Geek Fantasy Novel (23 page)

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Authors: E. Archer

BOOK: Geek Fantasy Novel
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“Excuse me,” Ralph called to the invisible catwalks. “Hello?”

The citizens of the two cities used to mingle freely, the Recently-Living and the Soon-to-be-Dead sharing their slow declines. But the Soon-to-be-Dead (which is how they have chosen to call themselves now that “undead” has become so overdone) were stinky, and had correspondingly dismal outlooks on life. So, many ages ago, the mayor of the Recently-Living city decided that if he forbade the Soon-to-be-Dead from visiting the Recently-Living’s city, their nastiness would stop making everyone even gloomier than they already were. So a decree was passed. Though he banned travel between the city-states, in the interests of diplomacy the Recently-Living mayor offered to send an emissary to the border of the two cities once every three years, if the Soon-to-be-Dead would do the same.

The Soon-to-be-Dead have never sent a single emissary. Every three years, one of the Recently-Living would travel to the same old rotting wooden table set up in the woods and wait until dawn for a ghostly emissary that never arrived.

So it has been for thousands of years.

Until now.

“Until now?” Ralph yelled up to the catwalks.

But the narrator pretended not to hear him.

Ralph cheekily repeated his question.

The narration shut off entirely. It couldn’t reward such character pertness.

CHAPTER LIII

“Hey!” Ralph yelled. “You come down here and tell me precisely what’s going on!”

The city’s night watchmen eyed Ralph suspiciously, for it’s very difficult to carry off yelling at the night sky without looking shifty.

Ralph was frustrated. He felt that in some ways he might as well still have been bedridden in Regina’s cottage, listening to a tale told on a stupid teddy bear. Clearly, he realized, the story transpiring around him was directed by forces much more powerful than he. But rather than give in to its currents, as any well-behaved character would do, he rankled.

Lucky for our despairing Ralph, the death count of this novel thus far was high, which meant a flood of fresh beings entering Purgatory. What with the hundreds of characters dispatched over the course of these three plots, one or two familiar faces were bound to have been randomly selected to appear in Purgatory Main Isle. And one of them came walking along right then.

Or, more accurately, flying.

Yes, it was Prestidigitator. Not the Daphne impersonation, but the real fairy, who had died back in the bunny blast and had been assigned to PMI
before the mass death of the Snow Queen’s Flood. She had been scouring the city of the Recently-Living for some time, hoping to find Ralph or Cecil, and her searching had gotten more and more frantic, since she had recently felt the Clutch and knew she would soon pass over to the Soon-to-be-Dead. Sure, hunting continually meant getting no sleep for a week — but there was plenty of time to sleep once she was totally dead, right?

You can imagine her delight to come upon Ralph. Granted, her glee was tempered when she saw Ralph crazily yelling at the sky, but it was immense nonetheless. She alighted on his shoulder and wrapped her daisy-pale fairy arms around his neck.

“Ralph!” she squeaked in joy. “You’ve died!”

Being reminded of his predicament didn’t help Ralph’s mood. But there’s no overestimating the charm of Prestidigitator’s button features. He embraced her.

Once he’d released her they exchanged whatever pleasantries they could think of while in Purgatory. “Have you … felt the Clutch yet?” she eventually asked, nervously nibbling on a wingtip.

“No, I don’t think so,” he said.

Prestidigitator gasped, the gust of which pulled her forward a few inches. “Oh! Of course you wouldn’t — you’re in
color!”

Ralph peered at his clothing. “Yes, I suppose I am. Any idea what that’s about?”

Prestidigitator shook her head, stunned.

Ralph then took a deep breath and recounted his recent adventures in search of Beatrice, culminating in his apparent death on the baleen of a whale, his arrival in Purgatory Main Isle, and hearing the narration broadcast in his head.

Prestidigitator was unimpressed, as fairies will be, at something as banal as a book narrating itself to one of its characters. But Purgatory politics had her fascinated. “So they send an emissary every few years, huh?”

“Every three years, yeah. If the jerk narrator is to be trusted.”

A nearby tree fell on the city wall and nearly flattened Ralph, who sprang to his feet in alarm. At this point any true character should have been quaking in fear at the awesome power of the Book; but instead, as Ralph was a testy young geek, he sulked.

“Well,” Prestidigitator said once she’d returned (she had been buffeted some fathoms away by the falling tree), “I’m going to guess — only a guess, mind you — that those three years will be up tonight.”

“Why do you think that?”

“That’s the way life works when you’re a fairy. Stick with me.”

“Do you know where the rotten table is?” Ralph asked.

Prestidigitator shivered. “Yes.”

The trail to the border led through more territories than a trail rightfully should. At first it was a forest lane, then a rocky mountain path, then a gravel perimeter of a skating lake, then a crystal canyon bridge, then a rope bridge in a wood canopy, then an underground tunnel, all in only an hour of hiking. It was like the whole world had been compressed to the snow globe scale of Purgatory Main Isle. Ralph, awed into silence, held Prestidigitator’s hand as they progressed.

The quality of the grayscale was changing, the darks sliding on a continuum from tweed to sepia to gunmetal to a set of flat tones, from the black-and-white of film to that of newsprint. By the time they reached the perimeter clearing, the only colors remaining were pure black and pure white with no
shading in between, so that they looked to be traveling through a land of simple cutouts and low-tech photocopies.

There was no vegetation in the narrow clearing, just shadowed chalk. At one side of a rough-cut table, flipping the crumbling pages of a leather-bound book, was the Recently-Living emissary. He appeared to have died sometime in the nineteenth century; he wore upon his head a tall traveling hat, on which the velvet had frayed and stood out like a mist of fuzzy curls. His long coat was shapeless from a century of wear.

“Do we introduce ourselves?” Ralph wondered to Prestidigitator from where they were hidden behind a tree at the edge of the chilly glen. “Or is that forbidden? What do you think?”

Prestidigitator wrapped a wing around Ralph’s mouth. For, across the clearing, a second figure had emerged.

The emissary coughed twice in shock, straightened his old coat, and squinted.

Through the crackling branches lurched an undead creature.

Conventional storytelling sets up a rather arbitrary distinction between the skeleton and the zombie. The story usually goes thusly: Zombies are lumbering, pallid creatures with a good amount of flesh dangling from them, while skeletons are rickety figures that have long been picked clean of muscles, organs, and sinew. Now, of course, the months post-death are actually a slow process of decomposition. Sure, you start out looking zombie-ish, but as chunks of flesh rot and fall away you wind up looking more and more like a skeleton. So it’s foolish to say there’s one group of zombies, here, and one group of skeletons, there, as foolish as saying everyone is either kind or mean, smart or dumb, feminine or masculine. This particular undead had a fair amount of muscle remaining around her spinal column and a big goopy piece
of flesh on one knee, and had managed to retain a chunk of brain that dangled limply from one side of her fractured skull like a wet sock. When she spoke, she revealed one circular staircase of a tooth in her jaw. You can call her a skeleton or a zombie — I’ll call her an undead and be done with it.

The Recently-Living emissary closed his book and made the sign of the cross as the undead woman shuffled toward the table. For a diplomat, he seemed entirely unprepared to encounter anyone. After removing his hat, he flicked his fingers through his hair (literally: one hair), placed the hat neatly on the table, stood up, held out his hand as if for a shake, thought better of it, sat down, and put his hat back on. Then he took the hat back off and held it over his nose, for the other emissary was very stinky.

The Soon-to-be-Dead emissary didn’t sit at the table (the Recently-Living emissary thought this was to intimidate him, though little did he know that it was only because the undead find it very hard to regain a standing position without the benefit of cartilage), and when she spoke it was with a booming voice that emerged from the center of her carved-out chest. “Those you call undead have a demand. We have decided that the boundary between the lands of the Recently-Living and the Soon-to-be-Dead is unfair. The Recently-Living have too much lollipop and sunbeam, the Soon-to-be-Dead too much hangnail and gloom. We thereby insist that the boundary be redrawn.”

The Recently-Living emissary worked hard to formulate a response as he watched one of the Soon-to-be-Dead’s lips fall off. “Oh?” he said, gagging.

“We have thought long about how best to do this. You have no choice but to accept our plan.”

“I say, that sounds most unfair.” The Recently-Living emissary was about to continue, but was stilled by the undead emissary’s angry expression, underscored by a sudden throbbing of her exposed brain.

“The Soon-to-be-Dead’s plan is that this night, at the stroke of midnight, after the last rays of the white sun have disappeared, the Soon-to-be-Dead and the Recently-Living will send their fastest riders from the city gates. Where the two horsemen collide, the boundary will be.”

The Recently-Living emissary found his voice. “This is a landgrab? And based on how
fast
we are? That’s ridiculous.” He paused, thinking for a moment. “I’m not even sure we have any horses.”

The Soon-to-be-Dead emissary extracted a piece of parchment from between her rotting leg muscles. “The undead have written their demand for your superiors to peruse. At midnight, we will send our ghost queen, Annabelle, racing toward you.”

The Recently-Living emissary pulled the damp paper from her hands. “You want me to bring this back to Lord Gid?”

“No,” the undead emissary said. “We wish one of the three watching to bring it back.” And with that, she cleanly sunk the remaining bones of a hand into the Now-Recently-Recently-Living emissary’s stomach. His guts shivered out over her skeletal hand like so much cream. He twitched and slumped over the table as the undead emissary shuffled away.

“Ralph!” Prestidigitator squeaked once they were again alone. “What was all of that about?”

“I don’t know,” Ralph said, his stomach heaving. He stepped into the clearing. “But she said there were three of us.”

He spun around. “Who’s there?” he called.

There was a rustling in a thicket, and who should emerge but Beatrice, plain and lovely Beatrice.

CHAPTER LIV

Beatrice stepped over the barren chalk ground and checked the pulse of the Now-Thoroughly-Dead-But-Recently-Living emissary.
1

“Beatrice?” Ralph called. “Is that you?”

But she ignored him. Already she was tearing toward the Soon-to-be-Dead city.

Ralph sprinted to catch up with her. “Where are you going?”

“I won’t be able to find the Soon-to-be-Dead city on my own,” she panted. “Tailing the emissary is my only chance of seeing my mother again.”

“Your mother is a zombie?” Ralph asked.

“She’s not in the Recently-Living city. Either she’s undead or she’s gone entirely. And you heard the emissary say the name of the ghost queen was Annabelle. This is my chance to find out if it’s her.”

They reached a line of charcoal trees. “I have to run,” she said. “The trail is getting cold.”

“I’m coming with you,” Ralph said firmly.

“I’d try to talk you out of it,” Beatrice said, “but I’m terrified of doing this alone.”

“Let’s go.”

“Someone needs to deliver the undead’s parchment to the Recently-Living.”

“Don’t worry about that,” Prestidigitator said. She had already flitted to the shoulders of the dead emissary and picked up the rank decree. She nodded dutifully in Ralph and Beatrice’s direction, then zipped toward the Recently-Living city.

Beatrice and Ralph began their dash into the realm of the undead.

1
n.b.
: What happens when someone who is already dead dies is actually quite complex, and not always the outcome one would expect. I recommend that those further interested consult
After the Afterlife: Under the Underworld
or works of similar scholarly merit.

CHAPTER LV

Shadows moved in the oily light, creeping closer with each step Ralph and Beatrice took. Some were shapes and some were figures, always growing and shrinking. They were everywhere Ralph and Beatrice looked, thronging the path and tangling in the breezes above.

As they chased the undead emissary, Ralph and Beatrice sprinted through territories similar to those Ralph had passed through to come to the clearing, only in washed-out shades and reversed order. By the time they reached the end, even the grayness had seeped out. The landscape was an overexposed white, as if etched in scrimshaw and left to bleach, and was even more thickly teeming with shadows. Ralph and Beatrice slipped between them, hands held tightly.

Finally the undead emissary slowed before a massive wall. The city of the Soon-to-be-Dead appeared to be identical to that of the Recently-Living — only at this side of Purgatory, the city had no discernible entrance. Ralph and Beatrice hid at the edge of the wood and watched the emissary run her bone hands over the seams of the white rock. Eventually she located a certain stone, jabbed her fingers around it as if to pluck it out, then dove through. The wall admitted her as easily as if she were a hologram.

“Do you think there are any guards?” Ralph whispered.

“I don’t see any,” Beatrice whispered back. “There might be, like, invisible guards, but we’re probably okay.”

They tried putting their fingers through various stones, with scuffed knuckles the sole result. Then Beatrice’s hand slid through one of the rocks. “Found it,” she said.

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