Under A Mound Of Earth (Part 2)

He backed into the wall again, staring at the Lady Sinukuan, but as the sight of her holding the box open was even more terrifying than what he saw inside the box, he kept his eyes riveted on the ceiling above him. He screamed again, but it died away in his throat and came out as a choked, rasping rattle.

The ring indeed was there, exactly as he had remembered it—but it was on the ring finger of a dismembered hand. The hand had been severed at the wrist, and worms wriggled out of the little rotting flesh it still had. The stench that came from it assailed his nostrils, and he collapsed to the floor, gagging.

“What—what sort of evil joke is this, my Lady?” he said wildly, when he could finally speak again. “It’s not even funny, it’s—it’s—” He swallowed, still shivering. “Whose hand is this?”

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Under A Mound Of Earth (Part 1)

There was a knock on the door, and when Jose opened it he found himself face to face with the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. She was surrounded by birds of all colors and sizes, all looking up at her with love. She was saying something to him, but he could only stare at her in incomprehension, wondering what in the world he had done for the heavens to bestow such a favor on him.

“You’re . . . ,” he began, but the words stuck in his throat. “You’re. Um. You’re—”

“Maria Sinukuan.” She smiled at him and went on. “Again, I am really sorry to intrude on you, Jose.”

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Ang Mahiwagang Kahong Pamasko

Sa umaga ng Pasko sa taong 2007, isang batang lalaki ang nakaupong mag-isa sa isang kanto ng sangandaan. Pinagtagpi-tagping basahan lang ang kanyang suot at marungis siya. Ang isa sa kanyang mga binti ay buto’t balat, pilay. Isang munting saklay ang nasa sahig malapit sa kanya, sa abot-kamay.

Walang kagalaw-galaw ang bata, nakatungo hanggang abot na ng kanyang baba ang kanyang dibdib, nakalaylay ang kamay sa may tagiliran, bukas ang palad – ang tanging bahagi niyang buhay, may hinihingi.

Masyadong maaga para may dumaan at maglaglag ng barya sa nakaumang niyang kamay. Wala pa ang araw at mahirap makita ang bata sa malamlam na liwanag ng kumukuti-kutitap na mga palamuting pamasko. Ang dumaraan lang ay ang paminsan-minsang jeepney o tricycle.

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The Librarian

She did not use to eat paper all the time. At eleven, she passed for a normal kid—shy/pallid/awkward like all the others. By nineteen, she had blossomed into a fresh-faced girl with too few secrets and too many dimples. Five years after, she found herself collections assistant at the National Library, and nine years later, head librarian. She did not even begin the habit then but only several months later. She had been looking for a particular novel to put on hold—Fitzgerald’s Great Gatsby—when she came across a stack of unsorted books on the PS section’s bottom shelf. She had paused to pick it up and carry it back with her when a stray page from Gatsby flew from between its covers. Balancing the stack on her knees, she grabbed it and held it between her lips, leaving both hands free to struggle with the books. Back at her desk, she intended to return the wayward page to its proper place, but by then it had already vanished.

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