outcast

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Coming June 2013

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After six years of “angels” coming out of the sky and taking people from her town, 16-year-old Riley Carver has just about had it living with the constant fear. When one decides to terrorize her in her own backyard, it’s the final straw. She takes her mother’s shotgun and shoots the thing. So it’s dead. Or … not? In place of the creature she shot, is a guy. A really hot guy. A really hot alive and breathing guy. Oh, and he’s totally naked.Not sure what to do, she drags his unconscious body to the tool shed and ties him up. After all, he’s an angel and they have tricks. When he regains consciousness she’s all set to interrogate him about why the angels come to her town, and how to get back her best friend (and almost boyfriend) Chris, who was taken the year before. But it turns out the naked guy in her shed is just as confused about everything as she is.He thinks it’s 1956.Set in the deep south, OUTCAST is a story of love, trust, and coming of age. It’s also a story about the supernatural, a girl with a strange sense of humor who’s got wicked aim, a greaser from the 50’s, and an army of misfits coming together for one purpose: To kick some serious angel ass.

TRANSCRIPT

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Coming June 2013

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1.

They come out of the sky and take you.

Everyone knows that.

Why? Nobody could answer that one. Not really. Not when you

thought about it. Sure the conclusion was that it was a Glory, but what

happened after they came, after they took, after they left? No one could

say for sure.

The first time it happened, it freaked everyone out. This was God-

fearing land. It said so, right on the town sign. You knew the second you

passed into our community that this was a god-damned God-fearing

place.

I’d always wondered if it was maybe ’cause we feared god so

much that they came.

Anyway, the people here couldn’t understand why they came when

folks went to church every Sunday. Everyone blamed everyone else. It

wasn’t anyone’s fault, though. Well, as far as I could tell.

They’d started coming six years ago, just that one day, just after

the sun had set. They came, they took, they left. They scared the shit out

of everyone. When they came the next year, same day, same time and

everything, that’s when people started thinking there might be more

going on. That’s when the church went up. I mean, we’d always had

churches here, but the other church was built. The one devoted to them.

The Church of the Angels.

See, people were conflicted, and the only way to reconcile it all

was to see it as a Glory. It couldn’t be that we were being punished. I

mean, some had speculated exactly that—that those who were taken were

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bad. But then someone pointed out that Georgia Banks had been taken.

There was just nothing about Georgia Banks that was sinful.

Then a newcomer, a man by the name of Pastor Warren, explained

it to us. He pointed out how god-fearing the town was, and that maybe

this was all a holy blessing or something. I mean, they’re angels, right?

And they take them straight up, right? It wasn’t like they were going …

you know … down. Maybe we were looking at it all wrong.

And the new church went up.

Pastor Warren saw to it that the church went up.

People went to the new church because they claimed they wanted

to thank the angels for choosing us. They claimed it was to pray that next

time they could be taken too. But that just wasn’t the way of it at first. In

the beginning they went to the church and prayed to be left alone. They

left offerings and hoped that if they said just the right thing the angels

would let them stay on this earth some time longer.

The third year there was a celebration. Instead of locking

ourselves in our homes, windows boarded up, like some hurricane was

blowing our way, we all made our way out to the gazebo in Codghill

Park. It was like Fourth of July, banners blowing, fireworks and

everything. Hot dogs. And the little kids playing carnival games. When

the time came, and we couldn’t be sure for sure they’d come again, we

stood and waited and looked up into the sky. The silence was meant to

be reverential, but I could feel the terror. The dogs could feel it too,

twitchy and howling, yanking on their leashes. Buster broke clear off his

chain, and Buster was such a good dog most of the time.

Then there was a scream, and Bernie Wilcox went flying into the

sky. He was the first they grabbed that year. We saw the shadow behind

him, thick arms wrapped tightly around his chest, and wings that spread

twenty feet across the sky.

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You never saw them come down, but you always saw them fly up.

Some reckoned it had something to do with the extra weight, but they

were angels, and I just didn’t see them as finding things particularly

heavy.

My thinking was they didn’t want to be seen coming in, because

then we might be able to run away. But they wanted us to see them

leave. Because they wanted us to know that they’d been.

Fourth year there was another celebration. By now Pastor Warren

had started to really convince us of the Glory. Well, most of us. So this

time we tried something different. We thought that maybe we could

think a couple steps ahead, that, maybe if we gave them some individuals,

at least in that way we could have some control over the situation. It was

a really strange celebration that year. You had, standing on the makeshift

stage, these hardened criminals, sentenced to life or worse. But then you

also had the volunteers, the ones who wanted the Glory. Saints and

sinners you could say, but I couldn’t quite understand why, when we’d

decided that the angels were taking folks to their Glory, why you’d be

sending up the sinners. I didn’t think they’d much want that side of the

stage.

They didn’t.

Didn’t want the saints either for that matter. They took whoever

they pleased from the crowd and left.

We decided after that to just to go back to the celebration idea. Try

just to have a good time. Pretty hard, really. Though we gave a good

show of it.

Fifth year they took Chris, my best friend since we were little and

who I’d just had my first kiss with the week before.

Sixth year, I shot an angel in the face.