I’d gone to the place of the hermit not too many years before expecting the usual. Dusty brushes with horse hair at the end of a stick, ash from an old cigar and some crushed shell thrown around the room, the Ace, the Queen, the Five of Hearts and Two of Spades on the table next to a glass ball and a chicken foot.
He had found it almost by accident, the strange stone monkey, an artifact worth a lot to an old guy in Chicago. Three days later he was on a cot in a hut in Fortaleza in the depths of something a lot like malaria. It was the monkey – the Gypsy Monkey, they called it – and it spoke to him in his twisted dreams. Make your choice, make your sacrifice.
Two days later I was sitting on my small balcony wondering what to expect, when the breeze shifted and the evening rain clouds rolled in. I ordered a pizza and ran down to the market for a six-pack. The rain had just started plinking on the roof when I heard the knock. I knew who it was.
In 1977, as you may or may not know, NASA launched the twin deep-space probes Voyager 1 and Voyager 2. To this day, both of them carry a gold-plated phonograph depicting the sounds of life on Earth. Carl Sagan himself helped pick out the more than one-hundred images and the music that each vessel carries. The idea is to put a happy face of life on Earth, should either of the Voyagers encounter alien life.
This story was one of ten selected by the readers and editors of Creative Loafing for their 2010 Fiction Contest. Like most everyone else in Florida, Twilight Janus Dawson had come to the Sunshine State for the conveniences but stayed for... Continue Reading →
I have a special way of working. No guns. Don’t like the goddam things, and I like the kin d of people who use ‘em even less. Noisy, messy. Easy to trace, too. I have a better way. Cleaner. Easier.
How do you lose a body on a plane this small?