there, now—too much I can’t bear.

“I’m sorry,” she says. “I just . . . don’t think we should do this any more.”

The painting behind her is ugly. Whorls of green and grey, an undertone of blue. Somebody’s idea of modern abstract. Somebody with no taste.

The colours blur at the edges and I look down. Not to her.

I know I could save it. Even now. Nothing has changed permanently. Not yet.

But it’s about to.

“Aren’t you going to say anything?” she asks. Her voice isn’t steady.

I study the shine on the handle of my cup and shake my head.

It’s better this way. Better she hates me and moves on. Better that than . . . .

She pushes her chair back suddenly and stands, knocking the table in the process. Her empty cup bounces once, clatters onto its side, and rolls toward the edge. She starts to grab for it, then pulls her hand back, her fingers curling into a fist. I cringe as the cup crashes to the floor. She takes a step toward the door.

“I hope you find some happiness,” she says softly, then walks away.

I listen to her footsteps receding. The noise from the street gets briefly louder, then quiet again, and I know she’s gone.

My vision blurs, and this time, there’s nothing I can do.

What to Do

Random Dreams

There are few things more annoying than a blank page. It sits there, minute after minute, hour after hour, staring back at you, laughing.

It was a cool night, and a gentle breeze was blowing, riffling the blank pages of the notebook that lay open on my lap. I was sitting out on my balcony, trying to write a short story. A large candle flickered on the window ledge beside me. I was staring off into the night sky, waiting for inspiration to strike. As usual, inspiration seemed to be off striking elsewhere.

My pen hovered, ready, over a blank page in my notebook, waiting to record my next idea. It had been hovering for a while.

“Some writer you are. Can’t even finish a single paragraph.”

“Shut up,” I growled back at the page. “You’ve got the easy part. You just have to sit there and absorb ink. I have to do all the work.”

“Work!” spat the page, incredulous. “You call that work? You write a line, then you cross it out. You write a line, then you cross it out. That’s not work, that’s aerobics! I’m the one who has to endure that sharp Uniball you so like. The marks that thing leaves are permanent, you know! And, Hell, your handwriting is bad enough without the bloody mess that thing leaves.”

“Fuck off! So I’ve been having trouble getting started.”

“Trouble getting started? The Wright Brothers had trouble getting started; Columbus had trouble getting started. You’re about as likely to finish a story as the sun is likely to rise in the west tomorrow!”

Unfortunately for me, the page was right. I’d been trying to get a story started for a week, and hadn’t yet made it to the end of a paragraph. In fact, I had spent more ink on strike-through than on text. Page after page, my notebook held the evidence of my crimes: dozens of paragraph corpses, each cut down in its infancy by one or more cruel strokes from my pen. My guilt in their murders was undeniable.

“Writing isn’t easy. If it was, everyone would be doing it.”

“Oh, in that case, let me apologize for my unfeeling remarks! I had no idea that writing was hard. Please excuse my ignorance. Why don’t you go do something easy.”

I can’t say I much care for sarcastic pages. I jabbed it with my pen, hard. It didn’t even give me the satisfaction of a grunt. Instead, it laughed at me, again, this time with maniacal glee. It was winning, and we both knew it.


I had done a fair bit of writing in high school. Most of it was competent. Some of it was even good. But I hadn’t written anything since: 12 long years of writer’s block. Not that I had been trying very hard for most of that time—I had had other priorities. But not writing left a bit of a hole in my life, a hole nothing else seemed able to fill.

A sentence formed in my mind, and I put my pen to the page, “Some days, you know within two minutes of waking that you’re going to wish you hadn’t.” I paused, thinking, then added, “Today was one of those days.”

“Not bad,” the page said, “although I think the second sentence uses the wrong verb tense. Overall, it’s kind of catchy, but where are you going to go with it?”

“I don’t know. Maybe I’ll just see where it takes me.”

“Oh, there’s a good idea! Last time you did that, you were a dozen pages in before you realized your short story was a novella!”

I can’t say I much care for pages that ridicule me, either. Even when they are right. “Yeah, but the writing wasn’t bad. And who’s to say that this one won’t end up being shorter?”

“‘The writing wasn’t bad!’ Not bad if you don’t mind melodramatic crap! I mean, seriously, the entire thing was one big manipulation! You weren’t telling a story, you were poking the reader and hoping his reaction would distract him from the fact that your characters were two-dimensional stereotypes. And the plot! Never have I had the misfortune to be covered in such a steaming mound!”

“It wasn’t all that bad.” I paused, suddenly unsure of myself. “Was it?”

The page sneered at me again. “Talentless hack! Go do something you’re good at, and stop wasting my time!”

I stared at the sentences I had written on the page. It occurred to me that today was one of those days.

But the page was probably right—I really couldn’t afford to find myself a dozen pages into a novella again. I had to produce something, and soon. And I wasn’t going to just give up.

“Oh well. I’ll try something else. But I think I’ll let this paragraph stand. Might come in handy sometime. And besides, I’m tired of all this killing.” I turned the page . . . 

 . . . back to square one, in effect. The blank page sneered up at me, daring me to try something, confident that my pen would never reach its bottom.


I had decided to take a creative writing course (short fiction, specifically) because it occurred to me that I would probably get something done if someone else was expecting results. Standard operating procedure for me, unfortunately: I’m great at getting things done for anyone else, but terrible at getting anywhere on my own projects. I know, I know, I really should do something about that.

I looked down at my pen, hovering expectantly over the page, endlessly patient. “Well, at least someone has some faith in me,” I thought, and smiled sadly. There was no need to vocalize that one—I didn’t need to hear the nasty response I’m sure the page would have been quick to formulate.

If only I were as quick with words as my blank pages had proven they could be.

I looked back into the night sky and waited.

“Okay,” I said to myself, as much as to the page, “a short story needs to be short—about one to eight scenes. And that is my problem. All the ideas I have for stories are longer than that.”

“Oh, that’s a convenient excuse. Why don’t you just admit it—you haven’t written anything because you suck at writing.”

Accentuating each word, I replied, “Fuck off! If you aren’t going to help, then shut up!”

“But why should I help when watching your miserable attempts at writing is so much fun!”

“I’d like to see you do better, you worthless piece of shit! You can’t even hold a pen!”

My stinging retort fell flat. The page howled with laughter. I felt the cold hand of despair curl its icy fingers around my heart. I had to do something, soon, or all would be lost.

I stared down at the page, determined to come up with something. The page hadn’t believed me, but it was true: I had several reasonable ideas for stories, but none of them would have fit in such a small space. And that in itself was strange—the longest thing I had written in high school was about fifteen pages. I was really at a loss as to what to do about it.

“Think, think, think, damn it! You need something that is fairly light on plot: one or two major points, and character fill for the rest. And you don’t have to resolve everything. It can’t be this hard!”

Unfortunately, I wasn’t convincing anyone, including myself . . . .

I looked into the night sky, and sank back into thought.


Things were looking bleak. It was getting late. Actually, that’s not quite true—it was late—it was getting early. And I had nothing. The blank page grinned up at me, sure its final victory was imminent. My pen hovered, waiting for some brilliant thought that would justify its faith in me.

Seems we were both waiting for the same thing.

“Maybe you are right. Maybe I should just quit.” I stared off into the pre-dawn sky, my eyes moist with the frustration of defeat. Slowly, weakly, I removed the pen’s cap from its end, bringing it around to the point. I looked down at the blank page, a surrender on my lips. I hated that page, and the joy it took in my failure.

And that’s when I heard it: a little voice, almost too quiet to hear, in the back of my mind. It offered a simple sentence, a summary of my feelings about the evening.

I set my pen out again, on a brief pilgrimage across the page, that mere slip of an idea driving it along. “There are few things more annoying than a blank page.” I stared at the words, pondering their fate. The page stared back, waiting with expectant glee for the sharp stroke that would slay yet another innocent sentence, and finish my will to continue. I hesitated, momentarily unable to grasp any of the thoughts scurrying through my mind. I relaxed, leaving the noise in my head to sort itself out. Slowly, something began to form, there in the chaos. A smile of realization spread across my face.

Finally, I knew exactly what to do.