Thursday, June 3, 2010

CHASING THE WIND - PART 7 ~ Barry J Northern of Harbinger*33 presents a mysti-serial


Chasing the Wind
 ~ Part Seven ~ 
By ~ Barry J. Northern

"Chasing the Wind" from THE CHAOSWIND CHRONICLES, an original fantasy set in the mystical world of Cryl, a land struggling to contain the chaotic magical energies that were unleashed upon the world when the last god was murdered.

The Mystical Story So Far ...
Aloethar and Pym have discovered how to Bind the Chaoswind within a drink called kohol, Walfrid the merchant drank some of the resulting potion and is still in a trance, while the clan's wind-chasers have ridden off to face the storm with the traditional Stone Sapphires. Unfortunately the Stones were not completely drained of power by the first potion and may not be able to stop the deadlier Aspects of the Storm. Aloethar and Pym race to produce more kohol with a new copper alembic while the storm rages towards them ...


     It felt calm and still back in the tent, and Aloethar realised now how windy it had grown outside. “We must be quick.”
     Pym helped Aloethar take out the two main pieces of the copper alembic and rest them near the fire. Then, under Aloethar's instruction, the two men lifted the bottom onto the tripod above the fire so that it sat above it like a large copper cauldron. It was about half the size of the old glass alembic, so Aloethar was glad that it was not too small for the tripod, although it was a close thing. Pym moved over to the top piece, which was shaped like the glass alembic had been; a dome coming up sharply to a thin peak, which bent down to form a long pipe leading to the floor. “This really is an impressive piece of metalwork, Aloethar. Your father may have been a master glass-blower, but you could fetch a handsome wage as a blacksmith in any town back home.”
     “Thank you, Pym. But leave that piece there for now. I have another job for you while I get this fire hot again. I packed some food on the cart for the journey, there is a bag of wheat-flour I was saving for next feast-day. I want you to make bread-dough. There'll be enough water left outside in the barrel we used to fill the pots.”
     “This is hardly the time to think of food, Aloethar. I'm hungry too, but there must be a more convenient snack?”
     “Yes, I have some dried dates in there, bring those out as well, but the dough is not to eat. Make it thick, and use the whole bag. We'll use it to seal the two parts of the alembic.”
     “Will it work?”
     “Have you got a better suggestion?”
     Pym conceded that he had not, and went outside to fetch water while Aloethar saw to the fire. When Pym opened the tent-flap, Aloethar could hear the not-so-distant howl of the approaching Storm outside. Soon, Pym waddled in carrying a large bucket in both hands. “Aloethar. Zakir and his men have ridden off to meet the Storm.”
     Aloethar put more wood on the fire. “God's speed to them all.”
     Both Aloethar and Pym cheered when the first drop of kohol pattered from the new copper alembic into a small glass. The glass was soon a finger-full, and Aloethar swapped in the larger khamra-kas when the dripping became a steady trickle. He raised the glass. “It’s the brewer's privilege to sample the first batch.” Aloethar knocked back the glass, sucked through his teeth, and blew. “Phew! That's good.” He smelt the glass. “It's clean. Purer than before. Smell.” He handed the glass to Pym.
     Pym smelt the glass, then held it under the new alembic's thin condenser tube. “I'd rather taste. Days like today turn a man to drink.” He too knocked it back in one, but unlike Aloethar stuck out his tongue and coughed.
     Aloethar clapped him several times on the back. “Strong stuff, eh?”
     Pym tried to say “yes”, but what came out sounded like a high-pitched yelp.
     They both laughed, but then the tent-flap blew in against a sudden, forceful gust of wind, and their smiles died. Aloethar shielded his eyes from the dust and sand, and secured the tent-flap. It was hard to make out anything out there, but he thought he caught a glimpse of Waldfrid, still kneeling down out there, staring into nothing with those black eyes. As he returned a thin jet of steam hissed from the join around the alembic. “Another leak Pym. How are we doing for dough?” The noise of the steam's whine was accompanied by the sputtering kohol as it splashed, no longer flowing steadily, into the container. Pym took the damp muslin off the bowl of dough, and brought it over to Aloethar, it was nearly all gone. They couldn't take many more leaks like this. Nevertheless, the leak was soon fixed, and the kohol returned to a steady trickle.
     The alembic worked fast, and before long they had to decant the khamra-kas into a bottle. After two more bottles, and with half-a-bottle's worth still in the khamra-kas, the stream of kohol stopped. Aloethar thinned out the fire, and left the alembic to cool, while Pym decanted the khamra-kas, and wiped it dry. Aloethar checked over his new invention, it was a little scorched on the bottom – it might need replacing more often than the glass variety, and there had been several more leaks, but it worked. And Aloethar had realised that the kohol it produced no longer had a sulphurous scent; something in the metal had reacted with the kohol, as Pym had predicted, but in a good way. It had made the stuff even purer. He wished his father was still alive to see it. Lost in his thoughts, he took a few moments to notice a change in the ambient sound. “Can you hear that Pym?”
     “No Storm.”
     “Nothing. It's all quiet.”
     “They must have done it!”
     Aloethar put the four bottles into a bag, along with two canteens of water, and gave it to Pym. “Here. I'll carry the khamra-kas to Bind the Stones in. We must go out to find them. We must have enough now to drain them all.”
     Outside, everything was covered in a fine layer of sand, so that all looked smooth and untouched, with no hard edges anywhere. Waldfrid had gone. Pym turned to Aloethar. “Do you think the Storm took him?”
     “No, look.” Aloethar pointed at the floor. “Footprints. He's gone south.”
     Pym squinted through the haze. “I really am going to need you to guide me out of the desert you know, Aloethar. I had no idea that was south. Without the merchants, I am lost.”
     “Let's hope they are not lost as well. They should have stayed with the clan. Let's head west.”
     They didn't have to go far. A man, slumped over a plodding camel, emerged from the haze. His face was covered except for the merest slit for his eyes. It could have been any one of the men. As they drew nearer, Aloethar was encouraged by the strong glow glinting through the gaps in the bulging saddlebags, but his spirits fell when it became apparent that the man was alone. No-one else emerged through the haze.
     Pym held onto the camel's reins to stop it, and the man nearly slid from its back. Aloethar took hold of him under the arms and hefted him to the floor. He pulled the wrapped cloth away from the man's face. It was Zakir. His eyes fluttered open.
     “Aloethar?”
     “Yes, Zakir. Are you all right?”
     “Water.” Pym handed Aloethar a canteen from the bag. Aloethar gently trickled some water past Zakir's cracked lips. He coughed a few times, but when he spoke again his voice was clear. “We stopped it. It was the biggest Storm I've ever seen, but we stopped it.”
     “The Stone's worked?”
     “The ones you drained worked, but they were full before we had captured it all. Then we only had the red Stones left. At first we thought they were working. Ahmed got too confident. He was the first to be taken.”
     Aloethar cursed himself. If he had believed in himself and tried the copper alembic sooner, then perhaps Ahmed would still be alive. “And the others, Issam, and Basel?”
     “All gone. Damn that Storm! Struck by the red cords. Each time a man was touched by one, it disappeared, along with the man and his camel. Issam was the last to go, and after that the Storm was gone.”
     Aloethar had a sudden memory of he and Issam, as children, playing jump-rope on a Feast's Day, with both their fathers smiling on, daring them to go faster and faster until they fell over in the dust in a tangle of rope. Their mothers, preparing the food they would all soon enjoy, laughed along with the other clanwomen. His mother had been heavily pregnant with Sana'ah that day. Within weeks she had died bringing his little sister into the world. That Feast Day had been the last truly happy moment Aloethar could remember. His father and mother were gone, and now Issam too. He would be damned if he'd let the second storm-front take Sana'ah and Ibna. He put the canteen to Zakir's lips again, but the soldier knocked it away.
     “Why couldn't there have been one more cord?” He sat up, anger contorting his face. “I should have sacrificed myself before my men, like the Thard did for me!” He stood, and though he swayed on his feet, stumbled away from them.
     “Where are you going?” Zakir meandered forward as if drunk, dismissing Aloethar with a wave of his hand. Aloethar started after him. “Wait. You've got to help me. I can drain the Stones. We can go after the Storm and save our people.”
     Zakir stopped, but did not turn around. His voice had lost its energy. He sounded weary and beaten. “Nothing can stop it, Aloethar. I am done.” With that he crumpled to the floor.
     Aloethar dashed to his side. “Here, take some more water.” Then to Pym. “You've got to get him back to the tent. He'll die out here.” Pym came to Aloethar's side, and they helped Zakir to his feet. “Can you manage, Pym?”
     “Aren't you coming?”
     “There is no time. I must ride out against the Storm before it is too late.”
     “No, Aloethar! It is suicide. Four experienced men have died already, and Zakir --”
     “Zakir may die too if you don't get him undercover.”
     “But, Aloethar!”
     “No more!” Aloethar snapped, and then more calmly. “Pym, my friend, please, I must do this. I promise you I will come back and go with you to visit the scholars, across the seas to the wetlands of Tyntieri.” He clapped Pym on the shoulder. “Now go! Zakir needs you now. I shall see you soon.”
     Pym hefted Zakir's arm more securely around his shoulder. “Good hunting, my friend.” Then he set off into the desert haze, leaving Aloethar alone.
     Aloethar made his way back to the camel. Ignoring his usual trepidation around the animals, he reached out and stroked the poor beast's neck. “I'm afraid you must take me back to the Storm, my friend.”
First of all it was time to drain the Stones with his new batch of kohol. He took the five shining Stones out of the animal's saddlebags. The old bottles of black kohol clinked together as the bags sagged. He laid them out on the sand around the empty khamra-kas in preparation. He was about to decant the new kohol into it but had another thought. He took the khamra-kas over to the camel, and emptied one of the canteens of water into it. The beast lapped it up quickly. “Good boy. You are a boy aren't you? You've got big lashes for a boy.” Aloethar giggled. Then berated himself. He mustn't let his nervousness turn to panic.
When the camel had finished, Aloethar took the khamra-kas, set it down next to the Stones, and filled it with some of his new kohol. Every one of the Stones positioned ready around the khamra-kas immediately began to dim as their magical energy flowed into the liquid. He hadn't expected that, and wondered if he needed to decant the kohol at all. The liquid didn't bubble this time, but rapidly turned through a range of ever-deepening greens until it was as black as the old stuff. All five Stones were already much dimmer. He poured the black kohol back into its bottle, and then tested his theory by placing a bottle of new kohol amongst the Stones. They began to dim too, so he put the last two bottles, and the half-full one, amongst them too. It was hard to see the kohol changing colour through the bottles' thick green glass, but the Stones dimmed even faster than before, and within a minute shone no more.
     With no time to celebrate this success, Aloethar hurriedly packed the bottles, distributing them equally in the saddlebags on each side of the camel's rump, and then stood by the side of the beast. “Now. How do I get on?” He put one hand up high on the back of the saddle, held a rein in the other, and tried to pull himself up. The animal made a strange, complaining noise, and shifted. Aloethar feared the camel would bolt, but it clumsily folded its knobbly legs and sank down to a sitting position. “Thank you, my friend.” Aloethar climbed into the saddle, wrapped his shawl across his face, and pulled on the reins. “Let's go!” The well-trained beast rose up onto its feet, swaying, and nearly throwing its untrained rider, but Aloethar was able to hold on, and soon they were off, tracking Waldfrid's footsteps. Tracking the Chaostorm.



(c) 2009 ~ Author Barry J. Northern 
Pencil Sketch by ~  Artist Jon Taylor
 
C H A S I N G   T H E    W I N D
 ~ To Be Thursday*Continued ~
S E E K   N E X T   I N S T A L L M E N T  AT THE BIJOU
 
THANK*YOU BARRY
for pure energy stirring
*AT THE BIJOU*
   
~ Absolutely*Kate
        and fine staff of renown 
 
Delve deep reader to the mystical mind of Barry, a talented conjurer as magicks go and let fantasies fiction flash and flow ~
 
AUTHOR BARRY J NORTHERN is fantasy, fable,fiction, fun and fine finesse when it comes to turning out churning energy thought ~ ala the written word.  Since you are enjoying Chasing the Wind kindly  email Barry at barryjnorthern@googlemail.com and convince him to finish editing the first Chaoswind Chronicle Novel, "THE BIRTH OF MAGIC". Also, Barry welcomes you  to pop on over to experience magic on the rise in words, sounds, sensations and enlightening glimmer at the mystical energizing site, 21st Century Writer Barry J. Northern.  

OR ... you could bring some FEAR TO YOUR EARS ~ Listen in @ CAST MACABRE. (Something's always brewing!)


   
I sensate Barry's energies are contagious. They draw me in. But I won't drink the kohol . . . yet.

       ~ Absolutely*Kate

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

GOT NOIR? ~ By Absolutely*Kate of Harbinger*33

GOT NOIR?
~ by Absolutely*Kate


From stylish crime dramas where come hither sensuality and cynicism on the rat-a-tat-tat shoot out their shadowy flings . . .  where grifters, coppers, dicks and pugilists pull punches and punchlines . . . this enticing genre spans decades of tough talkin' flatfoots and daunting dames who flaunt ~~ well, what dames should flaunt to keep their daunting on the up and up. I mean what's a dame without her up and up to ooze a come hither? Low-key lighting swirls mighty minds in mist or fog as the mystique of visual style transports police procedures, lingering glances, dark alleys  and opening chances to open and shut cases . . . or are they?

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Hello there. Cop a seat. Sit a spell. My name's Nelle. I'm a Private*Eye with a penchant for winking trouble's way. I can load a luger or lead-on a loser before I look over my shoulder, come the end of a coffee and doughnut day. That's how they come at you. When you least expect it. But you knew that. You're no flimflam or run-of-the-mill chump. You're Jake. And stories? Every sucker behind the eight ball's got a soppy one. You think they're on the up and up? No way Buster Brown. Not even when those bums hit the pavement and eyeball their bottom dollar, sucking last breaths with their puss down. Every bird is workin' an angle. My job? Cut through some con's shadow, lift the chenille curtain corner on a little mist, let some truth shine in for the chippies and the chopper squad ~ you know, menfolk who measure themselves by how big their machine guns really are. Yeah. You get my drift. Everyone's a dreamer. And everyone wants to grill their beef. They amble in to me when they don't know the diff and wanta get someplace where they're not. In a jiff. You can see 'em comin' like butter and eggs men. You know the type, the rubes and yokels who flash big wads in nifty nightclubs and wonder what hit 'em on a not so nifty night. Usually it was a 45.


1945. The world's got a whole new spin. Me and Jake, who was Jake -- we used to drink out of the same bottle. You know, we were real close friends, pitching the woo. Well, til the floozy in the glad rags. She was no satin doll though. I'll tell you that. But I don't wanta get into that now. Boy oh boy was I miffed. I did want to tell Jake Devlin to dust off, to git and take his dang gat with him. But there was a flaw to my fine falutin' thinkin' there. There's always trouble when you think a real good idea is the one hot potato that's gonna bounce you from the bumps on the rough stretches of the lonesome highways. The trouble with watching Jake's trench trudge out my door was ~ well, he's still my partner. And his uncle Harvey, he's our landlord. Gee whiz, I like Uncle Harvey. It's his nephew now that's janglin' all my nerves like bangtails at the Belmont at post-time.

(c) 2010 ~ Author Absolutely*Kate
Exclusive AT THE BIJOU premiere

Film-Photo  "The Big Combo", 1955


I've got more to tell you. 
It was real nice meeting you folks. 

BACKATCHA, NEXT TUESDAY
HERE *AT THE BIJOU*
A REAL SWELL JOINT



GOT SOME PALS
TO INTRODUCE YOU TO FIRST:


NOIR PALS ~

You know Beetner and Brazill?

DeeDee and Sam?

Sanderford and Payne?

Michaels and Venutolo?


R E A D   O N
( in the following NOIR presentation ) 


For a rundown on this Absolutely*Kate author/captain/promoter and believer in believers though, you genuinely need to sail over to the Pamila Payne "COMRADES" section of VINTAGE VICE. ~ It exceeds "quite nice". I thank her, wholeheartedly of course.  

~ Absolutely*Kate

NELLE'S NOIR PALS ~ AT THE BIJOU ... Double*Feature Tuesdays & Thursdays

~ *
Nelle's
NOIR PALS 
~*~*~*~*~*~


You know  
Beetner and Brazill?

DeeDee and Sam?

Sanderford and Payne?

Michaels and Venutolo?


 ERIC BEETNER
of Harbinger*33
with J.B. Kohl
One of the most appealing aspects (if not the most appealing) of noir fiction is it allows readers to plumb the depths of life, to observe characters pushed to their limits and beyond, into a very gray moral area. What Beetner and Kohl have done here is approach that gray area from both sides. One man is on a quest to avenge the death of his brother. Another is ostensibly out to stop him before he brings chaos down on the city, but what he's really doing is searching his own soul and scrounging for a reason--any reason--to not allow such chaos to descend. Both have high aspirations, but neither has convinced himself that he's worthy of them. A gripping character study sent in the nearly lawless, Wild West-esque days of Depression-era Kansas City, One Too Many Blows to the Head will deliver much the same to your own noggin.

~ Amazon Review by an astute guy named Jimmy 

ERIC BEETNER, author commits crimes on paper. Do carouse through his crime fiction, short stories, novels and screenplay notes. Ask him how he fares in contest flair (or flare?) ... and ... a GameShow? You have to ask Eric ... or find clues at his crime notebook of a write-site.
Eric's Noir
BIJOU Talkie:


~*~*~*~*~*~
 

Exacting Interview of  the illustrious
PAUL D. BRAZILL 
of Harbinger*33
~ by DeeDee of
the NOIR site of all Noir sites on any dark night, shedding some light ~
La Lumière et L'Obscurité ...

Noirish City....the world of rain soaked streets, dark alleys and dead ends...The Home of Tough Guys, City Dames, and a cup of (Coffee) ...The Maltese Falcon, Val Lewton(esque's) header, Black Angel, Sunset Blvd., dark, light, shadows, Cry of the City, Victor Mature, Robert Mitchum, Richard Widmark, Barbara Stanwyck, Richard Conte, dark figures, Act of Violence, The Big Combo, Out of the Past, Paranoia, dark alleys, rain slick streets, Chiaroscura......Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor, Peter Lorre, Sidney Greenstreet, Elisha Cook and that... "Bird."

PAUL D. BRAZILL, "You Would Say That, Wouldn't You?" Read up on an aspiring pulp writer who was born in Hartlepool, England and is now on the lam in Bydgoszcz, Poland. He started writing at the end of 2009 - or 2008 is it Paul? -- and he seems to be getting away with it ... Personally, I believe Paul's been channeling crime figures for decades and changes the date of the beginning of his beguine each year to maintain his ingenue status ... Shhhh, that's between me and whomsoever is gleaning this suspicion.  

~ Absolutely*Kate

 Do Enjoy ~
Paul's Noir TorchSong  
 
  

~*~*~*~*~*~

Likewise, Meet up with DeeDee's skillful cinematic pal Sam Juliano, co-founder of WONDERS IN THE DARK ... film presented ... as film should be.

"Featuring fairly regular theatre reviews and even the odd opera or classical piece by yours truly, it will, by and large, be a chapel in the North Transept of the Cathedral Devoted to the Moving Image in general. My enthusiasm, I am constantly told, is tireless, haranguing people into theatres with a zealousness not seen since Midshipmen patrolled the inns of Portsmouth and Southampton looking for ‘volunteers’ for the King’s Navy in Press Gangs.

"You’ll see a list of movies by year in the Movie Timeline, a basic reference tool to show what major films and milestones were released in a given year. We may make a go of this crazy enterprise."   ~ Sam Juliano

~*~*~*~*~*~
 
KEVIN MICHAELS
of Harbinger*33
on a NOIR spree
 

A Kevin Michaels readers' fave AT THE BIJOU is BETWEEN THE LINES - bikers, jail, a little violence, and a little blood... elements that drive a man's Harley-hardened engine. Kevin  is everything New Jersey (attitude, edginess, and Bruce Springsteen..but not Bon Jovi). He is a writer and surfer who lives at the Jersey Shore. Both Kevin and writing projects are on a  creative roll, banging out short stories, editing and revising yet again a few sections of his novel STILL BLACK REMAINS, finishing up stories that have lingered far too long in the "drafts" file, and pushing through other projects. 
 Shoot the breeze at  ~ A COLD RUSH OF AIR
for more Kevin Michaels classic edgy flair

      
      now playing
   AT THE BIJOU

Feel what repercussions can do
when a man does what a man 
thinks he must do.



~*~*~*~*~*~

PAMILA PAYNE
of Harbinger*33
 a NOIR feel . . .

LOS ANGELES AREA
WOMAN WRITES ...
  She writes dark fiction fueled by personal details and distorted through the lens of an imperfect memory. She writes horror, some of it real and recorded fact by fact. Pamila Payne's first novel, The Bella Vista Motel, is in search of a publisher.


Comrades  Recognition. Respect and admiration. Kind words from total strangers. Encouragement from friends.  March on fellow writers, march on . . . 

@ Vintage Vice, knockout new site heralding tough tantalizing talents of Pamila Payne 

For a rundown on this Absolutely*Kate author/captain/promoter and believer in believers, as well as Paul Brazill, dubbed the Timothy Leary of Pulp Fiction, you genuinely need to sail over to the Pamila Payne "COMRADES" section of VINTAGE VICE. ~ It exceeds "quite nice", we assure you. We thank her, wholeheartedly of course.  ~ Absolutely*Kate



 ~*~*~*~*~*~

HARRY B. SANDERFORD
and ABSOLUTELY*KATE
 of Harbinger*33
with a 1-2 punch



Harry B. Sanderford is a Central Florida surfing cowboy who'd sooner spin yarns than mend fences.

His talent touches lives as deeply as his friendships and memorable cheer.

 

READ MORE HARRY
HERE and HERE,

 THE PRINTS AND THE POPPER
matinees of murder mystery
determining fear 


~*~*~*~*~*~

ANTHONY VENUTOLO
of Harbinger*33
the first NOIR talkie!




ANTHONY VENUTOLO brought his first cinematic noir piece AT THE BIJOU with more excitement than a happy trigger finger (top-metaphor that one, Paul Brazill). He fancies himself a writer by trade and by passion. Dabbling with  screenplays, short stories and now a pulpy comic book about a tattoo artist in Atlantic City, this Jersey guy freelanced for such magazines as Bikini, Details, Chance and Playboy Online, and wrote a column for the gambling magazine Casino Player and Strictly Slots. Anthony works as an editor at a Pulitzer Prize-winning daily newspaper, and dated all the cocktail waitresses he could get good storyline material from until he met and married the sensational lady of his dream genre. (Joking about the cocktail waitresses, but not the sensational lady). Online his flash fiction and prose poems have appeared at Zygote in My Coffee, Red Fez, Deuce Coupe, Gutter Eloquence, Shoots and Vines and Six Sentences. He's a talent and a tribute AT THE BIJOU to himself and colleagues with a stellar story you can bet on in the upcoming HARBINGER*33, sailing forth writers' deserving destinies. 
  
BUKOWSI'S BASEMENT is primarily Anthony's showcase for nuggets that can range from Skid Row to the Savoy as well as gritty creative posts in the form of prose poems and flash fiction. So pour yourself some cheap hooch and settle in because this is a place to celebrate all things wonderous in the gin-soaked literary landscape of Chuck Buk, Jack Kerouac, Tom Waits and Raymond Carver.


~ *

Good NOIR
and Good Nights
from Nelle,
Absolutely*Kate
and the fine staff of renown, 
 
*AT THE BIJOU*