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"We don't have time to run and hope no one finds out about the treasure. We have to slow the spread of all this, or we're all dead before the wave even hits."
Sebaziun's breath hitched. His mind whirled, caught between the revelation of the treasure's danger and this new, terrifying truth. "You're gonna have to show me on a map  where you were when you saw it and what direction you think its moving
".
"I'm sure its not natural," Gamleon guessed. "Sure, the rain and all, the rivers swelling, that  seems normal enough. But this thing is something else. Something bigger. And I still can't believe it's really coming. Its so... just, coming faster than any of us are prepared for."
Sebaziun sat there wiping at his nose and eyes, silent for a moment, processing the flood of information. His earlier paternal tunnel vision was now tempered with disquieting deeper understandings. "So, we still go, go to the queen," he said finally, his voice quiet, resigned.
"Yeah. We have to," Gamleon confirmed. "She's our only chance to buy time. We tell her everything, and maybe—just maybe—she can keep her people quiet long enough for us to get out, to run. But that meeting, when everyone's gathered... that's when I'll have to tell them all about it. He could barely even spit out the words he was so tired and disgusted by it all ..." the flood, because in the end, Sebaziun, none of this even matters if we can't outrun that wave."
Sebaziun closed his eyes for a long moment, the weight of it all pressing down on him. "Alright. We go. We plan with the queen. But you'd better be ready to explain, Gamleon. Because once we start this, there's no going back."
Gamleon nodded. He knew the truth was going to shatter whatever fragile plans they had, but there was no avoiding it. The flood was coming ,whether anyone believed him or not.
"Consider this: what if she doesn't believe me? What if she doesn't believe us? What if they think it's some clever ruse to get away with the treasure? I wish I had some kind of proof."
Sebaziun nodded, the weight of Gamleon's words settling heavily. "Not only that, but everyone's getting ready for the games. She has some kind of special meeting set up—something about the plans and about discussing the arrow with the widower king. They were planning to make agreements about using the arrow, joining the conflict against the Cockatrice. It all seems so meaningless now."
"I would like to use some of my enormous new wealth to commission a new medal. The medal is an award for having the most insane to-do list ever conceived and we are the winners... and the losers." He tried laughing but failed, nerves frayed and raw, exhaustion overwhelming down deep to his core. He sat motionless as snot and drool ran down; he barely had the will left to move his lips or form coherent words. "I just want to keep saying that I'm sorry. But what would you have done if you were in my place? Of course I would come here. Of course I would come to the smartest person I've ever met or known in my life and in all my travels. If I didn't save you guys, if I could've done something and didn't try to do anything?"
"If I need some water as badly as I do, and I do. You and these poor kids... I imagine all you want to do is soak in a tub and just drink, drink water. He started to get up when he noticed the portrait in the dim light. " When my uncle was dying, I came to his bedside and asked him how he was, how he was trying to deal with it yuh know. How did he manage his thoughts? And you know what he said?"
"What's that? Your Uncle Ted, right? Wud did he say?"
He said, "You gotta take every single little thing one step at a time." Seems kinda obvious, but also, I mean, what else can you really do?
" I loved your uncle Ted. He was great. He woulda said "we better get up and stop feeling sorry for ourselves. Dreema is gonna come in here and find us like this. Kick both our *****" Gamleon said doing his best impression of the beloved old timer.
"****, that’s a really good uncle Ted, you really were paying attention all that time weren't you. I'm sorry, buddy. I'll get up. Go get you some cold water. You stay right there".
He handed the portrait over, and Gamleon cradled it gently.
"Bread and wine too, please. If it's not too much to ask".
By the time Sebaziun returned from the kitchen, Gamleon was sprawled out across the hall, totally blocking it, face down, snoring loudly.  The picture back where it had always hung. Sebaziun felt awful about nudging him awake, but after several attempts and failures, he could hear Gamleon's stomach roaring and grumbling as it ate itself. So, he shook him hard until he came around. Then, he put the warm buttered bread in Gamleon's hand and drank from the cooled wine before passing it .

"Ugh... oh, God, how long was I out? Did you tell Dreema?"
"Not long, and no, not yet. The kids are making her smile. The fae are dancing and singing, drinking up my best, but who cares. You good?"ut oh, those carrots in there are calling my name."
"Oh, that's a great idea. I'm gonna get some of the kids and head out to the garden right next to the kitchen window. Pull up some carrots and stuff real quick. That way they'll at least have something."
"Get the big goofy one his name's Kai. He loves diggin. Tell him, I told him to help you."
"Can do, boss man. Anything else I can do to help you?" he asked, jokingly, despite everything.

Sebaziun gave a nod and headed out, leaving Gamleon to snack and rest. Despite the weight of their multifaceted and dire situation, they managed to hold onto a thread of normalcy. It was a small drop in the middle of a swirling sea of uncertainty. It was almost too much it seemed in every direction there was something waiting, something constantly threatening to drown them all, yet there it was—an unbreakable bond, an attempt at levity and understanding. Something that didn't need to be picked apart or over examined. Something. Something kind and good that reminded them of their shared responsibilities and maturity.

"Yes, I hear you, Uncle Ted," Gamleon said aloud, catching Dreema's ear. As he began to doze back off, he could smell the sandalwood and sage that Ted liked to use. He drifted in an in-between state, trying to swallow the fresh buttered bread, overpowered by sheer and inevitable exhaustion. He slipped away and dreamed of flying immediately. He looked out to his side and there was a young, healthy Ted saying, "Yes, yes, you were paying attention the whole time, weren't you."
This is from Gamleon's Tail Worlds of within Book 1.
A.I. can copy
styles,
techniques, trends.
It can pump out infinite images and playlists
But it can’t fake
lived experience turned into art.
It can’t fake
the scars,
the humor,
the obsessions,
the contradictions.
It can mimic  sure
but it can’t embody.
it's a tool I know  I get it.
Do the children imagine it’s a door?  If so ,  to where?  
I can  see the  Old men lamenting it as some sort of  warning , but
failing to recollect entirely.
   Lovers, sometimes, mistaking it as something they feel
a need to fill ,
or trying to force it to become a  shelter.
  But no one carries away the same story after standing before it.
Those with  the fleeting courage to face it
These shapes in the world
stepped aside.

An absence, that draws
air leans differently there,
             palpable,
   as if even silence forgets
why it started
or how to stand.
To approach and look in.
  speak, to it with an unsteady  voice
returning
  broken,
smaller, as if ashamed its self .
Others refuse to stand near it at all, afraid of the way the edges keep their secrets sharp.
          Is it not empty , or emptiness ?   Was nothing ever something ?
That much is certainly   uncertain.

In the mystery,
does it wait ?
As if wanting and waiting   were its only language.

And can those  who manage to leave it behind
find themselves walking differently ,
lighter, or heavier, depending on what they thought they learned ?

Neither teaching or the teacher.
A space
wherein sits what we think of as nothing.
In reality we can’t perceive what is there but, it’s not empty
only our desire for it
to be .
...  This piece  doesn’t show the hole In fact, it never even uses the word; it is the hole, in all its seductive, unnerving incompleteness. The subtle wordplay makes it recursive    its absence IS the  piece   ,  the idea of wholeness, as if nothingness itself has a structure inexorable influence  ,  weight, and even intention.  ..  ( This is   limited time  note, I will remove  it )
Nothing candid for me,
thanks.
I like the planned. The known.
The contrived.
The professional.
The way I can’t
feel
inside.
Skeletons.   Mirrors.
It’s so sad that we have to explain that the symbol only matters if we agree on its meaning.
Society doesn’t want to agree that we don’t begin to teach
life’s important milestones.
The corporations sold government at least thirteen years of mandatory education
the breaking of the soul
for a life in a cubicle.
Earn, or die
on the street.
A shell that never knew,
never had a chance.
Just waiting
to be buried.
Oh, but the flashes. The sparkles. The lust and
amusement.
What it means to actually be alive — reduced to a few replayed moments.
The poisons, sanctioned
and otherwise.
The offer to **** everything else.
No rewind.
No delete.
The punches we never get to throw.
Our faces — always that attempt at “best we’ve got.”
The days that pass where we
can’t imagine what
or why
anything matters.
How do we learn the skills that transform us,
or give us the promise to set us free?
Do we think
of this as a time that could even belong to us?
The forced meaning we shove onto
our suffering.
Truths we’d rather never
revisit.
Filters inside of filters.
Inside is a shriveled, ambiguous thing we used to think
of
as an inner child.
What if it’s an old man?
What if it’s the Minotaur with no red thread?
What if the maze is
us,
and
we’re fine wandering?
The escape we wanted was from everything — especially ourselves.
( A self most of us wouldn't recognize, have never actually confronted and were never given the time or space ... to really ever, get to know.).
Pls check out my  yt chan and sub  there  ty search Gamleon
Hooded humans preceded the undead horde chanting in overlapping unison.. One can  feel them coming, the first sound  creeping far out  in front before even visibility breaks the horizon . b Rumbling calls to a  swarms of locusts devouring crops.  all who behold this spectacle keep their eyes transfixed. Closing them, even for a moment, flooded the mind with  a crippling thrum of ravenous ceaseless mouths . An impenetrable veil of darkness in flight descending and consuming remorselessly all in its path.
Creaking and deep groaning overpowered the subtle rattling of chains and the clinking of armor. Pervasive walls of sound never ceasing. Inescapable and heartless, like the piercing cold that spreads out in front of encroaching glaciers. You could feel it deep down in the pit of your stomach, crushing and rendering inconsequential everything in its path. The sounds were from a dream a nightmare you can’t wake up from, and they complemented the deep bass chanting of the human males exquisitely. Upon becoming enamored by the spell-like quality of it all, one would forget their earthly worries and struggles, if only for a mind-numbing evening.

Indistinct in the heavy incense smoke, slow movement enhancing effect with precision. Each figure was captivating in its own right. Grotesque sculptures forged from the bones of every creature, from the living to the long extinct. Dormouse skeletons scampered about, cobwebs clinging to delicate brittle ribs, rapiers and belts bouncing like chimes. They complimented and contrasted sharply among colossal monstrosities formed from thick femurs and crowned with heavy prehistoric skulls. Shadow clung to twisted, shining horns and gnarled, jagged teeth. These tireless wretched creatures, crafted from the remnants of ancient giant lizards and mythological beasts, evoked the eternal nature and inevitability of certain death. The frozen skeletal grins of so many exposed teeth cruelly mocked living smiles, while vacant, hollow eyeless sockets bore down upon the souls of the slack-jawed and helpless.
Thick incense billowed like ghostly tendrils, emanating a growing and intoxicating shroud. The reverent, deep reverberating chant grew louder, a cadenced incantation of somber, evocative fantasy, layers of mystical depth, coiling around—a spellbinding dirge that seeped into their very marrow. Most felt it as pure, frozen, primal fear, vibrating and resonating throughout... Air stolen from lungs, replaced by an inevitable longing and an uncontrollable pull to shuffle along and sway. Voices rose, trembling and uncertain, merging with the throng in a darkly captivating celebration, enthralled by the unfathomable. Not many knew the ancient spell-like songs, but twice as many tried to sing and hum along, their wills surrendered, entrapped in an insatiable vortex. Dragged into the depths of the procession.
The entire effect permeated all. A unique hypnotic display of decay and artistry, an unspoken reminder of the unseen. No one could form the questions about what forces were animating this skeletal orchestra. Robes and wrappings intentionally concealed flashes of weapons and sinister implements. What was left to appear harmless—like a tiny dormouse or an empty, fleshless hand—added to the intentionally reassuring yet engulfing sense of unease. Despite the sunlight inevitable on some days, the procession exuded an aura of the darkest, most moonless night, drawing all who saw it into a dreadful, trance-like ambiance.
Hooded robes, some pristine while others no more than sackcloth burial wrappings riddled with myriad holes, flapped and swayed. The cloying incense wafting around intensified a dreadful fog-like effect. Tiny torches, carefully proffered by the most diminutive, flickered weakly like the dying breaths of ancient spirits, casting an ethereal glow. Their faint, orange-ish light perfectly complemented the reds of the flowers and gems, accenting the details they wanted the eye to be drawn to with subtle precision. Blood-red roses, ribbons, and highly polished, oily-looking rubies adorned their sumptuous armor, glinting ominously against the spectral white of the long dead. Every decoration and position was meticulously chosen to create a visual contrast that was both hauntingly beautiful and profoundly terrifying. Important figures had torchlights in their rib cages and torsos where a heart may once have been. The ensuing play of light and shadow, coupled with the macabre elegance of their exquisite attire, transformed the scene into a nightmarish tableau. Undeniable beauty, craftsmanship, and horror interlacing in a scarring, value-disintegrating, magnetic embrace.
For you see, the procession was not merely a parade but a traveling theater troupe, a haunting performance replete with everything from huge bass drums to tiny handheld affairs. There was constant fire breathing and dangerous juggling. Horns ringing out in a beckoning cry, accompanied at times by simple string instruments. The theatricality and stage magic were designed to be beyond creepy and mesmerizing, ensnaring the unblinking eyes and stupefied minds of all who chanced to behold. They performed marionette-like fable plays that shifted into song, dance, and choreographed fighting, building to a grand crescendo that hammered home the futility of resisting them.
Announcing their intended set list and schedules were their human companions, medieval grave diggers and partitioners, willingly serving as the heralds of the horde. Some with great horns fashioned into megaphones. Flanked by those that swung incense censers, releasing plumes of smoke that mingled with the dust, enhancing the otherworldly aura. Together their steps produced a thunderous rhythm, an intentional comforting homage to mimic the last of life’s heartbeat.

Unassumingly stirring up a fine sediment that never seemed to settle as they pushed, dragged, and pulled everything needed for their grand show. The Jingoes wheeled their giant covered cages, chains, and ropes over many a shoulder as they leaned in. A long, majestic procession ordered to never appear mundane. They had amassed the most magnificent display of bones, gathered over countless centuries and now on full display. After watching them bleach in the sun and allowing ants to remove the remaining flesh, they applied a clear lacquer of their own design, creating these mighty skeletal constructs. Alarmingly many of the most fearsome were motionless for long periods before erupting into jerky, sometimes blurry and erratic movements.

The fiery flourishes, timed to the beating of drums, the banners, the staged violence and its chanted message—all worked together as planned and seamlessly. Nothing else in all the lands created such a spectacle of dark, powerful grandeur. Villagers came from near and far, gathering outside and watching. As the procession moved forward like a parade, they were gladly offered tickets to attend the show, regardless of how much coin they had or had not. There was a seat available for everyone.

Inside cages, resting peacefully, concealed from the eyes of those they crushed past, were enormous primordial gods. Sky, a magnificent blue dragon-like creature with a long, slender neck and a head covered in frills, spikes, and horns, lay nestled on a bed of goose-down pillows. Her water bowl, designed with a large base tapering upward, prevented spills as the cage rolled along. Nearby, trailing slightly behind, was her lifelong companion, Earth, a giant six-legged behemoth with two spines forming a Y-shape from its head down to heavily armored tails. This splendid, original beast possessed the head of a giant lion with fangs, and its body was covered in thick, gold and green dragon-like scales. The deepest greens faded into a lime color before transitioning to a metallic gold, with scales speckled in a sparkling effect. Adorned in magnificent armor, this accidental and bizarre creature moved as comfortably as possible within her confinement.

Earth also had a water bowl and food, of course, with less need for so many pillows. She tended to curl up and rest on her own bulk. In her confines hung the tusks of some unknown creature. These were sometimes worn behind both sides on the neck, jutting out in front to provide additional damage and sorely needed protection. Many believed these tusks were part of her body due to how deep down around the shoulders and neck they tended to ride. Those who helped put them on were reluctant to spread the truth.

Now, this magnificent beast catnapped, occasionally licking at huge, fault-like feet—a mixture of claws and scales with horned lateral protrusions. With six feet, it's a lot to keep up with. Caregivers were honored to attend to and worship this delightful creature. Much of Earth’s day was spent being dressed and armored. Sky lavished her resplendently, helping with her very long eyelashes and beautiful makeup. Huge, darting, solid black pupils occasionally flickered, turning into a golden hue with layers of slits and coverings like those of a cat's eyes.

The sky continued to darken, clouds gathered from nowhere casting wicked shadows that seemed to shift and writhe in the dying light. The sparse torch glow highlighted the scenes brilliantly. Steve had spent his day as usual, toiling in the turnip fields, the sun beating down relentlessly on his strong but skinny back. He was just about ready to head home when his buddy, Greg, came rushing over, eyes wide with contagious fear and excitement.

“Steve, Steve! You’ve got to see this!” Greg grabbed him by the sleeves, his moppish bowl-like cut swaying over his well-formed eyebrows. His somewhat gentle, kind, and energetic voice carried humorously. He grabbed him again, more firmly this time, nearly dragging him down the dusty street.

“Dang, Greg, what is it?” Steve asked, trying to keep up. “What’s so all-important?”

“You won’t believe it until you see it. Trust me!” Greg replied, a  twitchy grin spreading across his handsome young face.

As they rounded the taverns’ corner, the spectacle came into view. Waboom! The procession was unlike anything Steve or Greg had ever seen. The chanting grew louder, resonating through the bones of everyone watching, filling the crude streets with arousal, confusion, and mystery. Their hamlet had disappeared in many ways, replaced by a blurry, confusing mirage of bones and fire. Steve felt as though he could hardly breathe as the forms of his long-dead relatives shuffled past to the music.

In this ordinary village, the destitute townsfolk had all gathered to witness this unforgettable morbid display.  Wordlessly summoned like so many moths to a flame. Among them was Old Martha, a sweet, frail woman whose health had been declining for years. She stood reluctantly at the edge of the growing crowd, clutching her chest as raised and wheeled platform drew nearer. Her heart pounded erratically, the rhythmic chanting resonating through her small, frail bones. The sight of the skeleton warriors—some humanoid, others monstrous with multiple limbs and horns—filled her with a tenacious fear she just couldn’t shake. One looked so much like her missing husband that she gasped, her hand going to her tired mouth. It had an exact match of his crooked, broken teeth. Even the one gold tooth that she had so painstakingly saved up to buy him was still exactly where they had put it. She felt disturbed and vaguely betrayed, sick, and lightheaded. She ****** in air as deeply as her small, shaking frame would allow.

As the death cult creeped its way slowly passed, a massive bone dragon with extra-large wings arrested her ******. It had what must have been some type of leader holding its useless chains, his huge thorax alight with flames from within. He held lightly onto leaders attached to a spiked collar around the smoldering dragon's vertebrae. It was intentionally hulking and utterly terrifying, adorned with a twisted, multi-horned, demonic-looking skull. The humanoid was dwarfed in the shadow of the dragon towering above.
    When the Jingo Captain did come into full view, it seemed to stare directly with his eyeless sockets into the very soul of poor, dear, religious Martha. It appeared that he may also lift his arm to point directly at her. The vision, encompassing enormity; the profound horror of the scene was just too much for Granny Martha. She gasped, her eyes rolling back wide and white. Helplessly, Martha collapsed to the ***** ground, clutching at her heart. Some villagers including her cherished Steve and his well meaning friend Greg eventually gathered at her side, but it was too late for the lecherous old wash-woman. The heat and the shock had been too much.

Word of her death and loss of her “services” spread quickly, and by the time the Jingoes reached the next village, a group of religious zealots had gathered. Their faith was their armor, and they were determined to rebuke what they saw as an abomination. Clad in simple robes, they brandished holy symbols, chanting fervently as they drew symbols on the ground with salt and colored chalk. They attempted to create a mystical barrier, believing it would drive away the perceived demons.

“Begone, foul spirits!” cried their leader, a gaunt man with a shaved head and wild eyes. “Return to the abyss from whence you came!”

The undead moved on, undeterred by the zealots’ many annoying yet fruitless attempts. The fanatics' chants mingled into the procession's own mournful cacophony, creating a new and even louder performance, filled now with pleading desperate sounds that only heightened the terror. The sight of ancestral bones, animated and repurposed into abominable constructs, struck a chord of deep-seated sadness and awe among the confused and overwhelmed throngs.

Too many uneducated villagers were convinced that these were the restless spirits of their beloved ancestors. Blocking the path, up until the point of being trampled, they fell to their knees, praying and beseeching the many gods for mercy. The bone constructs, ranging from humanoid figures to centaur-like creatures and massive mammoths, moved on with a calloused precision, their obfuscated forms evoking the eternal and inevitable nature of death on their synchronized ground-shaking march.

As the constantly shifting ordeal reached the outskirts of the village, the leader of the particular Jingo society, adorned with triceratops skulls, raised his clawed hand, signaling a halt. The chanting ceased, replaced by the sound of huge bass drums and the haunting notes of horns. The theatricality and stage magic of the troupe were on full display....      want more ?  It's coming...  In the  meantime  read Gamleon's Tail .
If you enjoyed this ..pls search Gamleon on youtube . Worlds of Within is also the channel name . All the links are on that page
Home is where human spirit and effort unite,
, care,  love, warmth and light.
Cradle of armor and invitation,
Sanctuary of growth, pride, and imagination.
Shelter from the storm, penultimate destination,
From celebration to recreation, this is the place our lives should happen.

No one should get to label it a "hippie liberal dream."
If they begin that rhetoric, let us drown them in a scream.
The world should demand it, insist upon its due,
For safety, nurturing, and love should be a possibility for all,
For everyone, especially me and you.

A home can be pride made tangible, a legacy to guide,
A respite for effort where hope should abide.
We can do it
We must
We can.

The truth though
Is that we have never really tried,
Despite those freezing on the streets
And all of the tears we've cried.

Greed is not better or bigger than all of us.
It is time to stand up, speak out, call  their bluff
And let the corporatocracy and oligarchs feel, not just hear,
That enough is enough.
I am the author of Gamleon's Tail Welcome to the worlds of Within  book 1.

— The End —