Saturday, May 11, 2013

The Girl in the Glass for Dirty Goggles Blog Hop

A steampunk short for RuthSteven and Jenn's Dirty Goggles Blog Hop.  Enjoy.  For rules and to enter, go here. And Ruth has a ton of other helpful info here.

Category:  Steampunk
Content:  Safe for all.
Word count:  671

from Pinterest and altered via Paint


The Girl in the Glass
by Stacy Bennett-Hoyt


The ghostly image flickered inside the glass tube as Thinman spun dials and flicked levers.

“What kind of ‘werk is it?” Jasper asked, picking dust off Thinman’s jacket. The black tailcoat did little to hide Thinman’s skeletal bronze frame or the steadily whirling flywheels within.

“Sir?”

“What’s its function?”

“None, sir.”

“Explain.”

“It’s a girl, sir.” The mechanical voice was almost patronizing.

“It’s, … she’s human?” Jasper’s heart slammed against his sternum, notably lacking  the click-whirr-hiss that pervaded the rest of his world.

“I can’t refine the image further, sir.”

Jasper leaned closer, lifting his goggles to his forehead which forced his black hair into a spiky plume.

There hadn’t been a human on Portalune since the Exodus. Except for Jasper, of course. Stowed away on the first rocket to land, he’d been asleep, unnoticed, the night everyone disappeared. Thinman said war had called everyone home, though the blue-green orb remained untroubled from Jasper’s vantage.

Pale lips moved inside the dirty tube, silently pleading.  “Where’s the message coming from?”

A hiss of steam and Thinman rose with a smooth swish of joints to check indicators and gages. “Triangulating location.”

Jasper thumped his cane impatiently while Thinman’s inner abacus calculated, click-ping-whirr. “Three kilometers beyond the Tunnels.”

Fear curled its icy fingers into Jasper. Evil lurked in the Tunnels, those bloody bastards that had taken his leg. Looking again at the ghost-girl, his loneliness was suffocating.  He loved his clockwerks and, in their own way, they loved him. But, she — she was warm, breathing flesh. She could laugh.

He swore and paced the concrete bunker, cane and metal foot rapping in syncopated time as fear and need warred within him. He stopped suddenly and swept his top hat from the rack. Drawing his goggles down over his eyes, he announced. “We have to help her.”

Thinman turned so fast Jasper could have sworn he was surprised. “But your orders...”

“I know what I said. Set coordinates by your secondary gyroscope.”

“Affirmed.”

Jasper pulled open a drawer and withdrew a belt that holstered single-handed crossbow loaded with iron spikes and a miniature Gatling. He strapped it on and slipped a folding knife into his garret. Pulling a shotgun off the wall, he thrust it at Thinman.

“Sir?”

“In case of Slinkers.”

Then Jasper strapped on knee-length spats and picked up two oil cans, praying there weren’t many soggy places along the way.

He didn’t wait for Thinman but yanked a torch from the cupboard and strode out with all the inevitability of a man running downhill.  Through Portalune’s concrete halls, gears and pistons flanked them. They dropped down wrought-iron ladders and across cagey catwalks over boilers, among smokestacks and down again into the sewers where his path paralleled row upon row of copper pipe and wire. And everywhere a haze of steam obscured the dingy world illuminated by yellow flickering lamplight.

The diggerwerk named Bernard crouched at the entrance to a vaulted brick atrium that extended into darkness. Bernard’s large iron treads were covered with dried chalky moon-dust from its efforts to explore and expand the base, retired since the unpleasant discovery of some pre-existing tunnels and the warren’s vicious inhabitants. Jasper shivered in memory though it had been years ago.

His torch’s thin beam stabbed the dusty steamy darkness which replied with angry squeaking. Jasper hesitated. Then, a creature rushed out of the dark at him. Its lanky hairless body slithered on short legs. It had long claws, a serpent tail and a reptilian head, and it stood no taller than his shin.

“Careful, sir. Slinker.” Thinman’s articulated hand grabbed his arm tightly.

The creature stopped, hissing impotently at them. “What? That? Slinker’s are much bigger.”

“You were very small.”

“But my leg.”

“Gangrene, sir.”

Jasper turned back and unceremoniously shot the Slinker which dropped like a wet rag. “Bloody anticlimactic,” he muttered.

“This way, sir,” Thinman shuffled into the darkness, their way illuminated only by the tiny torch and Jasper’s desperate hope that the girl in the glass was real and was still alive.



Thursday, May 9, 2013

Love at the End of the World for #DirtyGoggles Blog Hop


OK... Here is my first attempt at dieselpunk, sort of an alternate WW II entry for Ruth, Steven and Jenn's Dirty Goggles Blog Hop.  Hope you enjoy.  For rules and to enter, go here. And Ruth has a ton of other helpful info here.

Category:  Diesel
Content:  Safe for all.
Word count:  693


Amerika Bomber via Wikipedia

Love at the End of the World
by
Stacy Bennett-Hoyt (@rowanwolf66)

The operation was a go and I'd already silenced the five lucky Jerries in the control tower.  I’m a real lady sometimes, giving them a clean death in the face of what was coming. The hangar was full of planes, silent and dark except for the eerie glow emanating from the nose of the biggest Messerschmitt ever made, the Amerika Bomber.  I wondered if it was my team on board, or the Fremdblut.  I shivered. I'd rather dance with Gestapo than meet one of the Others.  Drawing my Steyr from its thigh-holster, I climbed in the half-open bomb bay door.  Amerika was empty, except for a voice. 
"Ilday jayso. Ayeshi ahdeeltahi nanijih."  Navajo by the sound of it.  I lowered my piece and walked up behind the man in the borrowed blood-stained flightsuit working the radio.
"Nanijih, netah," it sputtered back.
He clicked it off. "Fuckin' banzai, my ass."  
"You seem to be missing a few folk."  My voice split the silence like a bomb blast. I was equally shell-shocked as he whirled to face me, a Mauser in each hand aimed at my heart.  The heart he'd already broken once.  Cagney himself had nothing on Maj. Jack Richards.
"Emily?"  Disbelief washed across his face. I felt like Scrooge when Marley’d come a-haunting.
"Butterfly white she wore her wings."  My code phrase.
"But lost the sparrow to flight."   The correct reply.  Gears turned as he decided whether to trust me. Jack had always been suspicious. And handsome.  And stupid in a typically clumsy male way. "They said that you -- " 
"I know."  I turned away, not wanting to hear the official cover. Only betrayal could have gotten me undercover this deep, deep enough to see the end. I steeled myself, cleared my throat. "They probably said lots of things, Major.  Now, where's my team?" 
"Dead."  He must’ve decided I was on the up-and-up because he holstered his guns. I heard him approach and turned to find him close enough to dance with.  Like that night in Casteau.  “Our orders are now bang and burn, Em."
I froze.  All thoughts of the past blew away like cinders as I stared into the desolate future. 
"Jack. They loaded Big Boy this morning."
"The final prototype? But our orders-- "
"Come from men who don't know what they're up against.  With Los Alamos destroyed, Oppenheimer and Groves assassinated. We need this.  This can kill them."
 "Them?"
"Remember those RAF boys Churchill said were liars? Well, they weren’t."
"Are you saying—“

“It’s War of the Worlds. They’ve already taken the Fuhrer."
"But he broadcast tonight."
"A Fremdblut, doppelganger, whatever you call ‘em.  Others might be compromised, too.  Damn Jerries traded concentration camp inmates for the bomb.” I leaned against his solid chest, letting the scents of diesel and grease take me back to that place we’d felt safe. “Our world’s about to end, Jack.”
"Shit." He pulled away, scrubbed his face and pinched the bridge of his nose, scowling like he’d pulled a six instead of an ace.
He looked ragged, tired, frayed at the edges like a faded old red-white-and-blue but there was still hero in him. I touched his cheek and forced his dark eyes to mine. Who would have thought he’d be the only thing that mattered to me when it all came down around our ears?  "You could fly it out, Jack. The tower's already down."
"Timeout… I still don’t understand why you vanished. Roy was crushed."
"Roy? You wanna talk about Roy?" I shoved him away with rusty anger.
"You two were-- "
"Nothing! We were nothing. I came to Casteau to see you."
"Then that night..." Jack's face went blank. Like I said, man-style stupid.
"And when you didn't want me, I requested transfer.” I gestured around me. “Hel-lo, Germany."
"Didn’t want you?” His dark eyes blazed. “Like hell I didn’t!"  He scooped me tight against him as his lips crushed mine with triumphant ferocity.  And I relished the late taste of victory thinking it’d be okay if the world did end right now.
But Jack Richards had other ideas. "For you, Em, I'd fly us through Hell itself." 


Pilot photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures, 2004, Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Tinker My Heart - For the Dark Fairy Queen Writerly Bridal Shower

This is for Anna Meade; it's my contribution to the Dark Fairy Queen Writerly Bridal Shower.  I hope I make her smile.  Anna has done so much for this group of writers, not the least of which is the joy and excitement she showers on everything, like golden and lavender glitter - everywhere!  And the occasional wombat cannon to keep folks in line (you all know who you are!).  Hope you all enjoy.



Tinker My Heart
by Stacy Bennett-Hoyt

At the crest of the curved path, the crimson hut leaned like a drunk against a tree as wide as a gunnery turret. The Gypsy girl was odd, but she was the best blasted contraptor in the district — everything from Galvani hounds to delicate clockwork bumbles. Could’ve put me straight out of business if she’d tried. She’d have what I needed.

On the porch, a hound snoozed with clackety snores while a steam-organ melody wafted on the hot breeze. A girl’s voice wove among the notes, sounding for all the world like the chickadees that once gathered in the fields. I knocked.

The door whisked open. “Theo Fullbuster!” The dainty mess of a girl smoothed an oil-smudged hand over her wild russet hair.

“Miss Frizzella.” I touched the brim of my bowler.

“I wasn’t expecting guests.” Hands fluttering like butterflies,she scanned the road.

“Sorry for the intrusion.”

“No. It’s fine. Please come in.” She yanked me inside. The hut seemed larger from the inside, chaotic as the aftermath of a wild rumpus.

“Frizzella, I need ...”

“Excuse me.” My train of thought stuttered as she slipped mag-glasses over her face and sat her curvy bustle on a stool. Craning my head over her riotous curls, I saw her vise held a delicate wing of copper and iron, like a Monarch’s but half again the size. She fastened tiny pistons into place; the dance of her quick hands mesmerizing me.

“I need one last thing for my…er…”

“Wife?” She looked up, her eyes comically huge behind the lenses. “Ya need a good heart.”

“Heart? Well, no. I need eyes.”

“Eyes?” Her lips twisted in thought. “Color?”

“Anything as long as its…”

“Beautiful,” she finished. Hopping down, she dug through the cluttered shelves and drawers that looked just like mine.

“Perfect!” She handed me two glass orbs, sugar-white with iridescent purple irises around blue-black pupils, reminding me of dragonfly wings.

“Yes, exactly. Cerise will love them.”

“Cerise?”

I blushed. “Her name.”

“Cerise.” Frizzella’s pink lips pursed and my mind went numpty for a minute staring at them. “It’ll do,” she said, as if there had been any question.

I dragged my gaze from her soft lips. “I’ve got to go.”

“Wait.” Her hand on my arm was something between hot static and a winter chill. “I’ve a perfect heart for ya.”

“Sorry, one’s in the post.”

“Brumbleton slags don’t know hearts from spleens,” she huffed, pushing through a door. When she returned, her bodice was distractingly disheveled as she shoved a small jeweled box into my hand. “Take it,” she said, spinning me around and shoving me out the door.

Jamming the box into my pocket, I hurried home. The post had come and with it Cerise’s perfect mail-order heart. Once eyes and heart were installed, there was nothing to do but start her up.

I surveyed the clockwork woman, reclining like a broken doll in her chair — all lanky gams, waspy waist and elegance. I pressed the toggle behind her ear. Flywheels spun, the new heart beat with a feminine thud-thud. Her joints shifted as hydraulics came on line. Dragonfly eyes fluttered open.

“Cerise.” My heart sang. I stroked her cheek.

“Don’t touch me, you coppered cloggler!” She shoved me with one queenly hand, sending me flying into the shelves.

I wiped my bloody lip. “You’re supposed to love me!”

“As if,” she sneered.

Strangely, the door flew open then. Barking irons peppered the air. The Prince’s Guard filed into my workshop, His Majesty among them.

“Ah, Fullbuster, I’d heard rumors.” He perused my masterpiece. “Well done, I say. I’ll take her.”

“Take her?” I sputtered.

“Yes.”

“I’ll make you another.”

He laughed. “A Prince with a copy? I think not.” He motioned a careless finger. His Guards raised their irons.

Then from the back of the workshop, in swept Frizzella with an army of glittering dragonflies, bumbles and wrens. Their tiny gears droned like an airship; stained-glass wings thrummed like thunder. I ducked as the metallic wave swept past me. The clockwork critters threw themselves at the Prince, splattering red hydraulic fluid as they forced him, Cerise and the Guard out.

“Cerise!” I called in agony.

“Mizzled,” Frizzella swore, “and my heart with it.” Then she cursed like an atheronaut.

“Sorry.”

“I don’t have another.” Lovely lips trembled. I’d never seen her so much as frown before, and here she was crying. “Momma said not to give a tinker my heart.” She hid behind dirty hands, and on her chest was a heart-shaped door I’d not noticed before. Her heart?

“Frizzella, I didn’t — .”


“What?”

“Use it.” I held up the box.

“My heart?” She took it, smiling. “Why didn’t you use it?” She frowned and slapped me. “But that means you didn’t lose it.” And it was then she kissed me.

My first real kiss. Softness without springs. Breath without bellows. Hydraulics came alive in me I’d never experienced. Hammered for life, is what my mates say. But my smart talented Frizz is worth a thousand perfect clockwork dolls.


The End

You can find the other stories here.
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To Anna and Michael:

May you always hold in your hearts the love and delight you feel right now, the certainty of how precious you are to each other and the rest of us.  Love well and laugh often!


Ebook:  Yes

Thank you so much Laura, Miranda and Rebekah for giving me this opportunity to share in Anna and Michael's happiness.  You guys are totally awesome yourselves.

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Photographed heart by VaughnSaball. Sketch by K. Hoyt. Please do not use sketched image without specific written permission.

Monday, February 25, 2013

The Outing for Monday Mixer

Sorry I've been quiet lately.  I took some time off for personal reasons and still may not be back to full steam yet.

But -- out of curiosity this week I'm joining in on the newest flash fiction contest.  It's called Monday Mixer and is brought to you by the creative genius of Jeffrey Hollar over at Latinum Vault.  The rules are fairly extensive so you really should click on the link to see them there.

Basically, it's 150 words exactly with up to 9 prompts.  This is my first attempt, and OverAchiever that I am, I tried to use all 9.

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The Outing


Walter turned, an ice cream cone in each hand, to find himself completely alone, sweating in the sirocco August wind.  Picturing his sanctimonious ex-wife’s inevitable tirade about his lack of paternal qualifications, he longed for the fine Cuban tucked away in the humidor back home. The greasy burger that passed for lunch left him logey, bloated, but he forced himself to start walking. He searched the castle playhouse (curiously complete with smithy and garderobe), the pretzel stand, and even the monkey bars, but no Juliana.  He finally found her at the deep pool. 
 
She didn’t turn her head at his approach, but spoke like they’d been deep in conversation. “They say this is a mermaid, but I think it’s far too ugly to be one.”

“It’s only a manatee, pet.  There are no mermaids.”

“You're quite wrong, Father,” she stated in her inimitable 5-year-old way. “There most certainly are mermaids.”


150 words
@Rowanwolf66

Yes, I'm being an Over-Achiever, to make up for the Mondays I've missed.  

Friday, January 11, 2013

The Raven - Twelfth Night Masquerade Flash Fiction Contest


The Raven
by Stacy Bennett-Hoyt

The clock chimed, its lustrous tones resounding inside me, chaining my heartbeat to its rhythm. Counting. Waiting. Ten...eleven...twelve - Midnight! My breath stopped with the sound though my heart fluttered like a caged thing.

At the tolling of the clock, Giovanni’s note had read.  Love’s raven will bind you forevermore.

Weeks ago, that had sounded romantic.  Now it was eerie.  Perhaps holding the Masque had been foolish.  It was my husband’s fancy after all, not mine.   But Gio’s letters convinced me and so here I was, lost in a sea of crimson feathers, cobalt silk, gold filigree, and pearls. 

A raven, he’d said. Would I even know him?  I searched the false faces, but eyes became unrecognizable without owners.  The harder I looked, the more fantastical the ball became. My body trembled in anticipation. Or was that fear? 

It had been a year since our last tryst when evil plots had spilled beneath the garden willow, sealed to silence with a kiss so passionate I could feel it even now.  Little had I realized the year of solitude I would suffer afterward.  Without him. Without either of them. A mourning widow didn’t get visitors. 

But I’d put away the black and the storm of raucous revelry around me brought back Dominic’s last night.  How his fingers had stroked me while memories of Gio’s kisses filled my mind, heating my blood.

A startling hand settled on my hip. I turned. The Raven waited, his nearness sending a flush through me.  His face was completely hidden behind the large black beak and riot of feathers, topped by a dark hooded cloak.

“Gio?”

The Raven nodded. Wordless.

The strangeness strangled my smile, silencing the lover’s greeting I’d planned. Trepidation trickled like sweat down my spine.  “It’s been a year,” I offered.

He nodded again and held out a gloved hand.  I was to follow.  I stared at the ebony leather for long minutes, my feet stuck to the floor. Then I closed my eyes, bathing in memories of our passion and slipped delicate fingers into his grasp. 

He led me through the crowd, ephemeral as ghosts.  Out the door, down the steps to a stygian carriage pulled by inky steeds.  We climbed in and it jerked into motion. 

“We’ve done it, Gio.  Now we can be together forever,” I sighed.

He nodded once more and stared at me.  Knowing unblinking eyes held mine.  Russet eyes.  

But Gio’s eyes were blue!

“Who-."  I reached for the mask but he wagged a warning finger.  Unmasking was bad luck, but I had to know.  That brown was too familiar.  Brown eyes in the night, a bed other than Gio’s.  My hand went for his mask again and slid it from his face which baited me from the deep shadows of his hood.

“Show me!” I screeched as fear clutched at my throat.

Slow hands slid back the hood and moonlight shone on the smiling face of Death. 

“Dominic?”  The world tilted.

“Hello, traitorous wife.” 

500 words.
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Hope you enjoyed my last-minute  entry to Meg McNulty's fabulous Twelfth Night Masquerade Flash Fiction Contest!  Such a great group of stories, take your time and browse all of them.  Great weekend reading!





Saturday, January 5, 2013

The Wolf and the Wren - Day 12 of 12 Days of Christmas Blog Hop

It's the final day of the 12 Days of Christmas Blog Hop and I hope you all had as much fun as I did.  You have written some fabulous prose and poems.  Such great reading. If you haven't read them all, I suggest you go back and start again.  I will leave the links open for a few days for those of you who are behind to catch up.  And now.. the final prompt:
MOON


The Wolf and the Wren
by Stacy Bennett-Hoyt

In the village of Brill, there lived a witch.  Wren was her name.  Some said she was a good witch, others doubted it.  Timid, Wren usually hid in her hut.  It was her husband Aaron who traded eggs on market day and Aaron who answered the door when a child was sick.  And only Aaron knew for sure what kind of witch she truly was. 
  
wakpaper.com
A few years back, during a bright Rabbit Moon, a foul wind blew evil to Brill.  Ancient evil, dark, voracious, and malign.  Wren heard it coming. She could feel its fell paws stomping in the fields.  She could smell its bloody breath in the shifting wind. 

On this night, the night the big bad Wolf came to Brill, the moon was huge.  It hovered so close to the fields, you could almost touch it.  Hungry for light, Wolf  devoured the Moon, casting Brill and the whole Earth into darkness.  Brave Aaron took his dagger and crept across the fields to slay the evil.  Wren crept after him.  In the dark, they found it by the drops of moonlight that clung to its jaws and puddled in the grass. 

To distract the beast, Wren pretended to be a new moon.  She cast a glamour, covering herself with glow bugs, then wandered out across the land.  The ever hungry Wolf stalked her, not knowing that Aaron followed them both.

Moon Witch by Motley_Mitch @ deviantart.co
Just as Wren could feel its hot breath on her neck, Aaron struck, plunging his dagger deep.  The Wolf was dead, but the moon was still lost.  Wren gathered its teeth and cut off her long hair.  Mixing these things with a bit of Aaron’s blood, she cast a spell in the night.  The bits of tooth began to shine and floated up into the sky until piece by piece the round orb of the moon was restored.  

Aaron knew Wren was a very good witch.

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Here's the final link:
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But wait.. the fun's not over yet!!  Don't forget to go to Meg McNulty's site for details on the 12th Night Masquerade Contest!