Daniel Gillespie | Writer
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When writing doesn’t satisfy…
I write some more.
*Novels, that is.
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2022
Fantasy
~70,000 Words
Currently under copyedit
Request for more
BYGONE
(Novel)
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CHAPTER 2
I have awoken again with a great sense of foreboding. To know The Journey will shortly commence but to not know how it ends… Well, it fills an individual with dread. Yet, what truly haunts this individual lately is a recurring memory: ‘The gift of prescience is not for the weak Foloom. May you fear it’. The grinding stone that cemented my decision grates on me. Scars my dreams. Then and only then, when the words were spoken and the stone whined, was I sure of my mistake. Oh and how the possibilities that were so ever clear have become blackened at the edges – time is surely constricting.
Lately, the only visions that remain clear are of a girl, almost like our continuity has begun to entwine. A dark, dark augury of developing unknown. And in all honesty, if I remain true to my own feelings, I do fear. For I see time spread out. Thousands of threads that twist and fade into black splay out before me, each with their own beginning and frayed end. Each a truth and a contradiction. Some pass freely. Some loop. Some are knotted with neat bows to others. Some are wound tight while others hang slack. Each one screams at me. They want my attention. See this, see that. Come view me. Don’t touch that. But no matter the beginning, at each end… At each frayed end I see her. That damned girl. And I see me.
But what is this? Right there, as I lay strewn, who stands over me? Harcail? Why is he here, no, there? Why am I a pile on the floor if I am writing at this desk? No. Why is she on the floor? That girl, poor girl. How could I slay her? Monster. Vile. But the end must have been brought forth from her own devices. It must be. It must. Time draws near as it flees.
The threads scream for me to understand. Which to pull on? Which truth? The thumping, constant drumming of seconds as they pass into nothing and re-emerge as undefined moments, defined in their ever uncertain, certain possibilities.
I must speak with my Olivia, my sweet Olivia.
“The Diary of Foloom”
Recovered from The Prophet’s Archives
Continued…
2023
Crime / Drama
~60,000 Words
First Draft (unedited)
Request for more
into pastures
unknown (Novel)
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Tomoya
The Milky Whites Of The Blind Rat’s EyesHiroshi Abiko would ascend in a glass elevator with his son ten storeys to the top floor of the Building Éveille each Friday at 18:00 sharp for unexplained business. Upon exiting the elevator and stepping into the drab hallway dressed in thick pile carpet, the young boy would be summoned by Hiroshi to stand by the hallway’s only door. However, instead of adhering to the strict orders, Tomoya would nervously pick at the edges of his fingers and tear off the loose skin with his teeth within the elevator- hoping it to be the day his father would resign and allow him to descend back down to the ground floor alone.
Tomoya hated the journey, the building and the ugly carpet with passion. The unexplained business frustrated him, and the expectation to stand and shut up outside the singular ornate door that stood smugly in front of the elevator drove him insane. Waiting for his father infuriated him too; all in all, Tomoya hated Fridays- and he would continue to hate them without leniency into adulthood.
No matter how much skin he tore from his fingers or thumbs, Tomoya knew that eventually he’d hear his name called with fake lenity, followed by a vicious jab at the thick piled carpet, and he’d, submissive to this final exclamation, move into position with the utmost show of respect and honour. This time was no different.
Tomoya exited the elevator, leaving his reflection behind, trapped in the glass walls. With small steps he cautiously skittered over to his father’s side, bowed, then stood to the right of the door with attention.
The wooden surface was heavily scarred with old organic wounds from whence it came. Tomoya had previously inspected it thoroughly and created small stories based on the deep gashes and surface imperfections. Perhaps an axe was let loose while the tree was but a sapling. Or, maybe a bear had found its trunk to be the perfect scratching post– that is what bears did, or so he read. Near the base of the door was a large black mark that writhed back and forth; this, he had formally announced to the empty hallway many weeks back, could be explained by a spontaneous combustion– he had read about those in a pseudoscience book– in which the tree absorbed the fire and saved the surrounding forest.
Surrounding the door was a frame of organically carved swirls– or, that’s how he imagined the company who designed it would describe the hideously designed spirals that ballooned at their ends. It was quite impressive how the frame tied the door into the bland hallway, and it impressed him further how much of an undeniable injustice to the slab of wood they were.
Tomoya truly had a deep distaste for this building.
Before the door ever opened, death in the form of a stare would gaze deep within Tomoya’s second soul and wring out any remaining self confidence that may have been hidden away. His father was quite the innovator in this way.
How he knew of Tomoya’s wandering soul, the one which he believed to be free from his father and Fridays, was a mystery. But each time, before entering into the room on the other side of the distastefully dressed door, Hiroshi would stare deep inside Tomoya and grasp at his wandering soul, grounding it. Pressing it into the walls of Tomoya’s stomach with a suffocating hold until he returned from his weekly business meeting.
The deed having been done, the door opened inwards and Hiroshi stepped into the room, welcomed with a chorus of voices shakily shouting ‘Great Abiko!’ in nervous harmony. Although they arrived at the same time and his father cracked down the handle of the door at precisely 18:04 every week, the people inside- whoever they were- were never ready.
‘Great Abiko.’, ‘Great Abiko, yes.’, ‘Of course, Great Abiko, please sit.’, ‘Here you go, Great Abiko.’ The door was softly shut, dampening the myriad of highly strung voices to a low mumbling of which Tomoya could not place any words.
Stood by himself within the shoebox hallway, small against the plain grey walls and alone on the rug-like carpet, the hallway felt less lonely.
“One. Two. Three. Four,” Tomoya robotically recorded the elapsed time, his small chest collapsed as he breathed out the numbers, it rose as he prepared for the next interval, “Five, Six, Seven, Eight, Nine, Ten, Eleven, Twelve, Thirteen, Fourteen, Fifteen,” The internal workings of the room were too low to amplify from the wood, but through precision counting Tomoya knew what was about to happen, “Sixteen, Seventeen, Eighteen, Nineteen,” A low growl, like a mountain lion snarling- warning- projected from the door, “Twenty, Twenty One, Twenty Two, Twenty Three-” Tomoya nodded, it was about time, and sure enough, before he reached twenty five, the first clomp resonated through the door.
Tomoya became tense and anchored himself to the thick pile carpet, his feet, then his body, becoming stone. The second followed shortly after, followed by the third, fourth, fifth- as if mocking Tomoya’s counting, eighteen violent, dull thumps rocked the floor before they stopped, as if now bored by the act of reverberating. A short burst of heavy words were then relayed to a submissive room.
For reasons unknown, Tomoya could never mentally compute how long it was between when the thuds ended and when his father eventually left the room. But no matter the measure, he would exit with his usual calm demeanour.
Hiroshi would leave the room, straighten his thick framed black glasses and swipe the bottom of his right shoe on the carpet three times before calling the elevator.
Tomoya never met his father’s eyes, even if they cared to look upon him. He would simply follow, staring at the now rising elevator. He never dared to look at the carpet, which he knew was cleaned each week without hesitation after they left. He never dared to sneak a glance into the room, or commit to memory the faceless beings that sobbed and hushed each other as the pair left.
That was until today, Friday May 25th in the Building Éveille at an unknown time, when Tomoya decided to reconvene with his reflection in the glass elevator and set his fate on a path of self-assured destruction.
Staring out at the city before them, the pale lights beginning to turn on and shine like fallen stars against a cooling sky, Tomoya, father by his side, turned to face the room. He locked eyes with a gaunt man with stale looking eyes and a long nose closing the door. And on the floor, next to this man, in the space framed by the scarred door– oh the sight on the floor, the ever expanding sight that seared Tomoya’s retinas and stretched his world view to a thin, delicate plain of tengujo. On the floor, on that thick grey pile carpet that stretched from the hallway into the room– could you call it grey? Oh how he wished he could.
Great Abiko laid a gentle hand on his son’s shoulder, then moved it upwards, curling his fingers under Tomoya’s jaw, turning his head. Upon a creased face. Above his jowls and the upturned ‘U’ of his mouth, under the thick wire-like shrub of eyebrow and under the black art frame-like glasses, two emotionless brown eyes peered into Tomoya’s. Flakes of caramel rotated in the pools of brown and faded into a crescent of all-knowing black. They did nothing but stare, not even blink. Then, only then did Tomoya understand; there never was a father, only Great Abiko and his floor.
2024
Western
~20,000 Words
First Draft (unedited)
Request for more
Between the fold — Working title (Novel)
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PROLOGUE
My Athena, what have I done? With my bare hands I strangled him dead, and in doing so snuffed out my life’s light.
His mouth remained open, just before me, right there, as if in a state of shock: if not for the dying, then at the sight of the man who committed the atrocious act– his own father.
It was the corner of 4th Firth Street that I shot him down. One bullet through the head. I don’t mean to be graphic. All I ask is that you understand. That at first I thought I gave my son a painless, quick death that he did not see coming. I was sure he did not even know I was the one that pulled the trigger.
It took me five minutes to break myself from the pavement I stood on to investigate the scene. The surrounding townsfolk locked their doors and windows, but their eyes… I could still feel them burning into my back. That’s when I realised, for five minutes I had let him choke on himself on the hot sand. Five minutes. I made my way over, but couldn’t bring myself to pull the trigger a second time– so I strangled him. It was slow and painful for the both of us.
It’s a scorcher of a day. Damn hot. After, in the same place I cocked and pulled the trigger, I sat in the afternoon sun for fifteen minutes, maybe more; my shirt untucked and wrinkled and sodden with sweat and blood. That’s where I made the decision. When I knew there was no turning back.
Funnily enough, sitting there, I could taste biscuits– you know, the ones he baked on his sixth birthday? They were good for a young boy. We used to say he would grow to be a baker. Where does the time go? We tried, that I do know. Darsey was the wrong baker, perhaps if we chose better he’d have been frosting Eckle-Os ‘round about now.
My stomach feels full and my throat is catching on the tears that have yet to mark my skin. Oh, Athena. Athena, why ask this of me? Of a sheriff with little in ways of food or ambition. Perhaps you wish to punish me.
You were right though, as much as I hate to admit it. It was the thing to do, it only made sense, and it was my duty. I knew when he began to run the rumours were true. Poor girl– Jonathon’s little Susy, I believe.
I just didn’t expect it to end this way. Unfortunately, I can’t bear to face my officers after this tragedy– let alone you. I loved him. Now he sits slack jawed, the twinkle– my twinkle in his eyes dead.
Why? Why did he go and commit such foul acts that smear our name, Athena?
I have dispatched many criminals before, and in many gruesome ways. You remember the Dayson Twins in ‘23? Surely. For far less that revolver’s recoil has reverberated the loose skin on my arm but this is so, so different than anything I have done before. Oh, why did he have to go and do the worst.
I can finally say it: I do blame your Grandpa. I believe he teetered the line of the law those many moons ago and now our bloodline has been tainted with poison because of him. I wish I had said that to your face. If there’s any time to be a coward though, I do imagine it would be right now. I won’t apologise for that. I owe it to myself.
I’m becoming slow and I fear that soon I will no longer live as the man I was before, if he even exists right now. If I do not act quick, I will become a shadow, and this I am not ready for. I’m not ready to forget my son, and second to that, I am not ready to forget myself in that lonely of a process.
Anyway, I will join our son now. I am putting down this pen, and my journal I will wrap tightly with its cord and leave on the Farrington Inn Room 403’s desk for my officer’s Charles and Ravenwood to find. There’ll be a note detailing personal statements and a handover plan for Willshire County Sheriff's Office.
Outside the Farrington Inn is that craggy rock that overlooks the place I killed our son. By the time you read this, I’ll have jumped from its face. If anyone so happens to find me alive at the bottom of its sheer drop, I pray they humanely execute me.
Forgive me, my dear boy. I killed our dear boy.
I hate you, Athena.