Fortnightly Writing Competition: FEAST WITH THE BEAST! Results

Started by Baron, Sat 24/12/2022 03:46:21

Previous topic - Next topic

Baron

Now is the traditional period of holidays in western society, where people join with friends and family to eat a symbolic meal together.  And yet...  And yet those meals usually consist of both portions and personalities that are too large to rub together amicably for long.  Inevitably there is a monster lurking beneath the patina of toupees and makeup that makes other guests cringe.  But what if that person finally gets what's coming to them?  This is the plot set-up for....

Feast with the Beast


Your story is to revolve around a feast, be it holiday related or not.  At least one character must be jarringly, nay obnoxiously, nay incorrigibly rude or despicable, and in the end they must get their comeuppance at the hands of one of the victims around the table.  This might take the form of a gruesome murder or a farcical bit of slapstick, but it is intended to be a mystery who has done the deed.  Authors are encouraged to submit the solution to their story in hide tags at the end of their story. 

The deadline for submissions is tentatively slated for the end of the day Hawaii time on Saturday January 7, 2023.

Like the well-crafted stories I expect to read in two weeks' time, the voting criteria shall currently remain a mystery. ;)

Good luck to all participants!

Mandle


Baron

A mystery!  Will Mandle make it or not?  Only his fellow diners know for sure....  :=

Baron

Yeah, yeah, temper your enthusiasm everybody!  You've still got 2 days left.  ;)

Sinitrena

I had a murder mystery planned. I did not have the time to write a murder mystery. (Especially when I managed to confuse myself while planning it out.)

So, this is a last minute entry, just to get a story in:


Too Bad

Now it was finally time for the great feast. Three days and nights they had spent cooking and creating culinary spectacles. The table was set with golden plates and bowls, with crystal glasses and arrangements of ice and light.

Slowly, the guests started to arrive, one after the other, robed in elaborate dresses and adorned with glinting jewellery. They chittered and chattered amongst themselves or with the lady of the house when servants started to bring out the plates.

Hardly paying attention to the words of the adults, the daughter of the house nuzzled the dragon under the table with her pointed shoes. From time to time, she slipped a piece of meat to her pet and the animal purred contentedly.

The dragon licked its snout whenever a new bite reached its hiding spot, but when the little girl wasn't paying attention to the pet or when her shoes touched the wounds on its wings, the purring easily turned into a hiss.

Unlike the girl, the dragon did listen to the conversation at the table.

"It is so easy!" the father said and leaned back in his chair, his fat belly pressing against the table edge. "Take an egg before it hatches, and these beasts love the first thing they see when they do. I sold seven of this hunt already, and just two paid for this house!"

The dragon could not see the self-satisfied smirk on the father's lips, nor the all-encompassing gesture of his arms, but why would it need to, when the words were so clear?

Slowly, with every word of the father, the dragon edged closer towards the feet of the man.

"My little princess here," he petted his daughter's head with his beefy hands without any regards to her comfort, "of course loves to play with them, and doesn't want to give them away, but she'll learn. Profit, profit is everything, and dragons, baby dragons are really no work at all." To support his argument, the father pounded on the tabletop with force, so that every glass and plate jumped into the air.

The little dragon startled, banging its head against the tabletop. Knives and forks, bowls and decorations, that had just settled down, shook again, and glasses, that were already swaying, fell.

Wine poured over the tablecloth and into the laps of more than one woman. Most guests backed away from the table as the dragon spread its wings in shock from the sudden pain in its head. Though small, the dragon's wings still had not enough room under the table to fully spread, not without touching legs and skin.

There was a distinct shriek, then a kick and then a second shriek as the dragon drilled its fangs into the enticing flesh right in front of its snout in shock. Luckily for the woman who kicked the dragon, it was not her leg that was so close to the dragon's teeth.

And even more luckily for people supporting justice and the general freedom of dragons, it was the father's leg that happened to be there.

And you wouldn't believe how he could scream. High-pitched and wailing, not fitting to his usual voice at all, it was an eardrum piercing screech.

Not satisfied with one attack on the eardrums of the guests, the dragon joined in the screeching, though it managed to do so without  letting go of the leg.

Guests stumbled and held their hands over their ears, they got caught in the tablecloth or got stuck on tableware. Dishes fell onto the floor, clattering and shattering, shards burst in every direction, and everyone just tried to flee from the sudden chaos.

Everyone, that is, except for the dragon. The dragon still held the leg of his captor between its teeth, but it was not satisfied with just holding it. It remembered how this man had cut into its wings just a day or so before, so that it couldn't fly away, couldn't fly at all. Because a pet was better on the ground, close to its master.

Well, the dragon did not agree and so it shook its head from one side to the other, while the father dragged and screeched.

This was an exhausting activity, and the little dragon started to breath heavily under the strain. Little did it know, that short and heavy breaths through the mouth are exactly how dragons ignite the fire in their throats. And so, of course, fire soon shot from within. The flame caught hold of the piece of cloth still half attached and half ripped off that once belonged to some elegant and embroidered trousers. It licked up the leg, past the snout of the dragon, making it sneeze.

And so, the dragon let go of the man's leg. The father exhaled relieved, before he noticed the flame licking upwards, upwards on his leg and upwards on the tablecloth, which had caught fire as well. For the dragon, the warmth of the flame was comfortable. The same cannot be said about anyone else in the room. Wine-drenched tablecloth and wine-drenched carpets burn easily and general chaos does not help when you need to extinguish a fire. The dragon did not care, the guests were already running, the mother and daughter among them, but the father's wounded leg would not carry his weight. He stumbled and fell, unable to walk.

"Pull me out of here!" he ordered the dragon, fully aware that dragons understood human speech and that they were strong. Usually, they obeyed the first person they saw when they hatched.

Unfortunately for the man, this dragon peeked out through a tiny hole in its egg while the daughter was polishing it. Too bad. The dragon shrugged and walked away, though it would have preferred to fly.



Mandle

I should have time tomorrow to finish mine. But I will be some hours past the deadline if that's acceptable. Too much laying around eating and drinking over Christmas and New Years.

Baron

I'll extend the comp until Mandle submits, just to make a competition out of it.  If anyone else is lurking with a story, now is the time to speak up! 

Mandle

GODDAMIT! I JUST FINISHED MY STORY BUT I'M BLOCKED BY THE F**KING "WHITE LIST" FILTER AGAIN!!! Gonna try and sort it out... AGAIN!!!

Edit: But it lets me post THIS here... why not my story?! Is it because of length?

(Please, no jokes Baron. This is seriously pissing me off!)

IDEA I HAD AFTER WAITING FOR SEVERAL HOURS TO GET UNBLOCKED AGAIN: Hmmm... What if I include the story in THIS POST I wonder... ONE EDIT LATER: Yup, it worked. Seems that I'm only blocked from making further posts but not from editing past ones so here is my story finally:

EDIT: Well, I tested it today and it would let me post the whole story in a new post below, so I'll delete it from this one and leave it there.

Mandle

BETWEEN THE LINES
*****************************************************

The book sat still, sandwiched stationary between two others just like it had sat for the last three hundred and sixty five days. The dust on the compressed top of the roof its pages made between its brown covers had been so undisturbed by movement since the last New Year that the motes stacked in latices like a lacy off-white snowfall. This year the book's title on its spine, written in dull, gold-foil beneath their own comparatively light coating of dust, read, "YO! PARTY'S HERE, BROS AND BRO-ETTES!".

Every year the book reshaped the gold foil letters and wrote something different on its spine, depending on its mood. This year, it felt frisky.

It started to vibrate side to side inside the tight vice its neighbors made. Slightly at first, and then faster and faster as the letters embossed on its spine began to glow and push their golden light out into the gloomy, narrow corridor holding book after book after book that was just one of the many rows of shelves in the basement of the New York Public Library. 

The delicate structures of dust on top of the book shifted on their foundations and started to gently crumble but then the book made a sharp upward and downward "THUMP" on its shelf, and the latices collapsed all in a rush. Their dust puffed out in a cloud into the aisle. The letters on the book's spine glowed ever brighter as it fully woke up and started thumping up and down harder and faster, the intensely strobing light sketching flashing cones of yellow through the cascades of dust it had created.

"This will wake the idiots up," the book thought to itself.

******************************************************************************************************************

Somewhere, way up in the library proper, above its basement, another book began to move. It started to slide out in jerky motions an inch or so at a time until it tipped over its center of balance and fell, with a spin through the air and a fluttering of pages, and then landed shut again on the floor, with a thud that sounded quieter than the echoes that bounced back from around the library's cavernous space moments later.

The book just sat there at first, almost as if waiting for the echoes to return, and then started to vibrate softly on the wooden floor once they had. It slid around a few centimeters each way here and there, like a modern phone on vibe mode would on a hard tabletop, but then suddenly stopped still and something much less modern flipped the book open from within. The book's cover, which read, "Dracula, by Bram Stoker." thudded open onto the floor. Pages flipped themselves from front to back in a flurry and then abruptly stopped.

From out of the black letters on the open pages a grey mist began to pour out. The mist was thin and almost transparent at the roots of the book's angular printing but flowed and coalesced into an onion-like shape above its open pages. At the tip of the onion it stopped, gathering more grey mist from below until no one would have been able to see all the way through it, if anybody had been there to see.

Then the onion of smoke seemed to squat down and pause, and then leap up and narrow into a smokey snake which dashed through the library as other books around it fell off of their own shelves, hit the floor, and snapped open.
 
From all around the vast rows of bookshelves in the library, and, in one case, from a newspaper discarded in a trash can, eight distinct ropes of dusty grey smoke wove their way from the stories that had birthed them, snaking down aisles and through the narrow gaps over the tops of the uninvited books in the shelves, all headed towards the basement.

A few flights of stairs later, and after some splitting and reconverging, the smokey streams homed in on the golden spray of light from the glowing letters on the party book's spine like moths to a flame, and slammed into it, puffing just a little of their essence of classic story characters out to the sides, before even that was drawn back in in a hushed rush when the tails of the trails quietly hissed into their rectangular host.

The golden light of the party book's spine flickered and then dimmed to nothing. All were in attendance and nobody else would be admitted now that the annual festivities had begun.

******************************************************************************************************************

Dracula drew his head up from its slump and looked around at the other guests who had been invited this year.

There was no way for him to know how many years it had been since he had last been here in the grand hall with its towering rich-brown walls of oil paintings and long, candle-lit table.

He had played out his part in his own story countless times since the last time he had been gifted this wonder. Countless in the literal sense of there being no possible way for him to tell how much time had passed in the world outside of his story. And now, with a wry curl of his thin burgundy lips, he reflected, with the wit that Bram Stoker had written into him, that his own book was currently "Count-less" as well. 

The wonder of being free to do such things as blink his own eyes or turn his own head outside of the behest of his book's text was intoxicating. He took the best advantage of this ability to turn his head and eyes to take in the other guests that were fortunate enough this year to be here with him.

The first thing he saw was that he was at the head of the long table this time for the first time ever. The next was that Sherlock Holmes sat in the first seat from him along the left-hand side of the table, and that Jay Gatsby sat across the table from Holmes in the chair to his own immediate right.

He gazed further down the table and, in turn from left to right sides, sat Tarzan across from Ebenezer Scrooge, and then Samwise Gamgee, seated next to Tarzan, who towered above him even while seated, in his muscular, loinclothed glory, and across from Sam was Dante Alighieri. The next pairs down and across the table from each other were Lady Macbeth on the left and Lisbeth Salander on the right.     

At the far end of the table, facing Dracula head-on over its long length, sat a very fat, striped, orange cat named Garfield.

******************************************************************************************************************

The fictional characters all looked around at each other, taking in the guests this year that they would be dining with.

Over the century since the party book had ended up here at the New York Public Library, some of the guests at the table had met each other before, and some hadn't.

Dracula knew Dante, and both knew Scrooge and Tarzan and vice versa.

They had all dined together here in the past in various combinations.

Sherlock had been here a few times before, but never in the company of any of the current guests.

Things got a bit more complicated after that though, as was always the case when dealing with newcomers.

Everyone reacts differently the first time they are ripped out of their stories. The party book doesn't even seem to care at which point in a character's book they are yanked out from.

Even among the returnee guests, glances went back and forth between Dracula and Dante and Scrooge and Tarzan. All off them long-timers.

Tarzan spoke up first and said, "Me Tarzan". Then, pointing a muscular finger, spoke across the table saying, "You bad Scrooge or nice Scrooge?"

Sherlock Holmes puffed out a cloud of smoke from his pipe and said, "I do not think that I'm impressing anyone with my deduction that we are in the presence of the Greystoke's heir's state BEFORE he left the jungle this time."

Tarzan glanced down at his almost naked body, winced in frustration, and struggled and failed to find a comeback before the old man across the table replied.

"I'm me at the end of my story!" said Scrooge, a gleeful smile creasing his elderly face, and rushed on with rosy cheeks glowing, "Merry Christmas to all! Sorry about all the 'Bah, humbugs!' the last time. I was horrible back then." 

There was a "HRRRMPHHH" from further down the table and Dante spoke up and said, "I'm glad all you people who are USED to this are having a good time with it. For me it's even a bit more confusing than Hell."

Tarzan looked over at Dante. It was quite alarming for the others, even those who were used to it, when the mountain-crag that was his jaw snapped around so fluidly on the massive pillar of his neck. His eyes seemed to have a thought behind them but then grew unfocussed as he was distracted by Sherlock replying to Dante's confusion.

"Ah, it is quite elementary." said Sherlock to Dante. "There is a book in the basement of this library that pulls us out of our stories. We never know when that might be for us. I, for example, was just examining the wrist of a murdered man and then felt the tug and now here I am. The food can be excellent though, as well as the freedom to be as we truly are for a short time."

From the far end of the table Lisbeth started to say, "How do I let go of the feeling of the golf club that I just had clenched in my hands? I can still feel it and it's so wei..."

But she was cut off by the deep, throaty cry of, "LASAGNA!".

All eyes turned to the foot of the table where sat the very fat cat called Garfield, outlined in bold black pen strokes filled in with bright orange fur overlayed with deep dark stripes. It was the first time a cartoon character had sat at the table and even the stoic Samwise was opening his little Hobbit mouth to say something about it when suddenly...

The tall twin doors at the back of the dining hall behind the cartoon cat burst open. The servants that flooded through the blinding light that beamed out through the portal were hard to look at, even for the fictional characters. There were moments when the servants seemed to run on spindly spider legs that made skittering footfalls along both floor and wall, and then moments when they swirled and reconfigured into floating blobs that spun and extended barbs that turned into the politely gloved hands of butlers and delivered the dinner-laden dishes of the evening softly onto the table in front of each guest before rushing away in a storm of spinning, diamond-shaped particles, back out through the doors that slammed shut behind them.

Dinner had been served.

******************************************************************************************************************

A hush fell over the room as the characters all ate. Slowly at first, but then with greater gusto. Food and drink never had the same "punch" in their stories as it had here in the magical dining hall. Occasionally they glanced back over their shoulders to where, somewhere behind each of them, the oil painting displaying the scene in the story they had been pulled from hung as stark reminders to make the best of all this before the evening drew to a close.

Dracula swirled his port-glass of questionable wine and smirked down the length of the table, his palm pressed flat to its base, questionably warming the thick red liquid inside. The plate before him lay as bare as it had before the "waiters" had entered.

Tarzan, ignoring the silverware on either side of his plate and just digging into his shoots and berries with his now juice-stained hands caused the corner of Drac's lip to curl in amusement.

Holmes dined on his roast beef and shepherd's pie impeccably, although Drac saw the detective's eyes darting this way and that from under the brim of his deerstalker hat.

Sam was engrossed in his potato stew and reached often for the pepper mill to grind showers of black specks onto each stratum as he mined his way single-mindedly towards the bottom of the massive bowl.

Lisbeth only picked at her green salad, her glances as attentive and suspicious as Sherlock's but not even nearly as concealed.

The weird cartoon cat-thing called "Garfield" was face down in its square lasagna dish chomping away with disregard to any kind of human table manners, spraying the table with chunks of meat-covered pasta and sprays of cheese and sauce.

But it was Dante that Drac's red-rimmed eyes were drawn back to the most. The Italian was only barely picking at the pasta before him, spending much more of his attention on the oil painting behind him. The painting showing the red fires and molten orange lakes of Hell itself.

Their eyes met, the vampire and the man who went to Hell. A brief glimmer of mutual understanding at their wretched conditions passed between them. Dracula felt his emotions swell and closed his eyes to block out this silent moment of kinship.

And then the room was plunged into darkness.
 
******************************************************************************************************************

"OOOOOOK-EEEEEK-OOOOOOOOOK!!!"

*BUMP-THUMP*

"If anyone comes even near me I'll gouge their..."

"Please remain calm and do not move! I will investigate once the..."

"Daisy! Help! I need you!"

*MEATY SNAP*

"Most annoyance be, if another damn spot landeth on me..."

*Slurp-slurp-slurp*

The darkness fled away just as fast as it had descended.

******************************************************************************************************************

All heads turned to the far end of the table where Garfield lay slumped, his neck broken at an unnatural angle, bleeding out into the pit he had eaten into his dish of lasagna.

Behind him, his painting showed the newspaper comic strip with him still absent and never to return to it: Garfield minus Garfield.

Most of the other guests around the table had never even suspected that such a thing was possible, that someone could die outside of their story never to return. That would make for a very confusing read.

"The game is afoot," said Sherlock.

"You bet your balls it is!" sneered Lisbeth.

Spoiler
I'm not going to provide the solution to the murder here just yet. I think it would be more fun to let YOU GUYS solve it. Everyone is welcome to offer solutions and/or ask questions, some of which I will probably even respond to. The goal is to expose the guilty and their motivation. And then I will probably write the conclusion to the story and post it as well, because I've grown to love this little tale.
[close]

Sinitrena

Quote from: Mandle on Sun 08/01/2023 06:25:37GODDAMIT! I JUST FINISHED MY STORY BUT I'M BLOCKED BY THE F**KING "WHITE LIST" FILTER AGAIN!!! Gonna try and sort it out... AGAIN!!!

OW! My ears!  8-0

Glad you managed to post it in the end. Not being able to post must be annoying, especially when there's no real reason.

Baron

Quote from: Mandle on Sun 08/01/2023 06:25:37(Please, no jokes Baron. This is seriously pissing me off!)

Sorry about the delay in wrapping up.  I was trying very hard not to make a joke about Mandle being white-listed.  It's been two days and I'm still not confident I'll get through the whole post without wise-cracking.... (roll)

So on to voting!  Our entrants this round in order of not being white-listed are:

Sinitrena with Too Bad
Mandle with Between the Lines

Voting will be by PM to me, and will be in a simple "I vote for x" format, where x is the writer that you felt created the best story overall.  The more votes the merrier, but in the event of a tie I will consult the filters that be to determine a winner.  Leaving feedback in the thread for our writers is always appreciated, as it helps us gauge what works and what needs work next time, making our stories better and better with each successive round.

Voting will run from now until FRIDAY THE THIRTEENTH.  Then I'll add up all the votes and we'll have a little party for the winner.  Good luck to all of our participants!

Sinitrena

Alright, I've read Mandle's story and send my vote., but I don't think I can guea the culprit or fairly judge the story without knowing the intended solution.

Some random thoughts:
- I get serious "Night at the Museum" vibes here (just less funny, more murderous   8-0 )
- Of course I know all the characters that show up here, but I haven't read all stories they come from. I do have to wonder, if the following is intentional or because Mandle might be more familiar with the movies about these characters than the original books: Holmes seems off. The description of the deerstalker hat as something typical Sherlock Holmes does not come from the books or short stories, but from the movies (don't remember which ones, but the older 50s or 60s ones) There might have been one or two scenes in the books where he does wear a deerstalker hat, but it is not typical for him, nor are his clothes described that much.
- There are some minor logical inconsistencies, that might be intentional: Dante was at one of these parties before ("Dracula knew Dante, and both knew Scrooge and Tarzan and vice versa.") yet he seems to not react in a knowing way to this situation ([Dante]: "For me it's even a bit more confusing than Hell.") Also: ""Ah, it is quite elementary." said Sherlock to Dante. "There is a book in the basement of this library that pulls us out of our stories. We never know when that might be for us" Dante has been here before, and so has Sherlock, but not at the same time. But why is Sherlock explaining this to Dante?; Apparently, paintings behind the characters show what part of the story they are from, yet they still need to ask about this (granted, it's Tarzan asking, who, at the point in his own story he is ripped from, would not have read A Christmas Carol, but on the other hand, awareness of things happening at these parties seems to stay with the characters, so it's difficult to gauge what they know and what they don't know.
- The narrative tells us it's the first time a cartoon character has shown up, so Garfield is here for the first time and he doesn't say a lot. So why was he murdered? (Really, this means the story technically doesn't fit the topic: Garfield was not rude or obnoxious, nor does he have a victim at the table that might want revenge (unless he ate something from one of the other plates, but we don't hear about it, at least) Looking for a motive, that would mean it lies outside of the direct actions of Garfield. Dante acts suspiscious a couple of times: picking at his food, is confused when it is said that he was at one of the parties before; Sherlock seems off, but that might just be me reacting to little things because he's the charatcer I'm most familiar with; Lisbeth doesn't do a whole lot, nor is she described much. But she does sit next to Garfield and is known to be a bit agressive (though not without reason, if I remember correctly; Dracula is a Vampire (obviously) and of the bunch the only villain; Samwise is described even less than Lisbeth - - In short, I could construe a motive for several of the characters (Drac wants to drink cat blood; Dante is mentally stuck in Hell; Sherlock isn't really Sherlock; Lisbeth really didn't want to share her meal; Tarzan sees the cat as a potential danger, as it is technically a predator) but none that is really evident (nor is there any evidence); And you can't leave out the host of the party either. It calls these characters "idiots", might be friendly ribbing, might be more sinister...

I really can't guess who did it, and my thoughts above are fairly chaotic, just written as they came. But I guess I'll leave my final opinion until I know the intended solution.


Mandle

Cheers for the notes, Sini! You did indeed spot the intended inconsistency. As I didn't have a ton of time to round off the story as much as I would have liked, it's pretty tough to figure out the motive without asking a few questions, which I will answer as I said.

I read your story and enjoyed it. I didn't send a vote as I assumed we just cancel out each other's votes. Well, Baron, I vote for Sini, in case that is needed.

Baron

Well it was a bunch of fun, but like most dreadful dinner parties this one too must end.

@ Sinitrena:  Short but sweet.  My guess is it was the baby dragon what done it.  ;)  Obviously I would have liked a longer submission, but at least the dinner jerk got his comeuppance and that's what really counts.

@ Mandle: There's a lot of moving pieces here, both character-wise and story-wise.  I think Sinitrena has already identified the most obvious story inconsistencies, but she (much like Mandle) has forgotten one suspect - and we all know it's the perfect time to commit a crime if no one notices you.  That's right, I'm pointing the finger at LADY MACBETH!  I'm not sure if she actually committed the murder herself or convinced someone else to do it for her (as per her modus operandi), but I'm pretty sure she had an unflattering cat quote that suggests motive.  Also 'tis well-known in literary circles that she hated both lasagna and gluttony - oh shit, it was Dante wasn't it? (roll)

Anyway, on to the vote tabulation.  In a near-run contest the votes were 2-1 in favour of....  MANDLE!

Excellent work old chap.  After the bizarre intro involving onion clouds this was a fun murder mystery.  Perhaps if you leave a bit more time next round you can flesh-out your characters and motives a bit more?  But wait, you won't be participating next time, since as per the sacred and ancient rules of writing competitions it is YOU who will be hosting the next dinner party.  I look forward to getting into your wine collection seeing what kind of juicy theme you've cooked up for us.

Mandle

Oh, cheers! I will start a new round once I think of a theme. Hopefully soon.

The solution to my story:
Spoiler
As was pointed out, Dante was supposed to have been here before but acted as though this was his first time. Tarzan DID have a moment where the realization that he had met Dante here before almost crossed his mind, but got distracted (yeah, Tarzan wasn't an idiot in the book but I played it for laughs).

Killing Garfield was actually a test to see what happened to a character's story if they died while out of it. This test showed that, indeed, they did not return to the book.

Out of all the characters present, the one with the most motive to not want to return to his book is Dante. He is bloody sick of spending his entire existence in Hell.

He had mentioned so to Dracula over a previous dinner together and they had come up with a plan.

Step one of the plan was already complete. Dante had snapped Garfield's neck while Dracula used his dark powers to plunge the room into blackness and proved that death was an escape route.

The plan from this point on was to have Dracula bite him and drain all his blood, "killing" him, but also allowing him to come back from the dead as an undead vampire himself.

Of course, he didn't know if this technicality would allow him to avoid returning to his book but is basically willing to try anything.

It does end up working. All the other guests return to their stories except for Dante and the dead Garfield, who are most-unexpectedly, rejected by the magical book and expelled out into the real world, appearing in the library basement next to the book.

Dante takes the cartoon cat's corpse to leave no trace of what had happened, breaks out of the library, and the story ends with an undead bloodthirsty vampire Dante stalking our world by night.
[close]

Sinitrena

Congrats, Mandle, a deserved win, though I'd really like some more votes.

Thanks for the summery, it's an interesting idea. I just have one note:
QuoteOut of all the characters present, the one with the most motive to not want to return to his book is Dante. He is bloody sick of spending his entire existence in Hell.
He doesn't, though. He spends the first part in hell, though not as someone banned and stuck there, but as a visitor, and then he visits purgatory and paradise. And in the end he understands god and his divinity. So... the motive doesn't work...

The idea to see if one can escape a book is still great and to use murder and vampiric transformation as a method is pretty good, just probably not with Dante as the murderer, not with this motivation.  ;)

Baron

I thought he was just giving Garfield his just desserts for the sin of gluttony...  :-\

Plus, Jim Davis is now upset that his royalty cheques are bouncing.  :=

Mandle

Quote from: Baron on Sun 15/01/2023 13:34:00I thought he was just giving Garfield his just desserts for the sin of gluttony...  :-\

Plus, Jim Davis is now upset that his royalty cheques are bouncing.  :=

That was a joke in the story. There is a popular internet comic series called "Garfield minus Garfield" where the cat has been erased from each one and it just looks like Jon is insane and talking to himself.

https://garfieldminusgarfield.net/

Stuff like this:


Mandle

Quote from: Sinitrena on Sun 15/01/2023 06:46:56Congrats, Mandle, a deserved win, though I'd really like some more votes.

Thanks for the summery, it's an interesting idea. I just have one note:
QuoteOut of all the characters present, the one with the most motive to not want to return to his book is Dante. He is bloody sick of spending his entire existence in Hell.
He doesn't, though. He spends the first part in hell, though not as someone banned and stuck there, but as a visitor, and then he visits purgatory and paradise. And in the end he understands god and his divinity. So... the motive doesn't work...

The idea to see if one can escape a book is still great and to use murder and vampiric transformation as a method is pretty good, just probably not with Dante as the murderer, not with this motivation.  ;)

All good points. Could The Divine Comedy be split into separate volumes in the library? Could this be the Dante from just the Hell volume?

Mandle

Quote from: Sinitrena on Sun 15/01/2023 06:46:56I'd really like some more votes.

Yeah, we had that big spike in votes a while back. That was fun!

SMF spam blocked by CleanTalk