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joegoda ([personal profile] joegoda) wrote2009-06-06 01:02 am
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A BP&G adventure - Pockets; Heretic



From a hidden spot along the Market wall, Beegle saw that failure was imminent. He watched as Bags and Briggs dispatched the last of his brigands, aided by an older man who he did not know. His frustration, his anger was boundless. How could his army have been so defeated, and defeated so quickly by so few. From what he had seen, Bags had only a handful of ragtag men, some not even carrying a weapon. And the worst part of it all is that Bags men suffered hardly more than flesh wounds, while his men lay on the ground dying like ants stamped out at a picnic!

Fastening his eyes on his hated foe, Beegle slipped out of his hiding space and worked his way along the wall towards the entry way. If he could escape once and build an army, he could do it again, and this time he would come back with a hundred, no... Two hundred men!

That stupid Pewitt wasn't even here, claiming he was going out to take care of that pipsqueak Pockets. Well, that was hours ago, even before the sun had come up and the battle here was lost. And where was the magic man? Nowhere to be found. Useless. Absolutely useless.

But what if even two hundred men weren't enough? What if Bags came up with some other scheme, some other trick, and defeated two hundred men. He had defeated the assassins of Bangala, and he had done it without drawing any blood at all! Absolute insanity.

"Well," thought Beegle, from a spot behind a straw filled wagon, "erm. I suppose it's a job I will have to do myself."

He drew his dagger, a jeweled encrusted dagger given to him by one of his army when the man had recognized Beegle's obvious superiority. Of course, the recognition had come at the cost of the other man's life, but that mattered little. In the end, it was Beegle who had been standing and the other had been dead.

The dagger had superb balance and Beegle had spent many hours practicing throwing it. His aim was precise and deadly, and he could clip the wings off of a fly at twenty paces. This was not an idle bit of braggadocio. He had demonstrated his skill many times to his rag tag bunch, as way of showing who should be boss and who could be dead. There were a great many flies who had perished without wings due to Beegle's skill.

His practice may also have been his undoing, because just as he was about to let the evil sharpness fly from his hands to find a new home in the ribcage of Bags, a winged black mote flew up Beegle's nose. The fly may have been a relative, seeking revenge.

Well, this would cause consternation to anyone, not just a maddened monster like Beegle. The jeweled blade, its trajectory disturbed by its owner having a fly up his nose, flashed across the space between Beegle and Bags, and rather than bury itself into soft flesh, it bounced harmlessly off hardened copper and leather.

Bags, Briggs and Hawk turned as one, seeking the owner of the deadly dagger. Their eyes fell upon Beegle, who was furiously slapping at his face and sneezing violently. The scene was so incredibly funny that the three men couldn't help themselves and started laughing.

One of the men near the gate, a circus weightlifter named Gregg, saw what had happened. He spied Beegle nearing the gate. Gregg picked up a chunk of granite the size of a breadbox and threw it at the retreating Beegle, crying out in fury as he did so.

The rocky missile was true to its mark, catching Beegle right above his shoulders, and removing anything that was above them. Beegle's body, headless, fell to the ground, shuddered briefly, and was still.

"Who did that?" Bags cried out, no longer laughing. He looked around at his eleven men, accusingly. "Come on, out with it! I'm not going to fire you or anything like that. But it would have been nice to capture the bastard alive."

Nobody would admit to the deed, but Gregg looked suspiciously sheepish, and Bags walked over to him and through an arm, companion-like, around Gregg's massive shoulders. "You know," Bags said loudly, "it was probably just as well. He wouldn't have lasted more than a night in jail. Some sort of accident, like this, was bound to happen."

This caused all the men to laugh and cheer their leader, and they all started chanting "Bags! Bags!" over an over.

The chanting brought the townsfolk, who had been kept prisoner inside the walls of their own kingdom, creeping and slinking out from their houses and hovels to see what all the noise was about. Seeing that all of Beegle's men were dead or very wounded, a cheer went up, hailing the heroes. The chant of "Bags! Bags!" grew even louder.

Bags, seeing that he ought to, even though he would rather not, say something, climbed upon a stack of hay bales and raised his hands for silence. When the noise had finally died down, he began.

"Beegle is dead!" he said. This alone brought another round of cheers and chanting until Bags rose his hands, asking for quiet again. "It will be a long road to get this place back to the way it was," he said. "And I want you to know I won't forget why I left in the first place." There was a general murmur among the assembly. "Some of you were awful quick to condemn my friend Pockets, thinking he was some sort of demon just because he was a bit... odd."

"Well," an anonymous speaker said, "He was, you know!"

Bag was silent and he glared at the speaker. After an inward count of ten, or maybe fifty, he began again. "Pockets wasn't a demon," he said quietly and most importantly, with deadly sincerity. "Pockets was... is... different. He has gone through more crap and suffered more pain because of his difference than any of you will ever know." Bags took a deep breath. "Did you know he died once, just to make sure all of your miserable lives would continue just as it had been? Did you?"

Nobody said a word, but a palpable feeling of shame rose from the crowd.

"Did you know," Bags continued, "that he was once captured by a mad wizard and forced into slavery, learning things that none of you could even begin to understand? Did you know that he and I were both orphans, and more than once he saved my life because he was different? Because he doesn't think like you or me and never will?"

Bags scanned the crowd for a familiar face. "Where's Damian? The guy that runs Swinehart's?"

A woman near the front of the crowd said, "Damien's gone, your majesty. Killed by one of his barmaids when she thought he had cheated her out of pay."

"Dead?" Bags frowned. "Well, crap. Who runs Swinehart's now? Anybody?"

Nobody spoke up for a while, and then a balding man near Bags said, "Beegle shut the place down. Said it was a place of... umm..."

"Decadence," someone prompted.

"Yeah," the bald man said. "Decadence. Said he shut it down for our own good."

"No Swinehart's?" Bags was silent. "Well, that's the first thing that has to change. I need a beer, now." Remember what he was talking about, his face took on a glower again. "The point is that Pockets, for all of his oddity, made your lives better. He created that refrigy thing that kept beer and ale cold at Swinehart's. Any farmers here?"

A few raised their hands.

"And didn't he create something that helped you do something with your crops? Make it grow faster or make it easier to harvest or something?"

The farmers in the group nodded and muttered agreement.

"So, how dare you accuse him of being evil!" Bags' voice rose again. "How dare you! When he did nothing but live his live in his little work shed, alone, and invented things to make your lives easier! How dare you!"

A tall woman stepped forward. "Your majesty! We were under a spell, a... glamour, from the Green Preacher! He promised us..."

"Promised you!" Bags roared in anger. "Don't tell me in one breath that you were under a spell and then in the next that you believed promises told to you by that green bastard! I could have believed you were under a spell. I don't, but I could have. I think you were lured by promises that your life would be grander, bigger, and richer than it was. I think you believed that you wouldn't have to work any more and were perfectly willing to hang Pockets, who never did any of you any harm, out to dry, just for your own petty wants."

"It wasn't all of us, your majesty!" A short, round man stepped forward. "Some of us spoke out against the Preacher!"

"Yeah, sure," Bags retorted, snorting as he did. "But after you spoke out, you did nothing. Nothing! All it takes for evil to take root is for good men, like you, to do nothing!" Bags spat on the ground below and bent to sit on the top bale of hay. "I don't think I want to be your king," he said quietly. "I really, really don't. I think I liked it better when I as exiled."

"Well, mister Timothy Bags, I didn't." A familiar voice from the back drew Bags attention. An old woman, stooped and bent, using a long walking stick for a cane came forward. She shuffled through the crowd, which parted before her like a river around a barge. When she reached the bales of hay, she thumped her walking stick on the ground once, hard.

"Bejay," Bags said. Bejay was the unofficial leader of the dregs of Tears society, who lived in the run down and fairly abandoned part of the kingdom. He and she had forged a tentative alliance during his first run in with Beegle.

"Yeah," she said. "It's me. Beegle left me and the gang pretty much to ourselves." She chuckled. "I guess he was too dainty for us." She thumped her stick on the ground again. "But you! You promised me that you would always be around, remember? And at the first sight of trouble, you bug out!"

"Bejay," Bags protested, "he was trying to kill me! Kill my family!"

"Oh, fine," she said and spat on the ground. "Like that's the first time someone has tried to kill you." She spat on the ground again. "Running to ground like a rabbit. And the moment you leave, the whole place goes to hell!" She cast a gray eye up to where Bags sat. "What does that tell you, sonny?"

Bags, his anger drenched by Bejay's, shrugged. "I dunno, Bejay. What should it tell me?"

"By god and goddess, Bags!" Now it was a Bejay's voice yelling. "It should tell you that this pack of people," she swung her stick around to indicate the crowd around her, "are like a bunch of children! You're like their damned daddy, you damned idiot, and Grizelda is like their damned mommy! So they picked on your friend, called him names. So what? They were scared of him, Bags! What do you expect? He never really came out of his little hidey-hole, never really got to know anybody here. He just stayed in his little shed and kept to himself, being all weird and godlike. To these morons, it was easy to believe he was a demon. It was easy to believe he could never be one of them. He never tried."

Bejay squinted an eye up at Bags. "And now the bad guy is dead." She pointed her stick over at the dead body of Beegle. "I kinda think that Preacher guy is dead too, if that big green ball of light I saw earlier means anything. So what are you gonna do now, Mister Bags, your majesty?" She turned slowly around in a circle, looking at the crowd gathered around her. "You have a buncha kids here, waiting for their daddy to come home." When her circle was complete, she was looking up at Bags again. "So? What are you gonna do?"

Bags sat silently on the bales of hay and scratched absently at his shaggy beard. Eventually he said, "I think, Bejay, that I will have a beer. I have a kingdom to rebuild, and I need fortification." Catching Briggs eye, he called out, "Briggs! You think you can get Swinehart's open and running?"

Briggs made his way though the crowd, followed by Hawk. "Oh," he said, smiling, "I don't think it will much trouble atall, your majesty. Remember Jeeves? Your scribe?" Bags nodded. "Before Beegle shut the place down, Jeeves was becoming quite the barkeep, since nobody else took the job after Sarah killed Damien."

"Good!" Bags jumped down from the hay. "Let's get this party started." He took Hawk's elbow. "C'mon, Hawk. Let me show you how to run a kingdom."

A stick thumped against Bags' chest. "Hawk?" Bejay stepped between the two men and gave a scanning gaze over the older man. "Hawk, as in Weehawk?"

"I'm not so wee any more, ma'am," Hawk said, smiling politely.

"You don't know me, do you boy?" Bejay laid a hand on Hawks chest.

"No ma'am," Hawk answered.

"Bejay," Bags explained, "he's lost his memory."

Bejay turned her gaze to Bags. "Lost his memory, huh? Well, maybe that's for the best. His childhood wasn't the easiest."

Hawk started, and his head jerked back an inch. "You knew me as a child?" he asked, surprised.

"Sonny," Bejay said, "I'm your mother."

Bags eyes rolled. "This day just gets stranger and stranger." He pointed at a member of his army. "You... um... Charles? Chuck?"

"Henry, your majesty," Henry said.

"Yeah, Henry. Go out and let Griz know it's okay to come in, okay? Tell her I kept my promise to her, she'll know what I mean."

"Yes your majesty. Right away." Henry took off for the front gate at a run.

"Now," Bags said, "let's say we have this little family reunion where I can clear my head a bit? It's been a heck of a day." He started up the road to where the pub, Swinehart's stood. "Oh, and if anyone can find Pockets, that will be a good thing. Send him my way, will you?"

[identity profile] capi.livejournal.com 2009-06-06 05:27 pm (UTC)(link)
The dagger had superb balance and Beegle had spent many hours practicing throwing it. His aim was precise and deadly, and he could clip the wings off of a fly at twenty paces. This was not an idle bit of braggadocio.
(( ah... Braggadocio... what a beautiful word! I love it! Sorry to have to say this, dear heart, but as lovely a word as it is, it doesn't really FIT here... in your story, it kind of sticks out like an equisite and rare jewel in a dock-side whore house. *sigh* You may need more a word like "bravado", more mundane, alas... but that fits better into the fabric of your story...))

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Nobody would admit to the deed, but Gregg looked suspiciously sheepish, and Bags walked over to him and through ((threw??)) an arm, companion-like, around Gregg's massive shoulders.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This caused all the men to laugh and cheer their leader, and they all started chanting "Bags! Bags!" over an over.

The chanting brought the townsfolk, who had been kept prisoner inside the walls of their own kingdom, creeping and slinking out from their houses and hovels to see what all the noise was about. Seeing that all of Beegle's men were dead or very wounded, a cheer went up, hailing the heroes. The chant of "Bags! Bags!" grew even louder.

((( i think you wrote this whole story just so you could make the whole town chant "Bags! Bags!" on a bet or something! I mean, really! Whoever HEARD of such a thing! *LOL*!! And you, being you, had to make them do it LOUDER, just because once wouldn't satisfy... *LOL* Imagine it! Come on, own up! Y'all had too many at the pub one night, years ago, and this was the true goal of the entire series..... *laughing and laughing* )))

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Damien's dead??? Dang, he sure takes that with a grain.... *whew*

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"No Swinehart's?" Bags was silent. "Well, that's the first thing that has to change. I need a beer, now." Remember (( remembering? )) what he was talking about, his face took on a glower again. "The point is that Pockets, for all of his oddity, made your lives better. He created that refrigy thing that kept beer and ale cold at Swinehart's. Any farmers here?"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

(to be continued....)

Part II

[identity profile] capi.livejournal.com 2009-06-06 05:27 pm (UTC)(link)
"And didn't he create something that helped you do something with your crops? Make it grow faster or make it easier to harvest or something?"
(( if you say "crops" then you gotta say "them", if you want to say "it" then you gotta say "crop".... *LOL* ))

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"So, how dare you accuse him of being evil!" Bags' voice rose again. "How dare you! When he did nothing but live his live (( life?? ))in his little work shed, alone, and invented things to make your lives easier! How dare you!"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Yeah, sure," Bags retorted, snorting as he did. "But after you spoke out, you did nothing. Nothing! All it takes for evil to take root is for good men, like you, to do nothing!" Bags spat on the ground below and bent to sit on the top bale of hay. "I don't think I want to be your king," he said quietly. "I really, really don't. I think I liked it better when I as ((was??))exiled."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"By god and goddess, Bags!" Now it was a Bejay's voice yelling. "It should tell you that this pack of people," she swung her stick around to indicate the crowd around her, "are like a bunch of children! You're like their damned daddy, you damned idiot, and Grizelda is like their damned mommy! So they picked on your friend, called him names. So what? They were scared of him, Bags! What do you expect? He never really came out of his little hidey-hole, never really got to know anybody here. He just stayed in his little shed and kept to himself, being all weird and godlike. To these morons, it was easy to believe he was a demon. It was easy to believe he could never be one of them. He never tried."

*blink blink*

Oh my!

*glances over at the author and wonders where that came from and how he feels about it*

(((((( huge quilty hugs )))))))))))

Well done, little brother! Well done!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

*bursts into tears again, only much bigger this time*

YAY!!!!! *wild applause* *stomps feet* *whistles*

*huge stoopid grin on her face with glistening eyes*

Re: Part II

[identity profile] joegoda.livejournal.com 2009-06-06 05:58 pm (UTC)(link)
Hey! Wait... did you just call my story a dock-side whore house?????

and yes.. braggadocio does NOT fit, but I just wanted to use it. Thanks for all the editing, sis. And, the story is still not done, because I have to deal with Griz, Pockets and the entire MIDDLE of the book.

Re: Part II

[identity profile] capi.livejournal.com 2009-06-06 06:25 pm (UTC)(link)
No!

hahahahahahahaha!!

Re: Part II

[identity profile] joegoda.livejournal.com 2009-06-07 03:06 am (UTC)(link)
and you laugh at me why?? In my hour of misery, you laugh. You must be my sister!

Re: Part II

[identity profile] capi.livejournal.com 2009-06-07 03:26 am (UTC)(link)
your hour of misery?? I would not, had i known...

Do i know?

I said NO because i was not calling your story a dock-side whore house..... *cracks up laughing* The very idea still makes me laugh!

But... is this your hour of misery? Or... did i miss it? Or... what???

Re: Part II

[identity profile] joegoda.livejournal.com 2009-06-07 03:50 am (UTC)(link)
I AM miserable! It has been so long since we had a decent dialogue and miss my sister horribly.

Also, I had too much fun today. I went out by myself and traveled to an antique hot rod show, and now I have to go back to work. *sniff* I have to wait a WHOLE WEEK before I can do it again.

Ohhhhhhh Woe Is ME! I is so miserable, pitiful, pitiful me.

Re: Part II

[identity profile] shackrlu.livejournal.com 2009-06-07 04:01 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah..you looked SO miserable!! ;-)

Re: Part II

[identity profile] capi.livejournal.com 2009-06-07 04:57 am (UTC)(link)
(((((((((((((( huuuuuuuuuuuuugs ))))))))))))))))))))

Aren't you GLAD it will be there still, in a week? I am! Else you'd have to wait a whole YEAR! YUCK!

*grin*

Poor pitiful you.... *giggle*

Shore do miss my liddle bro..... shore do.....

Re: Part II

[identity profile] joegoda.livejournal.com 2009-06-07 05:54 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks for the hugs, lil sis! In truth, this particular book is one of the hardest ones. It's been in process for over a year now, I'm having trouble keeping the coherence together, not to mention keeping the three main characters true to their own nature and personalities. So much has changed in my own life, so much of my own self has modified that I find it hard to not have those things pass on to my dear characters.

I realize that characters also grow and mature and change. Pockets is not the simple character he started out to be. He's not as trusting, not as happy as he once was. Realizing that the a way to defeat the Green Preacher was to disemble himself into the world, and use that world to work with him came as a relief to him. Even if it meant his ending. In truth, he was miserable alone, realizing his differences made it impossible for him to ever have what might be a normal relationship. He knew, even with Esme, that he was just a secondary character. She would grow and leave him behind. Pockets was glad to go, he was tired of life.

Bags has changed. He cares more deeply about other people than he ever did, but he has also become tired of the silliness and pettiness of the world. He longs to go back into the wild, to live the life he once did, and he knows he never will again. He loves his family, but he is on the verge of becoming bitter, having to deal with the day to day job of making decisions that he shouldn't have to make, if only adults would act like adults. He wants to run, but will not out of his love for Grizelda and Esmeralda, and his sense of duty.

Griz is pretty much the same... Sherry is a great model for the character, and if anything Grizelda is even stronger than she was. Even if her role is smaller than it had been, or appears to be. Grizelda is the one that I have no fear of dramatically changing from her original self. Little changes, yes. A bit more fear of growing older and unattractive, but that happens with all of us. The fact that she shows her weakness to Thom in this book is an indication that she is desperate to talk to someone about it, to be told that she's all right and still desirable.

My characters have become to real, and in becoming that way, they become far to complex to write honestly about.

So that, darling sis, is the true part of my misery. This is the last BP&G book, maybe, and I do not want to do an injustice to them.

Re: Part II

[identity profile] capi.livejournal.com 2009-06-07 01:15 pm (UTC)(link)
~whisper~ i love you, mister.

Altho' you may not realize it, but when capi learns what happened to mister pockets, it will take all of them to keep her from slipping away into death from meloncholy, for she loved him with a part of her that nobody else could ever reach.....

Re: Part II

[identity profile] joegoda.livejournal.com 2009-06-07 01:27 pm (UTC)(link)
I guess I better tell you that it all ends up well, then, huh?

Re: Part II

[identity profile] joegoda.livejournal.com 2009-06-07 06:38 pm (UTC)(link)
It all ends up well, capi. I could no more kill of Pockets than I could do my self in. The Universe wouldn't let me, anyway.

Re: Part II

[identity profile] joegoda.livejournal.com 2009-06-07 11:27 pm (UTC)(link)
The world of Nowhere is a magical world, which runs on the principle of science and logic, darling sis. The StoryTeller is the one through whom all stories pass, large and small. He knows if you've been sleeping, he knows if you're awake, he knows if you've been good or bad, or whatever makes your heart ache.

He never, ever, hardly never ever strikes out a bit of story and re-writes it. Just this once, though, he saw a group of people, our very own BP&G, who he felt needed to go on, as their stories weren't quite done.

Pockets, with his own selfish sacrifice, created a ripple that moved through the universe of the other two; Bags and Grizelda. The StoryTeller took the unimaginable step to modify the story so that all would be well in the end. Pockets has a surprise waiting for him, as his story isn't done yet either. He will find the love of his life, and he will, as best as he can, live happily ever after.

Re: Part II

[identity profile] capi.livejournal.com 2009-06-08 01:25 am (UTC)(link)
*cries and cries and cries*

I'm sooooo glad to hear this!! oh!!!

*runs away to cry rivers for her dear brother*

Re: Part II

[identity profile] joegoda.livejournal.com 2009-06-08 05:44 am (UTC)(link)
I knew the other ending had distressed you, dearling. That's really and truly the motivation that moved the StoryTeller... well, that and a few grumkples from a few other folks. But hearing your own heart break, that was too much ever for one as old as the Storyteller.

Though... why are you crying for me, silly sis?

Re: Part II

[identity profile] capi.livejournal.com 2009-06-08 05:51 am (UTC)(link)
What what WHAT could make a capi happier than Pockets finding his perfect joy? The love of his life? What could delight her more than knowing that he has found the thing he needs most and has lacked most in his life??

Re: Part II

[identity profile] joegoda.livejournal.com 2009-06-08 05:53 am (UTC)(link)
Well.. okay, I get that... but why cry for ME? As for Pockets, the story will wait until I'm awake enough and able to write it. I think you'll be pleasantly surprised.

Re: Part II

[identity profile] capi.livejournal.com 2009-06-08 01:52 pm (UTC)(link)
There is a very tight link between Mister Pockets and my little brother.....

.... and i love them both GREAT BIG HUGE! Not much i wouldn't do for doze guyz..... *grin*

[identity profile] shackrlu.livejournal.com 2009-06-07 04:03 am (UTC)(link)
I must say... I am liking this ending much better so far. sigh...Bags bein' dead was just too sad!! And it not being from an actual fight, but thrown by a dastardly coward from a distance.. that was just not right.