Monday, December 9, 2024

My latest collection is done and out today on Amazon!



Evil appears good to us when it agrees with us and offers us lives of comfort and peace. In these stories, demons are angels of light such as a story where the Lights of the World hide their sins by giving people peaceful lives and a young soldier of the Church must reintroduce suffering for others to a Church that refuses to. Every scenario forces the characters to go against their desire for comfort and what they think is right to do what is truly right.
This book collects; Unremembered and Unimportant, Pain or Damnation, God of my Choosing, and All Mask, No Face along with a few Behind the Story trivia details for each short story.

Thursday, December 5, 2024

My latest short story is done and out today!


Download for free at select online retailers - https://books2read.com/b/mZ2MdB

The theatre is a place everyone visits, but most forget. It's a place where everyone's view of reality is made manifest on their own stage and they have to accept the truth of their life and let go of what they believe to improve their lives or at least their outlook on it. The Stage Master, a mysterious being and overseer of the theatre and reality, recruits Dario to work at this theatre to help others and himself.

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

All Mask, No Face: Chapter 4 – On the Opposite Side of Charity

Chapter 4 – On the Opposite Side of Charity

Even after having three days off from being at the theatre, there’s a part of Dario that blames himself for the deaths of Renzo and Delia. He doesn’t blame Carlo despite him playing an indirect role in their beliefs and he appreciates the constant affection and help that Adelina has been giving him. His parents also lend him support by giving him fewer responsibilities until he feels better and giving him advice about his concerns. Dario doesn’t mention the theatre to his parents, but they still understand what’s bothering him despite talking around it, since they know the struggles of helping people who don’t want to be helped.

A woman from a larger charity walks into the building with her parents. The parents approach Dario’s parents while their daughter walks up to Dario. This woman has light blue eyes, dark pink hair, light skin, and wears a red dress with short sleeves.

“Hello, my name is Dario. Do you need any help?” Dario asks.

“Nice to meet you. My name is Elda, and no, I don’t need any help. In fact, it is my parents and our organization that will be helping you. Our parents are discussing a deal that will merge our charities.”

“I’ve seen you online and on TV before and know about your organization. It’s one of the biggest in the country, but I also know you and your parents live in luxury.” Adelina sees Dario talking to Elda, so she runs over to him and holds his arm as if making it known that Dario is hers. “What is it, Adelina? Everything is fine.”

Adelina grunts and stares down Elda like a fierce mother does when protecting her child.

“Everything is fine. You and your parents will receive a generous deal though some of your fellow employees may be fired and replaced,” Elda says.

“What? You can’t just fire them.”

“We can when the deal goes through. You’ll want our more experienced employees anyway even though you’ll have fewer people working with you. It’s all for the good cause of helping the poor and needy, right?”

“You don’t do that by corporatizing and cutting people out of the job they want to work. It’s not right to hurt others so other people can be helped.”

“Workers come and go. It’s the nature of business.”

“This is a charity. Not a business.”

“That’s right. You should listen to him and leave,” Adelina growls.

Suddenly, Dario and Elda find themselves in the theatre and on Elda’s stage. Her mask closely resembles her face and her body is mostly together except for her center, which is sorely empty and in pieces. After Dario explains what this place is and what its purpose is, Elda wonders why she’s here.

“There’s nothing wrong with me,” she says with a grin as if pretending to be innocent. “I help run one of the biggest charities in the country, as you said. Thousands if not hundreds of thousands of people are helped by me.”

Many examples of Elda’s charity show on the walls, ceiling, and floors, however, they are soon overshadowed by scenes of her cruelty by firing people, cutting their pay, cutting hours, giving overwhelming responsibilities to a person without a pay raise, and more.

“People are also hurt by you,” Dario says while pointing at the scenes around them.

“So, what if a few people are hurt so many more can be helped?”

“Because you’re supposed to help people! You’re part of a charity! If you actually did care about helping more than showing how ‘charitable’ you are, then maybe I’d respect you, but I don’t. You’re a hypocrite, a devil with the appearance of an angel.”

The scenes all stop and the room turns dark.

“How dare you!” Elda says while approaching Dario. “You don’t know anything about me, what I have to sacrifice for others! The many should be helped if only a few suffer because of it!”

Edla’s words are echoed by scenes of her on the walls showing her pushing away people she once called friends because they didn’t agree with her way of doing things. Inside Elda’s hollow body, Dario sees the mischievous swimming around.

“Haha! There’s so much room in here that I could fit two of me in here,” the technician says.

“I know what I’m doing is wrong, but it’s what I have to do to help the world,” Elda says with the technician’s voice mixed in with hers and lights start shining from her eyes. “Those people who I fired and pushed away will understand. No, they should be thankful because someone was helped because of the sacrifice that I made for them. They should all be thankful to me for doing what needs to be done!”

Hundreds of people start pouring into the room like the waters of a flood and Dario struggles to stay above them. Some shower Elda with praise while a few of the voices criticize her for her choices. She argues with them as she struggles to stay afloat and is being dragged down by her critics. In the chaos, Dario finds a scene of Elda crying and apologizing on a small mirror. He takes this small mirror, swims against the crowd, and shows it to Elda while shielding her against her critics.

“There’s no such thing as doing evil to do good. You know that. It’s okay to admit you’re wrong, but what’s not is refusing to. That only makes things worse,” Dario says.

Elda starts to cry as she says, “But if I stop now, I won’t be able to help as many people. They’ll be left to suffer by themselves with no one to help them.”

“There are plenty of people in the world to help them such as myself, my parents, and the charity we run. We can help the people that you can’t get to, so you don’t need to overextend yourselves, fire those who want to work for you, and overwork those who are as dedicated as you are to helping the needy. We can do this together. How about we have a partnership rather than a merger?”

The flood of people disappears into thin air, leaving the two alone in a quiet room.

“Okay…let’s do that.”

Dario and Elda are back in reality again. As they smile at one another, Adelina notices the shift in mood towards one another and looks at Elda with even more hostility.

“Did you two just go to the theatre? What did you two do?” Adelina asks.

“Nothing. Dario just helped me understand something I already knew and didn’t want to acknowledge,” Edla says. “I’ll convince my parents to partner up with your charity so we can help each other. Can we meet up sometime so we can talk more?”

“Talk?” Adelina says suspiciously.

“About business and the nature of helping people. I won’t take your boyfriend away from you though…I do want time with him.”

“Yeah, we can talk again next time.”

“I look forward to it,” Elda says with a wink.

Elda walks to her parents to convince them to agree to a partnership rather than a merger to which her parents reluctantly agree since Dario’s parents are stubborn in their decision to stay independent. Dario’s parents, Elda, and her parents then walk to an office to finalize their agreement. Meanwhile, Adelina grabs Dario’s face and closely examines it.

“What?” Dario asks.

“She didn’t kiss you, did she?” Adelina asks.

“No, why? You keep acting like you’re my girlfriend when you’re not.”

“Well…I want to be…is that okay with you?”

Dario hardly thinks for a second before saying, “Yes, it’s okay with me.”

“Good,” Adelina says before kissing Dario on the lips. “I would’ve cried until you said yes.”

Dario and Adelina hug each other and then go back to their daily duties helping people.

“Ah, yes. I knew this setup I created would pay off and they would make the right decisions,” I say to myself. “Dario is truly a good servant for my theatre and will be a guiding light to the truth and helpful hand for many, just as all who serve others rather than themselves should.”

 

The End

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

All Mask, No Face: Chapter 3 – Parroting for Comfort

Chapter 3 – Parroting for Comfort

With their new hire and potential daughter-in-law, Dario’s parents make it a point to have them working together so they can grow closer. Just as Adelina gives Dario a good morning hug, he is transported to the theatre he’s almost forgotten about.

“I was wondering if I ever was going to come back here,” Dario says to me.

“This isn’t a nine-to-five. You’ll be back here when you’re needed and since Adelina needed so much time with you, you needed to stay with her,” I say.

“Can you tell me if she’s the one who’s meant to be my girlfriend and wife-to-be?”

“What does your heart say?” Dario searches for the answer within himself as I fly him to the stage he’s meant to be on today. “You’ll be helping two people today, both of which have the same problem of being too worldly. They feed off each other’s ignorance as an excuse to keep acting as they do.”

“Wait, what?”

“The man’s name is Renzo and the woman’s name is Delia. You can handle them, Dario.”

Before Dario can say another word, he is thrust into the room where the two people are. Their stage consists of a place full of every popular item, movie, game, show, and sayings of the times all of which fade away and keep being replaced by new things. Renzo has a fiery orange and black mask that has red eyes with a silly expression on its face that covers half his face. He has blue eyes, short black hair, and most of his body is missing. As for Delia, she has green eyes, black hair, and most of her body is missing as well. Her mask that covers half of her face is upside down and is trying to hold back her tears while smiling with both mouths.

The two are going from place to place on their stage like children in a candy shop with a sugar rush, trying out every new trend until it goes sour, and then being invested in another. Every face attached to an advertisement and person they see is a variation of the mischievous lighting technician who keeps shifting his face with the trends, and at one point, has two faces at once to talk to Renzo and Delia at the same time.

“Stop all this noise and flashing lights! It’s giving me a headache,” Dario says to the technician.

“Haha! Why should I? These are the sights and sounds of the world! Better keep up or you’ll be left behind,” the technician says.

Seeing that he has no luck with the technician, Dario walks up the wall to Renzo.

“Renzo! Don’t you think this is all too much?” Dario asks.

“How can it be? This is amazing!” Renzo says before getting into an orange sports car and driving off.

The floor of Renzo’s stage becomes like that of a treadmill as Dario runs on it to keep up with him.

“You’ll get tired of following the times and eventually fall behind!” Dario says.

“Nah, not me. My followers and coworkers keep me up to date with everything that’s going on in the world,” Renzo says and then moves on to running on a literal treadmill in a gym with various political news outlets reporting on the goings on and telling people what they should think.

“It’s not right to change your beliefs every year or so because of today’s politics. Shouldn’t you believe in something more solid and unchanging?”

“That’s for people who are too stringent and dogmatic. Nothing is true and right can become wrong given the circumstances. That’s what I believe.”

“That doesn’t make sense.”

Again, Renzo’s stage changes and Dario finds himself on the ceiling skydiving from it. Several TVs are falling along with him each of which shows static screens of Renzo making apology videos only to go back and do what he apologized for, ganging up on people for their beliefs, and hitting close friends and family of his over disagreements while he was drunk.

“You’ll come crashing down eventually. No celebrity stays a star for long,” Dario says.

“If I’m going to crash, it’s going to be in a blaze of glory baby! Woah!” Renzo says as he plummets towards the ground.

Both Renzo and Dario crash to the floor, however, neither is hurt, especially Renzo who immediately gets up and races toward the halls of a loud sports stadium. Tired from having to deal with him, Dario shifts his attention toward Delia who is drinking at the bar in a casino with illusions of her friends, all of which have the distorted face of the mischievous lighting technician.

Dario catches his breath and then says, “Delia-”

“Who are you? Another admirer?” she asks in a pompous tone.

“A what? No, I’m not.”

“Then you’re not worth my time.”

Dozens of people start crowding around Delia as everything starts becoming nothing more than migraine-inducing lights and noise. Dario stumbles back onto a large slot machine that starts running and forces him to run on it until he falls forward and is flung into a river of alcohol that leads to a whirlpool that he is sucked into. He then falls into a dark void filled with scenes of Delia’s streams such as her gambling, shopping, and trauma dump streams. By the time he reaches the bottom, his ears are ringing and he doesn’t hear much until he sees Delia crying by herself in the dark.

“No, please pay attention to me. I need to see your compliments, be the center of your attention, and hear about my struggles. Don’t leave me alone,” Delia says while tapping at her phone and computer.

Dario walks to her with a hand reached out and says, “Delia, you don’t need everyone’s love and attention. Please stop working, partying, and streaming so much. Give it a break and enjoy the quiet.”

As Dario reaches Delia, spotlights from above come on, and the constant chatter resumes.

“She needs all the light and attention she deserves! She’s a hard worker after all!” the mischievous lighting technician says.

“Don’t listen to this kid, Delia,” Renzo says as he pushes Dario aside and hugs Delia. Now that they’re together, Dario sees that the colorful strings that comprise both of their bodies are colors that the other has.

“You’re right, Renzo. Let’s go have fun while we’re still young and rich,” Delia says.

“Wait! You can’t keep being so irresponsible with your lives! It’s not going to end well,” Dario says before Renzo throws a pamphlet at his face.

Looking at it, Dario sees that it’s one of Carlo’s old pamphlets that has tips on living a consistently happy life. He stops himself from cursing since he’s told Carlo to stop printing these or to at least change the advice on them.

“Give that a read if you want to stop being such a killjoy,” Renzo says.

“Stop and listen to me for a second!”

Scenes of Renzo’s and Delia’s many love interests pass by Dario, many of which end in fights both verbal and physical, but they usually keep ending up together even after cheating and breaking up with one another time and time again. Dario rips apart the pamphlet and is about to run after the two until he finds himself back in normal reality and Adelina’s arms again.

Noticing the sudden jolt to his movement and the tired look on his face, Adelina says, “Did you just go to the theatre?”

“Yeah…” Dario says as he gently holds her and looks away.

“Is everything okay? You look defeated.”

“Well, I wasn’t able to change the minds of the two people I was talking to. I don’t even know why I was kicked back into reality.”

“Don’t worry about it. The Stage Master had some purpose in you being there and will probably do the rest of the job himself or with another person.”

“Yeah…I guess so…” Adelina squeezes Dario with a big hug. “Ow! What?”

“Stop feeling so bad! That’s my job! You’re supposed to be the most positive between the two of us, so you better stop feeling bad or else I’ll start feeling worse.”

“Okay, okay. Thank you, Adelina.”

“Shut up and start smiling again.”

A day of work passes until Dario hears news of a car crash the next morning. Having a bad feeling that he should look at it, Dario looks into what happened and is shocked to read that Renzo and Delia were the ones who were killed in the crash after a night of drinking and partying. He sits dumbfounded and blankly staring at the news until he finds himself back in the theatre. His eyes look up at me and there’s an expression on his face that I have the answer to.

“Renzo and Delia didn’t want to hear the truth. They didn’t want to change, and because of that, they sealed their fate. You didn’t do anything wrong and there was nothing more you could’ve done,” I say to him before snapping him back to reality.

Now, Dario feels slightly better, and yet, still longs for a better answer, but he knows better. The truth can sometimes be hard to accept, shallow, unbelievable, and make you feel empty. Adelina comes across him staring at the news and asks him about it.

After telling her about it, she hugs him and says, “Don’t be upset. Remember what you said to me a few days ago? Well, you are my joy, and now, it’s my time to be yours, so let me help you move on.”

She then kisses him and holds him tighter as he cries.

Monday, December 2, 2024

All Mask, No Face: Chapter 2 – Uncaring Emptiness

Chapter 2 – Uncaring Emptiness

A hard day’s work passes for Dario until he enters the theatre, which he almost forgets to look forward to. He enters it just as he sits down on a chair to catch his breath and finds himself sitting on the floor.

“Ow! You could’ve made that transition easier so I wouldn’t slam my butt down on the floor,” Dario says to me.

“I need you in a particular mood for the next person you’ll see. Her name is Adelina and she needs some cheering up from her miserable and tired state,” I say before taking Dario to her stage. “Please be patient with her.”

“I will,” Dario says.

When he enters Adelina’s room, he finds that her stage is colored in various shades of grey with not much around her. She sits in the middle of the room looking down and humming herself a song. Her appearance is a disjointed one, not one part of it is normal because it is nothing but a series of grey lines with spikes on her shoulders and a shriveling grey thing in the center that must be her heart. The mask on her face covers most of it except for the side of it and her black hair. As for the design of her mask, it’s plain just as she is with four bits of hair on it and a strangely content look on its face.

Going up to her, Dario says, “You must be Adelina. How are you doing?”

“Fine, and you?” she says.

“A bit tired from all the work I did today, but good.” A deafening silence in the room fills the room as Dario is unsure of how to continue and is put off guard by how strange this all is, even by the theatre’s standards. “What troubles you?”

“Nothing does. I’m perfectly fine as I am.”

“You wouldn’t be here if that was the case.”

“I know. I’ve been here many times before and heard from many people like you.”

“People are brought here more than once if they need more help.”

“Or if that Stage Master wants you to be here. It’s not like we have a choice.”

“Well, it’s a good thing that we are brought here. I got a lot of help from him and am enjoying helping others like you.”

“If you say so. Maybe the reason why so many are brought here time and time again is because the help doesn’t truly work. I mean, in the real world, no one remembers the theatre, and most that do just remember it as a dream. If it were more important, it’d be remembered and more people would be actively searching it out.”

Dario thinks about Adelina’s words and back on his conversation with Carlo and how Carlo still thinks that the theatre was a dream. To Carlo, they’re only collaborating because he believes that dreams tell you a lot about reality and what you should be doing.

“I make a lot of the same mistakes,” Dario admits. “Back at the charity I work at, I sometimes put stock in the wrong area, bring the wrong stuff to a person, or tell someone to deal with a difficult patient that I don’t want to bother with. Even now, I have to remember that not everyone is perfect and we can be made better through trial and error.”

“I get it,” Adelina coldly says.

“Can you tell me why you keep coming back here?”

“I don’t know why. There’s nothing wrong with me. All I do is keep to myself and not bother anyone.”

“There has to be more to it than that.”

“There isn’t. I don’t care to be in anyone’s business nor do I care about myself.”

“That’s it then. Your uncaringness towards yourself and others.”

“What’s so wrong about it? I don’t bother anyone.”

Images of Adelina flicker on the walls around them, showing her being distant towards others and secluding herself.

“Seclusion isn’t good for you.”

“Why isn’t it? No one is hurt by it.”

“You are and the people who you could help by being around them.”

“No, that’s not true and I told you I’m fine.”

“You’re lying to yourself.”

Now, videos of Adelina show her longingly and jealously looking at gatherings of people.

“I wish I could be like them,” she says in the videos. “This is fine. Why can’t I make any friends? Who cares? I don’t care. They aren’t good people anyway. I’m not that interesting of a person. I couldn’t be friends with them. Life is stressful enough alone. Keeping up with family on holidays and special events is all I need. There are more important things to do.”

“I care, Adelina,” Dario says to break up the constant noise.

“I’ve heard that many times before and nothing has come of it.”

“Today, that changes. Can I see your real face? Your mask hides too much of it.”

“Sure, if you can.”

Dario slightly moves aside Adelina’s mask to reveal that there’s only the outline of a face on hers with no features to it, which shocks him a bit.

“There’s nothing to me. Nothing special or worth getting invested in,” Adelina says.

“That’s not true. You just need to find yourself.”

“It is true!” the mischievous lighting technician says as he pops out of Adelina’s head. “There’s hardly anything in here!”

Dario swipes away at the technician as the man pops in and out of Adelina like a game of whack-a-mole while saying, “Don’t listen to him! Everyone feels like a blank slate, at first.”

“I’m not a blank slate. I know my purpose in life, and that’s just to work, eat, and sleep alone until the day I die. That’s all I’m worth and I’ll ever be.”

“That’s not true.”

“Yes, it is. There’s nothing you can say to convince me otherwise. I’ve already heard how things could always get better and there’s joy to be found in the mundane, but neither answer has brought me peace. It’s never brought me out of the loneliness I find myself in.”

“I’ll be your friend,” Dario says with a hand on Adelina’s shoulder.

She looks to the side and thinks to herself as if the concept of a friend is foreign to her.

“How can you be? After we leave here, we’ll be far apart.”

“Where do you live?”

Adelina tells Dario the city she lives in, a city that so happens to be the same one he is in as well. They exchange addresses and realize they only live two blocks away from one another.

“I’ll take the time to visit you. We’ll talk and I’ll help you become the person you’re meant to be,” Dario confidently says.

Adelina smiles for the first time in what feels like years to her before frowning again.

“When do you want to see each other? Tomorrow? Next week? Next month? I’ve tried making arrangements to be with others, but they always ghost me in the end. Prove to me that you want to help me by seeing me sooner rather than later.”

“Okay. How about tonight? My parents should be making dinner now and it’ll be ready by the time I meet you at your house.”

“Ah…um…”

“This is proof that I want to help you, isn’t it?”

“It is. Um…okay. I’ll see you soon then.”

Dario blinks and sees that he’s back home. He immediately gets up and tells his parents that a friend in need is coming over for dinner and he’s going to walk her over.

“Who’s coming over?” his mom asks.

“A girl named Adelina. We just met,” Dario says.

“Oh, if that’s the case, well get dinner ready as soon as possible. We have to make a good first impression,” Dario’s dad says.

Dario rolls his eyes at the implication that his dad thinks he may fall in love with Adelina and walks out the door. When he gets to Adelina’s apartment, he rings the doorbell and doesn’t have to wait long for her to answer her. The sight of her is a bit surprising to Dario, and not, at the same time. She has a disheveled appearance that suggests she was rushing to do her best to hide her many imperfections such as her messy hair and sunken eyes. It’s also apparent that she’s about Dario’s age and hasn’t showered for days since she smells like perfume and the stink of work. Adelina is also blocking the door and shifting around to hide the mess that is her home.

“Um, hi, Dario. I’m glad you actually came,” she awkwardly says.

“The pleasure is mine. Are you ready to go?” Dario asks.

“Ye-yeah. Let’s.”

Adelina walks with Dario back to his house where they enjoy a nice together with Dario’s parents. For the next week, Dario makes time to see Adelina to help her find herself and enjoyment in life. To his surprise, he doesn’t enter the theatre during any of the days, but the most surprising thing he finds is that Adelina enjoys helping people at the charity with him, especially caring for the sick and homeless. At one moment, she catches him smiling at him.

“What?” she shyly asks.

“Nothing. I’m just happy to see you smiling and happy,” he says, making her smile even more and blush.

By the end of the last day on Saturday when Dario is walking Adelina home, he says, “It looks like I’ve finally managed to get you to change for the better.”

“Yeah, but this doesn’t mean that we’ll stop seeing each other, right?” Adelina asks.

“No, of course not. You’re welcome to work with my family and me at the charity full-time if you want.”

“That’s good. I don’t know what I would do without you.” Adelina hugs and then kisses Dario on the cheek. “Thank you for everything. See you tomorrow.”

Adelina then walks into her apartment while leaving Dario stunned and blushing. His shocked and blushed expression is stuck on his face even as he arrives back home and tries to hide it. Seeing him all red makes his parents ask what happened, and when he tells them, they’re excited that he has a new girlfriend. Even though he denies it, Dario wonders if Adelina kissed him just because he’s been such a big help to her or if she actually does love him and he also begins wondering why he feels like he wants her to love him.

Sunday, December 1, 2024

All Mask, No Face: Chapter 1 – Blinded by the Light

Chapter 1 – Blinded by the Light

Since yesterday, Dario has been wary about every door he goes through. He expects that each door could be the one taking him to the theatre, and yet none of them do. He tries to relax and keep his focus on his work at the charity so he doesn’t mess up. However, after he walks through a doorless doorway, he finds himself in the theatre and is immediately caught off guard.

I appear in front of him in a firework and say, “Good afternoon, Dario! How are you doing?”

“Fine that I’m finally here. I was in suspense all day wondering what door would bring me here,” Dario says.

“You don’t need to go through a door to get here. I can bring you here if you were on a plane, in the ocean, in a fight, or simply lying on your bed.”

“Really? Since we’re on the topic, what happens outside the theatre when I’m in here?”

“Absolutely nothing. This place is outside of time, and as such, you can spend years here, and not a second would pass in the normal reality.”

“That’s…impossibly amazing.”

“Anything is possible for me. I am the Stage Master and all of reality is my stage. As for you, you will be helping a man named Carlo on his stage. He has the issue of being too positive. It’s clouded his conscience as he only cares about being happy and directing others to do the same.”

“I see. Will you be with me while I try to convince him to change?”

“I’ll be with you in spirit and helping you to say what you need to. Other than that, it’s all you.”

“Okay. I think I got this.”

“I know you do. Now, let me show you to Carlo’s stage.”

Dario is lifted into the air by the invisible force of my power and flies through the many halls of the theatre until we reach Carlo’s stage. He laughs and mentions how fun that was and then enters the room. In it, blinding lights that mostly consist of shades of yellow and gold immediately come on.

“Could you turn down the brightness?” Dario asks.

“Haha, can’t do that. Carlo wants them to be as bright as possible. Who doesn’t want their life to be bright all the time anyway?” the mischievous lighting technician says.

With his eyes squinted and hands giving him some shade, Dario makes his way through the blinding light until he sees Carlo who is sitting on a beach looking out at the horizon. His real body is barely there as he only has his half torso that wears golden chains and a light blue shirt and lacks arms and legs while every other part of his body is comprised of various shades of blue strings. Half of his face shows his brown eyes and blonde air and the other has his mask that has banana-like pieces of hair coming out of his head, crescent eyes, eyebrows, and nose, and a smile showing his golden teeth that stretch his face so much that it threatens to tear his face.

“Carlo?” Dario asks.

“Hello there! Are you here to bask in this wonderful day with me? What’s your name boy?” Carlo asks.

“Kind of. My name is Dario and I’m here to help you change your life.”

“Ah, a coworker in the same profession. Thank you for offering, but I’m fine as I am. I see joy and happiness in my everyday life even if things go wrong during them.”

“That’s the problem right there. You’re viewing it a bit too positively.”

One of the lights breaks, causing a dark spot in Carlo’s bright day.

“What do you mean, Dario? There’s no such thing as being too positive.”

“There can be when it blinds you to everything else in your life.”

“Explain more and look at this.” The beach scene changes to show Carlo’s many talks to the positivity groups he manages. “These are the many groups I manage where I spread messages of positivity and happy living. What’s so wrong about this?”

“You’re focusing on being happy and treating it as the goal of your life when you shouldn’t.”

Another light breaks and the scene changes, this time showing Carlo breaking off family connections, quitting jobs, and begging his followers for money.

“Of course, I had to do these things. They kept me from being happy. Again, what’s wrong with this?”

“Can’t you see the answer? You broke your family’s heart and are leaning on your followers so you don’t have to work a job to support yourself. You’re making others miserable so you can be happy.”

“Those people deserved it because they kept me from doing what I wanted just like you are now. You don’t help people by making them feel miserable.”

“What’s making you feel miserable is your conscience, your guilt. That feeling of misery will help you confess that what you’re doing is wrong and live a better life.”

“But…but if I stop what I’m doing, then the people who follow me will think I’m a phony, stop paying me to give lessons, and go back to being sad.”

“Then you should help each other after confessing. Don’t be afraid of the consequences of your actions. It’s better to be true than to lie to yourself every day. I’m sure your followers will understand.”

“No…I don’t think they will.”

Two more lights break and the scene changes this time to show Carlo helping a woman who can’t find anything in life that makes her happy.

“Please, no,” Carlo says while looking away from the scene.

“I don’t know what to do,” the woman said. “Nothing makes me happy. I’ve tried gambling, sports, traveling, focusing on work, hanging out with family and friends, none of it makes me happy.”

With a grim look on his face, Carlo said, “I don’t know what to tell you. If I couldn’t find anything happy to live for, then I’d stop living.”

“I didn’t mean to say it that way!”

“But it’s what you felt,” Dario says. “It’s what you believe, that if you’re not happy every day of your life, then you shouldn’t keep living.”

More lights break until the room is in complete darkness except for one light that shows a news report about the same woman Carlo was talking to killing herself.

“I’m sorry…” Carlo says as he starts to cry. Every light in the room turns on again and points itself at Carlo. “I have to keep being happy and making them feel that way so no one ends up like her.”

“No, someone will end up like her if you do. She killed herself because she couldn’t be happy, so you need to tell people that there’s more to life than happiness.”

“What? If we don’t live to make ourselves and others happy, then what’s there to live for?”

“We can live to improve the lives of others and ourselves through hard work and determination. I work at a charity where I do nothing but run around helping the sick, hungry, and needy. It’s backbreaking and intense work. Not everyone I help becomes happy, but they are thankful and are able to continue living.”

“But life is full of so much pain and misery. Sometimes I just want it to end so I never feel the harshness of it again.”

“Life can make you feel that way. Even though I’m not happy every day and sometimes miserable for one reason or another, I find peace knowing that I did the right thing for the day, that someone was helped by my actions, and hope to do more and better the next day.”

“Yeah…yeah, you’re right, kid. Do you think I can do the same as you?”

Dario walks over to Carlo and hugs him.

“I think you can.” The darkness lights up and reveals all the people that Carlo made happy.  “Remember that you made dozens of people happy. You’re an inspiration to them. You just need to orient them in the right direction, and if they leave you or you mess up, then pick yourself up and try better next time. That’s all you have to do.”

“Right. You’re right! Thank you so much, Dario. Maybe we can collaborate on a project together to help others. What do you say?”

“I’d like that.”

Carlo and Dario shake hands. In the blink of an eye, Dario finds himself back at the charity. After work, he looks up Carlo online and messages him to follow up on what Carlo offered. Even though Carlo hardly remembers Dario, he accepts and they arrange to meet each other one day to plan their collaboration, a day that Dario happily looks forward to.

Saturday, November 30, 2024

All Mask, No Face: Prologue – Training for the Role



Prologue – Training for the Role

There is a place, a theatre, that everyone visits more than once in their life. Most don’t remember it and even fewer remember it as nothing more than a dream or nightmare. It is a place of learning and understanding, happiness and delight, fear and dread, but most importantly, it is a place of pure persuasive truth to challenge how a person views the world so that they can see it in the correct light and improve their lives. Of the few who remember the theatre as it was, even fewer want to help in its mission. That small minority of helpers is a special lot, one of whom is about to face a challenge of his own today.

The young man’s name is Dario, the son of a couple who manages a charity for the homeless who cannot care for themselves. His mother handles the business and office side of things while his father is a doctor and cook. Dario is responsible for running around the building to deliver mail and news, helping with stock, and caring for the patients. It’s what his parents did in their youth, so he does the same, except he doesn’t know which of his parent’s positions he’ll take over and prays that he knows in due time. As he runs in and out of rooms, he unexpectedly finds himself in the theatre.

“Woah! How did I get here?” Dario wonders out loud.

The part of the theatre that Dario finds himself in is the guest hall, a large spiraling room whose ceiling cannot be seen filled with lights of all colors, stagehands going about their business, and a seemingly infinite amount of halls and rooms each decorated differently to suit every purpose. An usher with a smile that spirals around his face takes Dario to the auditorium he is meant to go to where his questions will be answered. Along the way, Dario sees other strange people who have abnormalities such as one person having wings for arms, feet, and a head with eyes on their body, another person who has the face of a lion, lamb, and human all in one, and another who manifests from the shadows and turns into many kinds of birds to carry all kinds of luggage around.

Once they get to Dario’s auditorium, the usher bows his head and says, “Please, enjoy your stay.”

Dario tepidly walks into the auditorium whose doors close behind him. The lights turn on and focus on a figure that manifests itself out of the light and dark on the stage. This figure turns into an image of a man with white skin and whose clothes and hat are colored red, grey, and gold just like the circles in his eyes. He wears a long coat and outfit that looks similar to that of a circus master.

“Who are you?” Dario asks.

“I am the Stage Master, and you, my dear Dario, are here for the opportunity of a lifetime,” I say with a smile.

“What do you mean?”

I explain to him what this place is and then elaborate on his purpose here. “You are here to help yourself so you can better help others. On this stage, how you view reality will manifest and your troubles and woes will be laid bare so you can deal with them.”

“You can help me help others better? You’re an answer to my prayers then.”

“My boy, I answer all prayers. Now, let me reveal your troubles and view on reality, so you may become the man you are meant to be.”

The walls, ceiling, and floor disappear into particulars of light, and each corner of the room contains each part of the building where Dario works. In each part, he sees a familiar face.

“Mom! Dad!” he says to them.

“They can’t hear you. These are merely projections of them. I know your parents are great role models in your life and fulfill the role I’ve given them well. They are servants after my own heart, serving others while expecting nothing in return as all who work for others should,” I say.

“My only worry in life is not living up to their expectations of me.”

Versions of Dario appear in each room, messing up, and causing people pain in the worst scenarios. The lighting in the room distorts and changes as Dario’s parents harshly scold him in an out-of-character way causing the real Dario to become upset.

“Stop doing that!” I say to one of the lighting technicians far above us.

This technician’s head is the only thing visible. He looks down at us with his gold and grey eyes. His golden hair, though long, hardly hides his face and mischievous smile.

“Haha, sorry. I just thought he should see that,” the technician says dishonestly.

“Watch out for people like him,” I say to Dario while pointing up at the lights. “Even if they appear to make sense or be like angels, don’t listen to them if they tell you something that goes against what is true and right. Now, focus on this reflection of yourself. What do you see?”

Dario looks at himself in the mirror on the wall and is astonished. Half of him is his usual green-eyed, brown-haired self while the other wears a mask and whose body is made of disjointed lines of color. His mask mirrors Dario’s strong face, has golden eyes, has and a star on its forehead. As for the rest of his body, it’s all various kinds of colors and frilly like the outfit of a fat circus clown.

“What is that? Why does part of me look like that?” Dario asks.

“You are divided between the true idea of yourself and your view of yourself. One part sees you as you truly are while the other sees you as nothing more than a strong-faced clown that pretends to be a great helper,” I say.

“Well…I do act like a clown that’s only pretending to be a shoulder to lean on sometimes.”

“But that’s only sometimes. You pick yourself up after you fall every time. Don’t let the failures of your past define your future.”

“If you answer all prayers, could you answer one that I’ve been praying for so long and every night?”

“No, I cannot make you perfect. You will only receive that at the end of your life.”

“Why? I thought I was supposed to be someone to rely on, not someone who messes up and gets things wrong.”

“Your mistakes keep you humble, relatable, and human. They push you to become better than you are, keep you praying, and close to me. That is why you can never be perfect in this life.”

Dario looks around at his view of reality around him. He focuses on his many faults until waving away at them as if he could push them away with his hand. He then looks at the times he made people smile and when he made his parents proud. One moment in particular catches his attention. It was when his dad accidentally broke two family heirlooms by knocking them to the ground. After he picked up the pieces and got yelled at, he began constructing something new piece by piece every night since then.

Dario approached his dad and asked, “Are you and mom going to be okay?”

“Yes, we are. Why?”

“She asked really talked to you for days.”

“I don’t blame her. This is a special family heirloom that’s been passed down for generations, but she just needs time to get over it and I need to make up for what I did.”

“How can you do that? The two glass birds are beyond repair.”

“Beyond repair, yes, but not completely useless. See?”

Dario’s dad reveals to him the finished results of his month-long project, a glass statue of a family of birds made from the shattered remains of what he broke.

“Wow! That’s amazing!” Dario said.

“It is. Always remember this statue when you feel like your life is broken or that you’ve messed up and can never recover because the worst mistakes can become the start of a beautiful end.”

Once the finishing touches were done, Dario and his dad presented the statue to his mom who was overjoyed at the reconstructed statue. Dario pulls his mind out of the memory and smiles.

“Okay. I accept that,” he confidently says.

“I am overjoyed to hear that!” I say as I hug Dario then present to him a new image on his stage. “Many of the people who work here are people like you who want others to accept the truth about reality and make their lives better as a result. You could be doing what I was just doing for you, but only if you accept.”

Dario thinks it over for a second before accepting.

Again, I hug Dario and then say, “Thank you, so much! I knew you wouldn’t disappoint me.”

“So, when do I start?”

“You can start tomorrow. For now, rest up and return to your responsibilities at the charity. You have a big day ahead of you.”

The floor opens up like a door. After he falls through it, Dario finds himself exiting the room he was once in at the charity as if everything he went through happened in the blink of an eye. He looks around in disbelief and starts to wonder if what he just went through was actually real until he sees a card in his hand that he was unknowingly holding. It says, “See you again soon!” in colorful letters and has my face on it. Comforted with proof of past events, Dario smiles, puts the card in his pocket, and runs off to continue in his duties with a lighter heart and a happy hope for the next day and what may come next.