As is my usual, a few disclaimers before we start. While this story takes place in the same setting as my other stories "A Tournament of Colors" and "A Wolfpack's Epilogue", you do not need to read those in order to enjoy or understand this one. All characters involved in any romantic or sexual activity in this story are consenting adults over 18 years of age. There are scenes of violent combat in this story, but the violence is not in any way connected to any of the sex scenes.
The characters and concepts in this story are my creation, any resemblance to real people and locations is unintended and coincidental. However, the referenced locale of Galena, Illinois is a very real town, and a lovely place to visit -- as is the very real "Root Beer Revelry", a wonderful business there that I heartily suggest giving your time and attention to if you're ever in the area. The root beer and root beer floats they serve there really are that damn good. The owner of that store knows nothing about this story, they didn't ask me to plug Root Beer Revelry, I'm just including it as a fun side detail for one brief and minor scene because I have fond memories of the place from a few years back.
Without any further ado, on with the show!
A War of Phantoms
By MisterWildCard
It was the strangest conversation I'd ever had -- and I've had some odd ones, don't even get me started down that road just yet. Between some rather interesting ex-girlfriends, my time in the U.S. Army Rangers... but I digress.
The figure across the table gave my brother and I a smile. His skin seemed to have an odd silver color to it, almost metallic, but I chalked it up at first to the restaurant's lighting. "I am offering you a chance to earn that which you both most desire."
I stared at him, and my brother Morris snorted before he replied. "The only thing I want is to survive. My oncologist says I've got six months, tops. The only reason I'm here at all is because you promised us a free lunch at my favorite restaurant, and claimed you had something that could help. So unless you've got a bag of miracles handy, you're wasting your time, Mister Kanzaki. And mine, and time's kind of precious to me right now."
"Time and a miracle are exactly what I can offer. I can remove your inoperable brain tumor, Morris Vigilanco. I can give you your life back."
I put my right hand on my brother's shoulder. "Mister Kanzaki, do you not understand what 'inoperable' means? There's no way to get it out." I clenched my damaged left hand, concentrating on not letting my rising anger get the better of me, keeping my voice at a low whisper so I didn't make a scene. No sense in ruining the meal of anyone around us. "It's in there so damn deep that even if the surgery didn't kill him outright, they'd have to cut out so much brain matter to reach it that he'd be a drooling vegetable. If he's lucky. Our family is out of options and
out of time
, what don't you understand?"
"Your brother is out of neither, Sergeant Morgan Vigilanco. Allow me to demonstrate." Our host's eyes suddenly blazed with gold light -- and everything around us stopped.
Morris and I looked around the Milwaukee restaurant. All around us, time and motion were halted, and it was eerily silent. Fifteen feet to my right, a waiter in mid-trip hung in the air, his mouth open wide with horror as a plate of loose spaghetti hovered just outside his grasp, the mass of noodles looking like some blood-soaked tentacled horror, launching itself at fresh prey.
Kanzaki folded his hands in front of him. His smile didn't reach his eyes. "You're aware of the dimensional incursions your world suffers on a regular basis?"
The silent world around us was seriously creeping me out, and I leaned back in my chair. "Yeah. The Plex corporation has those 'Strike Force' teams all over the place to repel the invaders before too many come through and try to 'conquer the planet' or some stupid shit."
Morris nodded. "My friends and I used to dress up as Strike Force Olympus when we were kids."
"My home dimension harbors no such interest. We find your world far too interesting and would much rather observe it from afar than take direct involvement, much less anything so crass as military conquest. Thus we have come to... let us say... an arrangement with your world, and with our Plex friends."
"And my brother dying of brain cancer fits into this how, exactly?" I watched as Morris reached out and gently touched the arm of the guy sitting at the next table over. The frozen stranger's arm moved slightly, but he otherwise didn't react. After a moment's thought, Morris grabbed the midair plate and a fork, pushed the hovering spaghetti back onto it in a relatively neat pile, and then pulled the mid-fall waiter to his feet, putting the plate in the man's open hands. Satisfied with his work, my little brother sat back down next to me, but then stood up again and turned the waiter's fedora hat around to face backwards, just for a harmless giggle.
What did he do to deserve cancer? I mean, no one deserves that kind of hell, but when I'd watch Morris go out of his way to help people like that, it just really hit home that the good people in this world really never get what they deserve. Morris deserved everything, and he was going to be cut down before his life could even really begin in earnest. He was only twenty-three, for God's sake. Not that I believed in God anymore.