Thursday, April 28, 2016

Table of Contents Page for My Multi-Chapter Stories

As you may have surmised from the title, this is the table of contents page for my multi-chapter stories, ultimately for the sake of convenient navigation.


Scooby-Doo's Unsolved Mystery

An unnamed journalist (also gender non-specific, clever me) has a chance encounter with Shaggy Rogers some time after Mystery Inc. has disbanded. The conversation reveals a curious blemish on the gang's track record, and the journalist becomes intrigued enough to re-open the investigation. I'm quite proud of this story for a few reasons. First and definitely foremost, I feel the mystery works, and that's been an ongoing struggle for me in the past. Second, I feel like I successfully got inside the heads of each character and got their beats and mannerisms down without turning them into caricatures. And finally, I maintain that the best Scooby-Doo stories are the ones that remember to give Daphne something vital to do plot-wise. You can probably guess from the chapter titles that was an important element to me.

Chasing the Rabbit

This is my epic Disney fan-fiction (in progress) which I've had rattling around in my head for well over a decade now. I never thought to try writing it down until I started publishing on fanfiction.net, but when I learned that the site came with a built in audience I couldn't resist. The story: several famous Disney characters from different stories are waking up in an unfamiliar jungle with limited memories of who they are and no idea why they are there. As one mystery unravels, a larger one takes its place.

The Wax Buzzard Files

This detective spoof story came out of desperation one week when I was suffering from serious writer's block. I'd vowed over a year prior that I was going to take my blog seriously and post something on at least a weekly basis, but this particular week I simply could not motivate myself. So I decided to just go completely into absurd humor. I wound up liking the result and decided to revisit Detective Guffey any time I wasn't feeling up to a respectable blog. Suffice to say I have NO idea where this story is going, and I find that strangely liberating.

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Chasing the Rabbit: Chapter Four -The Eye in the Sky

Click here for the Table of Contents.

"Did you know that most dreams speak to you metaphorically?"

This was the latest in a never ending series of anecdotes about the subconscious that Meg's shadow, named Alice, had taken delight in sharing. "No," she huffed for the fourth time in a row, "I was not aware of that."

"For example, if one were to be following tracks which split in two directions, one would be well advised to follow the set leading to one's right. Hence, being 'on the right track'."

Meg was still a few steps ahead of Alice, but she could just feel the young girl was smiling about her wellspring of knowledge. Meg was about to make another futile attempt to convince her that she was in fact not dreaming, but Alice beat her to the pause in conversation.

"I find it fascinating how the human mind plays mathematical games with itself during its state of rest. Perhaps the mind fears entropy in a manner similar to the way most people fear death. What conclusion might you draw, Miss Megara?"

This question was enough to stop Meg in her spot. "Doll," she said, consciously reminding herself that she was speaking to a child, "This probably is as interesting as you think it is. But there is a hierarchy of concerns, and this topic is at least a few rungs below trying not to die out here."

"A hierarchy of concerns?" Alice responded, clearly honing in on the wrong element. "What an insightful way of looking at it."

Meg rubbed her eyes, thinking several incorrect myths about lemmings.

"Oh, Miss Megara!"

"Just call me Meg.

"Miss Meg, there he is again!"

Meg looked where Alice was pointing. "Who?"

"The man in the tree!"

Meg surveyed the jungle overhead but saw only jungle. "Alice doesn't live here anymore," she muttered.

"Well he was there a moment ago. I wonder if he's meant to be hunting the rabbit."

"What is this fictional rabbit you keep talking about?"

"I saw him in the meadow earlier. He was about my height, perhaps taller with the ears, and he stood upright like a man."

Meg decided to push on through the vegetation while humoring her escortee. "Did he say anything?"

"No he seemed to be running somewhere. It's all quite familiar really. I once followed a rabbit down its hole in a previous dream. Except that one was white and carried a pocket watch."

Meg had lost interest. But for the moment Alice was humming to herself, which gave her a chance to try figuring out what to do. Meg was used to being a pawn, but never one without information. She'd been stuck on this horrifying notion that she dared not say out loud. Hercules had made a deal with Hades for her life. He may have been powerful enough to carry her soul out of the Underworld, but that didn't mean the deal was undone.

She pulled an armful of fronds back like a curtain for Alice to step through. The girl smiled blissfully. Meg was trying not to dislike her, but the combination of her blissful ignorance and that melody that was now boring its way into her own head was proving to be a challenge.

"Hades," she whispered, genuinely asking for him now. She swore she wouldn't make any more deals with him, but at least if he'd show up to gloat then she'd know what the situation was. But he didn't come. And Meg couldn't decide if it was better or worse than if he'd shown up.

Then the ground literally fell out from underneath her feet. As she'd pushed through a patch of thicket, the forest ended with no warning. "Oh gods!" Meg yelled as she caught a branch in time to keep from plummeting down a steep drop.

Alice helped pull her back to the former terrain and took in the scene while Meg regained her breath. It was a wasteland; nothing but jagged red rocks and cracked clay as far as the horizon. And just off the right of where they'd emerged, many yards below, was a stone bridge that snaked to the entrance of a huge fortress some distance away.

The place looked almost conical in silhouette with three levels of spires, the highest one clearly towering over the spot where they were. "I wonder if that's really as tall as it looks," said Alice. She checked to see how Meg was recovering.

"This is why I hate heights," she gasped.

"Shall we, then?"

"Shall we what?" said Meg. "Go back the way we came and try reasoning with the headless man?"

Alice pointed at the ominous structure. "That's clearly the place we're meant to go. It stands out as the first concrete image we've happened upon."

Meg gently placed her hands on Alice's shoulders. "Lilies, when you get pinched you are really going to feel it, but until then trust me. That is not the place you want to go."

"On the contrary, that is precisely the place one wants to go."

Meg steadied her own head. "Okay, devil's advocate. If 'one' were in this precise situation and 'one' happened to know 'one' wasn't dreaming, what would 'one's' most mortality conducive course of action be?"

Alice thought carefully. "Still to visit the place with the spires."

Meg stared at her. For quite a while. "How," she said, "do you figure that?"

"Simply put, if one were in this precise situation, stranded in unfamiliar territory with no memory of how or why, and one dreaming it were no longer a possibility, then it stands to reason that answers must lie elsewhere. Possibly coveted by the owner of those answers, and kept in a location where few would dare to look."

"Okay...a follow up question? Suppose the few who dare to look find the owner instead?"

"Why would the architect of such an intimidating façade include a bridge if not for ease of access?"

Meg sighed. "Doll, you are too smart for your own good."

"On the contrary Miss-"

"Just-" interrupted Meg, "take the compliment, Lilies."


Elsewhere.

High up in the foliage, where the tallest treetops blanketed out most of the sky, there was an eye. A round lens encased in a crystal covering.

Tarzan stared intensely into this eye. Waiting. But the artificial iris did not respond to his presence.

He tapped on it with the tip of his spear, the one he'd made himself; wood, vine and bone. It clinked against the surface, unheard by anyone but the Lord of the Jungle. But the eye refused to stir.

Tarzan grumbled to himself, and struck the crystal with a more calculated force. And waited.

The tiniest red dot appeared in the middle of the eye. Slowly, it began to grow. Awakening.

Tarzan was so deeply focused on this eye, he'd been unaware that he himself was being observed. From behind.

He sensed it only at the last possible moment when he only had the ability to react. A familiar-but-not snarl filled his head as a set of strong claws caught the hilt of his spear, sending the ape-man off the branch. He fell.

The various twigs he was able to reach kept breaking off in his hands. Tarzan was halfway to the ground before he was able to pierce the trunk of a tree with his spear, steering himself to a sturdy enough vine for his weight. Somewhere up above, heavy paws shuffled the leaves, but he couldn't make out where they were.

Tarzan used the vines as he was proficient to relocate out of the dense area and into an open section of the jungle where he could see his surroundings clearer. He landed on a thick branch and controlled his breath, scanning the area around and above him.

For several moments he stood ready in silence, spear in defense. The creature had found him. He could hear the low purr, but couldn't make out which direction it was coming from. Tarzan peered carefully at the vegetation straight above him, anticipating an attack from that direction. He was wrong. It came from below.

The dark paw hooked the handle of his spear and pulled with heavy force. The ape-man refused to let go and vaulted over the head of the large cat. Confused, it released its hold on the branch and rolled backwards, sending them both into the throes of gravity once again.

This time there was a web of vines draped across the pathway down, and both combatants became entangled before they knew which direction they were facing. Tarzan got loose first, and used the remaining terrain to slide his way to the ground. He touched down lightly and rolled several yards away from the landing spot.

A few seconds later the panther's feet hit the same spot with an audible thud. It stared at Tarzan, appraising him, dissecting him. Tarzan held his ground as the beast circled him, growling.

He looked at the panther, then at his spear, and back. Slowly, Tarzan released his left hand from the end of the spear closest to the tip. Bagheera glared at him but didn't move forward. The Lord of the Jungle cautiously set the spear down on the ground with his right hand and backed away from it. Bagheera stopped circling, and waited.

The panther stopped growling once he was convinced the ape-man's spear was out of his reach, but continued to watch his movements. The human spread his fingers to show that they were empty and gestured to himself. "Tar-zan" he said.

"Oh no, not another one," Bagheera snorted.

Continued in Chapter Five.


Return to the Table of Contents.

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

The Wax Buzzard Files: Chapter Two -A Chapter Without a Very Good Title

You might be wondering what happened before now, but don't feel like searching for the links to the Table of Contents. As usual, I have to do everything around here.

My plan paid off handsomely. Unfortunately I'd bet against myself and lost big. Having followed my follower in reverse to his destination, which understandably had been his point of origin before he'd started walking forwards, I found myself in the office of the notoriously displeased mob boss Mr. Happy.

Like a tailored tuxedo, the name Mr. Happy was probably better suited for a man, but I wasn't about to question her choices to her face. Mr. Happy leaned over her desk, with the tip of her cigar grazing the end of my nose; and were it not for the 'No Smoking' city ordinance that thing might have actually been lit.

"Detective Guffey," she huffed.

"Present and accounted for!" I said in rapt attention.

"You're accounted for when I say you're accounted for!" Mr. Happy bellowed with a breath that smelled like Colgate. One of her henchmen, who I hadn't been aware was already in the chair in which I'd sat down, asked her if he should be taking minutes. Mr. Happy nodded. And she turned her attention back to me. "Now you're accounted for," she snapped, apparently feeling the groove.

"Mr. Happy," I said, "why have you taken an interest in my activities?"

She got right in my face. "I'll ask the questions!"

"And suppose I don't know the answers..."

"Then I'll answer them as well!" She snarled. "Why have I taken an interest in your activities? Because-" she pointed accusingly at me, "You look like you're thinking about snooping around. And I have a real problem with people who look that way."

"You ever try getting to know one?"

"Yes!" Mr. Happy growled. "And nothing bad happened. But I'm still entitled to my opinions. And I think it's about time you and I had a little chat."

"How little?" I asked needlessly adverbedly.

"So little that it's already over, Detective!"

Mr. Happy threw her hands in the air, waved them around like she didn't care (which admittedly hurt my feelings) and pulled The Manual of Violent Threats out of her desk. She found the information she was looking for, and I knew I was in trouble, because she muttered something about me being in trouble.

But before she could make two copies of the page for her henchmen I heard a familiar car horn, familiar because it sounded like a car horn and I've heard those before. I poked my head out into the hall to tell it to shut up when it occurred to me that I never ate my oatmeal that morning. That, and there was only one person I knew who could drive a car into a hallway without making a sound.

I resigned myself to the reality that my breakfast was likely cold by now and tapped on the driver's side glass. "Hey. You in there?"

Miss Nomer rolled down her window. "Get in!"

"In the car?"

"No! In line for the community theater production of Chicago!"

In the event that she wasn't being sarcastic it was to my advantage to dive in the passenger side. Mr. Happy's henchmen appeared in the doorway, pointing at us and hopping up and down.

"Pull carefully out into traffic and floor it!" I advised, placing my hands on the dashboard to brace for an inevitable impact. After what seemed like a few ambiguously measured moments I realized the vehicle wasn't moving. Miss Nomer glared at me.

"Please?" I added, and we were off.


There's actually a Chapter Three, and I can prove it.

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Editorial: On Writing Song Parody (With Special Thanks to Ricky Martin)

Parody is often misunderstood as a form of writing. It's critics tend to treat it as nothing more than 'changing somebody else's work' for the presumable intention of stealing their thunder. While I can't deny that's technically correct, parody has a much broader spectrum of quality.

Case in point, you must be familiar with this little virus:

Jingle bells
Batman smells
Robin laid an egg
The Batmobile
Lost a wheel
And the Joker got away

This of course an unquestionable parody, albeit a stupid one. 'Egg' and 'away' don't rhyme, and the jump from the opening Christmas carol line to the content about Batman has no internal logic. It's a safe bet that the originator of this recess yard rhyme made it up on the spot and presented the first draft as-is to the first elementary school audience, where it lived on in infamy.

Now in terms of lowbrow humor, this parody is far from the lowest brow, but it's clearly meant for simple minds. Unfortunately, a lot of people think ALL parody caters to this mentality. I want to try to challenge that notion some.

I've written several parodies that I'm quite proud of. If you're interested, check out my ode to the board game Monopoly set to Uncle Cracker's "Follow Me". Or if you're a bit of a literature snob, try my parody of William Blake's The Tyger. Better yet, here's parody in it's most simplistic form, a renaming the elements of the periodic table a la Zork.

I'm going to pretend you're reading this blog because you have an interest in writing a Weird Al-esc parody yourself, and want it to be good (either that, or you're my wife and thus obligated to keep dishing out those sweet, encouraging words of 'no seriously, honey, your blog really is interesting').

So let's talk about what makes a parody 'good' as opposed to the sloppy Batman example above. First off, when I say 'good' I don't mean funny. Funny is almost always associated with parody, but funny is also entirely at the mercy of the audience. If I tell you my sinuses are killing me, for some strange sadistic reason you might find that incredibly funny. I sure as hell don't. It isn't funny to me. But it may be funny to you. So funny isn't the best measurement for a parody.

A better one is the parody's effectiveness. How well does the parody work? If you're taking the time to devise a parody, it means you've got something to say. It may be as simple as complaining about socks, but that's what you feel like writing lyrics about. Now socks may not merit writing a song from scratch, but if you're going to use a pre-existing template (ideally a familiar one to a general audience) then you have an outlet you didn't have before.

At work, I'm in charge of the fiction department's shelf-reading list (don't ask, just accept it). Part of the task is assigning sections to my co-workers, and then motivating them to actually do it. I find my best tool is my sense of sarcasm that naturally shows up in my writing. Lately I've been giving over-the-top pep talks as if shelf-reading is an Olympic event and they're competitors. My most recent e-mail ended with this:

Best of luck team!

Now let's sing the Fiction National Anthem:

Should holds on paging lists be sought
And tomes, a mended spine
We circulate the recent plot
And plug the story line

Now I'm going to be very disappointed if I have to point out that this is a parody of Auld Lang Syne. But let's discuss the quality of this parody and determine what makes it good, not great, but good (enough). Lyrically, it's not laugh out loud funny. Maaaaybe amusing at best. I'm fully aware that plot and story line are the same thing. But the fundamentals for good parody are there.

1. It rhymes where it HAS to (i.e. at the ends of lines)
2. It accurately matches the rhythm of its source template
3. It has an internal logic

The first two are obvious. The third one is equally important and often overlooked amongst people who 'think' parody writing is easy. You may not be familiar with Auld Lang Syne, and you may not be familiar with paging lists or the word 'circulate' as it pertains to libraries but you get the general sense that this is written for an audience who deals with books from a behind-the-counter perspective. There are no lines that seem out of place.

That's the basic foundation, but let's explore a little deeper. If you happen to know Auld Lang Syne you can recognize that the ending rhymes for lines 1,3 and 2,4 don't just rhyme with each other, but also from the corresponding lines in the source template. The original song starts with the word 'should' as is mirrored by the parody. There's even a couple of intentionally similar vowel sounds in the middle of phrases.

"Should OLD acQUAINTance be forGOT"
"Should HOLDS on PAGing lists be SOUGHT"

What does that tell you, aside from I really have too much free time at work? It means that there was a certain amount of effort that went into these four lines. Not a massive amount of effort, but clearly I batted the lines around a few times in my head before saying "Okay, that works". And there is what I perceive to be the illusive fourth rule that separates a Weird Al parody from a lot of the quickie stuff you find on Youtube.

4. It indicates genuine effort

That Uncle Cracker parody from earlier? I started kicking that idea around years ago. I'd mull it over some, then set it down, come back later and even write some of the lines down, then push it away again. Then one day I decided I was going to finish the damn thing and post it in my blog. It took me a few hours one night and a few more the next day, pulling up information on Monopoly and poring through rhymezone.com to beat it into a working draft. A few tweaks here and there, and now it's finished. And I'm quite proud of it.

So with that dissertation over, here is another parody that I started working on about a decade ago and only just finished. This is Ricky Martin's Livin La Vida Loca with embellishments from a former Disney cast member who spent five years trying to claw his way out of the parades department and back into his warm, cozy bid line at the previously named Disney/MGM Studios. I HATED SpectroMagic (the night parade). I hated driving it. I hated spotting the floats. I hated dressing other cast members for it. But more than anything, I hated getting thrown into a Spectroman costume and strapped onto the back of the Logo float to pretend I was trained in the armography.

Suffering is pure arsenal for comedy.

Giving Me Grief on Logo
She needs-a quick solution
A pink shirt and a tower crane
I'm not in-to electrocution
Pray to God that it doesn't rain

(break)

It's too bad-I lack the vision
Could cure-my fear of heights
Can't see-the neat collision
With everything in lights.

'Cause I'm a mobilized hibachi
There's a brace in my regime
I pass for Liberace*
Dressed as the psychopath from Scream
And my head just filled with steam

Come on!

Ostrich Escort's downed and music maker's a no-go
A pawn is getting crowned. They need me to do back logo
I change at Lost and Found to a battery pack and a gobo**
(and bid) Farewell to the ground. They need me to do back logo
They'll teach*** me to do back logo
Impeach me to do back logo

(instrumental break)

Broke down at the street confection
Did the loop- a dozen ways
I struck a chord and I lost connection
I may have set-the float ablaze

Well there's a kid my purple wig offends
Who's sobbing to his dad
And all at once I'm pulling ligaments
I never knew I had
Should have stuck with Hook & Ladd

Oh no!

Draped in silhouette, I'm Porky from I Go Pogo
Or "Look, it's Jango Fett! He's up in the seat on logo!"
My clothes are drenched in sweat, and I'm feeling the burden of Frodo
(it'd be) grounds to down a set but not when you're in back logo
You're shot when you're in back logo
I forgot why I hate back logo

(instrumental break revisited)

Meadow Lane was close but no cigar
Got passed by cavalcade
And I didn't sign my ETR
Not even getting paid
Why'd I learn this damn parade?
Come on!

(Will we) Ever get off route? Where in the hell did the tow go?
To push or pull us out, or ram in the back of logo
And staging's not about. Who said I was scheduled Geppetto?
I'll slap that casting scout for giving me grief on logo

Topside concert band, where the discipline action's a BOGO;
A two point reprimand for my scathing critique of logo
My face is in my hand. Try to block out the flashing photo
I'll never understand why I'm getting my freak on logo
And I'm having a streak of logo
When I'm scheduled a week of logo
And I'm gonna try to get an RDO

Come on!

I'm locking my knees on logo
With Mickey on the street no one SEES back logo
I'm gonna catch a logo disease


*If you're familiar with the original song, you'll notice I chose to include internal rhymes here where they didn't exist before. See? Effort.
**Do you know how many usable words rhyme with 'logo'? Not many. As a compromise, I allowed myself a cheat on the third line of every chorus, which is the weakest in a four line passage. If you're going to fudge, that's where to do it.
***'Need' and 'teach' make another rhyme cheat, but since this is an internal rhyme it's permissible. The trick here is figuring out the balance between preserving the mathematical integrity of the lyrics and maintaining the strength of content.

Monday, April 4, 2016

Chasing the Rabbit: Chapter Three -An Infernal Flame

Click here for the Table of Contents.

“You know, I really appreciate you coming along with me,” the man called Kronk continued his incessant muttering. Bagheera rolled his eyes even though it was lost on Kronk, who was several paces behind the panther. “Safety in numbers. Anyone who’s not embezzling will tell you that.”

“Whether you want them to or not,” Bagheera grumbled.

“Of course we did just leave Jasmine by herself. But, hunters and gatherers right?”

Bagheera did his best to ignore the man who was undoubtedly smiling at him. He’d hoped the lack of response would convey his disinterest in the conversation, but Kronk was determined to continue.

“Actually now that I think about it, we’re the ones doing the gathering. You think any of these plants are edible?”

“Help yourself,” Bagheera suggested, taking more of an interest in the thickness of the nearest tree branches.

Kronk cleared his throat. “Snarl snarlen snarly snarl snarl.”

It took Bagheera a moment to realize this man was expecting a reaction from him. He looked back to see if Kronk was going mad prematurely.

“Did I say something?” he grinned like an infant.

“You said something, yes.”

Kronk hopped in place giddily. “What did I say? I never learned to speak panther but I’ve got a grasp on basic fundamentals. I was hoping they’d transfer over. So tell me how’d I do?”

Without a word, Bagheera slipped up a tree trunk and stretched out on one of the branches.

“Okay…” said Kronk. “Mental note. That may have been offensive. No hard feelings, buddy?”

“Remind me when I became your ‘buddy’,” Bagheera sneered.

“Aw, come on, basic survival etiquette. We gotta stick together.”

"We don't have to stick together. We're not pack wolves. And you don't need etiquette to survive the jungle, you just need to adapt." The panther closed his eyes. "I saw some yellow fruit in the direction of the sun. It should be safe for humans."

"You're just going to stay up there?"

Bagheera sighed. "Yes. Why not?"

"Well, it's just..." Kronk shifted uncomfortably. "Jasmine is a beautiful princess, and we only found the one cave. I thought it might be less awkward if we all camped out there, you know?"

Bagheera reluctantly raised his head again. "I have no idea what you're babbling about, but it's going to be dark soon."

"Yeah, you've got a point. Well, if you change your mind-"

"I've got your scent."

Kronk stood in silence for a moment, not sure if that was a dismissal or not. "Were you always a panther?"

Bagheera gave him a look. It was a look Kronk had seen many times before, most recently from Yzma (over and over), but receiving it from a panther just seemed...judgmental.

"Kronk out." He gave Bagheera a respectful scout salute and turned to walk away. "Oh," he called over his shoulder, "While you're up there, best keep an eye out for that guy with the spear!"

Kronk was out of sight before those last words seeped in. Bagheera's senses were suddenly alerted.

"What guy with the spear?"



Jasmine tried again to get a fire started by rubbing two sticks together. She'd seen this done at least a dozen times but she wasn't having any luck. The sun would be setting in an hour, give or take. Fortunately the group had found a surprisingly hospitable large rock with a couple of natural caverns and an outcropping that towered over the jungle like a balcony. Animals had clearly lived there at one point, but a quick survey had suggested the rock was now abandoned.

The smaller of the two caves seemed to have been previously occupied by someone with a penchant for cave drawings, although they'd faded over time. It was warm, but a tight fit for two people and a panther. The larger cave had enough room to get lost in, but the temperature was freezing. Huge icicles hung from the ceiling, and Jasmine was disinclined to explore it alone for fear of dislodging one of the sharp frozen points, much less risk building a fire inside.

"Son of a jackal!" she snapped as the piece of wood slipped from her fingers. She checked her skin for splinters, trying to keep her mind from thinking about the possibility that she and Kronk might freeze overnight.

She tried again. Until this point, building a fire herself had been an issue of pride. But as the question of how cold the nights must get to create icicles that large kept circling around in her head, this unobtainable flame was beginning to feel progressively more urgent.

"Think, Jasmine", she told herself, "this isn't working". Three people (well, two and one cat) all with no recollections of how they got there. Nothing particularly in common from what she could tell. Probably some sort of magic at work, though she was beginning to doubt it was specifically targeting her. The big question was whether or not this was all an accident or a prearranged intention.

"Outside the basket then." Jasmine stared into the large cavern. Maybe those icicles were out of place for a reason. Ice. Fire. Fire. Ice. In all likelihood she was reaching for a meaning where there wasn't one but she kept at it, determined to spark something-

"Spark," she whispered aloud. The ice. And the sun rays. Jasmine stepped carefully into the cold cave and used a branch to strike at the first icicle within her reach. She got a large enough piece broken off and carried it back to her makeshift furnace. She held it in the sunlight, finding an angle that bent the beam into a single point, and pointed it at the dry leaves.

For a while nothing happened. She had to keep blowing on each hand to keep her fingers from going numb. But several minutes later a small trail of smoke began to trickle from the brush. "Come on," she coaxed it. The sun was drifting nearer the horizon to where it would no longer be of use. Jasmine spotted a tiny glow underneath the smoke, but it wasn't catching. She blew softly against the glow, which pulsed reluctantly. Failing that, she went back to shining the beam at the same spot.

The smoke was growing but the sun was on its way out. This was going to be close.

At least until the roar from inside the cave. A loud roar.

Jasmine dropped what was left of the piece of ice which shattered on the rock below her. The ember she'd worked so hard for died, but she forgot about it instantly. Something in that cave had woken up and it was making its presence known.

Despite her impulse to dive off the outcropping, Jasmine kept her wits about her. The creature was roaring, but didn't seem to be coming to the mouth of the cave. She picked up the same branch she'd used to break off the icicle and held it like a quarterstaff, sidestepping as silently as possible past the entrance.

There was a crash from one or more icicles hitting the floor and some kind of fast breathing between roars. Jasmine was past the cave mouth now and almost ran for it, but she was struck with the thought that someone else might be in there. Perhaps with no memory of how they got there, like her.

She poked her head back into the entrance and saw nothing in the huge cavern that she hadn't seen before. The growling was coming from one of the tunnels that bent away from the main area. Another crash. And then she saw it. Two shadows stretching into one of the tunnels that kept switching places.

In spite of her sense of self preservation, Jasmine charged into the tunnel. It opened into a smaller cave where the floor was partially iced over. A young woman with blondish hair had taken refuge behind four pillars of ice, forming a barricade between her and the hairy white creature with powerful arms that was trying to dig her out. It swiped its massive claws at the pillars, shattering two of them in one stroke.

"Hey!" Jasmine shouted, uncertain as to whether either one of them knew what the word indicated. The large creature with the white hair turned its blue ape-like face in her direction and bared its teeth in a terrible growl. She didn't speak its language, but she was sure that it meant something more permanent than 'hey'.

The creature lunged toward Jasmine. She ran at the creature. At the last possible moment, she used the branch as a crude pole to vault over the beast. Its claws split the branch in half, and Jasmine landed on the icy section of the floor, sliding to the cave wall.

She turned to the woman behind the pillars. "I'll get you out of here but you have to trust me," she told her.  "Do you understand?" The woman's eyes were wide in shock but she managed a nod.

Jasmine's feet slid too much for her to stand up before the creature was on her again. Back-up plan, she thought, scooping up a handful of frost shards and stones. The beast reached down to grab her by the waist. Jasmine stuffed her pseudo-snowball in its open mouth, prompting it to momentarily lose interest in her in favor of spitting out the pebbles.

The creature flailed its arms about, and Jasmine deliberately absorbed an impact to send her sledding in the direction of the woman behind the pillars. From where she was seconds prior, it sounded as though the beast had half-swallowed a few of the rocks and was trying to cough them up.

"Come out in front," Jasmine told the woman as she carefully stood up on the ice. She used the gem in the middle of her tiara to scratch several deep cuts into the two remaining pillars, weakening them at eye level. She did a quick calculation of the trajectory to the tunnel leading out and positioned the other woman's back to it. "On my command, we push off each other."

The beast had recovered and was lumbering towards them. "No, switch," the woman said. Jasmine didn't have time to process how the woman got on the opposite side of her without slipping, but it wasn't important at the moment.

"Push!"

Jasmine slid toward the tunnel, falling backwards when her feet hit the section without the ice. The other woman skated back to the opposite wall. And the beast smashed headfirst into the ice pillars, causing a huge pile of frozen crystals to fall on top of it.

The other woman had somehow made it all the way to where Jasmine was before she'd even gotten to her feet again. An even angrier roar pushed them through the tunnel by sheer volume. "It's still coming!" the woman said.

They ran and didn't stop. Back in the main cavern an icicle broke from the ceiling and shattered into the floor in front of Jasmine. She lept over it and kept scrambling. Two more crashes close by. "I'm right behind you!" her rescue/er assured her. Jasmine sprinted towards the dying sunlight, just hoping to not get impaled by a falling object. Another loud crash, possibly several at the same time. Jasmine reached the cave entrance and dove through it, followed by he echo of the creature's roar.

Then the loudest longest series of smashing and crashing ice she'd ever heard drowned out all sounds from anything else. When it was finished, the roaring continued but significantly more muffled now. Jasmine looked back at the cave entrance which was now obstructed with piles of ice. The beast's deformed image clawed at the barrier from the inside.

The other woman knelt down next to her, looking completely detached from the whole experience. "Are you all right?"

"I think so," Jasmine struggled to control her breath.

"Did you see that?"

Jasmine swallowed hard. "What is that thing?"

The woman thought for a moment. "I believe it's called a yeti."

The creature gave up on the ice and disappeared back into the cave. Jasmine regained her composure and dusted herself off. She put out her hand. "My name is Jasmine, princess of Agrabah, daughter of the sultan."

The woman glanced at Jasmine's hand and slowly met it with her own. "Elsa."

"Elsa," Jasmine repeated. "A pleasure. So how long were you in that cave?"

Elsa tried to remember to no avail, just as Jasmine had predicted.

"I think we both have questions-" Jasmine was cut off by the familiar sound of the yeti's roar, now coming from the top of the rock high above the two women. "Oh that's not fair!"

"So questions later then?" Elsa asked half-rhetorically.

"Yes. We're going to need a different shelter."

Continued in Chapter Four.
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