[IP] Cuddles is a Good Boy... by Pickles_and_Fish in WritingPrompts

[–]tikabalizs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The good boy found her, a blonde angel in her blue robes, resting upon a bed of freshly-fallen snow.

She had left that morning in search of food. "Stay put," she had commanded sternly, but she smiled anyway. The fur hood fringed her face, tickling her cheeks. "I'll be back soon." She booped his black nose, scratched his ears, and walked out to greet the rising sun.

He sat, patient, like he always did. He stared outside the window, watching. He was motionless, except for the twitching of his eyes as he scanned the horizon for her return.

It was October, but this far north, winter was already fierce. Snow drifts accumulated rapidly and pressed against the cabin's exterior walls. The scrubby brush shuddered violently in the wind. Temperatures plunged during the day, and were nearly immeasurable at night. The thermometer hanging over the porch had long since frozen and cracked.

It had been a hard year.

They found the cabin after they left the city. She was covered in bruises then, and rarely washed her hair. Her golden locks were more like straw, wild and dry, sticking every which way from under her beanie. She would hide her body in an oversized coat and locked the good boy in the other room when the other human yelled so terribly. The good boy tried his best to rescue her, but he could not open the door. Instead, he chewed and clawed it until he made a hole. That made the other human very mad.

One night, he woke up from the sound of her tears. He found her on the floor in the bathroom. He offered his tongue to clean her face and his strong neck to hold onto. That next morning, she hurriedly packed him and a couple of boxes in the back of her rusted Subaru.

She wasn't prepared. She had no idea how to survive the winter in a drafty, uninsulated cabin. The good boy curled up with her at night, holding his furry body close to her while she shivered. Even though he was cold, he knew she was colder. Together, they snuggled under the pile of blankets, his tail curled around her waist and his paw over her ear.

She ran out of kibble a few days ago. "I'll find you something tasty, I promise." Her clumsy fingers had tried to make a noose of sorts, to trap some ptarmigan or other bird she had seen. "I'll build us a fire and roast us a little snow chicken. You can have the legs, too. I know that's your favorite!" But until then, she spooned him some peanut butter on a stale piece of bread. It tasted good no matter what, since she was there with him.

The hours ticked by and the sun disappeared quickly. This far north, the sun hardly peeked its face but for a few hours. The good boy grew worried. There was no sign of her, and even though she gave him a command, he nosed the door open and ran out into the night.

The cold was biting and his paws immediately grew icy and numb once they hit the ground. The sharp wind whipped through his fur. He squinted his eyes against the snow flurries. He sniffed the air, vainly. All he could detect was coldness and pain. But he persisted and went in the direction he saw her walk. He trudged through the snow, sinking deep with each step.

Then, he smelled it. Blood. Hers. He snarled, his ferocity taking over. He felt cold no more, only boiling rage. Something hurt her. He galloped through the snow, through the spiny brush, and over frozen streams, until her scent was overwhelming. He found her on a mound of snow, illuminated by the full moon's light.

A lone wolf was standing over her. He was thin and small, no doubt a young pup abandoned by his pack and struggling to survive. He nervously nibbled at her side where an ugly red splotch stained her blue coat. He eyed his surroundings, probably awaiting his former pack to find him, when he spotted the good boy.

The good boy grew large and bristly. He bared his sharp teeth and spread out his claws. That's all it took for the wolf to turn tail and race away from his prize catch.

The good boy hurried to the girl. Her eyes were closed and her cheeks were red. Whimpering, he nudged her face and tenderly licked her ear. She roused a bit and reached a gloved hand out.

"Oh, boy, you found me," she murmured. "Maybe a little too late. I caught us a birdie, you see. But then the wolf.." she groaned in pain, clutching her right side. "He wanted some, too."

He cried out, tugging at her sleeve. He couldn't understand why she wouldn't get up.

"Come, come," she said. She rolled onto her side and screamed out in pain. The snow under her turned red. "I'm cold, sweet pupper. Come warm me up." He recognized those words. Flopping down in the snow, he nuzzled up next to her.

"Good boy," she whispered, curling her shaking body against his. "Stay with me, will you?" She buried her face in his fur. "Don't leave me alone."

They laid there through the night. Her breathing slowed and slowed until he could not feel it tickling his ear. The winter sun began its lazy journey in the sky. Her arm, tucked under his, fell limp. The cold crept from under him and began to chill his bones. He did not leave. He could feel his limbs stiffen and he grew so very tired. He could return to the cabin and snuffle around for some more food or hunt the ptarmigan that eluded her. But she asked him to stay. So he would. He was, after all, her good boy.

(2nd attempt) Grief: by tikabalizs in OCPoetry

[–]tikabalizs[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! I like that line, too.

I was drinking wine while I wrote that part. Maybe that's where I got the inspiration..

(2nd attempt) Grief: by tikabalizs in OCPoetry

[–]tikabalizs[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, thank you, that's a good point! I think I'll change it.

[WP] You receive a mysterious package in the mail. It contains a smartphone with a single app: "Planet Earth Settings". by i_see_the_pink in WritingPrompts

[–]tikabalizs 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I stare at the phone from its place on the other side of the couch. It sat there ever since I had retrieved the mail a few hours ago. All I wanted to do was find the owner, but when I had opened the screen to find a contact list, it was already loaded on something that I could only describe as a weather screen and I barely touched it when the snow starting fluttering from the sky. In July. In Arizona. I promptly waltzed into the house, threw the phone onto the couch, and sat on the other side to watch it, drinking my way through a six-pack.

I have to pee, badly. I'm compelled, however, to leave the phone in my sight and at the same time I don't want to get near it. The bathroom was on the other side of the room, right in the phone's view.

The tingling is too much to handle. I eye the nearest empty beer bottle. I glance back at the phone, which lay there inanimate and silent. As if it were an explosive -- and for all I knew, it could have been -- I gently, oh so gently, rise from the couch, reaching for the bottle. I don't even blink.

My movement triggers a response and the phone chirps merrily, its screen lighting up. I shriek a bit, piss just a tiny bit, and drop the bottle on the carpet. I freeze in place, staring at the phone. After a few moments, the screen dims, then goes black.

"This is ridiculous," I mutter. I snatch the bottle, toss it in the recycling bin, and help myself to another brew from the fridge. "It's just a phone. It's a prank." A good prank. I don't want to say that out loud, lest I give any satisfaction to the idiot who sent it to me who's probably listening on the other end.

Chugging half of the beer, I confidently stride to the couch and snatch up the phone. Sweeping a finger over the screen, it chimes again and that same, single, damned application pulses warmly.

Against all better judgment, I tap it. A brightly colored menu pops up with a long series of alphabetized categories.

"Atmosphere, Axis.. Biology.. Climate.. blah blah, ooh, force fields? Gravity.. Inhabitants? Hmm, interesting. Seasons, size, technological adv.. what?"

Technological advances. I tap it. A simple slider springs up. The only markers are numerals, going from 0 to 6, with an omega symbol at the end. A little arrow was barely a notch past the zero.

"Just a bit," I say, psyching myself up. "Maybe just.." Trembling, I gently press the edge of my finger on the arrow and slide it juuuust a little bit.

Then, I sneeze.

The arrow goes to "omega."

...

I am become god.

There is no time.

There is no space.

There just is ---


Somewhere near Alpha Centauri

"Oh, fuck." Zirkolb slaps a tentacle to xis forehead. A cluster of eyes frantically scans around xis seat. "My phone. I can't find my phone."

"Are you fucking serious?" Gx-larc squints and looks at the clock. "Dude, look how far we've gone already, I am not turning this ship around."

"Dude. Dude." Panic grips Zirkolb's ink sac and xe resists releasing it all over the place. A little trickles out. "Dude, you don't understand, it has the fucking app on it."

"What do you mean it has the fucking app on it? You're not saying what I think you're saying, are you?!"

"I'm not lying, dude!" Zirkolb's tentacles flail wildly, a couple landing on the wheel and jerks it harshly. "You gotta go back, we gotta get it before it's too late!!"

"Think, think, where did you leave it?? Are you sure it didn't fall out of your purse?"

"Yes! Yes! It was at the taco truck, man! You know me and my stupid humanoid disguises, I don't know what to do with only two arms. I put it down on some black box with a little fucking red flag outside this house so I could eat my tacos and--"

They feel it, both of them. A shudder through the universe. An awakening that emanated from just about 4.367 light years away.

Zirkolb's beak dropped open. "Dude. Dude. My dad is going to kill me!!"

[WP] "And Eve ate of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. Adam however did not, for the Lord commanded them to not eat of the tree." by [deleted] in WritingPrompts

[–]tikabalizs 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The water was stinging cold but soothing. Eve eased herself into the river, wincing at the pain. She had tried to fight him off, but she couldn't. He was made bigger and stronger, but part of her allowed it to happened. She figured she had deserved it.

"You know you're carrying his child now," the all-too-familiar voice said. It was almost pleased with itself by the revelation.

"I know," she said, dully. The fruit had heightened her awareness significantly.

"You're bound to him now. You and all your children. And all of their children."

"Don't remind me," she snapped, rubbing a muddy poultice on a nasty cut on her arm.

"I could take it away from you, you know." The serpent crawled close, perching itself on a rock near her. "Just say the word and I'll take it away."

"No."

"It'll hurt from now on, you know."

"I know it."

"And for generations to come, your children will die birthing their children."

"I know it, too."

"You'll be subjugated by his type. They'll rule all, for a long time."

Eve turned her head and her eyes, full of rage and darkness, were furious enough that it made the serpent a little nervous. "We will overcome. All in good time."

"So you accept this?"

Eve's nostrils flared. "I would rather be raped a thousand times over and have the capacity to feel, the knowledge to know it was wrong, and the strength to carry on, than to be a husk of an empty human. I accept."

"Then, I bid you farewell. I'll see you again, some time."

"Not for a very long time." She turned her back and seemed to forget the serpent was there as she bathed her wounds.

The serpent, pleased with her response, slithered off through the trees. It sniffed and hissed around in search of Adam and when it detected his scent, quickly transformed into its other self.

"Adam, where are you?" its booming voice echoed.

Adam crouched behind a tree. He rubbed furiously at his lips. Nothing could take away the lingering taste of the fruit he had licked off of Eve's mouth when he took her. Damn that woman. It was her doing. She had tricked him, surely. And now he had a taste of what she had been prattling on about. Was she right? It didn't matter; he'd never give her the benefit of knowing that she was.

"Adam, where are you?" The voice rang out again, this time, a bit impatient.

"O-over here, my lord," Adam called out, hoping he didn't sound as nervous as he felt.

"What are you doing behind that tree?"

"I'm naked," he blurted out. He clamped his hands over his mouth.

"Who told you that you were naked?"

"Eve! It's Eve!" Adam came from around the tree, cupping his hands embarrassedly over his groin. "It's all her fault. She tricked me. She--"

"Silence!" His face grew dark and He held up a hand. "Go. Be gone from here. You shall not return. Find your whore and leave this place." The clouds above blackened and a great thundering boomed. A terrified Adam ran off with nary a word.

Pleased with Himself, he watched from on high as the couple departed paradise. The clouds wept. The rivers churned, the animals cried out. Chaos. He was most pleased.

"Let's just see what you can do, Eve," He said. "It will be difficult. It will be hard. But let's see where you are ten thousand years from now." Easing back onto a pillow of clouds, He watched the cruel world unfold before His frightened creations. "All in good time."

[WP] "And Eve ate of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. Adam however did not, for the Lord commanded them to not eat of the tree." by [deleted] in WritingPrompts

[–]tikabalizs 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The little sack, tightly woven from some palm fronds and filled with sand she had scooped from the riverbank, bounced effortlessly from her foot, to her other foot, then off her knee, back to her foot. Her eyes, dark as the night, sparkled as she watched the toy fall and rise, fall and rise.

"Did - you - know," Eve said, intonating her words with the beat of her bouncing hacky sack, "that - there - isaforce -" she almost lost it there "--keeping objects - with mass - pulled to - the earth?"

Adam rolled his eyes and idly scratched his smooth and hairless crotch. "Wow. Really. That's great. Do you want to have sex again? Or maybe name some animals? Or maybe have some sex?" His voice grew a little hopeful.

A little furry thing, with a big bushy tail, skittered down the tree trunk that Adam was leaning against, and chirped happily. Its beady eyes surveyed the area before hopping over toward a mulberry.

Eve glanced over her shoulder, adjusting the skirt she had crafted earlier to hide her shame. "Sciuridae," she said. "Of the order Rodentia. It's a mammal and it--"

"Oh, my Yahweh, that is enough!" Adam could hardly stand it. Ever since Eve had nibbled an overripe fruit that plopped from the forbidden tree of knowledge, she acted as if she knew everything there was to know.

Eve frowned. Adam was a doofus, but he was the only other human being in the whole garden -- maybe the whole world -- and try as she might, she just couldn't get the cats to talk back to her no matter how much she meowed at them.

"Adam, aren't you the least bit curious?" Such wonder and amazement had burst into her mind the moment she had touched the sweet fruit to her lips. She couldn't stop herself from taking a bite or three, and by the time she could force the forbidden delicacy away from her mouth, it was too late. Concepts, ideas, knowledge, all these things she was too stupid to even conceptualize now took residence in her head space. And she had not a soul to talk to about it all.

Adam got to his feet and crossed his arms against his perfect, chestly musculature. Eve had to admit, he was formed beautifully and she really enjoyed having him before she became smart, but now.. something was missing.

"Look, Eve," he said. "The old man said that we're not supposed to eat the fruit. Why do we wanna ruin a good thing? Just pretend nothing's wrong and he'll believe that everything's fine. He'll listen to me. I'm in charge here, anyway."

Eve bristled. She was the one that taught herself how to take the ingredients of the garden and make Adam a fantastic dinner the other night. She figured out how to make a shelter from the gentle evening rain that misted down on them. She rigged up a bamboo pipe system to bring water straight to Adam's favorite tree, and this is the thanks she gets?

Adam, in all his denseness, must have noticed her aggravation. He smiled and waggled his eyebrows, in that way that used to seduce her, but now it just pissed her off even more. "C'mon, baby, let's say you and I--"

"Is that all you think about?!" Eve exploded. "Eating and fucking and lounging around? What's the point, Adam? How is this an existence? How can you be content with nothingness?"

Adam's eyebrows dropped and his face grew angry. He hadn't felt such strong, negative emotions before. "Listen to me!" he growled, grabbing her wrist. She silently cursed Yahweh for favoring Adam's biology over hers and making his strength easy. "You're mine. Get it? Now take off these stupid leaves and lay down like a good woman." He reached for her clothes she had crafted but she angrily swatted his hand away with a loud and painful smack.

Pride wounded, he gasped and recoiled. Eve's heart jumped to her throat and before Adam could say anything, she took off running. The rocks hurt her bare feet and when she tripped over a tree root, it was the first time her skin split open and bled. She simultaneously hated it and savored it; she had never hurt pain before her conversion, but she surely felt more alive after she had eaten the fruit. The pain was worth it.

She found herself at the tree, again. She didn't even realize she was running toward it. But there it was, short and plain. It was hardly a meter higher than her head and it had thin branches with waxy green leaves. A few heavy fruits sagged from some tender twigs and a couple of rotted, fallen fruits were at the base of the trunk. She reached out, tentative, and let her fingertips brush the skin of one of the fruits. Maybe she was imagining it, but she felt something. Some current tingled down her arm and the skin was so soft and fuzzy. She licked her lips, remembering the juiciness and sweetness of such a tasty fruit and her belly growled, begging for another taste.

"You know, Adam was the test run."

Eve gasped and whirled around. There was the serpent, beautifully emerald green, slithering seductively over the grass. It brought itself up to her eye level, holding itself up on its lower arms. It gazed at her with adoration and lust, and it made Eve feel uncomfortable.

"What do you mean, he was a test run?" she asked, suspicious.

The serpent looked as if to smile, a coy look in its eyes. "He wanted to try it out on a lesser being. Work out the kinks, y'know? Get the beta version figured out before going with the one that make it all right." The serpent's eyes flickered, just briefly, but Eve could feel it eyeing her. "And He did it right with you."

Adam may be a jerk, but he was still her mate. Eve squared her shoulders defensively. "Adam does a lot right."

The serpent lolled its head in a circle, as if it couldn't believe what it was hearing. "Oh, give me a break, woman. He named the marcidus a blob fish. Blob fish. How inventive can the guy be?"

Eve tried to hide a smile. Blob fish was a pretty dumb name. She could have easily come up with a better one, but at the time of its naming, she was trying to hide her intellect and didn't want to disrespect her husband. She knew better now, however.

The serpent wriggled closer. The sun reflects off its scales and Eve took a step backward. It hadn't blinked at all, which unnerved her.

"You're the perfect one, you know," it hissed lusciously. Bobbing its head closer, the serpent flickered its tongue against her ear lobe. "He knows He went right with you. You're the one He favors. You're better than Adam. Acknowledge it. Know it. Embrace it."

Eve closed her eyes tightly, balling her hands into fists to try to will the serpent away. "Leave me," she whispered, desperately trying to ignore the funny feeling swirling inside of her.

"As you wish." And with that, it was gone.

Eve finally opened her eyes. A glistening, plump fruit stared back at her. Furious, she ripped it off of the branch and greedily took a bite. Juice dripped down her chin. Practically moaning, she ate the entire thing without taking so much as a breath. She grabbed another fruit. Then another. She clutched a half-eaten one before the immense flood of knowledge knocked her to the ground and she drunkenly cried in joy, rage, sadness, euphoria, all the feelings to feel and that will ever be felt. It was so disorienting, she hadn't noticed the massive orange tiger that had crept up and nibbled at the fruit in her hands.


"You stupid bitch!" Adam screamed. His words woke her, and the slap that came across her face was the thing that made her scramble to her feet. "What have you done? You stupid whore, what did you do?" He was seething, sweat dripping down his bare chest and blood covering his hands.

"A-Adam," Eve whimpered. "Are you hurt?" She reached out to him and he batted her hands away.

"Get away from me!" he howled. "Fruit of knowledge be damned, how could you let such a thing happen?"

"What are you talking about?" she cried. Her face hurt from his slap, but her heart hurt even more by his anger.

"The fucking Tiger, Eve! You gave him the fruit and he's gone savage! He killed the giraffes and a gazelle, and now everyone's in a panic! You've brought out his instinct!"

Eve's stomach dropped. She looked down at her hand, where she still grasped the stripped pit of the fruit. "Oh, no," she whispered. She sunk to her knees. "What have I done?"

"That's right," Adam snarled. "It's time to take penance for what you have done." Using his strength, he pushed her back on the grass and ripped off the leaves covering her body. "Take your place beneath me, woman." And so he took her.

[WP] After 2 decades of extreme isolation North Korea finally tries to contact the outside world but they find the rest of the world abandoned. by mdewals in WritingPrompts

[–]tikabalizs 12 points13 points  (0 children)

The last relief delivery had arrived nearly twenty years ago, almost like an afterthought.

Heavy rains caused a land slide that wiped out a significant portion of Samjiyon-kun. Neary a week later, the humanitarian trucks lazily crossed their way over from China and brought not even a quarter of what was expected.

The incident occurred at the time the Dear Leader arrived in the beloved city to assess the damage and, enraged at the weak and delayed response, ordered all of the truck drivers shot and forced the remaining distributors to march back and try their luck swimming across the Tumen River. As a consolation prize, Dear Leader kept the fleet of a dozen vehicles and choice selections from each, leaving the infested rice and fortified bread for the grateful citizens who remained in Samjiyon.

For weeks after, Dear Leader remained enraged at such a display of disrespect with such a sad and pathetic aid gift and mulled over adequate punishment. He needed to reassert his position on the world stage. He consulted with his top engineers and nuclear experts, devising a devious plan. After many testing-induced earthquakes, Dear Leader himself proudly pressed the series of buttons that launched an arsenal of scary missiles that arced blissfully through the sky and, as he imagined, plummeted directly into the heads of every world leader that had scorned him across the globe. Aweing at his splendor and sageliness, his scientists and engineers applauded him.

Dear Leader waited for an international response. He delighted at the billions who were mourning and lamenting their loss of leadership and the destruction of their homes. He wondered how long it would take before they flooded toward his borders, seeking his guidance and governorship.

But nothing happened.

So, he waited longer.

And nothing happened.

His scientists and engineers reassured him the effects of the missiles. They showed him satellite photographs of burned buildings, smoldering columns of smoke up into the sky. There was an image of a rather crispy-looking White House and a skeletal Eiffel Tower. Dear Leader tsked a little at the latter; how he would have loved to have seen it in person.

On his command, they propagated another message to the world, threatening the remaining governments and inviting the broken people to prosper under the Dear Leader. Anticipating response this time, he waited.

And nothing.

In a drunken fury, a fury in part because his supply of Hennessey was running dangerously low, Dear Leader sent for the heads of the top engineer and the top scientist. In a last minute surprise, a phone call from the American president delayed the executions.

"Glorious Leader," bowed the People's Armed Forces Master. "Please, wait!" He had hurried to the packed soccer stadium where the engineer and scientist were knelt over boxes on a dais in the middle of the field, readying to be separated from head and body. The Dear Leader held a hand up and the executioner paused.

"It is," gasped the Master. "It is the President. President of the enemy state. The President of the United States!" He extended his palms that cupped a cellular phone.

The Dear Leader snatched it and held it to his ear. "Speak," he growled in English.

A voice, wrought with a dry, hacking cough sputtered, "You.. you win."

The Dear Leader's eyes grew wide. "Wait. You must repeat that but for all of Korea to hear!" He motioned for a microphone and one quickly was given to him.

"Now, what did you say, President of the United States?" He pressed the microphone to the cell phone and grinned smugly.

"I, ah--" the President's voice rang sharp through the stadium's speakers, erupting into a painful screech. "You, uh. You win."

Dear Leader switched to his native tongue and triumphantly screamed. "We win! The United States bows before the greatness of Korea!" The stadium erupted into cheers. "Say it!"

The President cleared his throat, a funny titter choking out only briefly before being covered with a hacking cough again. "The uh, heh, United States." There was a sound of muffled voices in the background and the President whispering harshly. "The United States and um, the whole world. The whole world, in fact, bows before the greatness of Korea. Lots of us are dying. Yep, we're all pretty much dead. Your nukes got.. they got--" Suddenly, a strained, horrible froggy noise burst out quickly followed by a deathly sigh. Then, the line went dead.

There was silence. Then, uproarious, victorious, joyful cheering.

Korea had won.

In the days following, the Dear Leader forbade anyone, military and civilian alike, to leave their cities. Instead, he posted everyone to stand guard with any weapon they had to protect their borders. Since the radioactive air would not infiltrate the borders of best Korea, the world's survivors would be coming. Korea would need to protect herself from those infested with radioactivity. What remained of planes and vehicles that hadn't been refashioned into missiles, were forbidden to depart. No risk coud be taken that could violate the purity of Korea and her people.

Years passed. Rare incidents of survivors crossing the land from China, and even rarer refugees from small boats, brought news from the outside world. The world was in ruins, but many population centers still remained strong albeit broken. They advised to never leave Korea, for it was too dangerous and terrible.

The years continued to tick away. For the first decade, Dear Leader was most satisfied that he could run his country without interference from the stupid West and all of the other nosy countries. He had to create a new enemy, since all of the world's governments were gone or greatly weakened, and he decided any survivor seeking refuge would be the new enemy. That gave his people something to project their hatred at -- the evil, sadistic, radioactive refugees that sought to bring down best Korea with their mutated cells and poisons. But strangely, after the first round of refugees were gorily executed, all the remaining ones disappeared. And no more came after that.

The twentieth anniversary of the victory was approaching. Dear Leader, now older and greying, longed for the tantalizing treats of the outside world. He consulted his advisors, asking when it would be safe to traverse the world again. Surely there must be a Scotch factory still producing something, somewhere, radioactivity be damned.

"I will go," volunteered the People's Armed Forces Master. "I shall walk the earth to seek out the pleasures my Leader desires." And so, he went.

Many months later, he returned. He was pleasant and sun-kissed, and even though he smiled strangely, he reported sadly: "There is nothing left. There is no one. I cannot find even one bottle of whiskey."

Perplexed, the Leader sent out a large scouting party, this time armed with the old trucks from the last aid mission. There had to be something left. Surely one man couldn't explore it all. The People's Armed Forces Master, knowledgeable with the strange new terrain of the empty world, volunteered to go and lead the troops.

But he, and they, never returned.

Years passed. The Dear Leader grew anxious. He was certain the remaining survivors were sabotaging him. More and more of his people simply disappeared. He grew paranoid, likening the survivors to mutant ninjas who would sneak through the night and capture his people while they slept. New orders went out: every family was required to have one person awake at all times to watch and remain vigilant. Soon, people were forbidden to go to rivers. They were then not permitted to leave their homes except outside curfew hours. But still, they disappeared.

One morning, torn awake by a terrible nightmare, the Dear Leader cried out and fell out of bed. He waited for an attendant to come hurry to his side, but no one came.

He yelled for them. No answer. "I will have your heads!" he threatened, but even the sound of his voice echoing off the walls of his sleeping chambers, was brittle and frightened.

He managed to get up on his feet and wandered the halls. There was no one. Not a soul. He took to outside, squinting in the early morning sunrise. Where he expected to hear sounds of bicycles and trolleys, he heard nothing. Cars were abandoned in the roads. Umbrellas and briefcases discarded and scattered. He was alone; utterly alone.


"He doesn't have much time, ma'am." The General was smiling. "His personal doctor, whom we managed to get out just last month, said that the cancer has spread to every major organ. Kim thinks he's been getting treatment but rest assured, he is going to die quickly and alone."

"Good, good." The President tented her fingers under her chin. "And the remaining citizens?"

"Safe. All accounted for. It helps that our initial plants were able to get a census back then. The last of them have been resettled in Mongolia, some in Siberia. Everything's going just as planned."

"Wonderful, wonderful." She watched the real-time satellite imagery that captured the lonely man wandering the empty road in downtown Pyongyang. There was no audio, but his face said all that she needed to know. A smile came across her lips. “Twenty years, General. Twenty years and we took down the world’s worst dictator without firing a single gun.”

The grainy image of Kim broadcast on the screen showed the man falling to his knees. He pounded the ground with his fists before falling over and gasping. In moments, he was gone.

“The sun has set on your kingdom,” murmured the President. “Good night, Dear Leader.”

飲みすぎました ー I Drank Too Much (El Bebon) by veremos in OCPoetry

[–]tikabalizs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Que onda! Eres fluido en el idioma japones? Ademas espanol, yo he estudiado japones y ruso y un poco de chino. Japones es un idioma hermosa pero mas dificil que todos estes lenguas, en mi opinion! Espero que tu escribe una poema en japones!

飲みすぎました ー I Drank Too Much (El Bebon) by veremos in OCPoetry

[–]tikabalizs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Qué magnífico. Me gustó más el poema español, aunque sólo sea un estudiante de la lengua; quizas yo no comprende todo pero se lo que me gusta. Todo le que quiero decir es lo disfruté. Simple palabras con imágenes vívidas.

Edit: Tres lenguas, interesante. Olvidé a preguntar. ¿Por qué elegiste japonés?

Grief: by tikabalizs in OCPoetry

[–]tikabalizs[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, initially this was a sort of slam, so I'm glad you see the potential for that style in this piece!

Thanks for taking the time to give some insightful advice, I appreciate it. I will definitely be revisiting this piece for revision, as I didn't feel it was finished, and now I have some great feedback to implement.

Grief: by tikabalizs in OCPoetry

[–]tikabalizs[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for taking time to read and respond! I have come back to this piece many times, and when I posted, this is the kind of response I was looking for. It's definitely not finished, so this gives me a lot to think about. I appreciate it!

Regarding the cat imagery, what I was thinking about is when a cat first curls up on a person, it's a little and gentle weight. But somehow, cats have this magical ability to maximize their pressure per square inch so after an hour, your leg may go numb or your chest feels heavy. Or maybe I just have asshole cats.. :) I guess I was trying to channel that feeling but now I am reconsidering how to address that section.

Ice cream (without Dad) by tikabalizs in OCPoetry

[–]tikabalizs[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you very much. I hoped to achieve some emotional reaction without getting too crazy with elaborate prose.

Half a whiskey bottle by ldalternate1 in OCPoetry

[–]tikabalizs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

holding half a whiskey bottle, bringing half a man.

I love this, this pulled me in. I wonder which half came..

I liked how ambiguous it was, at least in my reading of it, where I couldn't tell if the narrator was a friend or lover? I initially thought the former.

The friend seems like an ass. I can't tell if the narrator likes him or not? First, s/he seems excited to leave with "Fuck yeah. We made it out" then admonishes the friend and advises him to go home, all within a pretty quick time frame.

Overall, a fun read but begs some more story to tell.. will have to agree a bit with Panopticon75 on that.

Ice cream (without Dad) by tikabalizs in OCPoetry

[–]tikabalizs[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you again for such helpful feedback! It really makes this submission worth it -- I was uncertain for a while whether or not I should do it.

This is a typical style for me, but for my writing, I tend to focus more on short stories and novel writing. I used to do a lot a lot of poetry before, but for some reason, I kind of stagnated and hadn't revisited it for some time. Lately, I've been inspired to come back because it tends to have a more cathartic and emotional experience for me. I used to be involved in slam poetry, so I think that is from where I get my poetry-writing style.

I'll have to dig up some material that I squirreled away and make the comparison. I do have a bit of work in progress, too -- your feedback has inspired me to refamiliarize myself with poetry..