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Published: 2011-04-17 11:17:55 +0000 UTC; Views: 1700; Favourites: 23; Downloads: 15
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And I looked and behold, a pale horse
And his name that sat on him was Death
And Hell followed with him.
-Revelation 6:8
"Time at the bar, gentlemen!"
Gary rang the bell, signalling closing time at the Pale Horse. He loved to ring the bell – it was his nightly ritual. Twice nightly, actually. Sometimes, when the regulars like Lloyd wouldn't leave, he even let himself ring the bell a third time.
That wouldn't happen tonight, though. It was Monday night. No-one ever stayed late on Monday night. One day, something interesting would happen on a Monday. Gary knew this: just as he knew that Lloyd would appear at 6 o'clock every evening to prop the bar up. One Monday, the bar would collapse on him. Or Lloyd wouldn't turn up. It hadn't happened tonight, though. Nor the Monday before. In fact, something interesting had failed to happen on every Monday in Gary's memory: which was probably why he hated Mondays. Even the word was rubbish – heavy and charmless, like a sack of potatoes. Monday. Monday was just the sort of day when--
-- he was upsetting himself. He drew in a deep breath and tried to clear his mind. He ran a cloth across the bar top. He considered ringing the bell again, to cheer himself up, but didn't really have an excuse.
"Alright Cass, you may as well head home," he said to Monday's bargirl - another waste of time. "I'll finish up."
"Thanks Gal!" she replied, throwing a dishcloth onto the bar and diving into the back room. It was funny, Gary reflected, how much quicker she moved when leaving a shift. She was a sweet thing really, just not much use in a crisis.
He leaned his landlord's bulk on the bar. He looked across at the evening's patrons, trying to decide how quickly he'd be able to shut up for the night. Ever-faithful Lloyd wasn't far from clearing his ale; but Derek still cradled a stout half and a long short.
Gary was about to offer words of expediency but was cut off by the front door slamming open. A rush of freezing air blew into the pub, carrying with it the unmistakable snort of a horse. A cloaked figure strode inside, metal clinking from somewhere in his black robes. He appeared to gaze slowly around the room, apparently heedless of the chill wind which followed him. Held outstretched in one arm was - Gary squinted in disbelief - was that a scythe?
"Hoi!" he shouted at the stranger. A dark cowl turned to face Gary's way; two tiny red points staring sightlessly out of its shadowy recess.
"Door!" he added, pointing for emphasis.
MY APOLOGIES, the stranger said in a peculiarly resonant tone - a voice that was somehow not a voice. It occurred to Gary that the stranger hadn't really said anything: the words had just sort of... appeared in his mind. This sort of thing didn't bother Gary: he had worked in bars on West Street for fourteen years. What was a paranormal patron compared to a hairdresser's Christmas party? These days, he was mostly just relieved to serve customers who didn't have fake tans.
As the door slammed itself shut (another fact which struck Gary as passing strange), Gary glanced across the bar. Lloyd and Derek had twisted around to stare at the newcomer, jaws hanging dumbly.
"Have you got a license for that?" Gary demanded, nodding toward the stranger's scythe. It was a vicious looking thing - the long blade flecked with rust, nocked cruelly along its curved edge. The shaft was of blackened, twisted wood.
YOU MIGHT SAY, spoke that voice which was not merely in the night, but somehow of the night, THAT I AM THE LICENSER.
"Uh, right," was all Gary could summon in response. A moment of silence descended, landing like an unsubtle innuendo at a funeral.
"Alright Gary I'm heading off," Cass's voice filtered through from the back room. "I've left my shoes in the- OHMYGOD!" she cried, halting as she reached the doorway.
"Uh, Gary," whispered Derek, leaning across the bar. "What..." he paused, fishing for articulation. "What the fuck?"
A LARGE GORDON'S, BARKEEP. NEAT.
"Bar's closed, mate," Gary said, turning his bulk towards the unnatural voice. "And I really think you should leave that outside," he added with a nod toward the scythe.
THESE GENTLEMEN ARE STILL DRINKING, the stranger said, quite reasonably, stretching a thin arm along the bar. As if to prove a point, Lloyd downed the rest of his ale, gulping greedily.
"These gentlemen ordered before the bar closed," Gary retorted.
The door slammed open again - a gangly figure swaggering into the room.
"Guys, you won't believe this. There's the weirdest fucking horse stood outside the..." he stopped as his gaze fell upon the robed figure.
"Alright Randy!" greeted Lloyd with impressive levity.
"Uh, never mind. I'll, er, I'll tell you about it tomorrow," Randy stammered, turning and exiting the pub. Gary had never seen anyone 'hightail it' before - but he was pretty sure that was what Randy had just done.
LOOK, the figure began again, striding up to the bar. YOU WOULDN'T BELIEVE THE DAY I'VE HAD. THERE'S A PEASENT'S REVOLUTION IN ALPHA CENTAURI. VERY LOUIS SIXTEENTH, IF YOU KNOW WHAT I MEAN.
Four slack jaws hung in a manner which said, quite firmly, that they did not.
AND ALL I WANT IS A DRINK.
"Sorry mate," said Gary, gathering himself. "Last orders have gone."
LAST ORDERS?
"S'what I said."
The figure carefully propped the scythe against the quiz machine before replying in a leaden tone:
THEY MAY YET PROVE TO BE.
"Look, if you're lucky the Cheeky Fiddle will still be open. It's just two minutes drive. Uh, ride."
The stranger slumped onto the bar, hanging his head wearily. With a pale hand, he pulled the hood back to reveal a yellowed skull. He ran a hand across the top of his skinless scalp, causing a dry, scraping sound to eke its way across the room.
"Oh my God..." Cass breathed, in case anyone hadn't heard her the first time.
ALRIGHT. HOW ABOUT I BUY A FINAL ROUND FOR EVERYONE?
Lloyd perked right up at this.
"What?"
"No," Gary said, shooting a glance towards him. "Besides, I could get my license revoked if I get caught after hours."
"We won't tell anyone, will we Derek?"
"Hmm?" replied Derek, eyes not leaving the stranger's shining skull. "Won't.. tell.. anyone."
"Fine," Gary relented with a sigh. "You got any money hiding in that getup?"
The stranger reached into the blackened folds of his robes: pulling out a huge coin. It was about the breadth of a pint glass and appeared to be made out of solid gold.
"And what do you expect me to do with that?" Gary scowled.
IT IS MORE THAN ADEQUATE PAYMENT.
"Is that gold?" gasped Lloyd. "'ere, Gary, you could get up to two hundred and fifty pounds for that!"
Gary wasn't impressed.
"Seriously - you send your gold in to these guys and they send cash back. There's adverts all over the telly."
"He's right, Gal," Cass added. "Let 'im get a round, eh? We don't want no trouble."
"One drink," Gary conceded, roughly seizing the coin from the stranger. "Gordon's, was it?"
LARGE. SLICE OF LEMON, IF YOU HAVE IT.
"Same again, lads?"
Lloyd and Derek nodded. Derek's eyes remained locked on the stranger.
"Cass, want to help me out here?" Gary asked, filling a tumbler with gin. "Help yourself," he added.
They served up the drinks – Gary wasn't too proud to pour himself a generous brandy. When the round was delivered, an awkward silence descended once more. Eyes flicked nervously from glass to cowled skeleton and back to glass again. The stranger slowly, impossibly, sipped at his gin; apparently oblivious of the atmosphere.
MY THANKS, he said, finishing the clear liquid and pulling up his cowl once more. NOW YOU TRULY HAVE SERVED YOUR LAST ORDERS.
The stranger took up his scythe and strode from the room, letting in the whistling wind for a moment as he swung the door open.
"What," began Lloyd after the door had slammed shut, "did he mean by that?"
The bell at the bar chimed once – long after the wind had swept through the room. A chill spread down Gary's spine.
"It means its time for you to go home, Lloyd."
The hairs on your arm will stand up
At the terror in each sip and in each sup.
Will you partake of that last offered cup?
Or disappear into the potter's ground
When the Man comes around.
-Johnny Cash; When The Man Comes Around
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Comments: 51
monstroooo In reply to ??? [2015-06-23 16:21:57 +0000 UTC]
Hey Chris, wow nice to hear from you after all this time! Appreciate the comments here and over on Cyber
I've always thought that to be a good bartender, one has to have a good tolerance for nonsense.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
chris-illustrator In reply to monstroooo [2015-06-23 21:47:46 +0000 UTC]
No problem. I was looking back at some of my older stories you were nice enough provide some feedback on and thought say hi
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katarthis [2012-12-19 18:22:40 +0000 UTC]
Superb little tale. It makes me think of Piers Anthony's "On A Pale Horse" as well as Pratchett.
k
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monstroooo In reply to katarthis [2012-12-20 08:34:57 +0000 UTC]
Thanks for stopping by, k!
I'm not familiar with Piers Anthony. I'll look him up!
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LookingGlassInk [2012-05-02 14:47:36 +0000 UTC]
What a fantastic story! So much awesomeness, it's hard to know what to say.
You did an excellent job with the personification of Death, and while admittedly it is certainly an homage to Terry Pratchett, I think you have done him proud. Outstanding work.
I really liked how you began the story with the scripture and ended it with such an appropriate quote from Johnny Cash. Both very seemly and well placed.
For such a brief story, your characterization of the others in the bar was also excellent and the imagery was remarkable. I felt like I was there watching the entire thing. Very eerie and very fun. Thank you so much for sharing such an excellent piece of literature.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
monstroooo In reply to LookingGlassInk [2012-05-02 16:10:47 +0000 UTC]
Oh, thank you!
I appreciate you stopping by and being so ridiculously nice
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LookingGlassInk In reply to monstroooo [2012-05-02 17:05:16 +0000 UTC]
Nothing nice about it. I'm a writer with the extraordinary ability to spot writing that I enjoy. You were unfortunate enough to fall under this category, thus the glowing praise. You'll just have to suffer my appreciation forever, now.
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monstroooo In reply to LookingGlassInk [2012-05-02 21:29:27 +0000 UTC]
Well, it's tough, but I'll try to deal with it!
Whether you enjoyed the work or not, you still took the time to a) stop by and check my gallery, and b) leave your thoughts in a comment. Both points mean a lot to me. That fact that you happened to enjoy the story is a bonus!
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Relic-Angel [2012-05-02 07:32:35 +0000 UTC]
Man, that last part in the prompt gave me the chills. Very visualizing.
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monstroooo In reply to Relic-Angel [2012-05-02 07:49:10 +0000 UTC]
Thank you! I don't think I've had much feedback about the closing quote, but it was certianly intended to carry a little weight. So I appreciate your comments
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Relic-Angel In reply to monstroooo [2012-05-02 07:54:31 +0000 UTC]
Anytime. From one writer to another.
One Terry Pratchet book that I own is Men at Arms: A Discworld Novel.
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Blacksand459 [2012-04-30 00:47:28 +0000 UTC]
Wow!! That was SO cool. I can easily see how this would win a contest.
It's neat to see Death portrayed like one of the guys coming off a shift at a factory. hahaha.
Loved it!!
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monstroooo In reply to Blacksand459 [2012-04-30 11:11:15 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! It's nice to visualise Death as 'one of the guys' (a joke that Terry Pratchett often likes to play with). In his line of work, I'm sure he needs a stiff drink from time to time!
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MetalMagpie [2012-04-29 14:55:50 +0000 UTC]
Great little story. I love the Pratchett-style Death (and Pratchett-style humour).
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monstroooo In reply to MetalMagpie [2012-04-29 21:32:24 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! It means a lot to get good feedback from you
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DailyLitDeviations [2012-04-28 02:46:00 +0000 UTC]
Your wonderful literary work has been chosen to be featured by DLD (Daily Literature Deviations) and has been selected as our “Pick of the Day”. It is featured in a news article here: [link] and on our main page.
Keep writing and keep creating.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
monstroooo In reply to DailyLitDeviations [2012-04-28 08:13:11 +0000 UTC]
Pick of the day? Good lord! Thank you so much
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xlntwtch In reply to monstroooo [2012-04-28 15:53:28 +0000 UTC]
"AH. YES. AN EXCELLENT CHOICE," the stranger said. "SHALL WE HAVE ANOTHER TO CELEBRATE. THIS. TIME?"
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SilverInkblot [2012-04-28 00:46:06 +0000 UTC]
You better believe I recognized Pratchett's version of Death when I saw it
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disrhythmic [2012-03-21 04:17:53 +0000 UTC]
Oh sweet lord, I love this. You have some of the most ridiculously awesome lines here...
"She was a sweet thing really, just not much use in a crisis."
"These days, he was mostly just relieved to serve customers who didn't have fake tans."
"A moment of silence descended, landing like an unsubtle innuendo at a funeral." That alone. I love you. XD
For all the comedy though, that really was a nice chilling ending. Expected, yes, but somehow not... probably because of the humor.
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CalleighBlack [2012-01-04 02:19:35 +0000 UTC]
Awesome! Though I am a big Pratchett fan, and a big Good Omens fan, this is so good that neither one ever crossed my mind. Great job!
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monstroooo In reply to CalleighBlack [2012-01-04 12:24:23 +0000 UTC]
Thank you! That's a huge compliment, I really appreciate it
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Meggie272 [2011-12-24 09:37:13 +0000 UTC]
Ohhh, brilliant! I love the Pratchettesque feel to it, there's some lines in there that are absolute gems. The characters are really well done too, I've never been able to capture a personality in a short story, but you do it very nicely. Chilling ending as well. Thanks for sharing!
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monstroooo In reply to Meggie272 [2011-12-24 10:15:14 +0000 UTC]
Thank you very much This made my morning
Merry Christmas to you!
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equinox627 [2011-07-15 17:05:38 +0000 UTC]
*nods* extra points for Johnny's song. i think that brings you up to about 110? either way, you did an excellent job on this
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monstroooo In reply to equinox627 [2011-07-15 21:26:56 +0000 UTC]
Thank you I hope I did the man proud!
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equinox627 In reply to monstroooo [2011-07-16 03:59:59 +0000 UTC]
I'm completely convinced you did ^^
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KeyesUK [2011-06-29 04:38:37 +0000 UTC]
Brilliant. Absolutely no complaints - a well-told story. You got the character and attitude of Terry Pratchett's Death across really well.
Also, I'd say his complaints about his day justify his desire for a drink
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monstroooo In reply to KeyesUK [2011-06-29 08:13:36 +0000 UTC]
Thanks man! I appreciate that He's not intended to be a replica of Pratchett's death, but he certainly comes from that mould.
Nice to see you getting active in #WritersInk , too!
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KeyesUK In reply to monstroooo [2011-06-29 12:54:16 +0000 UTC]
I'd say the fact that he's not identical is a good thing - I see him in your story as a being that understands humans and social interaction a lot better than he does in, say, Soul Music or the Hogfather.
And yes, my uni year has finished for now and I'm a lot more free to pursue writing - finally! Been sitting on a fair few ideas, and I have yet to read more from the fine members of the 'Ink
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monstroooo In reply to KeyesUK [2011-06-29 19:04:09 +0000 UTC]
Oh, congrats on completing the year! Take my advice - write as much as you can, while you can (even if it's shit!). It's all good experience man, get it out of your system
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Gricken [2011-05-05 17:14:11 +0000 UTC]
Brilliant writing. I love the subtle irony, the fact that Gary has always been hoping for something interesting to happen on Mondays and he finally gets it, a visit from Death.
I just find it awkward reading everyone's reactions to Death's presence and how rude they're being. I would've liked to see how Death would respond to their shock, but then again, him being Death, he'd most likely be used to that by now. But it's a little strange that they would express their distress aloud. As I said, it seems kind of rude to do that to a visitor even if he's a walking skeleton, and if I were in their place I would be at a loss for words or any form of expression for that matter other than complete terror.
That's me overthinking it.
I'm to understand that the people in the bar die that night, right? I'm really curious as to how they die. Maybe there could be a little epilogue at the end about dead bodies being discovered?
I loved it anyway. You have such skill with words.
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
monstroooo In reply to Gricken [2011-05-05 17:27:34 +0000 UTC]
Thank you
I like the idea of leaving this hanging. Maybe they die, maybe they don't. I originally conceived of them dying on the way home; or in a manner befitting their personalities. Gary would die of ignorance, perhaps; Larry of drinking; Derek of gaumlessness.
But I like to leave an element of doubt in things, too. Maybe they'd just had too much to drink on a stormy night. Maybe someone played a prank on them. Maybe there was no deeper meaning to what the stranger said.
Besides, I think if I actually killed off the characters, the story would lose some of its comic value
I'm glad you enjoyed it, thanks for stopping by
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GentlemanAnachronism [2011-05-01 18:35:48 +0000 UTC]
I really do like this - and the Pratchett-like Death is the icing on the cake as far as said liking is concerned. It's got just the right mix of humour and creepiness, drawing you in even though you've never met the characters before and, at the start, have no real idea what's going to happen. Congratulations on a well-deserved win.
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linaket [2011-04-19 04:17:08 +0000 UTC]
This is well written, as expected from you, and absolutely hilarious. TAKE THAT, MONDAY!
A moment of silence descended, landing like an unsubtle innuendo at a funeral. "Its cold outside? You know what else is cold? YOUR MOM! oh.. wait..." PAHAHAHA. um... please excuse my brain. I love your one-liners. This one and the girl who "wouldn't be much use in a crisis." are just perfection.
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monstroooo In reply to linaket [2011-04-19 07:02:06 +0000 UTC]
Haha! I might use that!
In a story, obviously, not at an actual funeral
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kiwi2191 [2011-04-17 14:34:30 +0000 UTC]
Bloody Brilliant
A short snapshot filled with vivid detail is how I would like to describe it.
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DramiraSK [2011-04-17 14:21:24 +0000 UTC]
I LOVE the dialog. So well done.
This is great. I wanted to do the prompt also but I have my hands full, dont know if I can make it.
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monstroooo In reply to DramiraSK [2011-04-17 19:11:35 +0000 UTC]
Thanks
I don't do many prompts... I always have a stack of my own ideas to burn through. And stories normally take me months to write, not days
I still think there's something missing in this - but I'm happy enough with it
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DramiraSK In reply to monstroooo [2011-04-17 19:40:05 +0000 UTC]
Well, I liked it just fine! You should be happy!
I made it, I just did one. It's really dirty, though, hahah. It coulda been better but I saw today was the last day. I feel the same- happy enough to submit it. I hope they take naughty stories. Let me know if you give it a read and if WritersInk might want some of it.
Itd be cool if someone from writersink won, yeah!?
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
monstroooo In reply to DramiraSK [2011-04-17 19:49:02 +0000 UTC]
Woah, good work! I'll check it out
TWM has a few naughty stories in it, it'll be fame
It would be good for a WritersInk member to win. TWM is my second home, though, so I don't really mind!
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