The Price to Pay
“But train tickets are never free. You cannot be so lucky as to find your destination marked on a discarded ticket on the ground. To travel between the worlds will also cost you, and for some, it costs a great deal.”
Read More“But train tickets are never free. You cannot be so lucky as to find your destination marked on a discarded ticket on the ground. To travel between the worlds will also cost you, and for some, it costs a great deal.”
Read More“If you don’t want to be in danger, do not cross the Sinamar Bridge at a quiet hour, specifically right between Asr and Maghrib time.”
Read More“He loved me then, bathing me in chilling ivory and watching as I, snapping and whining, drew back my lips to reveal sharp teeth.”
Read More“‘She could just as easily have taken my life.’
The other man’s gaze flashed with pity. ‘From where I see it, she already has.’”
“It didn’t help that her position was innately voyeuristic. Night after night, she watched the mortals, envying the excitable urgency of their short lives over the stifling monotony her endless one had become.”
Read More“He had favorites, of course he did. He strung them into constellations and told stories through them. He let them have a central part of his night sky, so the mortals would see them out, trace the tales, and know that he tried to caution them against too much glory in life.”
Read More“Days since Hamlet’s last hallucination: zero. This number has not changed for weeks. It’s everything you can do to keep him from taking a kitchen knife to someone’s throat, his own or his uncle’s or sometimes yours.”
Read More“That’s probably why our marriage has lasted into the age we’re in. I know him, I know what haunts him, what fears drive him—pathetic, never satiated, fiendish, floundering, incestuous Zeus.”
Read More“Authorities of mortal bureaucracy have limited her to an un-aged face, buried in smoking thorns. Bitter laughter of the Gods as he cursed his longing, necrophilic fate. Unto Hades, he fell, in art & body.”
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