Krivoth gestured with two folded black claws and his mandibles clicked a hard, wet rhythm as he spoke. âIn here is the break room. Coffee, snacks, suffering-sticks, fresh fruit, ichor, the usual.â Ms. Pollibuttonâs sagging, chinless face reflected a thousand times over in Krivothâs faceted red eye. âYou get one fifteen minute break every four millennia.â The tone in his lubricated clacking voice suggested he expected some resistance on this point. Ms. Pollibutton remained stoic and pushed her glasses back up her nose.
After a somewhat disappointed pause, Krivothâs hind legs drummed in sequence creating an agitated, impatient air. âAnyway, moving on,â he said. The tour continued, Krivoth being sure to tick off the points of interest: The Floundering Abyss; The City of Pain; Dyre Labyrinth; Nightmare Valley. Ms. Pollibutton nodded politely at each, never slowing her short, rapid strides. The soft clink of her Cromwell buckles steadied into an incessant grate against Krivothâs nerves.
âSo hereâs your workstation,â he said after an age. The loose folds of Ms. Pollibuttonâs throat wobbled ever so slightly as she ran a white glove along the dusty outcropping of red stone. A massive anthropodermic book lay on the slab desk.
Krivoth flipped the book open to a page marked with a bone hook using his spiked foreleg. âIt works like this: an entrant will arrive at processing. Once Foharr is finished with intake and cleaning, Sinestine will usher it in here. You record the data and let Nesti know which plane is next in the rotation. This is important, okay? If you start double- or triple-stacking the Murdergrounds or whatever, youâre going to have some very grouchy underdaemons. We canât torment properly if we donât have time to do the orientations.â
Ms. Pollibutton said nothing, but flattened her lips as a silent means of inviting Krivoth to proceed.
âIndex the entrants at the end of your shift in the Dark, over there,â he gestured to a sturdy bookcase made of corkscrewed humanoids encased in amber. âMake sure you get it right. Everyone uses the Dark, and Iâm sure itâs no secret why you were brought in. Last guy missed a line and threw everything off for a dozen eons.â
The short cloud of Ms. Pollibuttonâs white hair remained static as she gave a tiny tilt of her head and lift of her pencil-filled eyebrows.
âMaybe we should go see our old Bookkeeper real quick,â Krivoth suggested, âso you understand whatâs at stake.â He narrowed his eyes at her, awaiting her reaction. She pulled the corners of her mouth down further than they already were and glanced at the exit. Krivoth opened his slime-caked mouth to speak, but stopped himself and sighed instead. âThis way.â
They exchanged no words en route to Daharâs Wracking Void. They ducked into the low entrance and Krivoth held Ms. Pollibutton up with a claw. âWait until he notices us,â he warned.
Looming overhead was a mountainous daemon standing waist-deep in a vat of boiling pus and blood. The caked remnants of the standing bath left copper and milky stains up Daharâs expansive gut, the sunken chest outmatched by the writhing but thickly muscled arms. Daharâs head was a blurry swirl of black void inset with two bleached bone eyes holding the vacuum left behind by remorse and pityâs abandonment. A steady trickle of lava flowed down the back wall of Daharâs cavern into a cistern. Four long chains ran from shadowed corners and held a splayed figure suspended in the air near the daemonâs head.
âKrivoth,â Dahar said, its voice telegraphed into their heads in a piercing shriek of overlapping agony. âCanât you see Iâm busy?â
âApologies, master, but Iâve come to acquaint the old Bookkeeper to the new.â
Daharâs cold white eyes pawed at Ms. Pollibutton. âI hope you are not such aâŠâ Dahar reached out a taloned thumb and forefinger and squeezed the chained prisoner in the middle, as casual as excoriation, until it screamed and burst. While the chains slackened, the daemon finished, ââŠdisappointment.â
Krivoth waited for Ms. Pollibuttonâs reaction. Seeing none, he leaned closer and said, âThat was your predecessor.â As he gestured, a swarm of buzzing imps collected the ruptured halves of the tortured soul and dragged it back together, weaving its whimpering and agonized form back into a semblance of unity. Ms. Pollibuttonâs expression never changed. As the imps released the figure, he slouched against the chains and his shrieking began again. The new Bookkeeper pulled a small pocket-watch from her apron and checked the time.
With a pointed exchange of breath Krivoth stalked out of Daharâs chamber with a curt, âLetâs go.â He walked the whole way back without checking to see if the recruit had followed. It was no surprise to find her standing with placid impatience behind when he arrived again at her station.
âAll right, then, have at it.â
His huffy walk slowed several dozen paces down the magma-lit corridor. He turned back to see Ms. Pollibutton had already begun writing in the book, the bone quill twitching under the rapid fluttering of callused fingers. She paused to refresh the blood-ink and snapped her gaze at Krivoth so abruptly he recoiled, something he hadnât done in his entire, infinite existence.
He returned to his normal duties, but the new Bookkeeperâs attitude gnawed at him. Toward the end of his shift he could take it no more and shredded the souls he had been toying with in a spasm of anticlimactic violence. He blustered down the hall.
âNow look here, Ms. Pollibutton, the least you could do is show someââ
âYouâve made a mistake,â she cut him off.
âI begâ What?â
She tapped the book in front of her. âYour soul count is wrong. The report is incomplete.â
âThatâs impossible.â
âUnlike youâand my predecessorâI do not make mistakes.â She peered over her glasses. Krivoth thought he saw a smile play at her lips. âDahar will see you now.â
Another of Chuck Wendig’s Flash Fiction Challenge pieces, this one from the Random Story Title Generator.
Meh. Not crazy about this one, but I wrestled with it all week and couldn’t come up with anything better so I went with this in lieu of not completing the challenge.
The other story titles I had to choose from may have, in retrospect, yielded more fragrant bouquets:
Queen of Hearts
Houdini Earth
The Jewels of Moonlit Salvage
The Mozart that Shall Not Kill Heist Job
But I’m not sure you can put a title in front of me that has the words “Dark” and “Book” in it and not expect me to at least try.
LOL that was not the ending I was expecting! Great little twist there đ