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196 - Support: a Blackhall Tale, Part 4 of 6

Broadcast on:
17 Aug 2011
Audio Format:
other

Part 4 of 6

Read the full text, as well as the show notes, at http://flashpulp.com

Tonight, master frontiersman and student of the occult, Thomas Blackhall, finds himself in the gloom of a fatal cloud.

[music] Welcome to FlashPulp, episode 196. Tonight, we present Support, a Black Call Tale, part four of six. [music] This week's episodes are brought to you by Pendragon Variety. Consider this. [singing] Now consider this. I vociferously disagreed with him. I'm not feeling too sanguine about, you know, eating up. Okay, now picture character Arphy type hanging compared to finger. The romantic hero type, the almost villainous protagonist type. Well, I'll be darned. It does sound like that. Mika, I think you, I think you waxed North Carolina in there for a second. [mimicking character] Pendragon Variety, usually more intelligible than a baby. FlashPulp is an experiment in broadcasting fresh pulp stories in the modern age. Three to ten minutes of fiction, brought to you Monday, Wednesday, and Friday evenings. Tonight, Master Frontiersman and student of the occult, Thomas Blackhall, finds himself in the gloom of a fatal cloud. Support, a Blackhall Tale, part four of six. Written by J.R.D. Skinner, art and narration by Oppopanex, an audio produced by Jessica May. [music] At first, the distance from Blackhall to the inky tendrils, which had drifted from the verdant green of the forest, made it appear as if thick smoke had come wending from some unseen flame. As it moved closer, however, purpose and cohesion became apparent. A firm lick of darkness first touched, then enveloped, the laggard of sour thistles bolting honor guard. The brown-furred weasel cousins squealed in pain and commenced thrashing. It did nothing to slow the approach of the black mass. Follow was all Blackhall had opportunity to shout at the forest queen, and he shattered the still water with pounding legs, and finding an acceptable depth, dived. The bushman was quick to retrieve the talisman he had long ago lashed about his neck with rawhide, and popping the flat stone beneath his tongue, he breathed heavily of occult air. As the blue sky above his rippling view grew murky, he was relieved to find sour thistle close at hand. Her hides swollen with the wet, but otherwise unharmed. Unknotting his trinket strand, they spent uncountable hours below, trading the stone between them. The standoff wore at Thomas's nerves, but as time passed, he began to feel as if their position, while not permanently tenable, would at least hold against the threatening swarm. Even as such considerations ran through his mind, a fat ebb and slug splashed down on the surface and drifted in his direction. He could see the squirming shape clearly, a soot-colored three-inch worm, not unfinger-like, which flexed and bloated as it struggled to bring its double set of fluttering dragonfly appendages into action. A leech, black all realized, but worse, a winged leech. His eyes were locked on the beast with fascination and concern, but whatever unnatural metamorphosis the thing had experienced to take its new form had also made it unsuitable to a life in the water. As Thomas watched, the parasite's struggles ceased, and its glistening form became nothing more than floating detritus. What followed was an afternoon of impatience, although the pair of survivors made several attempts to simply walk to a point of safety. The swarm seemed intent to follow them, smothering the waves underneath their shadow. In the end, they were left in positions, not so unlike they'd had on the shore. Black all standing, his shirt now flapping in the flow instead of the breeze, and a wolverine sitting, her claws playing impatiently with the muddy clay of the lake bottom. The thought of supper looming large in his growling stomach, Thomas began to consider a methodology of angling with his available instruments, which were few. He did not relish the idea of raw fish taken in with gulps of silty water. The sarathistle, he thought, might appreciate the freshness, and, given a protracted siege, he considered that he may have no alternative. Could they last the night? He wondered, the weak? He looked up, and they were gone. As his head cleared the surface, the final wisps broke westward, but they appeared dislocated and untidy, not a solid mass, but instead a speckled haze. When once again upon solid ground, they'd surveyed their surroundings. The buck they'd seen break the woodline just prior to their escape lay where it had fallen. Portions of its flesh had been eaten away, but most of its hide held. Still, its bone structure was plainly visible beneath, as if the parasitic flock had suctioned its innards clean of blood, meat, and organs. Sarathistle's guardians were there as well. The swiftness of the fishers had nearly made the sand when it was overtaken. The collapsed fur recalled Thomas's mind of a mink he'd purchased for his merry, but he was careful to keep the thought close. "Should we bury them?" he asked. "No, the carrion birds are our way," she replied. It seemed to Blackhall's eye that there was a meager dinner left for the crows, but he again said nothing. They'd spent the night at the lake's edge, the frontiersmen snacking on jerky from his reclaimed travel gear, and the lady of the forest cracking oyster shells fished from the mud of the shallows. The darkness invited little talk, as awareness of an impending threat depended heavily on their heating the battle of the breeze. As dawn broke, however, and the smell of cooking bass lifted Sarathistle from a sporadic slumber, Thomas continued the discussion he'd begun the day previous. It's the flying plague I've come about, as regent of this domain, surely you must know their source. He tossed one of the seared fillets to the queen, who let it fall to the beach's turf to cool. Her razor teeth had no concern for extra sand. Under the cresting sands orange glow, the six cold fishers were barely visible, and yet Thomas noted Sarathistle's contemplation of their resting places. "Our eyes will be eaten from our skulls before we arrive, but I will lead you and the less," she replied. Then their mouths were too busy with food for conversation. The opening of their journey was largely spent retracing the brood upon which black holla had approached, as the queen had chosen a remote location to rule her wild subjects from. The following days were taken at a careful pace, lingering as often by a brook or river as possible, and always with ears cocked to the wind. They did not encounter the swarm again until after they'd arrived. Their destination became apparent to Thomas as the pair crested a wooded hill. Although it was still a good many miles off, and he could not see their true objective from the dense forest floor, he noted a cloud which remained unchanged, even as the branches about him rattled in gusts. As his view crept closer, he confirmed his suspicions that the thunderhead, grey against a sky filled with white fluff, was perfectly round in composition, no matter what the state of weather in the surrounding environs. At the realization, black hole tutted to himself quietly, and Sarathistle simply nodded. Given the hush as she moved over long-dried beds of pine needles, Thomas was unwilling to break the calm that had become the hallmark of their tour, but many questions alighted on his tongue in that moment. Too many of his queries, he felt, were answered when they achieved the edge of the swamp. The boundary between the spaces was plainly visible and tight. The marches of pine ceased, and heat seemed to bleed from the broadleaf plants and thick vines that marked the change in terrain. The damp air at the marshes' brink set Thomas's lungs to aching. "I'd not expect to find such a sight anywhere this far north, if on this continent at all," he said. "It is the time to speak of the old man who lives within," replied Sarathistle. She'd come to a halt some yards away from the twisted landscape, and squatted now in the deep shadow of a fir tree. "The blood-suckers are hits. I have remained within my principality, and he in his own. There has been little confusion as to the perimeter. We have never spoken." With his eyes prying at the shade within, Thomas began to make troubling identifications. "I believe that's a card, and those may be needless asses dead in harness." "Look, Carter, you yet find the worst of it," the Wolverine responded. "Have you examined the strange fruit which the thaumaturge harvests?" The canopy above the bog was woven thickly between the trunks, another oddity for the frosty lands of the north, and it was only by craning into the swelter that Blackhall was able to uncover her meaning, strung by their feet from the highest reaches with the shapes of men. Their bodies, as well as their bindings, endured in various states of decay, and Blackhall's view fell upon a noseless face, which he reckoned likely to belong to his former acquaintance, Rosie Red Archer. Squirrels have sung to me of the life-drainers, though I had not encountered them myself until recently," said Sarah Thistle. The incidents commenced sporadically, only to grow all too frequent. "I know not why the ancient has become vengeful, but it is obvious all the same that his wrath has regularly breached her borders." With her tones still fading under the morass of insect song, a bent form stepped from the dim, as if summoned by her words. Flashpulp is presented by Flashpulp.com and is released under the Canadian Creative Commons attribution non-commercial 2.5 license. Text and audio commentaries can be sent to Skinner at Skinner.fm or the voicemail line at 206-338-2792, but be aware that they may appear in a future flashcast. We'd also like to thank the Free Sound Project, found at freesound.org. For a full listing of effects used during the show, as well as credits for the users who provided them, please check this episode's notes at flashpulp.com. And thanks to you for listening. If you enjoyed the show, please tell your friends. [Music]