Monday, December 29, 2014

Ragnarök: Part One

A wolf ate the moon, and all hell broke loose.
I, twenty minutes prior the aforementioned event, lived at the University of Central Florida in Orlando, where I planned to eventually major in film.
I lived in my car, which I moved every few hours to avoid parking tickets. It seemed that the school didn’t like you to park your car there until after you enrolled in your first class.
I showered in the UCF gym (it offered a wonderful, cylinder-shaped climbing wall). I sort of dated the girl who checked IDs at the gym, so I could sneak inside after five pm, Monday through Friday.
A lot of school clubs let me join up with them, despite the fact that I didn’t technically attend school yet.
I worked as a dog groomer on the weekends. I often felt amazed my boss never fired me. I figured I could learn how to wash and trim a dog as I went, but I seemed to only get worse at it.
I would often place a mirror in front of my four-legged customers, and they would regard their reflections with sincere pity directed at (they assumed) some other dog.
My smartphone awoke me from the backseats of my Volvo. Three pm. Time to meet with the Multicultural Book Club (I served as its vice president).
I yawned so hard, I though my jaw would dislocate. I heard what sounded like harp music. I stretched, smelled my shirt, and decided I didn’t need to change it. I locked my car/apartment and headed towards the school library.
I neared the stairwell that would lead me to the bottom of Parking Lot B. I noticed, as I did, a man who wore a rooster’s head.
Let me clarify. I did not see a man who held the decapitated head of a chicken. Nor do I mean that I saw a man who wore a mask. The head of an actual rooster rested on this man’s shoulders where a proper head ought to sit.
Let me clarify further. The rooster head I witnessed did not exist in dimensions proper for a human being. It looked the same size as that you would find on an average-sized rooster, yet it sat on the shoulders of an average-sized man.
The man played a harp. He wailed on it, actually. Van Halen. That song about Panama.
Rooster Head stood, feet spread wide. He leaned forward and banged his head in a circular fashion while his fingers attacked the strings of his harp.
I wanted to ask a few questions, naturally, but the other members of my book club wouldn’t appreciate it if I arrived late.
I tucked my copy of My Pet Goat under my arm, snuck around Rooster Head, and darted down the concrete steps towards the ground floor.
I headed, from there, past the giant fountain into which everyone jumped every year and ended up sick the next day. The library stood behind it.
The water in the fountain looked a bit rosier than usual. Its center looked thick with blood. A large dog with matted fur and six eyes stood within the pool. He growled at no one in particular. His eyes blinked out of synch with each other.
This struck me as odd, but again, questions could wait. I made, last New Year, a resolution to disallow myself to grow distracted by everything around me. I always suffered from a short attention span.
I sprinted around the large fountain and headed up the wide walkway that led to the library’s front doors.
An amused crowd gathered around some guy in a brown robe—probably another religious job who wanted to remind the students that they stood hell bound.
I hurried past the crowd while the robed guy said, “Odin will come for his eye. He will fly from the heavens on His reindeer and destroy all who stand between Him and his prize.”
Hmm. That seemed different.
I reached the library’s automatic, front doors, but they didn’t open. I tried to move them manually (as if I lived in the middle ages), but they still didn’t budge.
A wave of concern washed over me. I couldn’t miss the meeting. I served as the vice president!
I checked my cellphone. A text message awaited me:
Joey-
The library’s closed today because the water fountains squirt acid and the books fly around as giant bats. The book club will meet at the football stadium, instead.
-Trisha
I really needed to get off my butt and ask Trisha out on a date. Not a single Zelda game ever touched a shelf that she did not conquer within a week of its release. That seems pretty awesome no matter how lazy her left eye grew (and that eye floated all over the place).
I headed for the football stadium where the UCF Knights recently won a game against the Washington Lazy White Bitches (sounds kind of racist to me).
I took about ten steps in that direction before my attention snapped towards the library’s roof (where I sometimes went to smoke pot and quote Yoda).
Another rooster-headed man stood on this roof. He wore only a golden codpiece that I suspected didn’t require nearly as much girth as it offered.
This second rooster head held a harp high into the air and screamed, “Are you people ready to rock all night?”
The students gathered around the robed man frowned and responded with “All night? We have finals in less than a week!” or sentences nearly the same.
The rooster head adopted a heavy metal guitarist’s stance before he set his harp to a fast-pace wail (AC/DC).
Several fiery comets swooshed from the sky (which brewed to a dark scarlet, almost black, color) towards the medical center. Crash. The Earth shook beneath my feet.
A crater smoked where the medical center once stood. Something roared from inside the crater. I wanted to investigate the source of that roar—but my meeting started in minutes.
I ran towards the football stadium. The ground trembled a few more times. I overheard glass break, people scream, and something screech. Thunder boomed. Lightning flashed. I distinctly heard a young woman say, “Kraken.”
I neared the stadium. Dwarves surrounded it.
They knelt and cried words too vulgar to repeat. A large, round, flat block of stone sat on the grass before them. I never before saw that block.
I noticed, as I raced past it, that strange symbols glowed across the block. It shook. It rose to partially expose a wide tunnel beneath it. Something angry echoed from the bottom of that tunnel.
I found my book club five minutes later, seated in the stadium.
Trisha and the other three members glared at me.
“You’re late,” Trisha said.
I wanted to apologize, but I couldn’t get my breath under control—plus, how could she hear me over the sound of the sky, which snapped in half right then?
A powerful wind blew from the tear in the sky. I watched—while day quickly evolved to night—a massive, wolf’s muzzle drip from the tear. Its lips pulled back to reveal a harvest of slimy tentacles.
My attention spilled towards the football field, where several strange people now faced each other.
Thick, silver horns thrust sideways from one man’s head. Another guy gripped a claw hammer half the size of a bus. A donkey’s head decorated another man’s shoulders.
The largest of these people stood with a bloody hole where you would expect to see an eye. The eye she still possessed glowed with golden light.
A dirty, red rooster with a football jersey strutted onto the field, opened its beak, and, in a spray of maggots, vomited a massive harp onto the ground.
The rooster’s clawed feet plucked at the harp, played the opening theme from the Mortal Kombat movie (the good one), and the army attacked itself.


To be concluded . . .

I publish my blogs as follows:
Mondays and Thursdays: Short stories at martinwolt.blogspot.com
Tuesdays: A look at the politics of the entertainment world at EntertainmentMicroscope.blogspot.com.
Wednesdays: An inside look at my novels (such as Daughters of Darkwana, which you can now find on Kindle) at Darkwana.blogspot.com
Fridays: Tips to improve your fiction at FictionFormula.blogspot.com
Sundays: Movie reviews at moviesmartinwolt.blogspot.com

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