Dawn of The Dragons

Invictus

Sonbather

The Snowman

The Eyes Have It

PHILIP K. DICK

“The Eyes Have It” originally appeared in Science Fiction Stories 1953, but since the copyright wasn’t renewed, it’s lapsed into the public domain. “A little whimsy, now and then, makes for good balance,” the magazine’s editors wrote then. “Theoretically, you could find this type of humor anywhere. But only a topflight science-fictionist, we thought, could have written this story, in just this way … ”

 

It was quite by accident I discovered this incredible invasion of Earth by lifeforms from another planet. As yet, I haven’t done anything about it; I can’t think of anything to do. I wrote to the Government, and they sent back a pamphlet on the repair and maintenance of frame houses. Anyhow, the whole thing is known; I’m not the first to discover it. Maybe it’s even under control.

I was sitting in my easy-chair, idly turning the pages of a paperbacked book someone had left on the bus, when I came across the reference that first put me on the trail. For a moment I didn’t respond. It took some time for the full import to sink in. After I’d comprehended, it seemed odd I hadn’t noticed it right away.

The reference was clearly to a nonhuman species of incredible properties, not indigenous to Earth. A species, I hasten to point out, customarily masquerading as ordinary human beings. Their disguise, however, became transparent in the face of the following observations by the author. It was at once obvious the author knew everything. Knew everything—and was taking it in his stride. The line (and I tremble remembering it even now) read:

… his eyes slowly roved about the room.

Vague chills assailed me. I tried to picture the eyes. Did they roll like dimes? The passage indicated not; they seemed to move through the air, not over the surface. Rather rapidly, apparently. No one in the story was surprised. That’s what tipped me off. No sign of amazement at such an outrageous thing. Later the matter was amplified.

… his eyes moved from person to person.

There it was in a nutshell. The eyes had clearly come apart from the rest of him and were on their own. My heart pounded and my breath choked in my windpipe. I had stumbled on an accidental mention of a totally unfamiliar race. Obviously non-Terrestrial. Yet, to the characters in the book, it was perfectly natural—which suggested they belonged to the same species.

And the author? A slow suspicion burned in my mind. The author was taking it rather too easily in his stride. Evidently, he felt this was quite a usual thing. He made absolutely no attempt to conceal this knowledge. The story continued:

… presently his eyes fastened on Julia.

Julia, being a lady, had at least the breeding to feel indignant. She is described as blushing and knitting her brows angrily. At this, I sighed with relief. They weren’t all non-Terrestrials. The narrative continues:

… slowly, calmly, his eyes examined every inch of her.

Great Scott! But here the girl turned and stomped off and the matter ended. I lay back in my chair gasping with horror. My wife and family regarded me in wonder.

“What’s wrong, dear?” my wife asked.

I couldn’t tell her. Knowledge like this was too much for the ordinary run-of-the-mill person. I had to keep it to myself. “Nothing,” I gasped. I leaped up, snatched the book, and hurried out of the room.

*
In the garage, I continued reading. There was more. Trembling, I read the next revealing passage:

… he put his arm around Julia. Presently she asked him if he would remove his arm. He immediately did so, with a smile.

It’s not said what was done with the arm after the fellow had removed it. Maybe it was left standing upright in the corner. Maybe it was thrown away. I don’t care. In any case, the full meaning was there, staring me right in the face.

Here was a race of creatures capable of removing portions of their anatomy at will. Eyes, arms—and maybe more. Without batting an eyelash. My knowledge of biology came in handy, at this point. Obviously they were simple beings, uni-cellular, some sort of primitive single-celled things. Beings no more developed than starfish. Starfish can do the same thing, you know.

I read on. And came to this incredible revelation, tossed off coolly by the author without the faintest tremor:

… outside the movie theater we split up. Part of us went inside, part over to the cafe for dinner.

Binary fission, obviously. Splitting in half and forming two entities. Probably each lower half went to the cafe, it being farther, and the upper halves to the movies. I read on, hands shaking. I had really stumbled onto something here. My mind reeled as I made out this passage:

… I’m afraid there’s no doubt about it. Poor Bibney has lost his head again.

Which was followed by:

… and Bob says he has utterly no guts.

Yet Bibney got around as well as the next person. The next person, however, was just as strange. He was soon described as:

… totally lacking in brains.

*
There was no doubt of the thing in the next passage. Julia, whom I had thought to be the one normal person, reveals herself as also being an alien life form, similar to the rest:

… quite deliberately, Julia had given her heart to the young man.

It didn’t relate what the final disposition of the organ was, but I didn’t really care. It was evident Julia had gone right on living in her usual manner, like all the others in the book. Without heart, arms, eyes, brains, viscera, dividing up in two when the occasion demanded. Without a qualm.

… thereupon she gave him her hand.

I sickened. The rascal now had her hand, as well as her heart. I shudder to think what he’s done with them, by this time.

… he took her arm.

Not content to wait, he had to start dismantling her on his own. Flushing crimson, I slammed the book shut and leaped to my feet. But not in time to escape one last reference to those carefree bits of anatomy whose travels had originally thrown me on the track:

… her eyes followed him all the way down the road and across the meadow.

I rushed from the garage and back inside the warm house, as if the accursed things were following me. My wife and children were playing Monopoly in the kitchen. I joined them and played with frantic fervor, brow feverish, teeth chattering.

I had had enough of the thing. I want to hear no more about it. Let them come on. Let them invade Earth. I don’t want to get mixed up in it.

I have absolutely no stomach for it.

 

 

You Almost Had Me

REMINGTON GRAVES

The moonlight bathed the bloodshed, adding a silver blanket that glimmered in waves across the bodies of men that wailed and grunted, sparkling with scarlet spears, carnage of human fields, and he exhaled with reticent resolve—gazing beyond the ocean of death, thinking of home. Recollections of horripilation, while he ran across cold marble floors, sighed through his mind momentarily; a laudable lad longing for a world outside of luxury, befriending shadows in a vast palace, while his father fought another foreign war. He would stare at a gargantuan orange and white-centered sun, holding his wooden soldier, rubbing it with his left thumb and smiling at the thought of his father, The Emperor, defeating the furious armies of lesser peoples from other lands. His mother would call his name and faintly with her chiming tone, but he would lose himself thinking, “If my father conquers the world, I will then…have to conquer the sun.”

 

And as the whining last gasps of his enemies filled the night with song, a thin beam of light shot from behind his right ear, and he knew.

 

With a thunderous scream, a digging of his feet in the soil, he dropped to one knee and like paralyzing lightning, stabbed his adversary with five fingers and dug deep inside, yanking intestines out like burgundy ribbons. And as the rain began to pour heavily, he beheld the countenance of his assailaint…it was a woman.

 

He rose slowly as she choked on her tongue—she tried uttering something. He tilted his head in mild curiosity as he felt her violent breath on his lips.

 

Grabbing her by the jaw with a cold metal-scalloped glove, he said softly, “You almost had me.”

 

 

Indeed

REMINGTON GRAVES

He wondered without worry, without doubt, for his efforts were fruitful, his love was latently lurid and lugubrious despite the fierce wanton the world around him, in the carnage of that contrast, had reminded him of. Recollections of ostentatious shortcomings plagued his brain as grey-blue birds plummeted and zipped to the left of the horizon—disappearing in strident, swarming, intertwining shapes that spelled out the words he longed to hear…as the backdrop of explosive, gargantuan popcorn-shaped clouds hovered silently like floating giants with fiery bellies, for hot-oranges, reds, magenta, and yellow lightning shaped lining spread from underneath them. Twirling ensued and his right elbow patch flapped open, and candy of all colors fell from his pockets and bounced and rolled quickly under the park benches where women sat unaware as their heads fixed firmly at their cell phone screens and their fingers swiped incessantly. Ardent tears unleashed, clearing a dirty countenance with thin zigzagging trails, and the laughter began as a sob, then quickly became a cackle.

 

“That guy has fucking problems.”

”Jesus, Amber, must you?”

”What? I’m serious, I mean, look at him.”

”He seems fine to me.”

”Fine?! The guy clearly has issues.”

“Leave the poor fucker alone.”

 

And as the birds returned, chasing one another with strident song, the weeping man looked up at the sky and smiled as snot oozed slowly over his dirty lips and said, “I am free. I am as happy as can be. No dire need. No pain to feed….indeed…indeed…indeed.”

 

 

 

 

Invictus

WILLIAM ERNEST HENLEY

Out of the night that covers me,
Black as the pit from pole to pole,
I thank whatever gods may be
For my unconquerable soul.

In…

Notable Films

BLANK CITY

In the treacherous time where Super 8, before the hip hug of hum from independent film, there was something known as Underground Cinema. Before the sickening sludge that is Social Media, cultural movements were fiercely grounded in geography, not the virus that is the “viral” from the virtual. New York City, downtown Manhattan, in the late 70’s and early 80’s, was the menacing vanguard for what appeared to be the future of filmmaking. Here, Blank City spins the story , of which had been long the wait, of radical renegade filmakers broke like jokes at a dubious period in NY history. This movement of punk rock filmmaking had not been documented until French director Celine Danhier emerged to showcase the “No Wave Cinema” and “Cinema Of Trangsgression” movements. Inspirations are evident and nodding to Film Noir, French New Wave, Warhol, and John Waters. Filmmakers: Jim Jarmusch, Eric Mitchell, Beth B, Charlie Ahear, Lizzie Borden and Amos Poe feature the glowing grit and attest to the ascending East Village art and rock scenes and the inception of hip hop. With their films, the lines of reality blur…short, long, color, black and white…all gems of beauty and dissonance…

But enough Yaking. Watch this film!

Lord Of The Underworld

REMINGTON GRAVES

I knew you would leave me the day I laid eyes on you

The way you smiled and the shape of your lips, like an old starlet in hiatus

Your hair like upside flames and eyes smeared Monet’s locked in frames

The sway, the liar, a kiss on the nape of your neck, the assassin you inspired

 

O baby, you cried as the traffic died and the city lights faded faintly

A feverish dream, it now all seems, as death defied the song in your sigh

Epic gods of young heart throbs tossed the days that time assigned

We left our innocence in frameless beds that sat concretely in cheap carpeted apartment floors

 

I was relieved to know you eventually would go

Pretended to hurt at times for cinematic woe

Truth be told, at birth, my heart was sold

Thank my mother, that first lover, for that tired tale of old

 

Further still with Scotch and pills I heard your old friends say

Under bridges, old worn stitches, never did you lose your figure

Courtesan of dance and song, begging and begging for a baptist’s head

Killer of your dreams and ventures, how dare me now nostalgic gesture

 

 

You left me like I knew you would

Ophelia, where art thou now, but floating down no longer where you once stood

Underworld lord atop this Underwood, once again, a life misunderstood