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Musica Universalis

~ May 4 – May 6, 2018

Musica Universalis

Category Archives: World Fiction

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Black Sunday KGNC Broadcast

18 Sunday Feb 2018

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On the afternoon of Sunday, April 15th, 1935, one of the worst dust storms in American history devastated the Plains States. The Black Sunday storm happened about four and a half months prior to the events of Musica Universalis. In this game-world clip, Amarillo KGMC broadcaster Mike MacInnis warns residents to take shelter. At game time, Panhandle residents will have visceral memories of having recently survived this event, and folks who weren’t present will all have heard the harrowing stories.

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“Some sort of infernal machine”

30 Thursday Mar 2017

A story found below the fold of the front page in the Sunday, Aug 31st, 1930 edition of the Amarillo Globe-News. Someone has circled it in red and left it on your doorstep.
news story

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Moving On

03 Friday Mar 2017

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A disheveled elderly man with watery blue eyes and a nervous laugh breaks the silence around the pitiful fire. It is not until he begins speaking and you turn your attention to him that you realize that he is wearing his shirt backwards.

I used to have a family. Used to be respectable. I worked hard, I married my high school sweetheart, I went to church every Sunday. I did everything right. Now look at me.

Look at me. Really look at me. What…how did I get to this?

He sighs and laughs his nervous laugh again, looking down the hill towards the train yard

I can’t keep away from the trains. I just can’t. I don’t even want to ride the rails. I want nothing more than to be home. I don’t even know if I’d be welcome anymore. It’s been…years. I hear I’m a grandfather now. So that’s good? I guess. I guess, yeah.

But it also means I definitely can’t go home. I hear the whispers in the whistle. I hear the seduction in the slow churning thump of the locomotive. I have already lost myself to it. I’m already a passenger on the Devil’s night train. I have to keep riding. I have to hope it protects my family from the voice, from that smiling bastard.

You’ve seen him, right? I can’t be the only one that has seen him walking the tracks at night. Muttering promises of everything you could ever hope for, if only you’d give up just a bit inside. Hand over everything that makes you, well…you. Human. Special.

That’s how I know I’ve got a grandson. Because he knows. Because he’s told me, with a big plastic smile on his face.

There is a long silence here, as the old man has touched on one of those things you don’t discuss in polite company, even if that company is poor and desperate. No one, not even you, can bring yourself to meet those watery eyes again. He finally laughs nervously again, breaking the quiet.

Don’t worry you old superstitious louts. I’m leaving tonight. Pushed to sell another little piece of myself to keep my ‘good friend’ by my side, rather than roaming. My train is coming, and it is time for me to be moving on.

He rises painfully and limps down the hill towards the train yard, the eyes of the others following him as long as the firelight allows.

Like the Plagues themselves…

20 Monday Feb 2017

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A sun-wrinkled elderly woman vigorously enjoying her rocking chair calls out to you as you hurry down the beaten dirt track, looking for cover before the next storm hits. Her gulping gasps, so typical of dust pneumonia, seem to come impossibly intermingled with her words, almost giving the impression that she doesn’t need to pause to breathe.

Quite some weather we’re havin’, ain’t it neighbor? I mean, don’t get me wrong, it’s downright glory be to have some rain at last, just wish it weren’t all comin’ down at once like there’s no tomorrow. Course the way things’ve been goin’, maybe that’s not too far off? Know what I mean?

You see the storm last week? Aw, what am i sayin’, course you did. Ain’t no one alive coulda missed that. Twister tore right through town, tossed one of them big rail cars over like it was an angry child. And then the thunder! Lord almighty, the thunder. Rain so fierce the Republican burst its bank lickity split, and it’s been so low the past two years gone that even a horse’d have trouble gettin’ a good drink. But I hear that’s exactly what it did, jumped right over the banks and went pourin’ every which way. Milly says that it even washed the McNiece’s farmhouse clean down to Red Willow.

Still, I’ve been so dried out I woulda taken it, no matter how hard it was comin’ down. I get so parched these past two years, I can hardly remember who I am and which way is up. So it was nice to have a bit of wet to wash away the doubts and remind me, know what I mean?

Lord have mercy, I’ve gone and scandalized you. I am so sorry, honey. I was just reminiscin’ about the good old days, when a body could take a bath or two every week and didn’t need to keep the leftovers for dishwashin’. I didn’t mean to make you uncomfortable.

Besides, I ended up just stayin’ inside snug as a bug. Whatever hopes I mighta had about gettin’ wet were thrown away when that dust storm blew on in from the south. All that red clay slammin’ into the rain and fallin’ out of the sky? Looked too much like blood. Gave me the creepin’ willies somethin’ fierce. Straight out of the good book, you know? Moses and his bloody river. Like the plagues themselves have come to roost…

Instruments

11 Wednesday Jan 2017

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After you finish asking your questions the man in greasy coveralls and a brand new Stetson takes a deep pull from his beer and leans back on his stool

Well the first thing you gotta understand is that the Music isn’t meant for us. Well, not meant for us to hear, anyway. Not in the way you think of when you hear the word “Music”. It’s more like…like the engine that keeps things running behind the scenes. Most folks just turn the crank on their model T, hop in, and head on out for a whirl. Living their life, heading wherever they are set to go. If they hear they rattle and roar of the engine at all, they quickly tune it out as background noise. Incidental to their hopes and dreams.

But is isn’t, is it? The pitch of an engine can tell you everything you need to know about the health of an automobile, whether you should get in it or not, whether you stand a chance in hell of outrunning it. Anyone that’s ever heard a straight six can tell you it is a whole different world.

The Music is like that a bit. If you’ve got the ear and if someone’s taught you what to listen for, you have a chance of knowing a bit about what is going on underneath the hood without having to pop it up and take a look. If you want to do something about it, though, you gotta get in there and get your hands dirty. And you’re going to need tools. I’ve heard rumors that some of the Shining Ones or other crossroads folk that can just hum and coax the engine around that way, but you and me have to get about it the hard way. Like I said, Music isn’t rightly meant for us.

So you’ve got your engine and you’ve got the tune you want it to play, the pitch you want it rattling at. How you get them to come together is where the tool comes in. You wouldn’t use a ball peen to tighten up the breaks. Gotta find something that matches your purpose. Your intention.

That’s really all an instrument is. Just a tool you pick out to help you match your song to your intention. Could be just about anything, long as it picks up a bit of the rattle of the world. I’ve seen everything from banjos and trumpets to candles and books. Even saw a gat once. It’s song scared me stiff.

Simple in concept, though. Just find what works for you and start tuning. Easy as pie, as long as you’ve got the ear for it. And the wherewithal to deal with what happens if you break something monkeying around in someone else’s engine.

Why I Stay

23 Friday Dec 2016

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As conveyed by a care-worn woman of indeterminate age in a simple flower print dress stained brown with dust

I’m a Homesteader. That’s who I am.

You want to know why I don’t want to leave? Why I fight tooth and nail for my land, even as it blows away? Why I stay when my friends and my neighbors and even my children have left to find better chances in California or wherever? It is because this is my home. This is my identity. I have struggled through death and drought before. I have had pieces of paper claiming to remove me from my land before, and I am still here. I will fight the banks, the lack of rain, even the Earth itself if I have to, because this is who I am. If I were to give up and leave, what would that make me? Another Okie. Another poor soul making the long drive out of the dust. Someone else.

I’m not a Dreamer. I’m not a Traveler, or even just a Farmer.
I am a Homesteader, and this is my home.

How could I Sing away from it?

A Local Perspective

23 Friday Dec 2016

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Overheard as a visibly-intoxicated man with over-long fingers lectures a cat with faintly glowing yellow eyes

Oh, go shove it. Most of the local folks don’t care much about what happens between upstairs and downstairs.

…Okay, that’s a lie.

We care plenty, we just…ignore it. Eh. That’s not quite right either. Look, the big dust up between the Divine and Infernal is all well and good, but it isn’t like it is anything new. They’ve been fighting for so long it just sort of drifts into the background. Sure, sometimes one of the local players gets recruited to one side or the other, but less and less these days. And both sides have avoided the sort of knock down drag out fight that got all the splashy press early on for years. So if the neighbors want to engage in a quiet war that mostly ignores us, we’re fine with mostly ignoring them. It’s not like we don’t have our own problems.

Things are changing, and far too quick for most of our liking. Humans are multiplying and spreading so fast these days. It is hard to find a place to call your own. Harder still to keep it. And it isn’t just competition among ourselves we need to worry about. More and more mortals have learned the Music over the generations. Sure, they may not be operating on the same level as we are, but they can also walk down the street without a second glance, and there are a lot more streets than there used to be.

So no, I don’t particularly care which angel beat up which devil this week. I’m too busy trying to hold on to my livelihood while everything falls apart around me. Or changes faster than I can keep up with. Which might as well be the same thing…

The Crossroads Market

23 Friday Dec 2016

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Relayed over drinks by a woman with too-blue eyes and boots that never sound quite right on wooden floors.

There are a lot of rumors and half-truths about the crossroads markets, but little that can be said with certainty.  We do know the markets have been around since…forever. Even the old timers talk about it in permanent style, and some of them are still coming to terms with railroads and gunpowder. Go back as far as you can and you’ll find evidence of them wherever two or more factions meet on a regular basis. Sea and shore. River and road. Farm and city. Human and, well…not. Some of them are trade hubs built to last, roots put down for long term relations. Others are a bit more fluid, carrying commerce on their back or in their pockets.

They have a sort of freedom lacking in the rest of the world. Better individuals than I have argued about whether it is because the Music is stronger or weaker there, but the fact of the matter is that things are possible at a market that just flat out aren’t elsewhere. Trading fates and selling ephemerals, for example, though I don’t need to tell you that both come with problems of their own. And swapping Songs, naturally. The bread and butter of the market. Of course, every transaction has a price, and ignorance of consequences isn’t the same thing as insulation from them. Make sure you know what you’re getting into before you shake.

All crossroads markets have the same rules, and they are pretty simple: all that can find their way here are welcome, no going back on a deal you shook on, no fighting, and the market stays independent. It doesn’t matter who you are or how you get yourself to the market, once you’re in you’re there. As long as you leave your fight at the door you’re welcome to drink, argue, buy, or sell to your heart’s content. Or whatever you might have instead of a heart…

Maybe they had to struggle to enforce those rules once upon a time. Maybe they had some sort of crew to keep things running smoothly. These days, the markets are so vital to our economy that other patrons usually take care of policing their own. Nobody wants to try to go it entirely alone, regardless of what their rhetoric might be. There are some things you just can’t manage on your own, some Songs too alien to play. We’re all in this together, after all.

Bah, but I’m drifting into politics, and that’s against my policy.

The State of Things (Upstairs)

23 Friday Dec 2016

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The state of the universe, as described by Emmanuel Hawthorne, an avowed white shirt

Maybe the universe was stable once. Maybe it could continue without help. A watch that could wind itself or a stream that flowed from the source without interruption.

But that was before. Before the Divine war. Before God’s mind was divided. Angels, the big ones, I mean, are more than just enforcers, administrators, or functionaries. Each one represents a concept of God; a portion, a self-contained thought or intention given personality, will, and drive. So yeah, maybe the universe worked the way that it was supposed to before the split. I dunno. I wasn’t around then.

What I do know is that now days, we need to help things out. Nudge things along, so to speak. Keep the spring wound. To do so, we sing. Sure, it might sound frivolous at first, but like the good book says “be filled with the Spirit; Speaking to yourself in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord.” We sing, play, give thanks, and raise our voice to the Lord. We know him, and in doing so, he knows us. We lend our small strength to him, filling in some of the gap left behind by the absence of those rebellious Archangels. Now I’m not saying that we are in any way equal to the personification of Divine will, but even a drop of water can cut through the hardest rock eventually. The more that hear, the more that know, and well that sort of…reinforces things. Keeps the water flowing, so to speak. Keeps everyone on the same page in terms of what is real and what isn’t. Or rather, what shouldn’t be real.

A Close Call

10 Saturday Dec 2016

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Spoken by the dark-eyed stranger you didn’t notice slumped across the piano until you you wander over to take a closer look at the worn keys and battered wood that seems to hum softly when you’re not looking straight at it.

I see ye’re clever enough ta poke around some. Not take anything fer granted.
That’s good. Might serve ye well. Might even keep ye alive, if yer lucky and not too rash.

Now I don’t know how well ye know the song. Heck, I don’t rightly know if ye’re a warbler or not. But ‘less you got yer head buried deep under somma that dirt been droppin’ outta the sky all regular-like, ye probably know somethin’ ain’t right round here. Maybe ya noticed that people and places ain’t where ye left em. Or that things don’t always keep fallin’ when ye knock em off the table. Sometimes ye can’t tell if yer awake or sleep fer days on end. Or maybe ye just have trouble carryin’ a tune these days.

Now I know what the holy-holies say, ’bout it bein’ the Devil cuttin’ the legs outta the good Lord’s plan, but I ain’t so sure about that. I’ve got a touch of the song myself, ye see. Not so much as to be all impressive-like or nothin’. ‘Xact opposite, fact. When things get hoppin’ I can get all low and quiet-like, and singers just sorta, well…gloss over me. Real useful.

So anyway, I’m walkin’ down the track the other night, and things start to go all red and brimstone-y. I maybe ain’t the wisest a’folk, but I know how ta watch my hide, so I starts hummin’. Just in time, too, cause this smilin’ bastard comes saunterin’ round the corner aheada me. It is just as happy as can be, laughin’ to itself and pattin’ its briefcase. Musta been a real raw sucker it got hold of at the crossroads, cause it was chucklin’ somethin’ good. And I’m just standin’ there hummin’ under my breath and hopin’ that the devil’s distracted enough by the payday that it don’t notice the twist in the song or the fact that my knees are knockin’ together loud enough ta keep time. Course I got no luck to speak of, so that don’t happen. It gets close enough to smell me and it just knows somethin’ ain’t right. They don’t rightly enjoy bein’ spied on, so I’m about to piss myself as it opens its maw to start singin’.

And that’s when things get weird. ‘Steada some song comin’ out, or that faint ache behind the ears ye get when ye hear somethin’ you can’t actually hear, there’s just this bursta noise. Like when yer changin’ the radio, ye know? Between the stations. Weird as hell ta hear. And then my song gets caught in my throat and I pop outta hidin’ thinkin’ I’m done for, but the devil goes flyin’ backwards like someone hit it in the chest with a sledgehammer. Then it gets up and just starts runnin’ off. Little furry legs goin’ like nobody’s business. Darnedest thing I ever saw. Funny lookin’, too.

Might evena laughed at my good fortune, if I hadn’ta seen its face.

Damned thing was scared.

What kinda thing can scare a devil?

Recent Posts

  • Black Sunday KGNC Broadcast
  • NPCs
  • “Some sort of infernal machine”
  • Moving On
  • Like the Plagues themselves…

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