Sunday, 25 July 2021

♠ Redemption song ♠

Dirk crouched down, expecting the bird to fly away in panic. Maybe it would have. But it couldn’t. He reached out and picked it up, gently, supporting its tiny head with his thick bass-playing fingers. One wing was shattered, bent in too many different directions. The matchstick leg on that side of its body was just as mangled.

The bird looked up at him. No longer scared. Resigned to its fate.

*

Mick leaned against the wall outside Janine’s flat. Those stairs were a lot steeper than he remembered. Although, to be fair, he was normally stoned when he used to climb them.

Speaking of which. He drew a deep breath of the air in the corridor. The Rasta neighbours were obviously home, a fact reinforced by Bob Marley asking whether he would help to sing these songs of freedom. He grinned with his blackened teeth. Redemption Song. A fitting soundtrack.

Inspired, he pushed himself upright and staggered towards Janine’s door. Woah, there, sunshine. Take it easy.

He wiped one hand across his eyes and reached the other one into his jacket pocket. Then his eyes cleared and he stepped forward to set things right.

But… Wait a minute. What was this? What was that prick doing here?

♠

Read ♠ Dancing in Valhalla ♠ in weekly installments on FaceBook or WordPress. Receive notifications via Twitter, Tumblr, Instagram, GoodReads, or Amazon, where you’ll find the whole book – 13 decadent twisted tales of mystery, music, magick & mayhem.

Download ♠FREE♠ sampler previews of all my books – and some complete short stories – from PCloud. Including the new Burning Books sampler booklet (also available on Kindle Unlimited).

No charge. No obligation. No sign-in. Read for free. Share with your friends.

♠

If you have a book you’d like to publish, contact me to claim your 15 minutes of bestselling fame at #1 on Amazon. Find all my details at BurningBookLinks

Or catch me at the New Authors Book Fair in Rivonia on 15 August, if the govirusment lets it go ahead.

♠

Cheers.

Sunday, 18 July 2021

♠ Under the gun ♠

Janine sat on the mattress on her apartment floor, looking out the tiny window that allowed sunlight to warm one section of dark brown carpet at a time. She had done what she could on a limited budget, but it still looked like a one-room apartment with a dark brown carpet, a tiny window and a porcelain sink in the corner.

She avoided the communal bathroom across the hallway whenever possible, preferring to grab a quick shower at work when they weren’t too busy. Although, she had to admit, the Rastas next door did a decent job of making sure that everyone on the floor kept it reasonably clean. It had been a while since she’d seen a discarded needle in the bathtub. The relentless bass beat pounding day and night through the paper-thin walls was a small price to pay.

Maybe Noddy was right. Maybe they should just go, pack what little possessions they had and hike down to the coast. See where they ended up. Could it be any worse? This was no place to raise a child.

Especially with Mick back on the streets. Although he wasn’t as bad as everyone said. Was he? He couldn’t be. Could he?

She picked up the gun she had taken from Noddy. Turned it over in her hands. She looked more closely. Balanced the weapon on her stomach as she leaned back against the wall.

Was that safety on or off?

♠

Read ♠ Dancing in Valhalla ♠ in weekly installments on FaceBook or WordPress. Receive notifications via Twitter, Tumblr, Instagram, GoodReads, or Amazon, where you’ll find the whole book – 13 decadent twisted tales of mystery, music, magick & mayhem.

Download ♠FREE♠ sampler previews of all my books – and some complete short stories – from PCloud. Including the new Burning Books sampler booklet (also available on Kindle Unlimited).

No charge. No obligation. No sign-in. Read for free. Share with your friends.

♠

If you have a book you’d like to publish, contact me to claim your 15 minutes of bestselling fame at #1 on Amazon. Find all my details at BurningBookLinks

Or catch me at the New Authors Book Fair in Rivonia on 15 August, if the govirusment lets it go ahead.

♠

Cheers.

Wednesday, 14 July 2021

♠ Burning everything ♠

Sorry, people. A certain government seems to have mistaken the dystopian novel we published a year ago for a textbook, and based their entire political strategy on events set in a fictional South Africa in 2028.


♠


“What was it like? It was a colossal cluster f@ck the likes of which nobody had ever seen before. Or since. Hundreds of innocent civilians, men, women and children, desperately trying to find food and clothing after they’d been told not to stockpile. Then the strikes hit, fanned by greedy union leaders and unscrupulous politicians, and the supply chains ran dry. People had nothing.


“The booze and cigarettes, we hadn’t expected that, either. No warning. The insiders stocked up. Politicians, hangers-on, black marketeers, they drained the bottle stores. Stashed single malt like it was going out of fashion.


“But when the food ran out… It didn’t matter who you were. How much money you had. It just wasn’t available.


“Of course, we still got our three meals a day. Military, police, government workers, the strikes didn’t affect us. Nor did the lockdown. We had food. We still received our salaries. Hell, we even still had beer in the canteen.


“The people didn’t like it. You can’t blame them. There we were, enforcing new laws that didn’t make any sense. Laws we didn’t believe in, or understand. But while we were enforcing them, the new laws didn’t seem to apply to us. They knew we had stockpiles. More than we needed.


“So it shouldn’t have come as a surprise when they broke in, started looting the military bases and the government warehouses. Except, it did. The powers that be, they’d been so bloody arrogant, so cock-sure of their authority, that they hadn’t even considered this possibility.


“Of course, under a state of emergency – well, let’s face it, when the curfews were imposed, it was pretty much martial law. Soldiers on the streets, doing whatever the hell they liked. Cops stealing booze and drinking it themselves. Politicians throwing lavish parties and posting photos all over social media. It drove the people over the edge.


“You’re probably too young to remember, but the last straw was when that one minister, the one who used to wear the traditional robes, she made a public announcement that if there was no bread or pap, people should eat cake.


“Next thing we knew, they were coming through the fences, over the razor wire, and we were ordered to use live ammunition.”


♠


Extract from Big Day Out, available on Amazon and everywhere else good books are sold.


http://www.amazon.com/author/burning

Sunday, 11 July 2021

♠ Free bird ♠

Noddy started down the stairs from the rooftop. They had to leave. Today. He would convince her of that. Fuck the money. They could survive without it. He would start wearing shirts with collars. And sleeves, if that’s what it took to find a job at the coast. He would even cut his hair. If that didn’t convince her of his sincerity, his desperation, then nothing would.

♠

“Fucking rat!”

What now? Dirk set off towards the corner Mick had just turned, flexing the fingers of his right hand towards his inside pocket. He would always have Mick’s back, no matter what. But if he was kicking homeless people again…

He needn’t have worried. The street was empty, the steel security gate on the front of the flats the only thing moving as it squealed closed on rusty hinges.

No, that wasn’t right. On the ground in front of him was a flutter of movement.

“Shit.”

♠

Read ♠ Dancing in Valhalla ♠ in weekly installments on FaceBook or WordPress. Receive notifications via Twitter, Tumblr, Instagram, GoodReads, or Amazon, where you’ll find the whole book – 13 decadent twisted tales of mystery, music, magick & mayhem.

Download ♠FREE♠ sampler previews of all my books – and some complete short stories – from PCloud. Including the new Burning Books sampler booklet (also available on Kindle Unlimited).

No charge. No obligation. No sign-in. Read for free. Share with your friends.

♠

If you have a book you’d like to publish, contact me to claim your 15 minutes of bestselling fame at #1 on Amazon. Find all my details at BurningBookLinks

Or catch me at the New Authors Book Fair in Rivonia on 15 August.

♠

Cheers.

Sunday, 4 July 2021

♠ Simple Simon and the Firepool ♠

In celebration of South Africa’s justice system, we interrupt our scheduled weekly programming to bring you a short story that has nothing whatsoever to do with SA or any of its corrupt politicians.

♠

Once upon a time, in a beautiful land far far away, Simple Simon met a pieman going to the parliamentary buildings.

Said Simple Simon to the pieman, “I’ll need seven hundred and sixty nine, eight hundred and seven hundred – listen properly – seven hundred and sixty nine thousand, eight hundred and twenty, and seventy, pies to feed my wives and extended family.”

“But aren’t we supposed to be cutting back on government spending?” asked the jolly pieman, who had cut his road trip short to attend to Simple Simon’s needs.

“You’re fired,” said Simple Simon.

He felt no sympathy for the pieman, or his family. Simple Simon had accumulated a huge pile of gold by stealing the hopes and dreams of millions. Whenever he walked past a group of hungry homeless children in the streets, he smiled. Because he knew that he had destroyed their future. It made him happy.

The buses were on strike again, and the trains he had bought were too big for the tracks. His wives had taken possession of more cars than the land could afford. All his over-priced submarines were in dry dock for repairs. And he was not allowed to buy himself another jet (at least not openly). So Simple Simon didn’t mind walking. It was a short trip from his fairytale homestead, and the path was paved with the bones of dead miners and farmers and mental patients. This also made him happy.

He would normally have taken his goats with him on such an outing. But he had recently traded them for some magic beans. These beans had sprouted overnight, growing into a huge firepool in his yard. From the land beyond the firepool had come a family of ogres who demanded that Simple Simon hand over his land to them in return for lordship over all the sheep in the land. And more gold.

Some of the sheep who lived in the beautiful land had been less than happy with this arrangement, but the vast majority of them had just gone along quietly. Simple Simon found that sheep were much easier to control than goats. They did whatever Simple Simon said.

Especially when he generously provided them with the illusion of freedom. He allowed the sheep to believe that they had some say over what happened in the beautiful land. He waved documents at them, documents that had been drafted by wise men a long time ago, before the ogres and the big bad wolf had darkened the land. These documents assured the sheep that they had rights, and that they were indeed free. Unfortunately, the wise men had written the documents in an ancient tongue which was no longer generally spoken in the beautiful land. So the old documents were often misinterpreted and misunderstood. Simple Simon considered himself exempt from these ancient rules. They only applied to the sheep.

He found that it helped to dance with the sheep at every opportunity, and sing songs with them. This made them believe that he was one of them, and that he wasn’t just dressed in sheep’s clothing. It also distracted them from the annoying public meetings and question sessions they held from time to time. These meetings always made Simple Simon laugh. He laughed so much that his glasses kept falling off his nose. He liked to use his middle finger to push them back up. He felt that this sent an appropriate message to the sheep.

One of his old friends had been caught stealing from the sheep. He had been sentenced to an endless session of playing golf and fighting with news reporters. The message had been clear – steal from the sheep, and your skills would be recognized and rewarded. There would be a lot of bleating, but nothing bad would actually happen. Nobody would ever have to repay their ill-gotten gains.

So Simple Simon had done his best. He hadn’t stopped at theft. He had his way with every young sheep that caught his eye. But he always showered afterwards. So he didn’t understand how anyone could possibly take offence.

And yet, he did hear distant mutterings of unhappiness. Luckily, there were enough dancing sheep around him at all times to keep these problems at bay. To be safe, he always kept his famous spear with him wherever he went. This weapon was so famous, it had even been immortalized in works of art. But Simple Simon and his favourite sheep were not happy about this. He preferred to keep his spear hidden, a secret weapon to be shared with those who were closest to him.

Besides, those who muttered against him had stolen everything themselves originally. Simple Simon wasn’t sure how he knew this, how it worked or exactly what it meant. But he knew it to be an indisputable fact. Whenever they raised their voices in protest, all the king’s horses and all the king’s men were denounced as foreign invaders, and every attempt they made to put the beautiful land’s economy back together again was blocked.

This made Simple Simon happiest of all. He laughed as he trampled his land’s currency into the dust, dancing a jig and raising his voice in song. It was a good day for spending the money that should have been allocated to education and housing and basic services and social grants.

He decided to buy himself a shiny new jet after all.

♠

Extract from Dancing in Valhalla, available on Amazon and everywhere else good books are sold.