Archive for the ‘Kat Beyer’ Category
Straight Out to Yurtville
Friday, April 11th, 2008
To celebrate our first anniversary, each of us here at the Cabal has written a story beginning with a line kindly provided to us by Jay Lake. Click the link at the bottom of the page to see the stories Alex, Dan, David, and Edd have come up with, and check back Monday to see what Luc Reid does…
Zoli liked to hang around psychiatrists’ waiting rooms to hit on the low self-esteem chicks. The waiting room on the Pacific zeppelin was the best, because every time the airship lurched the chick would fall into him and many pleasant sensations would result, usually up in her cabin after her session was over.
And then, landing in Tokyo, taking her cell number, and skipping town for Ulan Bator while the piece of paper with her number on it got washed down a gutter with the cherry blossoms in the Asakusa district. He always went to the temple before he left town. A couple of prayers to Her Holiness Kannon were a good idea: somebody had to have mercy on him, and the Goddess of Mercy was best qualified, right? Light a couple of incense sticks and head straight for Yurtville, the last place some clingy chick would look.
Zeppelin Freak Number 23 was pretty hot for a low self-esteem chick. She slouched like a professional, which made it easier to see down her shirt, although she had a face worth looking at too, an Ethiopian princess thing going on, even if she didn’t take care of her skin–pockmarks on her chin and cheeks screamed “I hate me!” Perfect. Sarcastic and sad, even in bed. He found himself trying to cheer her up when he should’ve been getting off. She almost didn’t give him her phone number.
“You won’t call,” she said.
“Yes I will,” he lied, kissing her on the cheek.
Three incense sticks and two airships later, he settled into his guest yurt, thinking about Genghis Khan, who would never have screwed chicks who hated themselves. But old Genghis wouldn’t have had a problem getting laid. Zoli drank too much airag and stayed up late playing dice with his landlord (also named Genghis).
In the night she stood over him, shoulders back this time, face like an Ethiopian queen this time, pockmarks royal instead of ugly, and she struck him about the face with the long sleeves of her kimono.
“You said you would call, and you didn’t!” She roared in a voice meant for velvet compassion. He got a boner even in terror.
“And then you had the gall,” she continued, leaning close, “the appalling gall, to light three sticks of incense at my shrine and pray to me for mercy? You’re an idiot.”
How Captain Mojo Struck the Wrong Note
Monday, March 24th, 2008
Powered almost entirely by whiskey and attitude, Captain Mojo’s ship “Chastity’s Bottom” sailed its way across the sky in search of trouble and rock ‘n roll—but more importantly, in search of her.
The crew had sold all the cannon for hammocks and guitars. The First Lieutenant gave herself the nickname “Ten-Shot Hammond,” the Second Lieutenant called himself “Six-string Butler,” and everybody called the Third Lieutenant names that could not be printed in the presence of gentlemen—or ladies, for that matter.
They swept through the air, and the other travelers of the skies feared them, especially when they started to play.
“Tell us where she is,” they would shout across the range of clouds, “or we will start a fifty-minute guitar solo!”
So folk in their air boats would lie rather than listen.
“She’s in the City of Rain!”
“She’s dead!”
“She’s joined a band and they’re on tour in the Twelve Currents!”
“She never wants to talk to you again, she hates you, and she wants all her sheet music back!”
“Who the heck are you looking for? Who is she?!”
Only fools asked this question: Captain Mojo would answer them in song, before he burst into tears and hurled empty whiskey bottles across the abyss between ships; he would tell them of her red, red hair, and her glow-in-the-dark tattoo, and her smile like a thunderhead looking for a fight.
The last whiskey bottle flung, he would always end by leaning his elbows on the gunwale and sobbing, “If you see her, tell her I meant it as a compliment!”