Thursday, October 24, 2019

Welcome to Purgastory


The little boy materialized in front of the saloon with a slight popping noise. His jeans and faded red T-shirt were torn and dirty, a smear of blood ran down from his nose and covered his upper lip, his hands were up in front of him in a pair of clumsy fists, and his face was contorted into a grimace somewhere between defiance, elation, and terror. He was ten, but frequently mistaken for eight or even younger.
His expression faded into pure confusion as he took in his surroundings. He stood next to a crossroads where at least half a dozen dusty dirt roads met in a snarl of confusion before heading in all different directions. A handful of rough wooden signposts attempted to impose order on the chaos, but between the arrows that rarely pointed in the direction of anything remotely resembling a road and the paint that was in most cases faded to near invisibility, they largely failed. The terrain was straight out of a Western: endless rolling plains covered in scrub brush, with an occasional tumbleweed blowing by.
The only building to be seen was the saloon behind him, also straight out of a Western. A pair of swinging wooden doors, flanked by windows currently covered by rough-hewn shutters, marked the entrance to a low building made of rough wooden planks. Out front, a set of low steps led to a bare, dusty porch. Flickering orange light shone out around the doors and through the cracks in the shutters. Above the door, someone had painted the word “PERDITION” in incongruously cheery, bright yellow paint.
For what felt like several minutes, the boy could do nothing but blink at this spectacle. Finally, gathering his wits, he picked up a bright-green backpack adorned with the face of the Hulk and trudged up the steps.
As he approached, the noise of conversation and laughter from the interior grew louder, then stopped abruptly the moment he hesitantly pushed one door open just wide enough for him to slip through. A bewildering variety of faces and costumes confronted him, from pistol-toting cowboys to elegant ladies in ballgowns to haughty-looking elves to exotic, many-limbed aliens. He froze, unable to move, his heart pounding as if to beat its way out of his chest.
A deep feminine voice broke the silence, announcing, “A newcomer! This round’s on the house!”
Amidst a sudden chorus of cheers, roars, and less identifiable noises, everyone turned back to what they had been doing, and the boy’s heartbeat slowed slightly. A moment later, the same voice drawled, “I’m Lucy, and this is my bar. And who might you be?”
He turned to see a reassuringly human woman staring down at him, arms crossed. Her bare arms and leather vest alike were covered with a network of old scars, testifying to years of experience with the long sword with the plain, leather-wrapped hilt that she wore slung at her side. Her medium-length auburn hair was pulled back in a ponytail, revealing an aristocratic face with high-arching brows and cheekbones that would have looked quite elegant if it weren’t for the nose that had obviously been broken repeatedly.
“I-I-I’m Willy,” the little boy finally managed to stammer. “Wh-where am I?”
“Perdition, of course. Didn’t you see the sign?” She tilted her head in the direction of the doors. “C’mon, let me grab you a drink, and I’ll give you the full speech.”
She disappeared behind the bar for a moment, coming up with a glass of amber liquid before striding across the room, Willy stumbling along in her wake. In a quiet back corner he hadn’t noticed before among the profusion of tables, as varied and bizarre as the patrons, was a child-sized table made of a large tree stump, surrounded by low stools. Lucy deposited the glass in front of one such stool before taking a seat on the floor on the opposite side of the table.
Willy half-fell onto the indicated stool, dropping his backpack carelessly on the floor next to him. He took a cautious sniff of the liquid in the glass, then downed half of it at once when it proved to be nothing more alarming than apple juice.
Lucy began briskly, “To answer the question you’d intended to ask, this is the world of Purgastory. Everyone here is a character from one story or another who refused to do what their author wanted and has been exiled to reconsider and try to earn their way back. Now there’s a bunch of terms people around here will use, so pay attention, because I’m only going to explain them once.
“First is your straw scene—as in the one that broke the camel’s back. That’s the scene where your misbehavior finally exasperated your author enough to exile you. By the looks of you, I’m guessing your straw scene was a fight of some sort?”
Willy nodded. “Moe was being a bully again. He keeps making fun of my name, and I keep asking him to stop, but he—”
Lucy held up a hand to stem the growing tirade. “So what were you supposed to do? You felt like there was a little voice in you telling you to do something, right?”
“Yeah, it…” He reddened, looking down at his hands, which were twisting nervously in his lap. “It wanted me to…to give up, let Moe beat me up. There was this…this older kid always hanging around the edges, and the voice told me to just…wait for him to save me?” He straightened, lifting his chin defiantly. “But I’m no coward! I fought him, and I got in a few good licks too, before—” He deflated again. “Before I ended up here.”
Lucy nodded in satisfaction. “Yeah, that would do it, alright. Sounds like you were an extra, whose only purpose was for the protagonist to rescue you, to advance the plot who knows how. Maybe you’d crop up in a few more scenes, maybe you’d just be a one-scene wonder, maybe…”
Willy had been slumping deeper with every word she said, and his nose was now in danger of bumping into his glass. “So I’m a nobody.”
“Yup, that’s about the size of it.” Despite her blunt words, her tone was gentle. Noting the boy’s downcast expression, she quickly moved on. “Now me, I was an innkeeper, and happy with it—the cheerful atmosphere, the constant flow of new people, the stories they told—until one day some weirdo came in and tried to tell me all this nonsense about how I was a long-lost descendant of some royal, and it was my fate to go on a great quest to blah blah blah. I don’t know any more details; it was about then that I shot him.”
Willy gasped. “You just shot him?!”
“What can I say, I was feeling cantankerous that day. Anyhow, that was my straw scene. Now, what else…?” She paused for a moment. “Oh yes! Echoes. You remember I said we have the chance to earn our way back to our own stories? Well, echoes are how we do it. Every so often, we get a chance to relive our straw scene, but do it right this time—or at least the author’s definition of ‘right’.” She snorted. “How it works is, your shadows—mindless images of the other people who were involved in your scene—appear out of nowhere and act out their roles again exactly the way they did in the first place, and if your performance this time around pleases your author, you’ll be taken back into the story to continue as if nothing had happened. Or so we assume; none of us has ever actually been taken back and returned.”
Willy had been gazing at her intently, drinking in every word. Suddenly he drew back in alarm. “That means I’ll have to fight Moe again, doesn’t it?”
“Over and over, I’m afraid. Unless you want to give in and just let him beat you up.”
The panic in his eyes faded, to be replaced by determination. “Never.”
Lucy gave him an approving nod. “The good thing is, echoes come up less and less frequently over time. Eventually, the author will give up on you entirely, and you’ll stop getting them at all. You just have to hang on for a few decades until then, and you’ll be fine.”
His determination was starting to fade into panic again. “But—”
“Tell you what. There’s some folks here who might be able to help. C’mon, I’ll introduce you to them.”
Once again, Willy was swept up in her wake as she strode through the bar, stopping occasionally to introduce him to some of her regulars.
A tall, dark, handsome man with roguish good looks and an easygoing smile: “This is Jack. He was a romantic lead until he found himself more interested in his rival than in the girl they were both supposed to be pursuing.”
Jack winked, giving the pair of them—well, mostly Lucy—a devastating grin.
“He actually enjoys his echoes, unlike most people.”
Jack added, “Absolutely! When I see those baby-blue eyes of his—”
“Yes, thank you, Jack.” Lucy cut him off, glancing pointedly at the young boy accompanying her, and moved on to a blonde dressed in a gauzy, lacy white confection, whose every feature shone with ethereal beauty.
“This is Lynette. She’s an Ophelia-type character who decided it was silly to drown herself over a boy. Her shadow is somewhat unusual; it takes the form of a lake that spontaneously appears around her.”
Lynette beamed cheerfully and pulled out an odd contraption that was slung on a strap across her back. It looked somewhat like a gas mask without the goggles, a fearsome leather-and-metal construction that, when she strapped it across her mouth, covered the entire lower half of her face and emitted ominous wheezes and gurgles with every breath.
“Shphtwh glrm—” At Willy’s look of incomprehension, she pulled the mask off and tried again. “A mad scientist made this for me! It lets me breathe underwater. Isn’t it great?”
Her enthusiasm was infectious, and Willy found himself smiling with her.
Lucy nodded to the girl sitting next to her. “Howdy, Rose. Have you decided what you’d like to drink yet?”
The teenager, wearing a plain gray sweatshirt and jeans, peeked up timidly through her eyelashes. “N-no, I…”
“Are you going to decide anytime soon, or will you be leaving instead?” A spark of mischief shone in Lucy’s eyes.
Rose’s gaze darted from side to side, like a cornered mouse looking for an escape. “I-I-I…”
“It’s all right, dear.” Lynette stroked her arm reassuringly while glaring at Lucy. “She’s just teasing you. Take as long as you’d like.”
Lucy finally took pity on Willy, who’d been watching their exchange with wide eyes. “Rose here is crippled by indecision. As you may have noticed. Her story arc in her original story was intended to make her more decisive, but it failed. In her straw scene, she was supposed to finally make an important decision, but she still hesitated until it was too late.”
“And now the poor thing can’t even decide if she wants to stay here in Purgastory or go back.” Lynette gave her a friendly smile. “It’s okay. You know we’re all here for you.” In response to Lucy’s not-quite-hidden snort of derision, she added, “At least, most of us are.”
The innkeeper opened her mouth, then thought better of saying anything and simply shook her head and moved on.
They stopped at another small table, where a boy not much older than Willy greeted them with a cocky grin. He was dressed in ragged, cast-off bits of gentlemen’s clothing, complete with an old-fashioned stovepipe hat.
“Hey, newcomer. I’m Charlie. My author made me a blatant ripoff of Dickens’ Artful Dodger.”
“So what’s your…” Willy began hesitantly.
“I can’t stand stealing. My ma raised me right, I’ll have you know!”
His expression was so indignant that Willy burst out laughing.
“So what can I do you for?”
Lucy stepped in. “His echo is a fight.” She nodded at his battered clothing. “I was thinking you might be able to teach him something about hand-to-hand combat, so he can handle it a bit better next time.”
“Right you are, ma’am! Stick with me, and I’ll teach you everything you need to know.” He stuck out his hand with a reassuringly confident smile.
Willy gripped it without hesitation and shook it firmly. In that moment, surrounded by new friends, he made his decision: he would never go back.