Friday, August 7, 2009

The Book : Part 8

Welcome to a mini series brought to you by Christopher J. Perger. If you are first time reading this blog segment, I highly suggest that you start with "The Book : Part 1". After all, the beginning is called the beginning for a reason !!!

Cheers!

* * *



My dear, we have to fly
.

The words were honey. The way they slid their way into my ears could be captured with no other words.

We have to go............

They came more solid now. More demanding.

Julius!!!! I need you more than ev-

My eyes came blurry. Sharice was shaking me drastically and leaving me nauseous.

"I'm going to throw-," I said just before throwing up upon the left thigh of her revealing dress.

"You're lucky I care about you, brother," she muttered as she frowned at the throw-up on her dress.

"It's not my fault I can only do so much," I muttered back as I struggled to get to my knees and hands.

"That's what she said," Sharice rebutted, without disclosure, and a chuckle in her voice. I kicked her.

With a moan I was to my feet and after a shake of my head back to my senses.

"Are we going to have a longer bout this time?" Sharice asked, bringing a double take from me. "You are running the show, if you hadn't noticed," Sharice got to her feet and slapped my pocket, grabbing the bible hard and giving it a good shake.

The world shook rapidly, as though turbulence was at hand. But we both knew it was more than turbulence. At least, not as far as wind conditions were concerned. She was shaking the very preconditions of life. While life is only a four letter word, it can represent a vibrance of capatilities behind the letters themselves.

"Don't you see? Everything's in fragments because you keep running around and messing with THE bible!!!"

Sharice let go of the bible in my pocket and took a step back. We were in the cockpit of the plane, I now saw. Somehow, there were souls running the plane. Like the souls I would usually capture. The only problem was I had no remembrance of capturing these souls.

I took a couple more steps back, running my back into the wall of the cockpit.

"I'm messing up the story?" I asked in a hush.

Sharice nodded at me.

"Brother-"

"I know what I'm doing," I harshly cut her off. I lunged to punch her in the face, although only contacted the warped molecules of her transfer to behind me.

"This has to end! You're no longer in control, lucifer!" Sharice quickly shrieked from behind me.

I gave a hard swing, but contacted nothing. I whipped around on my feet, and fell to the ground, pitifully.

"Brother, please come easily," She asked from above me.

"I have been wronged," I viciously replied. "Jesus was right about one thing," I chuckled

"What's that?" Sharice asked as she cocked her head to the side in wonderment.

"Jesus is punctual."

At that moment the cockpit's door was knocked open and Jesus was there and ready with disciples.

"I haven't the pleasure to meet you yet, sister," Jesus said in a hush next to Sharice's ear.

"Niether have I," Sharice replied with a grin.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

My Book’s Release

Here's just a quick break in my series to say...
My first book, "Elimeno," just hit the market today!!! You can find it at amazon.com, or cheaper through my publishing house at Authorhouse.com!

Cheers, folks!!!!!
Crispy

The Book : Part 7

Welcome to a mini series brought to you by Christopher J. Perger. If you are first time reading this blog segment, I highly suggest that you start with "The Book : Part 1". After all, the beginning is called the beginning for a reason

Cheers!

* * *


The seats were smaller than I expected.
I situated myself into a coach seating and heard the stewardess say," Sergeant, please. Follow me to first class." Her eyes were bright and affixed on a military man a few rows ahead of me.
With a mischievous eye, I stood up and followed the sergeant. I came up close behind him and seeded a bullet into his backside, quickly grabbing his soul moments after his death. With a twist of my wrist I had my newest minion dragging his own corpse into the bathroom so that I could make a change of clothes.
"Thank you, military," I said as I slid into the bathroom behind the dragged sergeant.
As I closed the door behind me, Sharice warped her way upon the sink, her ass situated uncomfortably upon the bowl.
"Is this the best way, brother... owwww!" she shot up from the bowl of the sink, knocking me over against the sergeant.
"Well, it wasn't going so bad, until you so unpolitely interrupted," I said in a grunt. The sergeants soul looked at me, confused as of what he should do. His left leg was in the toilet bowl, and the other upon the sergeant's head.
"I apologize, but you never told me where we're going," Sharice said as she brushed her blouse straight, and eyed herself in the mirror.
"Just get us in the sky. And keep the pilots alive, please," I told her with half a smirk.
Sharice smirked herself for a moment, and then poofed from sight, off to deal with the pilots. I was sure seduction was her game as I undressed the sergeant and switched his clothes for my own.
"Going to be a long day, sergeant," I muttered as I released his soul.

Intermission (The Shadow On My Shoulder)

This is just a quick "Intermission" blog between "The Book". This German beer makes me feel more creative than ever!




* * *

The Shadow On My Shoulder

I give it looks, but it's never seen.
Alike the whisper in my ear when I awake, the thoughts and remembrance of the past cascade over me like a droning nuisance. I'm sure it's just life at work, although that doesn't satisfy me. Not today. Not tomorrow.

I give it the time of day, but it never cares.
Alike the drunk uncle that the parents warn you about, the thoughts are sneaky. Am I apart, or altogether? Was I there when I decided to live the path I venture, or just apart of the board? It's not that I regret a thing, it's just that.......

I give it the shadows of my mind, but it only wants my shoulder.
Alike the time yet to come, the thoughts don't form on their own. I wish too much for nothings and damn away even more that that I can fathom. A spiral of misdirected intentions.

I give it all to the shadow on my shoulder, for I wonder why it follows me so closely.

Tschüs

The Book : Part 6

Welcome to a mini series brought to you by Christopher J. Perger. If you are first time reading this blog segment, I highly suggest that you start with "The Book : Part 1". After all, the beginning is called the beginning for a reason

Cheers!

* * *




I took a couple steps before Sharice grunted from behind me, "It's time to go, brother."
I twisted around to find her right arm wrapped around her tiny waste and upper body hunched over. Her lips were taut over her lips and voice low in disgust.
"Nobody punches a sister of mine," I softly said as I turned back around to give a closer look at the infidels where Sharice had retreated from. The suited gentlemen and bulky guy I presumed to be Judas were giving looks around, dumbfounded by Sharice's instant teleportation.
"We haven't the time," she screamed as I made my way towards them. Her voice quickly grabbed their attention, leading them all to zero in on us at once. I replied as I whipped up my gun, took aim, and ticked off two bullets, one into each of the suited henchmen's foreheads. Judas looked around for a moment, bedazzled by the moment, as I quickened my pace and went into a full on sprint. The space between us was a mere 30 feet, and with my offhand I did what was necessary and pulled the henchmen back to life.
Screams sounded from all around us. In the distance an alarm sounded, although I cared little. Let them worry about nothing they can know of, I thought to myself.
Judas narrowed his eyes on me as though he was ready to toss down, and then underwent a state of shock as my minions grabbed his legs, sending him falling forward upon his face and sprawled out arms.
"Judas, I take it?" I asked as I walked up to him. He said nothing, only grabbed at his legs mercilessly, misunderstanding what it was that could possibly be holding him.
Sharice appeared just on the otherside of Judas and said, "Brother, what did I say about making a scene?" People were running by us as though the gun I had fired was pointed at them. Funny what a little noise can do...
"Sister, I'm not making a scene, I'm making a point." I suggested as I flicked a finger, leading to one of the minions to punch Judas on the back of the head, knocking him out.
"Better be a fucking sharp point," Sharice muttered.
"Just do me a favor and take over a plane for me," I said as I tucked my gun at my waist and had my two minions grab Judas up, one at his legs, the other at his shoulders.
"Oh my god, he's floating!!!" one of the onlookers shrieked from nearby as she pointed with a shaky finger at Judas's held aloft body.
I chuckled and waved the minions to follow me as I said, "Magic's all fun and games to these people until they see it really happen."

The Book : Part 5

Welcome to a mini series brought to you by Christopher J. Perger. If you are first time reading this blog segment, I highly suggest that you start with "The Book : Part 1". After all, the only climax you'll get is from the proper illustrated placement.

Cheers!

* * *




The last call for New York, folks. I repeat, this is the last call for New York!


"How do these people live like this?" I asked as I flopped out the day's newspaper upon my lap.
"One day at a time, brother. Just how they've been doing it for centuries," Sharice said as she eyed herself through her mini-makeup set. The oval mirror captured her face in stages of looking this way and that as she dabbed her face with blush, lipstick and the sorts.
"It bothers me."
"You bother me."
"But really, sister. These people spend their lives doing fiasco after fiasco. Don't they know it doesn't matter? It's such a small jump from birth to death and yet they-"
"Julius, don't you realize how jealous you are?" Sharice halted her pamperings and turned towards me, her face in quandary.
"Jealous of what? Them?"
She threw a shoulder up and nodded. "Yes, them. You're ranting as though they disgust you, yet we both know what they have is completely unappreciative through their eyes. Life, brother. Life." She turned back to her oval mirror as though her concern for my concern was long gone.
"I hadn't known you cared so much for them," I said with a shrug.
"I hadn't known you did either," she softly replied. "And he should be here any minute, so please, for the sake of dad, please let me do the talking."
"Judas is his name, right?"
"Yeah, Judas."
I gave a long sigh and said,"Kay, kay. It's not like the world matters, or anything."
Sharice stood up, slapped her makeup kit closed and slid it into her purse; her casual dress sliding over her hips to unwrinkle itself as she dropped her purse in the chair next to me. "And he's here, so do your best not to make a scene, seeing how great you are at that."
She tossed me a lenghtened-lash wink and turned away from me. Across the way from our terminal was a Chili's that a bulky guy had just entered. Sharice followed him, her eyes affixed on his every move. It had to be Judas.
"Seeing how great you are at that," I childishly mimicked quietly. I settled into my seat, recrossing my legs, just as a couple suited gentlemen followed Sharice into the restaurant. One of them threw an arm around her and said a couple words into her ear, bringing a jolt out of her.
I shot up as the bulky guy I assumed to be Judas turned around and punched Sharice square in the stomach.
"Heavens no," I muttered as I pulled out my first favorite 9mm.

The Book : Part 4

Welcome to a mini series brought to you by Christopher J. Perger. If you are first time reading this blog segment, I highly suggest that you start with "The Book : Part 1". After all, the only climax you'll get is from the proper illustrated placement.

Cheers!

* * *



You’re almost there, Mary,” Janice, the maid, screamed as she assisted Mary’s birth. The baby’s head was crowning, and Janice was about to collapse, for it was the third time that night.

John shuffled his way over from the other two infants to stand aside his wife.

“Honey, you’re almost there. You’ve got this. You’re a champ!” His face was pale and hands shaking as he clasped Mary’s right hand, mind trapped in a pandora’s box awaiting a time and place far from then.

Gaaaaaaaaa-gnaaaaaaaaaa!!!!!” Mary squealed. She saw the light that night, for not only was she a virgin to begin with, she was unaware about the circumstances.

There was only suppose to be one! She thought to herself just before passing ou-

“Jesus?” Jesus distantly heard as his eyelids fluttered.

I stopped pulling him by his shoulders and began scanning the area in a frantic manner. The backside of the church becoming very popular as a couple more bullets whizzed their way out the back entrance, clipping the doorsill.

I quickly reloaded one of the 9mm’s as I stood up straight and made my way back towards the back entrance of the church. I took aim upon the first human I saw and planted his brains far behind him. With my offhand I twisted his soul back to life and had him come down to the back entrance and stand guard.

Jesus!!!!” I yelled, keeping an eye on my newest soul-struck companion.

“But, Momma!” Jesus yelled as he shot awake. His eyelashes were riddled with dust and face smeared with all sorts of dirt from the time I dragged him out of the church just a minute ago. He hacked and coughed for a moment or four.

“Momma’s long gone, brother,” I replied as I stretched my fingers out, leading my captured soul of a friend to begin strangling the next gun-wielding man through the back entrance. His face of confusion and sheer disapproval left me with a chuckle and after he had been strangled to death, I grabbed his soul and began my second army of the night.

Jesus rolled over and slowly got to his feet as he mumbled this and that, unsure of which was what.

“So what’s our plan, brother?” he asked as he rubbed at his clenched shut eyes, eyebrows sharply hooding under his rubbed-away eyes.

“Well, we’re getting out of here. How, is another factor to the-"

Jesus pulled out another cell phone and dialed only one number before putting it to his ear.

“You apparently have been in this time for a while, haven’t you, brother?” I asked, a smile teetering at the edge of my lips.

“You have no idea,” he replied before turning the phone back to his mouth and said, ”Yes, Peter? The most of dire, my disciple.” Jesus’ words were slick, almost as if he had been awaiting such a day as this.

“So how long?” I asked with my eyes venturing to the sides decisively.

“Thank you, my son,” Jesus said as he slapped his clam cell phone closed. “Four seconds,” he answered nonchalantly.

“Four?” I asked as a cab zoomed down the alley next to us and slammed on the brakes to slide right alongside us.

“Brother, I never knew you had the power of punctuality,” I joked.

“Then apparently you haven’t read the book I’ve put together,” Jesus said as he slid into the back seat of the cab.

I jumped into the seat next to him, throwing my hand downward and releasing the souls I had captured at the backside of the church, leaving them hunched over in remorse for a place to confide. For a moment I felt their remorse, for I usually leave the souls I capture heading in the right direction. This time though, was exactly that: time of essence.

“What book,” I asked Jesus as I slammed the cab door behind me.

“A bible, Julius. Finally, the bible,” Jesus replied with delight smeared on his face as he pulled a pile of wrinkled and torn paper from his left pocket.

* * *

The bible?” Sharice asked before taking a long pull from her cigarette.

“Ya know, that smoking is gonna’ be the end of you, sister,” I said while rubbing the right side of my hip. The bullet’s that had struck me just outside the backside of the club had long ago disintegrated and there was now only a couple craters left that were rapidly healing.

Sharice smashed her smoke out in an ashtray brimming with a mountain of cigarette butts. Seeing how much she had smoked over the last half hour, I assumed that she had last emptied the tray just this morning. Maybe around 9 a.m., I pondered.

“We’ll all die eventually, Lucifer,” she replied in disgust as she pulled out another cancer stick and lit away.

“Surely, you’re right on both accounts. Yes, the bible. Sharice, he had started everything! Jesus was on the right track!” I got up from the wooden, kitchen table chair with a grunt and eyes of excitement.

Was on the right track?” Sharice asked from across the table, her eyes bullets of analysis.

“Yes, was,” I crossed my arms before my chest and leaned against her fridge, knocking away a few magnets from it. There was a plethora of multi-lettered magnets upon it; a magnetic alphabet, each colored and large, capturing Roy G. Biv in his finest. For a moment I wondered if there was a child in the house, and then remembered that there was, and she was sitting at the kitchen table chain smoking. Sharice had always had the heart of a child. At least, through my eyes she had.

“So where is he?” Sharice asked as she got up to pick up the fallen magnets.

I turned away from her and sighed before saying, “Well, that’s where things get complica-"

“He’s about to die, brother,” Sharice whispered from behind me.

I whipped around in alarm to find Sharice fiddling with the magnets that had fallen from the fridge.

“What? How?

Sharice stood up and backed away from the magnets that held her eyes in a state of engrossing panic.

Some of the letters were upside down and a ‘zero’ was substituting for an ‘o’, although they had still fallen in just the right order for the rainbowed phrase to be clear: 3 soon 2 then 1

Fucking Christ,” I muttered.

“Don’t use your brother’s name in vane!” Sharice hissed at me.

“Sorry, it’s an inside joke,” I muttered with blank eyes. “I think I know when and where he is."

“C’mon, then. We have to go,” she said, turning for the front door.

“Hold on. We’ll need togas.”

Sharice halted and turned to me, “Togas, brother?”

“Togas,” I assured her.

The Book : Part 3

Welcome to a mini series brought to you by Christopher J. Perger. If you are first time reading this blog segment, I highly suggest that you start with "The Book : Part 1". After all, the only climax you'll get is from the proper illustrated placement.

Cheers


* * *

"Father, I have sinned," I whispered through the shielded window of the confession booth.
"How so, my son?" the shielded window replied.
"I have ideals. Ideals that defy the lord." I heard him shuffle uneasily through the shielded window. I licked my lips, mouth parched from the day's journey.
"Well, my son, one cannot be at fault for the temptations of evil. It only matters that they recognize the evil for what it is," he replied, bringing a chuckle out of me. "What do you find funny, my son?"
"That you believe what you say, my brother." My voice grew deep and raspy, giving the life my words needed.
He gasped and softly asked, "Julius?"
"It's been many suns, Jesus," I answered, taking delight in his surprise.
"I've missed you," Jesus loudly said as he got up and shuffled out of the booth and threw open the door to my own side. I stood up with a smile and took in a long breath and released it, shoulders falling like an avalanche of worry letting loose.
"I've missed you, too, brother," I hopped out of the booth into his arms with the biggest of hugs. We held each other for a moment, embracing the years lost between us.
Jesus took a step back, eyes lit with joy and said, "I've made friends, brother."
"Worthy friends?" I asked with a cocked eyebrow.
"Disciples," he replied as he flipped open his cell phone and began to dial.
"Get the shit down!" I screamed as I tossed a look from the shadowed stained glass across the church back to Jesus. I pummeled him to the ground as a spew of bullets whined over our heads.
As we hit the ground the booth behind us was put to holes as the barrage of bullets had their way with the only place of confession I would ever have.
"Who followed you, Julius?" Jesus asked as he turned over to face me with a curious smile.
"My disciples," I replied as we shuffled on the ground up to cover behind a pew."But never mind my disciples. How about you get ahold of your disciples and quick-like."
Jesus once again flipped open his phone and began to dial, hollers echoing throughout the church from our intruders.
"They're getting closer. You might want to hurry, brother," I rushed him as I pulled out a pair of 9-mm's.
"Judas? Hi, how goes your day? Yeah, yeah... Listen, I'm at the home base right now and -" his phone shot out of his hand as a bullet whizzed by, grazing his cheek.
I gave a chuckle as I readied my firearms and shot to a stand.
From face to face, I took aim and fired, never giving another look back.
Bam, Bam, Bam...
I lightly pivoted this way and that, popping off another shot just as fast as my eyes could take aim, which was quite superhuman to say the least.
The clips ended and the fun began. I took a quick glance around me to find three remaining, and they were reloading in a hustle. I wasn't looking for the alive, though. I was looking for the freshly dead. Whithering, I found the recently released souls close to their corpses', anxiously insecure with their sudden death; the perfect situation for capture.
With a twist of my wrists, I had captured six unsuspecting souls and sent them grappling like fiends at their ever-so-recent comrades.
Jesus's eyes shot wide and asked with disbelief, "Julius, where have you been?"
"Call me Lucifer, brother."

The Book : Part 2

Welcome to a mini series brought to you by Christopher J. Perger. If you are first time reading this blog segment, I highly suggest that you start with "The Book : Part 1". After all, the only climax you'll get is from the proper illustrated placement.

Cheers


* * *


“May I take your coat?” the welcoming man on staff asked me.

“Surely,” I replied as I slid my overcoat off and handed it to him. He took it from me and coolly turned away to closet it nearby the door.

I rolled my shoulders and tossed my neck sideways bringing out a series of cracks. I sauntered over to the bar, glancing from patron to patron in search for her.

I leaned an elbow upon the bar and scanned dance floor.

“Where the fuck is she?” I softly asked.

“What’ll it be, chief?” the bartender asked in a chipper.

“I’m thinking a shot of-” my answer choked in my throat as I took in the sight of her behind the bar.

Sharice’s hair was curled at the tips and dyed a blood red. I barely recognized her through get up; eye shadow thick and lipstick matching her hair. She wore a black silk shirt that maliciously covered her breasts and tight, black leather pants.

“Really? You’re still drinking shots of tequila, Julius?” She cupped her right hand to her hip, and cocked her head to the side with a curious smile.

I returned a smile and as I glanced back towards the entrance to make sure I hadn’t been followed said, “Old habits die hard.”

“New habits die even harder,” she whispered in my ear. She now stood right behind me, her smell as intruding as her words.

I spun in my chair to face her. “The tequila can wait. Care for a dance?”

She snapped her fingers, bringing a passionate rhythm of a saxophone through the place, and then offered her hand to me.

I cradled her hand in my own, and escorted her out to the floor.

“I never thought you the dancing type,” Sharice said, a sly smile grounding her face. She eloquently followed me out to the center of the floor, other fellow dancers giving a glance at us and parting out of our way.

“Well, I honestly never thought I’d meet the dancing type tonight,” I whispered into her ear as we nestled each other close, one arm around her waist and a hand with hers, fingers intertwined and close to our faces. As our cheeks rested together, I softly said, “Why did he give you a chance?”

She jolted lightly and reared her head back to grace me with eyes of shock. Her bottom lip quivered lightly as she looked past me, and then slowed the dance to a halt. She squeezed my hand that she held as her eyes widened.

“Because he gave you a chance,” Sharice said, face fallen into complete disbelief. “They’re here.”

“I know,” I replied. “Just keep dancing.”

Hesitantly, we got going again, the flow of our dance less smooth this time; as though it’s forced.

“He knows what you’re doing, Julius,” she sternly said. Her eyes were affixed to the whereabouts by the entrance. I didn’t have to look to know that there was probably some men of the larger type giving a bother to the welcoming staff. Men that aren’t as they appear. Men that have unseen wings and wield the word of my father. Sharice’s father.

“Sister, he knows nothing. They’re pawns on a chess board to him. A fucking science experiment. And how many times must I tell you, call me Lucifer,” my words slithered.

Sharice pulled me close to her, the warmth of her body heating me uncomfortably. Her hand began burning in a way that made me doubt my intentions in meeting her that night. I glanced at our hands clenched together to see them boiling. Literally.

Brother, you don’t know what he has in mind. They aren’t only pawns. They are us!” I heard her teeth grit between her words, and her syllables very pronunciated.

She pushed me away from her, arms extending after the blow so far that they buckled and broke at the elbows. A suddenness of surprise ran through me as I flew back and fell upon a table at the edge of the dance floor.

I slowly got to my feet, brushing the remnants of the tabletops holdings off of me as I did so. As I met Sharice’s eyes and realized how red they had grown, the prophet-men from the entrance were at my side and placing their hands upon my shoulders.

“It’s time to go home, Julius,” the one at my right said. His voice was light, entrapping even. “You’re father needs to speak with you.”

“I don’t have a father,” I muttered lightly enough for them to edge their ears closer to hear.

I grabbed each of their ears and twisted with all the strength I had. As I held my eyes on Sharice, her body buckled forward and attending to her broken elbows (snapping them back forward with as little as a small shutter), I tore an ear from each of men next to me. Knowing it would do very little to the angels, I ducked and ran, throwing the ears at my sister as I made it towards the back door.

A moment later I shoved the door open and had bullets wining by me. Two of them planted into my hip as I rounded out of the doorway and headed down the alleyway.

The daylight hit me abnormally, and I knew it to be of his work, considering it was 12:30 in the A.M. My legs buckled underneath me and I fell hard against the building side in the alley.

Fuck,” I screamed.

The backdoor I had just exited flew open and Sharice gallantly walked over to me.

“Tell me, brother. Have you found Jesus?” She asked it in a way that claimed business.

A smile slithered its way onto my face.

“Well, as a matter of fact-“

The Book : Part 1

I lay my hand upright on the table, wincing lightly in agitation. The hand is tired, ragged even, from holding tight to a slippery rope of insanity. I sigh and smile, as the man across the table chuckles. He finds it funny. Is it my pain he enjoys? Or is it just the game? He takes pleasure in too many things for me to tell for sure of anything.

I meet his chuckle and extend my smile into a grin, although it hurts to lie.

“Just say the word, and you’re free to go,” he says.

I stop grinning and scoff, clenching my hand tight in contempt. A few drops of blood trickle from my fist as I pull my hand back. He finds the droplets entertaining and runs a finger through them and licks them away from his finger. My stomach curdles.

“I thought we were on the same side,” I tell him after the pain falters away. I daren’t speak with the pain in full bloom, for my words may come out in a choke.

“We are. You wanted a shot at humanity, and I wanted to see you try.” His voice is boisterous and matches his black eyes magnificently. I don’t hate him as I think I should. Instead I find myself in a state of admiration. His puddle of humility was astounding and not of this world.

“I didn’t try, I did.” I reach into my pants pocket and pull out a book that I toss on the table. He nabs it up, his eyes zeroing in on my trump card. His face melds into a state of complete discontent. He slams the book back onto the table and resituates himself in his chair. Uneasiness consumes him as he crosses his arms before his chest and narrows his eyes on me.

“You’re naïve, God. Even if you did create the world in seven days, you overlooked the most magical part of creation. It’s not what you did, but what comes thereafter.”

I grab the Bible off the table put it back in my pocket. I stand up and turn for the door.

“You might have twisted my word, but they’ll come around.” God stands up and I stop in my tracks.

I turn around and softly say to him, “Fat chance. Neither your way or this way is correct, but with any luck, they’ll figure that out.” I turn away from him as he clenches his wide jaw and pockets his hands in his knee long overcoat.

I open the door as he viciously says, “It’s only a book. How long do you think a book could stick around in any specie’s existence?”

“You’d be surprised,” I whisper to myself and slam the door open and prepare for round two.