Trespasser (Part XVI)

Later that morning, after her daddy had long since returned to work, Vanessa awakened from her deep slumber.  She furrowed her brow as she troubled herself over the conversation from the night before, trying to make sense of her father’s cryptic words.

“I just worry…”

She didn’t understand why there was the need to worry.  She was too young, yet, to understand the intricacies of finance, and the burdens that come with it.  Nor was she yet aware of the evils that existed in the world.  Sometimes, late at night when she was having trouble sleeping, she heard her parents talking about the things that grownups do from time to time, but there was never anything said that caused her any alarm.

Fortunately for her, her age also prevented her from holding onto any one thought for longer than a few minutes.  As sleep slowly fled from her muscles, so too did the memory from the night before, until it had become nothing more than a nagging sense that she should do something nice for him later.  Perhaps she would draw him a picture?  Or, maybe she could help with something around the house?

She shrugged, her attention once again diverted, this time to the middle of her body where an incessant grumbling was taking place.  Quickly, she dressed, and in a manner of seconds she was wearing a simple sun dress and her pajamas were forgotten at the foot of her bed.

She fled her bedroom, as children often do in the morning, chasing the idea that there would be breakfast waiting for her on the kitchen table.  In the very least, she could climb upon the counter and help herself to a bowl and some cereal.

She didn’t notice anything out of place in her room, but then again, she wouldn’t, unless she was looking for it.  Nor had she heard the sounds just outside her window as she was changing.

*Click*   *Click*   *Click*

The Morelli Bros. (Chapter II, Part I)

Not too far from where the embattled plumbers were making their stand, entrenched behind the many crates needed to supply his army, was the first of many forts established by the mighty King Koopa.  It was small, no more than four walls and a crenulated roof, but for what it was being used, it was completely functional.

Many strange creatures surrounded the structure, nothing like anything either of the plumbers, or the denizens of this world, had ever seen.   They poured from the mouth of a green pipe, one that was very similar to that which the brothers had earlier passed through, except that this had two openings.

The first, which was parallel to the ground, belched out a continuous stream of small reptilian creatures.  Only slightly larger than the Goombas which they were sharing ground with, they walked slowly on four cleft hooves.  Their skins bore earthy tones varying in degree from muddy brown, to algae green, and they were covered in fine scales.  Upon their backs, they wore a bone like shell for protection. As is a turtle’s, the shell’s exterior appeared to be divided into several small plates. The shape of the plates, much like the creature’s color, also varied in size and in shape.  Some were rounded squares, while with others, the number of edges were anywhere between five and eight.

Their skin slowly oozed a pale green liquid, some more than others, suggesting it to be their body’s mechanism for keeping cool.  From their almond-shaped eyes ran a thick colorless mucus which gave off a strong, foul odor.  Flies surrounded the heads of some, happily drinking from the stinky nectar.

As they stepped onto soft ground for the first time, most fell immediately to all fours, advancing menacingly upon the foreign land as if they intended to trample it out of existence.  Others rose upon their hind legs, pausing only to gather a helmet and weapon from a nearby crate.  Unlike those that walked on all fours, these more advanced soldiers of the Koopa army wore less bulky shells on their back. Their legs were also more muscular, and at the end of their arms were three short fingers.

The second exit from the pipe spat smaller creatures into the air. Some were miniature versions of the soldier Koopas, only they had no shell on their back at all. These creatures burst into the air riding on what first appeared to be small, white clouds, over which they glared with thickly bespeckled eyes.  Closer inspection, from any who dared, proved this a fatal misconception.

They rode on a rare breed of six winged Snow Moth, creatures that were bred to extinction in the wild, now existing only in mindless servitude to their masters. Once known as the Faerie Moth, these creatures derived their new name from the thick white powder they emitted while in flight.  Not only does this protect their delicate bodies from the wear of their rider, but it also camouflaged them within the guise of a cloud.

Standing just inside the door to the fort, their leader watched his coming army through furrowed brow.  Unlike his soldier cousins, he towered over those around him.  Where the Koopa army resembled a more advanced form of turtle, he was the bastard child of dinosaur.  He stood on thick, heavily muscled legs that complimented the rest of his similarly built frame.  Unlike the soldiers, a long tail protruded from beneath his shell, which also differed in that sharp spikes jutted from it in all directions.  His scales are the color of coal, a darkness interrupted only by a white war stripe painted from the crown of his head, to just beneath his waist.

“My Lord Morton, sir?  We have prepared the girl as you have ordered, sir.”

He slowly turned and regarded this world’s poor excuse for intelligent life with a deep sense of disdain.  The creature stood barely over two and a half feet in height and wore very little on its body to cover its flabby shame.  Brown leather wraps covered its feet, which, he had to admit, had its practical use.  Unlike his soldiers, this creature could move with great speed when it wanted to!  Covering its genitals was a white cloth that for the life of him, he knew not how it stayed clean.  A light blue vest hung loosely around its middle, and on its head was a red and white spotted mushroom cap.

“Very well, Toad,” he breathed in exasperation.  “Be sure she’s ready for our King when he arrives.”

“Yes My Lord.  As you wish, my Lord.”

As Toad vanished once more into the fort’s interior, he turned to watch as his army continued to grow.

 

Trespasser (Part XV)

The floorboards creaked with the comforting familiarity only years of intimacy could bring.  The sounds were a soothing, gentle reminder to the end of a long day.  He paused only once, on the final stages of he journey, as he looked in through a cracked door and upon a small sleeping figure inside.

She was curled up deep beneath her blankets, softly snoring, where she would remain safe until the morning.  A long sigh escaped his lips, partly from exhaustion, but mostly from the frustration of knowing the things that Davie had recently shared with him.  It might as well have been spoken in another language.

He couldn’t imagine any harm ever coming to his little monkey-butt, his sunshine when the skies are gray, and the very thought that she could be in danger had put him in a very dark place.

What did they even know about Andy anyways?  Handy-Andy, who seemed to know a little about everything, had given him little cause to be suspicious.  But then there were the pictures.  Why the hell was he taking pictures of her, and what could he be using them for?!

He could feel his blood pressure beginning to rise.  His cheeks grew hot, and the blood thundered through his veins.  His nostrils flared as he struggled to get his breathing under control, but his emotions got the better of him.  Hot tears leaked from the corners of his eyes as he fought away the dark images haunting him.

“The fuck,” he whispered to nobody in particular.  His words were full of anguish, born from a day overflowing with hardships heavier than he was accustomed to bearing.

“Daddy?”

He nearly jumped out of his skin when her little voice broke the silence.

“Is that you,” she asked sleepily.

“Yes pumpkin,” he answered softly.  “Go back to sleep.”

The weight melted from his shoulders when she spoke, chased away by his absolute love for her.

“What time is it?”

“It’s late, kiddo, that’s all you need to know.”

As he answered her, he crossed the room and approached her from the right side of her bed.  Then, as she crawled back up to her pillow, he sat on the edge of the bed where they shared a brief hug.

“Nessa,” he asked softly.

“Yeah daddy?”

“You would tell me if there was something wrong, wouldn’t you?”

“Yeah daddy,” she answered.  He peered searchingly into her confused eyes, seeking for any signs that might indicate otherwise, but there was only the innocence he knew.

“What’s the matter daddy?”

“Nothing baby,” he answered before placing a kiss on her forehead.  “I just worry.”

“Don’t worry,” she said sweetly.  “Everything’s going to be okay.”

He smiled as he tucked her in, pausing only to give her another kiss before turning to leave.  It was amazing how quickly she’d changed the direction of the dark tides rolling inside of him, with only a single word.

“I love you daddy,” she said as he slowly closed the door behind him.

“I love you too, Nessa,” he said with a smile.

He turned to walk down the hall and by the time he got to his room, he had nearly forgotten everything but the last few minutes.  Not much longer after that and even those were a distant memory.  Twenty hours after waking, he finally returned into sleep’s embrace.