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On The 7th Day
On The 7th Day
On The 7th Day
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On The 7th Day

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In one week the anti-Christ is due to be born, and it’s up to Barnaby, an Agent of Death to try and stop it. Assisted by an angel, a human woman, a self-obsessed Sci-Fi actor and the flamboyant Santa Clause of Norway, he’ll try his best to keep the world from coming to a premature end. With time running out and humanity’s stupidity getting in the way at every turn, they’ll race to save the after-life from over-crowding. At least they’ve got a little extra time on their hands, as the 4 Horsemen of the Apocalypse are stranded in the desert after misplacing their rides.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherZack Murphy
Release dateJun 4, 2012
ISBN9781476420288
On The 7th Day
Author

Zack Murphy

Zack is a father of two young boys. That's what has defined him as a person for the past 5 and a half years, and he couldn't be happier about it. Every once in a while he enjoys wandering around wooded areas performing Shakespeare. Luckily every so often other people join him, and it becomes an actual show. He lives in Massachusetts, which means in the winter he's buried in snow, and the summer he's dripping in sweat from the oppressive humidity.

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    On The 7th Day - Zack Murphy

    On The 7th Day

    Zack Murphy

    Copyright 2012 Zack Murphy

    Smashwords Edition

    Smashwords Edition, License Notes

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    6 DAYS BEFORE THE BIRTH

    Jeff MacFeeghan normally didn’t ride the bus; as a matter of fact, he was morally opposed to even the idea of their existence. But when your brand new Lexus, that you had only purchased 2 months back, decided that this was the day it wasn’t going to start, you ride the bus.

    It had been raining for three straight days, a sure sign of the Apocalypse in southern California. Being an up-and-coming young investment banker in one of the most prestigious offices in the country had many perks, and not riding the bus with commoners was, to Jeff, the biggest perk.

    Something happened, Jeff knew that. What actually did, he couldn’t quite put his finger on. There was a dense fog of nescience permeated his brain. The past several seconds had seemed to flow in slow motion. Jeff had chalked this up to the sinus-permeating fumes of the woman sitting across from him, who had felt it better to douse her body in a full bottle of cheap perfume than to take the time to bathe.

    He looked around at the other passengers on the bus, the ones with whom he had so keenly avoided eye contact, for fear that they may want to chat about whatever had happened over the weekend at the county fair or exchange recipes for the latest craze in goulash or enchiladas.

    Suddenly, and without warning, the bus was overtaken by the brightest light Jeff had ever seen, filling the bus with a radiant white glow. He shielded his eyes from the glare, but couldn’t quite seem to make out the shape emerging from the brilliant radiance that pervaded his stare.

    A silvery voice beckoned from the shadowy form approaching him, but couldn’t quite make out what it was saying. Jeff shifted away from the light and tried to find any door that he could; if this was the Apocalypse he was damn sure he wasn’t going to spend the end of the world trapped inside public transportation.

    As Jeff fumbled for anything that looked like an exit he realized that he was not, in fact, on the right side of the bus. He was very much on the wrong side of the bus indeed. The figure drew closer as Jeff struggled to make sense out of the verity that he was now sitting on the ceiling. As he looked at the seats lined overhead, resembling a vast display of mall florescent lighting, he thought about all the other travelers on the bus and thought, shaking his head, Man, the boys at the office are going to have a field day with this one.

    As the figure crept closer to Jeff he could just make out the shape of a man, or a woman, hooded in a black cowl and a flowing robe that stretched from head to foot, and carrying what seemed to be a scythe. The figure stopped a few feet from where Jeff was sitting, tapped the handle on the floor and tilted his head.

    It had situated itself between a small Latino woman and an elderly man dressed in a horribly tight-fitting, blue and yellow-striped seersucker suit. The older gentleman reached out his shaking arm to touch the figure. Jeff tried to telepathically advise the old man about the dangers of such brazen activity, "don’t grope at it you old fool, it’s obviously a not-for-touching thing, like a dive-bar debutante after a few beers; no matter how tempting it is, you just don’t know where she’s been." The old man’s hand grabbed ever so gingerly onto the robe of the figure.

    The figure looked down at the man and nodded intently. A sense of calm inflicted itself upon the passengers. They may all be crumpled in a mound of mangled steel, but it suddenly seemed okay. Instead of taking the old man’s hand in a reassuring gesture of humanity, he slapped the old man’s arm away and boomed out, Okay everybody, you don’t have to go home, but you can’t stay here!

    What? said Jeff weakly, trying to figure out why the Prophet of the Apocalypse was being kind of a douche.

    Let’s not talk, okay? whispered the hooded figure, shaking his head let’s just be good little boys and girls and walk into the light.

    Why are we whispering?

    Because I’m a tad bit hung over today.

    Really?

    No! screamed the veiled outline, I just want to do my job, and I can’t do my job unless you go into the light.

    It pointed its scythe toward the portal of light that was shepherding the other passengers from the bus. The scythe was large and daunting, the blade the most magnificent silver he had ever seen; it seemed to literally cut the air into slices as he waved it about.

    This isn’t how it’s supposed to end at all! barked Jeff, feeling betrayed by the figure trying to usher him towards an end unbefitting his demise.

    This isn’t how what’s supposed to end?

    The world. The universe. Everything. This isn’t much of a reception for Armageddon. Where’s the fanfare, where’s the vestigial virgins, where’s the glamour? clamored Jeff, fumbling for the right words that would express his overall disappointment.

    The end of the world? the figure gave a bone-chilling chuckle [which is very hard to do with a chuckle, a laugh yes, but a chuckle?] My poor disillusioned boy; this isn’t the end of the world.

    Then what is it?

    The figure shrugged. It’s just the end of you.

    *****

    Dana Plough sat bleary-eyed at her kitchen table and lunged for her morning cup of coffee. Piece of crap, freaking decaf freaking coffee, she muttered, looking down at the swollen lump that used to be her belly, I can't wait until you’re out of me and I can get a decent cup of coffee.

    It wasn’t as if the life form writhing within was an big inconvenience; she was still working. She loved her job and, quite frankly, her job loved her. Working for the top-rated 24 hour news channel had its privileges, especially when you’re the poster child for the machine that owned her network.

    She knew how to pick fights and she knew how to win them. She had battled all-comers to her show and mowed them down, like a big league pitcher hopped up on a mixture of human growth hormones and steroids facing a batch of wide-eyed little leaguers.

    Being nine months pregnant came with attachments Dana Plough had not anticipated: The hourly peeing, the immense back pain, the fetal horns of the son of Satan writhing in her belly, jabbing her insides like some kind of disgruntled goat trying to pry open a can of beef stew.

    She knew that the life forming inside her was for the greater good, and she was happy for it. She felt happy for all of mankind as she sipped the brown sludge sitting in her mug, knowing that within days the child inside her would burst forth out of her womb and into the world, ushering with it an eternal darkness that would swallow and destroy all those who were not deemed to be on the right side of the war of the heavens.

    Fire and brimstone would hail down as the skies opened up and brought forth a new beginning of evil and suffering. It was going to be great to be a mom.

    *****

    Jeremiah was outside, gardening. He really did enjoy the activity of cultivation. He had become quite fond of his little patch of land with its rows of carrots, beets and the occasional tomato plant. He was particularly fond of the pear tree he had nurtured from a seedling. He called it Mr. Partridge.

    Naming inanimate objects had been a particular bee in the bonnet for Jeremiah for quite a long time; he could never quite seem to get it right. He had a cat named Cat and a washing machine he had effectively called Mr. Washing Machine, though most people who would come over to the house would delicately tell him most people didn’t actually name their appliances.

    Mr. Partridge had been named, very cleverly in his opinion, after a song he had heard while shopping one late December morning in one of the local shopping centres. There were a group of 12 people dressed in what they liked to believe were authentic-looking Victorian era clothing, each taking a particular verse about what some seemingly very wealthy man with too much time on his hands had given his true love. As the song progressed the man had come up with a wide variety of items to give his betrothed, but always punctuated the new gifts with retreads of old ones.

    By the end of the song, the woman had been presented with enough gifts to open up a small village on the outskirts of town with an overabundant contingency of maids, leapers, drummers and a wide assortment of livestock. A partridge that accompanied the pear tree was always given as gift no matter what day it was.

    Jeremiah knew it would be very impractical. Unless you already had a large lot in town and enough people around to warrant the eating of all those pears to house said birds it was not a functional gift, but it was a fine inspiration for someone who had but a single tree and nothing to name it.

    *****

    There had been better gigs, but a job was a job and being the personal driver for Dana Plough was what was defined as a job. As he drove down Santa Monica Boulevard he espied into the backseat through the rearview mirror, and watched Dana Plough pour herself a triple of vodka.

    Are you sure you want to be drinking that with the little one on the way Ma’am?

    When I want your opinion, I’ll ask for your opinion, okay? Marco. she glared at his eyes in the mirror as she poundeded the glass in one smooth shot.

    Yes, Ma’am, said Manuel.

    Manuel DeLuego had been Dana Plough’s driver for almost three years now, and much to his chagrin she had continued to vehemently insist that his name was Marco, even though he kept protesting it wasn’t. His insistence over his name was a tad disturbing to Dana Plough since she knew that some people were not supposed to be right about anything and those people were the working people.

    Manuel had speculated that Dana Plough had once met a Latino man years before named Marco and had deduced, in all her worldly erudition, that all Latino men were named Marco. That, or she was just a bitch. He settled on the latter.

    It wasn’t as if Dana Plough had a problem with her liquor; in fact, before the pregnancy she hadn’t had so much as an ounce of liquor since the two tequila shots at Suzy Kessleman’s after her High School prom and that made her violently ill for three days after. That the baby craved liquor was strange enough, but that the baby only seemed to hunger after straight-up vodka was something she couldn’t quite fathom.

    Poka Vsyo was a little known brand from a small fishing village in Siberia, made by a chapter of lapsed orthodox monks working behind the local mink stole shop. It was three thousand dollars a bottle and almost impossible to get. But when your unborn fetus, fathered by the dark overlord, wants expensive grain alcohol from the furthest depths of a former Soviet Bloc country, who are you to deny it?

    Big show today? Manuel was trying to make small talk, something he was gifted at outside the car; but inside, with Dana Plough, was a different story.

    "All my shows are big, Marco. Lest we forget that", she replied as if talking to three-year-old child. Dana Plough was excellent in knocking people down a few notches; it came in handy both in her job and in her personal life. She had an analytical need for people to know she was superior to them.

    Of course Ma’am, it was just that-

    You don’t need to apologize to me Marco; I know you try your best.

    Yes, Ma’am.

    As the car made its way into to the lot of Global News Association Network, Dana Plough peered out the side window. She stared up at the prodigious G logo on top of the GNAN building and sighed. She had spent her entire life striving to get to where she was and now the little bundle of joy was going to take it all away. She sighed again and reconsidered her first thought.

    At least where she was going after this would make everyone in the office sit up and take notice and curse the fact that they didn’t put her on at the 8 pm time slot she wanted, instead of the twelve noon time slot she was so erroneously given. They’ll all want me in prime time now, she mumbled under her breath.

    Excuse me, Ma’am?

    Nothing Marco, just keep driving.

    Yes, Ma’am.

    The car pulled up at the front doors of the studio where stood Juliet Robinson, a bright, cheerful, smiling, brunette of 23 years, who opened the car door and stuck her head in. She was dressed in a conservative gray pinstriped pantsuit, hiding the well-toned body that she had put in hours at the gym to sculpt.

    As Dana Plough had stated many times, if god wanted you showing your assets to the world he wouldn’t have invented blazers. In her right hand Juliet held a bottle of Evian water, in her left hand she clutched a clipboard, both of which she tightly gripped as if her life depended on the objects being there.

    Good Morning, Ms. Plough; we have an amazing show planned for today. I hope you’re feeling up to it, her eyes chaffed with a deep desire for the tiniest bit of encouragement.

    And why wouldn’t I be up to it? Juliet. The way she said Juliet’s name had a ring of serpentine malice about it. I’m the best there is and don’t plan on ever being anything else. Dana Plough had a certain uncanny way of always knowing who she was, and who she was was the best. Dana Plough lurched out of the car with the wobbly, unsteady restraint that nine month pregnant woman do.

    Yes Ma’am, Juliet knew she would have to wait for another day before the compliments came in. If you didn’t get palatable Dana Plough first thing in the morning, it wasn’t going to come that day.

    Dana took the bottle of water from Juliet and drank it all down in one impressive, smooth swallow. She reached out her hand and Juliet placed two breath mints in her palm. Dana Plough chewed on the mints as she eyed her assistant up and down, thinking that she herself had had that kind of body not too long ago. As the ladies headed inside, Manuel drove off to the studio’s cafeteria to exchange stories with his fellow drivers about the wonderfully misguided souls they had to work for; and a have good laugh over a Danish and coffee.

    *****

    Heaven was a hive of activity this particular day. A massive earthquake had killed 312 in Argentina, a hurricane wiped out 35 locals and 12 tourists on the island in Aruba and a small guerrilla war in the Middle East had claimed another two dozen, to go along with all the time-honored deaths of old age, gun-downs, overdoses and the ever increasingly popular auto-erotic affixation.

    Technically, this wasn’t heaven, but none of the recently deceased could tell the difference. Most people believe that when you die you go straight to Heaven; this is in fact a big lie. Before anyone gets to pass through the Pearly Gates, they must go through many hours of standing in processing lines, filling out massive amounts of paperwork and then meeting with his or her particular God. This was not heaven; this was what you had you to do in order to get into heaven. This was the giant DMV in the sky.

    Once one’s death had been processed and one was fit for going on to the next life [To go onto the next life, it actually helps if one were actually through with this life. There are approximately 22 accounts per year where people who weren’t actually dead ended up going through the bright white light because It seemed to be the thing to do at the time.], one must stand in a very long color-coded line that marked his or her particular belief in his or her particular god, religion, being, cult, etc. Once one met with one’s god, guru, incarnation, cult leader, etc. one would then move on to one the four cities of heaven or, in some cases [members of said cults] to hell.

    The better it was determined that you had lived your life on earth, the better the city in heaven in which you would be assigned to live. Someone who had led an extraordinarily exemplar life would live in the most grandiose city of heaven, deemed Heaven One [because heaven had a lot more things to think about than naming the cities where people would live]. Heaven One was ripe with huge fields of lilac bushes and freshly mowed green grass, encircling majestic mansions on vast hilltops looking down on one of Heaven One’s four-star restaurants.

    In the lowest city of heaven were standard one bedroom apartments, overlooking fields of concrete slab and a Denny’s. Hell also had four cities, but none were nearly as nice as the fourth city of heaven.

    Death of the West Coast of the United States including Nevada, Arizona and Hawaii walked through the front door of his French chapeau-style home in the city which had been deemed Place where workers of the after-life live Three.

    He took off his black hooded cloak, hung it the coat rack, and plopped down on the sofa, resting his feet on the coffee table overgrown with magazines that sported titles like "Heaven’s 10 best places to get Shrimp Scampi and Hell: It may be too hot to work here, but the benefits are endlessly fun".

    Death of the West Coast of the United States including Nevada, Arizona and Hawaii rubbed his eyes and slapped his face several times trying to get any semblance of cognizance back in his aching head.

    Being an agent of Death was the cushiest job in the afterlife, but the hours were hell, so to speak. People died twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year, and although not everyone had to be personally guided through the light, it was a given that a Death had to at least see 32.8% of his clients through to the other side.

    The phone rang. Well, the phone would have rung if it were an actual phone; it was in fact just a telepathic thought being transmitted to DWCUSiNAH [Death of the West Coast of the United States including Nevada, Arizona and Hawaii will now be referred to as simply DWCUSiNAH to help keep the author’s typing to a minimum.] from Death. Death, of course, being THE DEATH and not one of his employees, who were also called Death, but with a fancy long title tacked onto their names. The Death, throughout history and story-telling, had been transformed into a tall, rather bony individual by people who thought Death would be better served to scare small children and college coeds at sleep-away camps, than merely someone whose job it was to get people to stop living and get on with their deaths. The Death wanted a staff meeting and when the big guy called, you jumped. So DWCUSiNAH pulled himself off his sofa and started toward what was going to be the worst week of his after-life.

    *****

    The Hall of Death was a magnificent entry in the encyclopedia of architecture, with its high fresco ceilings aglow with Rembrandt’s, Michelangelo’s and other assorted mutant ninja turtle painters. The corridors were festooned with great statues of past gods and retired Deaths.

    The floor was decorated with mosaic tiles depicting ancient civilizations becoming bygone civilizations; the place would give any normal thinking person a good case of the willies. The room at the end of the hall was large and dimly lit by torches affixed to the walls. In the center of the room was a large oak conference table, surrounded by high backed chairs adorned with deep purple velvet cushions. Seated along the table were the Deaths of every spot on the planet with any life on it. Death’s motto was: If you can live in this god- forsaken part of the world, we can get you out of it.

    DWCUSiNAH walked in and sat down in his assigned seat at the table. He turned to his right where sat Death of Japan, the Koreas and the Philippines, who was nervously tapping his fingers on the table and blinking in what seemed to be Morse code for "I don’t want to be here STOP Get me out of here STOP. Don’t let the big guy see my blinking STOP".

    DJKP [If you guessed that DJKP = Death of Japan, the Koreas and Philippines, then you’re really getting the hang of this. Good work!] was, at any given moment, in the midst of some degree of a nervous breakdown. Death was a high stress job, made for low stress individuals. DJKP was here on what was an over-sighted technicality; no one knew about his penchant for nervous breakdowns before he got the job.

    Death was a lifetime appointment; only retirement or, in the worst case scenario, really pissing off The Death, you were here until you said so, and even though many of the other deaths had tried to pull DJKP off to the side and council him on the wonderful world of not being Death, DJKP insisted that he was all right and that tomorrow he’d be just fine. Of course, at last count there had been 250 years of tomorrows.

    So what do think this is all about? Whispered DWCUSiNAH.

    Adjna aux eru kubinanaru, Mumbled DJKP.

    Well, he can’t possibly fire us all.

    Ba sazo eru kubinanaru.

    No, he wouldn’t just fire you. DWCUSiNAH considered this proposition for a moment, I’m sure he’d probably bring you in by yourself for that.

    The Death walked into the room and stood at the front of the table. He perused the faces of his workers. I’m sorry, I didn’t mean for all of you come, just you. He pointed a long bony finger towards DJKP.

    Shimatta!

    Sorry, not you, said The Death, I meant you. His finger turning its point towards the death sitting next to DJKP.

    Me? gulped DWCUSiNAH.

    Yes.

    DWCUSiNAH’s face crumpled. Dammit!

    The other deaths stood up from their chairs and walked swiftly out of the room. DWCUSiNAH could make out some of their whispering to their fellow Deaths, and what he could make out didn’t bode well for him.

    DWCUSiNAH sat still in his chair, a million thoughts racing through his head, though most of the thoughts were stifled. "Oh my, I’m going to get fired, or worse; I’ve really pissed him off!" screamed the loudest, drowning out any good thoughts that may have been trying to reach the top.

    Come with me, said The Death.

    Where?

    We have some things to discuss. In private. The words purred from The Deaths exposed jaw as he walked out of the room. DWCUSiNAH sat petrified, clutching the arms of his chair with the grip of a vice. The Death popped his head back into the conference room. Coming?

    Do I have a choice?

    Not at all.

    DWCUSiNAH stood up, ironed the wrinkles out his robe with his hands and whispered only audibly to himself. That was what I was afraid of.

    *****

    Jeremiah was sitting on a bar stool at the local watering hole called, inappropriately, The Laughing Devil, as it was neither particularly evil nor possessed any semblance of mirth. The name had always struck Jeremiah as being very humorous. Jeremiah had learned to love a good pint of ale, and The Laughing Devil had ale.

    It also had an entertaining assemblage of unique locals that used a delicious collection of colorful colloquialisms to describe what they reasoned to be their mundane lives. And even more colorful colloquialisms to describe how they felt about their local football team and its buggerful of players.

    He had come to know these people as friends, even if these people found him to be "that barmy chap at the end of bar who wouldn’t know his arse from his knackers". He liked being near people; he liked people in general, even though he didn’t quite understand them. People were a vast range of neuroses and unpleasant bodily functions. But they were also full of life and great imagination; able to do anything they set their sights on, as long as they could do it by 4pm and it wouldn’t harm their back, since it was already a little tender to begin with.

    He sat at his usual spot at the bar and nursed his ale as he watched the telly. It was an American program where a strange pregnant woman harassed a small child who had refused to attend her school’s Christmas pageant because she was Jewish. The host seemed to be winning the debate because the young girl was sobbing into her mother’s breast while her mother was berating the host for being a bully.

    The host told the woman that she was a godless heathen and declared that she, the host, had won the discussion. Jeremiah found it all fascinating, especially since the pregnant woman seemed to be a bit on the tipsy side during her display of disputing prowess. As he sipped on his beer his ears perked up at what he thought he heard coming out of the woman’s mouth.

    Did she just say, ‘those damn horns are killing me’?

    Yeah, and she looked at her belly when she said it, said the bartender.

    Probably giving birth to a goat, chimed one patron named Charlie.

    American’s are always giving birth to animals, supposed Nancy, another regular.

    Nah, that’s a lie, said the bartender giving her a look.

    It’s true, Nancy rang in, Don’t you ever read the Sun?

    Nah, that’s stuff’s a bunch of rubbish.

    ’S true, said Charlie, One American gave birth to half-boy half-alligator.

    S’that right? We’ll I’ll be damned, conceded the bartender, who was not a great debater. As long as two people said it was true; who was he to argue with mob rule.

    It’s not a goat! yelled Jeremiah leaping off his barstool. It’s something much, much worse!

    Worse than giving birth to a goat?

    I gotta’ go to America, said Jeremiah as he hurried out of the pub.

    The bartender and patrons looked at each other, then at the door, then back at each other. They pondered Jeremiah’s statement for a moment and came to a group conclusion; going to America was much worse than giving birth to a goat-child.

    *****

    Actor Jonathan Frakes sat at a booth at the Seattle Science Fiction Convention and Go-Cart Rally, signing autographs for a long procession of fans lined up for a chance to experience the aura of his stardom. He made agonizingly quaint small talk with each one, signing an assortment of collectables that they laid in front of him.

    A small man wearing a bowler and dressed in a dapper tweed suit with bulky coke bottle glasses came up to the table and placed a small book at the foot of the booth. The book was well worn and old, not exactly the piece of memorabilia most enthusiasts wanted to get signed by their favorite television alien organism.

    The book was tattered, with the words The Last Days vol. XII emblazoned with red calligraphy on the leather cover, with the tagline: or what to do when it finally does happen, written in marker many years after the book was first printed.

    This seems to be a very old book, are you sure you want me to autograph it? asked Actor Jonathan Frakes.

    The small man coughed, clearing throat, No, Mr. Frakes I do not want you to sign this book! This book is very special!

    Okay, okay, I’m sorry, Actor Jonathan Frakes was very astute when encountering rabid fans at conventions; he knew what to look out for; and crazy people with old books that didn’t want them to be signed were at the top of the list. It is a very nice book, did you write it yourself? he said as if speaking to a two year old child. There are two major factors when approaching a person verbally that may have a tough time discerning fact from fiction; one: don’t piss off your paycheck and two: some of those weapon replicas come with terribly sharp points.

    No, I didn’t write it! the man took a deep breath and calmed himself. He tried to come at the conversation from another point. This is real. This book is real. I know it sounds crazy, but believe me, I’m not. This is real! The man had picked up the book and shoved it front of the star’s face.

    Look, I don’t want any trouble. I don’t get paid enough for trouble.

    You don’t want any trouble? You don’t want any trouble? Do you hear what you’re saying? This tells us that we are knee-deep in trouble my friend.

    What do you want me to do about it; I mean, I’m just an actor.

    I know you’re just an actor! I told you I’m not crazy! At this time three towering security guards with more muscle than brain crept up on the shouting little man and grabbed him. They started to lead him out of the convention hall as the man kicked and screamed, writhing and squirming, trying to break free from their control. Read The Book! Just Read The Book! the man screamed as he was guided out from the sight of Actor Jonathan Frakes. Just so you know, I’m usually quite reserved and level-head, he added to no one in particular.

    After the room had returned to normal [as normal as a room filled with grown people wearing homemade costumes of differing space creatures they’d seen on television programs and b-movies can return to.] Actor Jonathan Frakes returned to signing his name for the hordes of various costumed Martians, demons and bogeymen until the convention was over. As he was readying himself to leave he looked down at the table.

    There sitting ominously was the book, The Last Days vol. XII. He thought twice about picking it up, but finally persuaded himself to see what all the hoopla was about. Besides, he reflected, sometimes these fan-fiction books can be a hoot.

    *****

    Death’s office was in every way an allegory in opposing contrast. One might think that the office of someone whose sole purpose was misery and destruction would be gloomy and dark, filled with recently scalped skulls and paintings of moaning ghosts trying to escape their tortured prisons. You might even wish for a little black.

    But Death’s office was small and cheerful, with freshly cut flowers in on his desk and a brightly woven tapestry on the wall. It was an office more suited for an ex-hippie high school art teacher than the purveyor of mortality. DWCUSiNAH sat, nervously waiting for The Death to put his head on the chopping block of employment.

    He pulled out a book from one of the many bookcases lining the walls: How to influence people and get them to REALLY like you, and skimmed through the thick tome. The Death had spent the last several years trying to soften his image, but it was difficult diminishing the coldness of an eight-foot tall skeleton in a frock wielding a scythe.

    Oh good, you’re still here, said The Death, entering his office carrying a large basket. I made cupcakes, would you care to try one?

    The Death may have been trying to become a gentler, kinder being, but he was not as yet adept at the finer points of baking for consumption. DWCUSiNAH didn’t eat, he didn’t need to, and after looking at the pile of what could only be referred to as cupcake-shaped objects, he was glad he never had to.

    Sure, they look delicious. Just because one doesn’t have to eat doesn’t mean one doesn’t have to eat.

    Now, said The Death, let’s get down to business, Jimmy.

    Jimmy? questioned DWCUSiNAH.

    Maxwell?

    Huh?

    Franz? Alberto? Jack? Barnaby? Just stop me when you hear one you like.

    When I hear one I like, what? DWCUSiNAH was usually confused when having to spend time alone with The Death, but this time the conversation was really taking the cupcake. [Which he carefully spit into a napkin while his boss wasn’t looking.]

    I’m trying to liven up the place by giving you all proper names, bemused The Death. If DWCUSiNAH squinted hard enough he may have seen what appeared to be The Death conveying the look of wanting a child-like approval for his new concept. So which one do you prefer?

    Well, it was very hard stalling for time with someone who can read your thoughts. It was much better to jump straight into a lie and ride it out until the next question came around and The Death had forgotten what you lied about in the first place.I love them all.

    I know, said The Death, But which one suits you more? I feel that I am much better at making up names than actually giving them to you.

    It wouldn’t have been wise to correct his boss in saying that The Death hadn’t actually made up any of the names, in fact the names he had been listing had been

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