Since I've given some critiques on some other people's works in the Creative Projects forums, it seems only fair and right that I post some of my stuff to prove that I'm not (totally) talking out of my ass.
This is the first ~900 words of intro to what (for me) is a longer project - currently 7,000 words and going strong! - as most of my stuff is best defined as micro-fiction.
Max stood on the top of a verdant hill, liberally studded with wildflowers and bushes. Looking down the slope, Max could see the lush green grass yellow, then brown with decay by the bottom of the hill. The bottom of the valley was nothing but torn earth, with the jagged sun-bleached hulks of dead trees reaching up from the earth like the hands of a giant skeleton. Most of the bark had been torn from the trees, and deep claw marks ten feet long marked the naked wood. Broken bones lay scattered in throughout the valley; most animal, but at least one toothless human skull glared at Max from where it lay, half buried in the mud.
The villagers from the nearby town – those who remained, at any rate – said that once the entire valley had been teaming with game, as well as being a rich source of nuts, herbs and spices. All that had changed less than a year ago when the beast had arrived and made its home in the system of caves that tunneled below the valley. Within weeks, all the plants had begun to wither and die. Peasants who entered the valley started not to return. Then, just a couple of months ago, villagers started disappearing. Overnight, doors were smashed and homes invaded. The men and children were killed, but the women simply vanished. Most took this as a sign that it was a good time to move on, but a few – mostly the brave, the stubborn and the stupid – remained.
Max wouldn’t have known (or cared) about any of this, except that several nights ago the daughter of a minor lordling had gone missing, a fair maiden whose beauty was talked about throughout the land, and whose father had put up a generous stake of gold for her return. Max had been in the tavern, mug of beer in his hand, listening to a mistral massacre a song on his small harp when the crier had passed by the town, telling the tale of the missing girl and the horrible beast.
Neither the crier nor the villagers had been able to describe the beast – apparently anyone who had seen it died with the knowledge. Judging by the trees, it was large and apparently had a very nasty set of claws.
Max slid his sword out of its sheath, holding it in his right hand – its grip was well-worn leather, but the blade was sharp and straight. He lightly hit the flat of the sword against his chest, and was rewarded with a soft ‘clink’ as the sword bounced off the thousands of close-set rings that made up the protective mail under his leather jacket. With his left hand Max made a motion as if he were holding a ball, perhaps the size of a large grapefruit, his fingers spread and curling inward. He focused his mind just so and suddenly a soft blue glow spread over the grass around him, despite the shining sun overhead. Floating just off his palm, not quite touching his fingers, a small orb of energy hovered, bobbing slightly with the movement of Max’s hand.
Stepping carefully, Max descended down the hill. Immediately on reaching the floor of the valley, Max was hit with a blast of noxious fumes, as if a city’s worth of midden piles, chamber pots and outhouses were located just next to him. The stench was eye-watering, and for a moment Max wavered and nearly decided that maybe the girl and the gold weren’t worth it. Summoning his courage, he put on a stoic face and focused on putting one foot in front of the other, heading to where the locals had said the entrance to the cave system lay.
The ground grew more damp as he approached, mud (or at least, Max valiantly hoped that it was mud) clung to his boots with each step. The horrible miasma that seemed to cling to everything down in the valley managed, somehow, to grow even more noxious. If Max had ever wondered what had killed all the plants in the valley, any doubts had now been eliminated.
The entrance to the cave was just a hole in a particularly sheer part of the hill. It had originally stood perhaps four feet tall, but giant gouge marks had ripped out great swaths of earth, and could now be easily entered by Max without ducking. Max increased his estimate for the size of the beast upwards a few notches, not particularly enjoying the resulting image in his head. The interior of the cave, as seen by the light from the globe in his hand, was dark and looming – black slime or mold had covered every surface. Small (and sometimes large) fragments of the stuff fell from the ceiling to land with a squelching noise that caused Max’s stomach to heave, and he only just barely kept from retching. The fumes here were almost a physical force, seeming to cling to him and burrow under his flesh.
Summoning his courage once again, Max stepped into the opening of the cave and…
“Max! This is the third time I’m calling you, and it’s going to be the last! If you don’t get up now you are going to be late for school, and if that happens, you are in very big trouble!” The voice of his mother boomed up the stairs.