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—
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DECEMBER
HEAVY METAL
5
1984
VOL. VUI, NO. IX
DOSSIER, edited by
Lou
Stathis
14
TRITON,
26
THE WALLS OF SAMARIS,
34
THE ITALIAN INQUISITION:
by Daniel Torres by Schuiten
FEDERICO FELLINI INTERVIEWED, by Dan Yakir
38
HM's STAR DISSECTIONS, by Drew Friedman
40
AN AUTHOR SIX
IN SEARCH OF CHARACTERS,
by Milo Manara 52
THE HUNTING PARTY, by P. Christin. Enki Bilal.
61
62
Illustrated
by
CHAIN MAIL ENSLAVED BY THE NEEDLE, by Joost Swarte
80
84
GALLERY: DORIS AND BORIS VALLEJO'S
ENCHANTMENT THE BUS, by Paul Kirchner
85
TEX ARCANA,
93
ROCK OPERA,
by John Findley
by Rod Kierkegaard, Front cover.
by Richard Corben Back cover. by Royo
Jr.
FOR $9.95 WE
That's the "Good Clean Sex" issue up there: witty, racy, innovative— an issue reminiscent of the enormously popular National Lampoon special editions of the seventies. It's January, the first monthly issue of the new National Lampoon, the first of twelve completely different issues to be published in 1985. Each issue of (he National Lampoon in 1985 and thereafter will be created and edited by a different team of writers, editors, artists, and cartoonists. Each will have a different theme, a different look, a different approach. Each, however, will deal in NatLamp humor, the humor that has made this the most popular magazine of its kind in the world, that created National Lampoon's Animal House, National Lampoon's Vacation, National Lampoon's Radio Dinner, National Lampoon's Lemmings, and so much more. For fifteen years the National Lampoon has had basically the same look, with many of the same columns and many of the same most features. We feel it's time for a new look. There will be no regular columns or features or comic strips— although many of the popular artists and writers of the past fifteen years will continue to appear in the pages of the magazine. But each magazine will be different.
All magazines have a continuing format It is one of the most unusual and innovative ideas in the history of the magazine business. with columns and features that appear on a regular basis. This one won't. Following "Good Clean Sex" will be such issues as "A Misguided Tour of New York," "National Lampoon's Fifteenth Anniversary Celebration," and many other unusual and hilarious issues to be announced. Subscribe now. This could be fun!
Sirs:
interesting, new. joke-filled magazine described above. I'd love to subscribe to the wonderful, hilarious, unusual, innovative, have to be an absolute dogbrain not to. Here is my money, you deserve it more than I. 1
am
one
reasonably intelligent and
I'd
I'd like
year, please for $9.95 (because
I
have deduced that
it
me
$14.05 over the newsstand price and $2.00 over the
will save
$34.25 over the ridiculously already too low newsstand
will save
subscription price). I
am
quite sophisticated but not a real genius, so I'll take for $ 13.75 (since my slide rule informs me that
two years, please price
Q I
and $4.20 over the very
fair
I
subscription price).
the smartest person I know and 1 demand that you send three whole years, if you don't mind for the paltry sum of $ 18.50 (which any price and of course $6.45 over the very reasonable subscription price). I
am
idiot
knows
is
a saving of $53. 50 over the newsstand
Lampoon. Dept. HM1284, 635 Madison Ave., I am to send check or money order to National per year for Canada, Mexico, and other foreign lands. All checks must be in U.S. funds.
also understand
Add $5.00
New York,
N.Y. 10022.
NAME ADDRESS. STATE
CITY If
you are in a
her.
real big
"Big Jim sent me."
hurry you can
call this absolutely toll-free
-
ZIP
number: 1-800-331-1750. And ask
for Secret
Operator #31.
Tell
—
—
Wordpekar Worry is what he's doing at the moment. Harvey Pekar has a lot to worry about— he doesn't mind telling you and
Sometimes I find myself down to just one or two dependable artists, so have to try
crabbiest person east of the Mississippi.
(Yeah, he lives
all this
taking up lots of valuable you want to know exactly what's worrying Harvey Pekar, pick up a
to
copy of American Splendor. It's all there in black and white: divorce, being broke, dealing with jerks at work, trying to meet girls, trying to figure out what the fuck life is all about. When you get right down to it, what isn't there to worry about these days? Not a whole hell of a lot. And so, Harvey Pekar worries. Now would you please just let the guy alone so he can get something done? And for God's sake, buy his goddamn magazine
HM: Where did
Consider the case of Harvey Pekar. Here's a guy who's got to be the
—
in Cleveland but is that an excuse?) At the same time, he puts out the best damned comic book you can buy— if you can find it. If you can't, you can order it from Harvey. Who, as
really
you might recall, is a real grouch. Why is Harvey so crabby, you ask? Because of assholes like you, asking
dumb
questions like that
all
the time.
I
mean, can't you find anything better to do than bug other people? Especially people who are just trying to get by, working a nine-to-fiver, and then putting together this great mag, American Splendor, about the life and times and thoughts and problems of Harvey Pekar— a magazine which never sells worth a damn and is a
—
talk
And
time.
is
if
befor attics
all
over Cleveland collapse.
Mike Barson
pain in the ass to get into final form, what
with artists always being late with their
HM:
work, and the printers always fucking up, and the distributors never ordering enough copies.
collaborate with you through nine issues
.
.
.
Well, you'd be cranky, too. just Harvey's pbinl
pain in the ass,
life
And
that's
—people can be
a real
can be a real pain
in
You've had a wagonload of artists
of American Splendor.
How
determine which
should do which
artist
do you
story?
HP:
i
each
illustrator,
try to
work with the strengths of and in that way minimize
their weaknesses.
keep
in
mind
over Cleveland?
issue
is
always the art of the possible.
who can do what
I'm gradually learning and why. However,
best,
me, getting out an
that for
pleasant 'little genre gets upgraded to a
the early Seventies, the publishing
drugstores, and 7-11
category. Category fiction gets
's.
And
its
own
mucho horror product. Most of which
buying land who will gladly fork over hard-earned sheckels for the privilege of having the bejeezus scared
of course, quite horrible.
out of them.
publisher as
Today, not a week goes by without one bookstores by the bushel. Now that Steven King has been accepted as the
Harold Robbins of horror, the publishing can just sit back and let umpteen biz
dozen other writers get sucked up jet-stream. That's what happens
in his
when
d
who
often are
unknown drawn
can't always have a story
who would
have been
my
Cleveland?" HP: Some of them came from local art schools; others were introduced to me by people who already were working on AS. Considering my limited contacts and the lousy money pay, I think I've been !
fortunate to find so
many
fine illustrators.
Dumm and Greg Budget!, Gerry Shamray, Sue Cavey, Kevin Brown they've each got their own unique style. HM: I must confess, I first picked up an issue of American Splendor strictly Gary
because of the Crumb art on the cover and inside. He always seems to get the funniest stories to draw. HP: Crumb is one of the greatest I know he is capable of finding the means to handle just about any kind of story, i have been
Thus, the creation of
full.
is,
Take William Peter Blatty's Legion. Please. Launched by its hardcover if it were trie second coming of Carrie, it turns out simply to be the second coming of but that would be telling. Why not run out and buy the paperback (Pocket Books) and ruin your day on your own? Suffice it to say that this book might'vc been subtitled The Exorcist U, except that the movie by that name already ruined the market for that .
.
.
thinking of him primarily for the more
humorous
pieces, but you'll see a major
departure
in his
work
To be absolutely
in issue
good ideas buried
number
how many pages
fair,
in the
there are a few
midst of Blatty's
ridiculously overripe prose
those racks
have to be kept
their
1
artist
choice.
you discover all the young talent that handles the bulk of the art on AS'} "Off the streets of
title.
big racks in B. Daltons, airports,
industry has been hip to the fact that there are lots of people out there in book-
or two of these creep-fests appearing in
first
nine. There's a limit to
on The Exorcist. Ever since William Peter Blatty's nasty novel made several million dollars back in it
me. by the
cartoonists of our time, and
the ass, and what the hell is he going to do with 50,000 unsold copies of American Splendor stored in attics all
Blame
I
to recruit others,
—and one
scene good for a buzz on the old boo-
—but
let's just hope that Blatty cook up an Exorcist ill ten years from now to pay the rent. Marginally better is James Herbert's Shrine (Signet), which takes 458 pages to tell a 158-page story. If wading through those 300 unnecessary pages doesn't bother you and for $3.95, some people might consider that getting their money's worth— then this overinflated account of a young girl's possession (yes, again) by a witch from the middle ages might please. Not only is Herbert, a British writer, tone-deaf when it comes to style, but he
box
doesn't have to
—
HEAVY METAL
Crumb
have
HM: You can
to
has the time to do for me, but I'm happy with every piece he's done. see that he really has an
to
keep your costs down to rockprinter for the covers, one
bottom— one
shoot the negatives, one to print the
understanding of you and what you're
interiors,
trying to accomplish.
thing together.
HP: Yeah, he does have understanding of
my
a real
good
I
a
bindery to put the whole
And
it's
up
that everything gets done,
stories; in fact, he's
I
comfortable working with over the phone and through the mail. All the other illustrators 1 use
the only artist that
and
feel
to
me
to see
and done
right.
actually drive the covers over to the
bindery in a station wagon once they're printed that's 10,000 covers.
—
HM: Do
vou ever wish
that
someone
else
HM:
It
must have been a heck of a
correspondence.
HP: The thing that really set it off was when she asked methink it was in her
—
—
I
"How can 1 tell if I'm a member of the working class or not?" That provoked a long answer from me, and the rest just went from there. HM: And so you whisked her away to Cleveland. Have you lived there all your second
letter
DID XTEJSLZOErSVS KV LIRE SEEMED SO SZOUENLY. MV BELA'ISOTJSHJP WITH
MV GIRLFRIEND WAS JOORLY DEFINED, MV BUDDY VISITS ME AND I DON'T HAN IUK US TO DO ANYTHING CW SATUKDffi night. i knew that he did mtod Been© left alone eot itd gotten mvsely into a kjsmon ujhere if i pleased her i abandoned him. i knew he'd let ME OFF THE BOOK FOR 2T,Sl7T HOW COULD I HAVE BEEN SO
Harvey Pekar as depicted live in the
me
Cleveland area.
in
American Splendor #9 by Kevin Brown,
Crumb gave my career
a great deal of help early in
as a
comic book
The
writer.
story
first
illustrated
HP:
by him and and printed
book, The People's Comics in 1972. also turned Willie Murphy on to me, which led to Willie illustrating three my stories for his Flamed Out Funnies
the
start.
HP:. Yeah, I was in several mags before got started—Snarf, Marvel's Comix Book, and an issue of Bizarre Sex, in which I had the lead story, "How'd You Get into This Bizness. Ennyway?" it was about a gang bang. So, you could say that my style was established by the time AS began. HM: Writing a story is hard enough, but you took on the additional headaches of
AS
—
the editor and publisher
decided
to put out
when you
book
6
—which
so,
my
is
from beginning
to end.
what happens when you
HEAVY METAL
life has been greatly enriched began the book.
since
I
HM:
You met your new wife through AS,
you? HP: Yeah, she was part-owner of a comic-book store in Delaware that carried my book, and she had to write me to get an extra copy of number six when her own copy accidentally was sold. We began corresponding, and after about a didn't
distance phone calls, and several plane trips,
It's difficult
have four different people printing the
would be especially
million letters, a zillion hours of long
American Splendor by
yourself.
HP:
it
money on it all the time; I could afford to pay my illustrators more, which in turn would make it easier to get work from them on time. But I've been aware for a long time that AS was never going to be that popular, and that I was letting myself in for a heap of aggravation by publishing it myself. Even
I probably read those stories and never realized who this "Harvey Pekar"
AS was
It
else to
have
nice not to lose
HM:
thai
someone
I'd like to
then
#1.
assumed
like for
And
distributed better.
of
I'd
would
I
publish AS.
in his
Crumb
dude was.
was handling the publishing end of you could just concentrate on
things, so
the writing?
1
ever published, "Crazy Ed," was
I
we were
appetance big star in
married. She makes a brief in AS number nine, but she's a number ten. so you'll get to
meet her then.
life?
By now, Cleveland
has assumed the
role of the second most-important character in your stories.
All my life, yeah. I was born in the Mt. Pleasant section of Cleveland's east side at a time when it still had a large Jewish and Italian population, but was in
HP:
the process of ghetto.
becoming
part of the black
The neighborhood
I
live in
now—
the Coventry section of Cleveland
—
Heights has a great mixture of people from different social classes and ethnic backgrounds. Everyone gets along surprisingly well;
it's
terrific!
HM: What do
you think AS offers mainstream comic books do not?
that
HP: Most comic book
fans prefer fantasy.
I'm a
try to push
realistic writer:
I
own lives, try to how much drama and heroism and even humor there is in the people's faces into their get
them
life
of the so-called average person.
to realize
American Splendor does not offer is what I think most comic book fans are looking for. (For a copy of American Splendor #0. send $2.75 to Harvey Pekar, Box 18471, Cleveland Heights, Ohio44ll8. Issues two escapism, which
through eight are also available, at $1 .50 to $2.75.}
— places the horror high-point
—
way too early
book, leaving lots of anticlimactic "big" scenes to star! you snoring. Shrine, however, does not quality as a bad in the
book—just
Il seems ungenerous to. complain again, of a weak ending, but the rest of this book is so good that the hurried
conclusion
is
a double shame. This tale
a mediocre one that should
have gone on a diet. Herbert. incidentally, has built his career on horror, and has eight other novels to his credit (including
decent sex scene.
Which brings
all
room with human
skin. This book is having the hell promoted out of it by the publisher, which means il's probably going to be a hit. Whether Klein can come up with a second book of this quality remains to be seen, but one can hope. He is one of the few people in the genre who knows how to write a
The Fog. filmed by John
Carpenter). If Shrine were filmed with scenes intact, it would run aboul nine
reupholstered his living
Ramsey
us to
Campbell's The Face That Must Die (Scream/Press). Campbell has been around since 1964, when Arkham House
hours. 'Nuff said.
Speaking of films, the very hot Chelsea Quinn Yarbro has been commissioned to novelize a screenplay for something called Nomads (Bantam). Being shorter than Shrine doesn"! help but it allows you to finish it this turkey that much sooner and get on with your life. The female protagonist, a doctor wl is deja-vuing a dead man's experiem "finds herself in a nightmare from which
published the collections.
first
We
of three short story
know him from
also
fine anthologies he has edited.
New
Terrors and The Far Reaches of Fear
—
the
—and
he has not been too shy lo include one of his
own works
in
each collection. Which
to the good, because
is all
.
writer-,
perhaps the only
current group,
who
Campbell
celebrated fifty years from now. (You don't really ihink
is no escape." the cover copy tells escaped by tossing ii across the room. Yarbro, who had a million-seller with Dead and Buried a few years back, would be doing herself a favor by not cranking out novclizations of other
anyone will be reading Cujo even five years from now, do you?) The Face That Must Die is a restored
i
version of the earlier, expurgated novel;
people's lousy screenplays.
To move from
The premises
finishes
worthy of first
to
come
looney-iunes. There's nothing
provide a counterpoint to the creepy
up with
his beginnings.
half of The Shining.
It's
feels like to die
from bubonic-
in a coffin.
illustrations,
their
to the
Ceremonial author T.E.D. Klein. owes a good deal
most original—and Ed Gein
ncrdiesi hero and the
nasty
—
villain since
Riders of the Sidhe Bantam)— pronounced "shce" as in '"shee-r/!"— is Kenneth C. Flint's daring expose of the ancient Celtic gods, villains, and heroes Men from Outer Space. It's Martians I, Mythology 0, as a bunch of lovable
as
characters help a lad
become tell
a
man and
everyone
(Scream/Press: P.O. Box 8531
Cruz,
CA
,
S.
Barson
Santa
95061)
lovable rogues and bumbling magicians
could send anyone into insulin shock, while Asprin's sparkling contemporary
dialogue could get him a job scriptwriting for "Three's
Company." Cliches
range from the offensive people love this
here
to the dated.
People also eat
stuff.
But :
frozen fishsticks.
Spiegel Catalog of fantasy fun from
The Sleeping Dragon, by Joel Rosenberg (Signet), at least has the decency to be naive about its relentless lovableness. You can lean back and watch as stock characters from Any town Stale U. are sent into their own Dungeons & Dragons universe, where they get to work
Starblaze Funny-Looking Books. Hit or
out their personality problems. There's a
apart because they
ail talk
have different-colored
hair.
differently and
No one
in
bad
fantasy novels ever has a personality they settle for Character Trails.
Middle America popular culture comes Elfland in Robert Asprin's fourth
The problem with most fantasy novels is that their authors can t write. So you bad fantasy and bad novels. Let's get our priorities straight, okay? First you learn to write, then you come up with
Myth
some
cuteness"
neat ideas.
—Michael
LovecralVs Clhulhu
to
mythos, as well as the stories of Arthur its real charm is having the
save the world. You can
BA3K
things should be.
Machen; but
Q 9?
(PLU6 $1,50 FOR
POSTAGE AMP HANPLIN&.')
CONAN BY MICHAEL KALUTA. BEAUTIFUL FULL-COLOR DESIGN ON A CREME COLORED SHIRT. CONAN PORTRAYED BY ARNOLD SWARZENEGGER FROM THE MOVIE, IN FULL-COLOR ON A SILVER SHIRT. THE CONAN LOGO, BLACK PRINT ON A WHITE OR RED SHIRT, OR WHITE PRINT ON A BLACK SHIRT. CONAN BY WILLIAM STOUT, FULL-COLOR ON A CREME COLORED SHIRT.
SIGNS HEAVY METAL MAGAZINE DEPARTMENT HM 1284
NEW YORK, STREET
SIZES AVAILABLE" SMALL: 34
LARGE: 42
36 44
MEDIUM: 38 40 EXTRA-LARGE: 48 -
TOTAL
CONAN CONAN CONAN CONAN
! CITY
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-
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_
A
S-M-L-XL
$9.95
B
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C D
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$9.95
checks must be payable within the continental U.S. Please add $1.50 per shirt for postage and handling.
All
TOTAL
[CONAN
© 1984
CONAN PROPERTIES,
INC.
_
^^
8
reprehensible
is
their pretending to be the
way an adolescent male should
me
Give
be.
an honest video, flashy or not, than
mindless, sexist, headbanging any day. (Naturally, I agree
—but you've got
to
remember that videos are advertising, not and any means to insinuate the
art,
product advertised into your
NAIL Dear HM: Before you guys get a deluge of mail on your special video awards issue (September),
I'd like to put in
cents worth on what
my
think are
I
plain
lame videos of the past year. My good as //A/'s, but as video viewer (about two to three
credentials aren't as a steady
my
hours a night),
I'd just like to get
kicks in now.
don't want to kick too
I
the worst dancing:
David Bowie's "Let's Dance." Bowie, who can dance, doesn't; those that do,
What
can't.
hands down.
It,"
don't
make you laugh
A
though.
Loudest video (visually): Duran Duran's "Reflex." The colors are loud, the editing
is
too
fast,
concert footage cut
with film footage until you can't
which
is
which, and where
is
tell
that water
Loudest video
A
busy set, high winds, guitar feedback, and Sting
SHOUTING
the song.
Not very pleasant.
Ugliest group in video: Kiss in "Lick
It
—
painted masks.
—
Is)
Performer making biggest fool of The Cars' Ric Ocasek, in "Magic." Squinting in the sun, he poses and moves ridiculously with a bunch of extras in silly costumes while walking on himself:
and get rid of "Salammbo Keep it coming, guys!
II."
Medina
D.
Brooklyn,
Dear
NY
MM:
1950. Television
is
introduced. People
are engrossed and will watch anything
because it's so obvious. Just look sharp and the world will fall all over you.
broadcast, because there's been nothing
(Too bad
like
the truth.
it's is,
The
interesting
are they reinforcing a cultural
—
Is)
Video exploiting sexual perversion:
Michael Jackson's "Thriller," anything with Boy George (Why? Just because of way he dresses? That's ridiculous. and I'd say about 88% of videos by heavy metal groups. (/ think you're lumping exploitation of pure sex with sexual perversion. There is a difference.— Is) Though I've never seen it, I've heard that Frankie Goes to Hollywood's "Relax" video (the original, banned one)
—
the
Is),
worse.
The
lead singers,
—
it before. As time progresses, people better shows. Along come "Star Trek," "Roots," "The Day After." 1977. Along comes HM. People are engrossed- there has never been anything like it before. As time progresses, people demand better. How about it? True, you've printed some great stories
demand
—
Cameo's "She's So Strange," Prince's "Little Red Corvette," Bowie's "China Girl," The Stones's "She's So Hot,"
who do admit
and artwork, but you've had more than your fair share of "Gilligan's Islands."
Why
run
95%
foreign art? (Simply,
because we like it better than most of the American stuff offered us, and because HM is an international magazine. Is)
—
Just
because an
mean be
artist is
he's great.
by lousy
stories,
crummy
French,
Good artwork
doesn't
it
ruined
is
and the French seem
to
writers. (They're also less
being gay, (Horrors! Is) go into a gay bar filled with leather, kinky S&M,
captivated by the boring cliches of traditional American comics. Is)
and other negative stereotypes. (Sounds like a typical episode
Try not to run so many continued stories this is HM, not "The Days of
of "Ranxerox" seen the clip
to
me. But seriously, I've
in question,
inoffensive. It's also well
and edited, and As with ZZ Top,
and
it's
pretty
photographed
pretty fucking hilarious.
a question of
it's
reinforcing negative stereotypes or simply
—
underground gay scene and if Frankie to Hollywood want to shoot a home movie of one of their nightly golden
Goes
showers, I think they should be allowed
wash
Just as long as they
afterwards.
of macho defiance. Is) Most obnoxious video: Yes's "Owner of a Lonely Heart." Whenever I feel sad and a little lonely, I feel like putting
worse. Motley Crue's
are safe
—
Is)
But
I
their
—
—
Our Lives." Too many
issues are
85%
continued. Try more complete stories, like "June 2050," which is the best item you run every issue. (You lose. "June 2050' has been cancelled. Is) Finally, someone should invite Lou Stathis over for a Jim Jones-style Kool-
—
'
portraying them. Those sorts of places do exist, and they form a major part of the
dumb as Billy Idol does, with his crowbarred sneer and adolescent pose
—
more music (albums reviews, interviews,
dramatic tribute to the summer Olympics, comes off stilted and boring.
water. Right. (He doesn't look nearly
as
A
etc.),
transvestites,
Up." God, these guys are ugly without makeup. (No kidding but smart enough to realize those grim mugs wouldn't make them nearly as much moolah as the
the
few other suggestions: end "Tex Arcana" (because the suspense is killing me!),
to
(overall): Police's
in
sex 'n' violence department for a while.
is
coming from? The screen? Huh? "Synchronicity II."
should keep us satisfied
face, twitching in a
Again, you can't pick just one. There's
tie
Is)
Most pompous video: Manfred Mann's "Runner." What's supposed to be a
stereotype or just reflecting it?
quite as hard.
Funniest video (unintentional):
—
someone up and falling off a building. I'm glad Yes finally put these subtle emotions in such an appealing way.
Some
between Pat Benatar's "Love is a Battlefield" and Jefferson Starship's "One Way Out." That video by Heart comes close, but I forget what the song is. Most exploitive video: John Lennon's "Living on Borrowed Time." Nice song,
utilized.
corridor, screaming in an elevator, beating
question
the point?
is
Funniest video (intentional): Weird Al
Yankovich's "Eat
be
Glenn Dressier Kankakee, IL
gals
of Madness's videos are amusing, but
is to
Dear Metalurgists: While Liberatore and Tamburini are dreaming up new adventures for Ranxerox and Lubna, why don't you people run some S. Clay Wilson material? That
Video most exploitive of women: Trying to pick only one is hard. I'd say the worst is ZZ Top's "Legs" simply
hard, just in the right places.
Dance video with
my
maggots on
twenty
some of
the most exploitative, pointless, and just
consciousness
Aid
party, for putting his
comments
through the middle of Chain Mail. there letter,
to.
hands
Isn't
enough room at the bottom of each Lou? It's irritating. Gary Davis Montesano, WA
think videos that
and unquestionably dishonest are
"Too Young
to Fall
in Love" is an adolescent male fantasy and covers much the same territory as "Relax." What makes Motley Crue so
Sure there's enough room, but by
now
most everyone' s forgotten what specifically in the letter is being
responded
was
to.
Right? Uh,
the question?
—
now what
Is
HEAVY METAL
61
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77
#2/MAV '77: Russian astronauts, "Conquering Armies," the ultimate rock festival, and more.
#15/JUNE
'78:
Corben introduces classic "More illustrated, more
Shahrazad. Sturgeon's
Than Human"
is
"Barbarella," and
#3/JUNE
'77:
Macedo's "Rock-
the origins of
#29/AUGUST '79: Caza steals show "New Ark City," plus Mayerik, Suydam, "Galactic Geowith
#42/SEPTEMBER
"1996,"
graphic," Bode, more.
while Bilal's "Progress!" picks up steam. Ernie Colon, Paul Kirchner, Leo Duranona contribute nifty
#4/JULY '77:
"Gail,"
'78:
resumption of Druillet's
more "Heilman," "Orion," "More Than Human," and Cor-
#30/SEPT EMBER
'79: "Elric,"
ben's 'Arabian Nights."
"Buck Rogers," a lizard named "Elvis," and "Little Red V-3,"
#5/AUGUST
#19/OCTOBER
alongside Montellier and Moebius.
gins,
tor 17," Ellison's illustrated "Glass
'77: "Polonius" be"The Long Tomorrow" concludes, and "World Apart" and "Den" continue.
'78:
"Extermina-
Goblin," debut of McKie's "So Beautiful and So Dangerous."
to
H.
'79:
P.
'77: Roger Zelazny has a short story, and Moebius, a space opera; plus more "World Apart," "Den," and "Po-
lonius."
#7/OCTOBER
#20/NOVEMBER
'78:
Twenty
pages of the Delany/Chaykin "Empire," more "Sindbad," "Exterminator," Major Grubert, "Heilman" 's final rebirth, more.
dam,
Druillet,
shorts,
with Suy-
"Rock Opera"
while
gets
stranger. '81:
Corben's "Blood-
Gimenez's "Good-bye, SolHarry North's "Stories from London," and an interview with
star,"
dier!,"
Julio Ribera.
#32/NOVEMBER
'79:
Corben's
"Rowlf," Bode's "Zooks," Brunner's "Elric,"
My '77:
A Halloween
Lovecraft,
Breccia, others.
"The
'80:
Alchemist Supreme" concludes
#49/APRIL
#31/OCTOBER tribute
Moebius,
#6/SEPTEMBER
#41/AUGUST '80: Druillet returns with "Salammbo" while Moebius concludes "Shore Leave" (and is interviewed). Bilal continues "Progress!"
A
happy ending for "Barbarella," a sad ending for
#16/JULY
Lots of Moebius: 'Arzach," "The Long Tomorrow"; conclusion of "Sunpot."
#28/JULY '79: Bode's "Zooks" premieres, Corben's "Sindbad" concludes. Morrow and Moebius continue, Mike Hinge debuts.
"Heilman."
blitz," highly praised "Shells," be-
ginning of Davis's "World Apart," Moebius, Corben, Bode, more.
Chay kin's "Ths
Stars
Destination," Moebius, and
Fiction by
#50/MAY '81: Premiers of Chaykin's "Cody Starbuck" and Bilal's "The Immortals' Fete!" Plus: Suydam's "The Toll Bridge" and WilBurroughs on liam
immortality.
S.
Theodore Sturgeon, Moebius's Garage," "Den" and "Polonius" back again. "Airtight
#33/DECEMBER
#8/NOVEMBER '77: New Harlan
mas package from Caza, Corben, Kofoed, Suydam, Stiles, Trina, Moebius, and Ellison, plus "Gnomes" and "Giants."
Ellison
fiction,
9 color pages by
Moebius and Rimbaud, conclusions and "World Apart."
for "Polonius"
'78:
Morrow
'80: An eerie cover adorns this issue. Corben's "The Beast of Wolfton" McKie experiments with the Air Pump, and we join Matt Howarth on a crazed acid trip. begins,
#36/MARCH '80: Why did "The Crevasse" take Jeannette? Read the Schuiten strip! Plus: Corben, Matena, Moebius, and Lee Marrs's "Good Vibrations."
illus-
Lob and Pichard update Ulysses, "Conquering Armtrates Zelazny,
"Den" continues.
#11/FEBRUARY
'78:
New
adven-
tures of "Barbarella," cover and center spread by Nino, plus Moebius
'78: The stocking's full with "Orion," Kirchner's "Tarot," and 12 beautiful pages of
#37/APRIL sary issue
'80:
—32
Our 3rd anniverpages of "Cham-
pakou" in living color, final installment of Moebius's "Airtight Garage," plus Caza, Bilal, Howarth, Corben, Bode and more!
Gray Morrow's swashbuckling "Orion" debuts; more "Barbarella," "Urm," and "Den."
#22/JANUARY
#13/APRIL
'78: Our 1st anniversary issue! A 30-page insert from "Paradise 9." "Barbarella" gives birth, while "Den" wraps it up.
#23/FEBRUARY
'79: "Galactic Geographic," "Starcrown," Corben's "Sindbad," McKie's "So Beautiful and So Dangerous."
Alchemist exist? Will Axle ever find out? Will "Champakou" reach the Doll of Jade? Will Joe strike out with the alien Marilyn, too?
#I4/MAY
Mad"
#24/MARCH '79: Twenty pages of
#39/JUNE
waves bye-bye, but "Orion" and "Barbarella" continue, and Alex Nino tips his hat.
Chaykin illustrating Bester's "The Stars My Destination," "Starcrown" II, and Ellison's late show.
meets his fate, while "Captain Sternh" saves the day. And it's the Flying Wallendas vs. Earth!
'78:
#5I/JUNE
'81: The 1st part of the Richard Corben interview, Jim Steranko's adaptation of Outland premieres, Howarth's "Changes"
winds up. Plus: Caza, Chaykin, Crepax, and Workman!
#56/NOVEMBER '81: Jeronaton's "Egg of the World," Jeff Jones, Seand Bilal all frame the art and Diane Dillon beauti-
grelles,
of Leo fully.
#58/JANUARY
'82: Our "Happy issue. Includes Arno, Loustal, Voss, He, and Gillon; and "The Autonomous Man," all surrounded by Chaykin and Simonand Steranko.
Future"
son, Segrelles,
#21/DECEMBER
and Corben.
#I2/MARCH
Christ-
Go u rati n
77: Extra pages complete "Vuzz," by Druil"Fortune's Fool," by Chaykin and Wein, plus full-color Corben, Macedo, Claveloux, and Moebius. for the let,
ies" concludes,
A
#35/FEBRUARY
#9/DECEMBER
#i07JANUARY
79:
and
'79:
Trina debuts
Druillet concludes "Gail," plus
—
#59/FEBRUARY
'82:
The
further
adventures of John Difool in "The Incal Light." Wein and Chaykin's "Gideon Faust" gets going again. Plus Fernandez, Jones, Schuiten.
—
#60/MARCH '82: 2nd Special Rock
McKie and Corben.
#38/MAY
'80:
Does the Supreme
Issue featuring Dick Matena's "A Life in the Day," a surrealistic look life of John Lennon. Luis Garcia's "Nova 2" begins. Plus "Mercenary," "Den," "Rock Opat the
era," etc. '78:
"Urm
the
'80:
"Champakou" #61/APRIL '82:
5th anniversary issue offers a variety of material. Claveloux, Druillet,
What with
Moebius,
Bilal,
G. Ballard,
and an essay on
you'll be
J.
busy until our
6th!
#73/APRIL '83: Moebius's "The Twinkle in Fildegar's Eye," and Sauri's "The Odyssey," along with Kaluta, Crepax, and Workman.
#87/JUNE '84: Slava Tsukerman talks about "Liquid Sky." "Lann"
#7S/JUNE
"Doom-
#88/JULY '84: Long interviews with
end of Crepax's "The from Harlem," and a peek at
funnymen John Cleese and Jerry Lewis. Long-awaited art from Jeronaton.
and "The Hunting Party"
1st part of David Black's "Third Sexual Revolution."
"The Art of DeEsSchwerfberger." Plus: "Sixteen and Vanilla" by Ted White and Val Lakey.
#63/JU!\E
Corben's
the 3-D science fiction thriller, Spacehunter.
New
#89/AUGUST
'82: Fantastic Cities is-
sue, with artists Voss,
Caza,
and R. Crumb, rounded by regulars: belli,
Sci-
surDruillet, all
Moebius, Schuiten, and Fernandez.
#64/JULY
'82: Marcele and Lacome's strange "Life at the Circus" and pages from Corberfs Flights into
Fantasy.
Man
'83:
the
scult,"
Plus Jones, Garcia, and
#76/JULY '83:
Liberatore's
"Ranx-
erox," the end of Kulata's "Starstruck" (for the time being), an interview with Dan O'Bannon and a glimpse al Ray Bradbury's Dinosaur Tales.
#77/AUGUST
'83: Arno and Jodorowsky's "The Small Earthdebuts, Gimenez's "A MatTime" appears, and Captain
worm"
Druillet.
Beefheart is interviewed, all behind a beautiful Greg Hildebrandt cover.
'•...,:
1
^tisjH
'83: An excluinterview with Francis Ford at the Rowena Morrill and the conclusions of "Zora" and "The City that Didn't Exist."
#907SEPTEMBER
HM
ond Annual
'82:
#66/SEPTEMBER '82: Hecht's "Music-Video Interface," Lupoff's "Barsoom!" and Hinge's "Object." Plus our regulars: Bilal, Fernandez, Kierkegaard. #67/OCTOBER
'82: You'll have Scary Dreams after reading our special horror section. Everything from Eddie Poe to the weirdest pho-
bias possible. Don't read
it
alone!
Last part of Black's "Third Sexual Revolution." P.S.:
Part 1 of Kaluta's "Starstruck." Findley's "Tex Arcana" continues as does "Den II" and Druillet's "Yragael." Plus: a peek at Wrightson's National Lampoon's Class Reunion. '82:
#69/DECEMBER
'82: A Will Stone Gallery, the return of Suy-
#91/OCTOBER
'84:
The
HM
in-
terview with director John Sayles. by,
and Jeronaton and
Bilal continue.
#92/NOV EMBER
begins, Jeronaton ends, and Paul Kirchner gives us some "Cool." Plus, shock-director John Waters tells
dam's "Mudwog." and Mark Fish'Amino Men." Plus Corben, Fernandez, and Kierkegaard.
'83:
Timothy
Leary! Enki
Bilal!
Walter
Rocky and Bullwin-
Hill!
A
great issue!
—
tina the Pirate." Enjoy.
#81/DECEMBER
'83: Ranxerox Valentina comes on
Artist Liberatore viewed. Lots more!
strong.
#82/JANUARY
'84: Part
is
inter-
one of
David Blacks vampire memoirs. Plus "Ranxerox in New York," and a peek at Arthur Clarke's The Sen-
HM
Dept. 1284 635 Madison Avenue York, N.Y. 10022
tinel.
New
#83/FEBRLARY Trumbull turns. pires
talks.
And David
comes
to
'84: Douglas John DiFool reBlack's My Vam-
an end.
#84/MARCH '84: is
interviewed.
Douglas Adams Vu.
Angus McKie and
Charles Burns return. Ranxerox ends his New York adventure.
#85/APRIL
HM
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#80/I\OVEMBER '83: A spirited talk with Will Eisner, along with a
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#71/FEBRUARY
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#70/JANUARY
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Enchantme by Doris Vallejo
Illustrated
by Boris Vallejo
Dragonprince "Have you had many lovers'?" the Dragon asked in a casual tone the Princess had come to recognize as a warning.
feet into a ravine to retrieve the Prin-
cess's golden apple.
broken when
He was stretched out in front of his cave, absentmindedly singeing the grass around
after
some
lapse sobbing
ants.
As
they scuttled away, he
singed the grass
in their
wake. The Prin-
cess would have asked him to stop had
she noticed. At the
moment
she was too
busy massaging the iridescent green hide of his back. It gave her pleasure to do this because she knew he liked it. "None like you," she said. "None as strong and brave." The Dragon had made a flamboyant display of his courage at their first meeting, diving several hundred treacherous
80
HEAVY METAL
fact briefly
it
fell
She had been heart-
down
there;
had
in
considered flinging herself
What she
it.
at
did instead
the
was
to col-
edge of the ravine.
And then the Dragon appeared. He offered to get the apple for her if she would make love with him afterwards. Naturally she was taken aback.
outrageous.
And from
It
was
a dragon no
less.
But, recovering from her outrage, she
thought: sired
is
Why
not? After
being dea compliment regardless of the all,
circumstances. In addition, he can't be
any worse than some of the noblemen I've had.
And
besides, he
may
not really
be a dragon. For
all
I
know, he's an en-
chanted prince.
To her delight
the
Dragon turned out
to
have a pretty accomplished erotic tech-
She particularly enjoyed certain effects he could produce with his fiery breath, making it ripple up and down her body like small, electric, singing waves.
nique.
"You
are evading
my
question." the
Dragon said. She smiled at him. How well he knew It was almost as though he could read
her.
her heart. "I'm sorry," she said. "I just
how the others can matter now." "Because 1 want to know all about you," was the answer. "It excites me don't see
to
m*
nt hear about the others; appeals to (he voyeur in me,
I
paused, as
if
suppose.
And
.
.
."
Here he
gathering the necessary
strength to continue. "1 suppose that,
having a dragons typical insecurities,
want
to
know how
]
I
measure up against
men."
real
..." the Princess began uneashappy about complying with
'"Well
not loo
ily,
his request but nevertheless
saying to her-
'Oh, what the hell, how can it hurt?' "There was Rolando, who was immensely attracted to though we had nothing at all in common. Can you imagine, he once said 10 me: What's the point of
self:
I
looking
at
away and
the stars
when they
are so far
there's plenty to look at right
"
here on Earth."
"Obviously a man infatuated with meDragon said. "He was a palace guard," the Princess continued, "and married to boot. So the relationship had its limitations built in right from the start. Not only did we always have to meet when he wanted to and never when I did, but there was the guilt. Always the guilt. As if his infidelity was
nected," the Dragon said, "however abstruse that connection may seem."
"My
diocrity," the
somehow my
It
doesn't
close to,
"An emotional cripple," the Dragon Rolando in half a sen"Was he the only one?" "There was Justini. He not only found
God, the power women.
make him an easy man at least not for me."
King kept her
the
at
arms length out of an
said, dismissing
admirably developed sense of self-preser-
tence.
vation.
it
interesting to look at the stars, he could
name them and were
the constellations they
where they could be found
in,
in the
sky and so on. But he would think noth-
making love and getting up as soon was finished to study his astronomi-
ing of as he
cal charts."
"Anymore?" the Dragon ingenuously asked with no hint that, when it suited him, he would use these stories against her, would call her a pushover, a worthless cunt, and a whore in heat. "Yes, of course there were others; always the wrong ones," the Princess said. "I wanted so very much to be loved. For dreamed of the prince who would come to me from somewhere far away. years
I
I
used
about him, about what he
to talk
would look like and be like. I used to have imaginary conversations with him."
"You
are beautiful," the
Dragon
said.
He rolled on his side and drew her to him. "You are beautiful," he repeated huskily, pinning her against the grass
with his powerful forepaws. In less than
two hours he would
call
her ordinary
looking, a shade too large
in the hips,
and, what was worse, disgustingly pale.
was a great shame, he would coldly
It
tree-covered
"You quite
hills
and the blue sky,
seemed small and
great bulk
his
vulnerable.
are beautiful, too," she breathed,
meaning
human. They could They could flash,
"Yours
is
ter.
"Often enough I've wished that she couldn't," the Princess said. "For one thing, she's maddeningly conceited about it. And, for another, kindness and tact are not her strong points. She positively delights in grim futures. Or else she tells the future in riddles so you don't know anymore when she's finished than you did at the start."
"If you're too dull to unravel riddles, The Dragon's long red tongue
that is."
suddenly unfurled
to trap a scarlet
and
mouth. The Princess pretended not to have seen. Whether he'd done it to shock her or because, imprisoned within a drag-
on
s
body, he had no choice, she was not It
seemed
best, therefore, to look
They
my dreams would
look
like,
and
it,
I
can
Prin-
tell
The Dragon was
when
"Am
I
macy of
gone
for a
am
swim
I
in the
lagoon near his
He
praised the artwork and
decided, after studying
rock.
bore a certain resemblance to him. "A
The Princess thought this over carefully. "They did love me. They do love
markable woman, your mother," he "I want to meet her."
me. I never doubted it in my head, you know. The difficulty has been, at times,
edly apprehensive.
believing
it
in
my
"The head and 82
This proposal
it
a
bit, that
The Dragon, sensing
re-
said.
made the Princess decidThough her parents
heart."
professed a sufficiency of liberal ideas
(And why
shouldn't they? In the past
in
his advantage,
a pained, brave voice.
He understood how she might find it awkward to be seen with him. She needn't explain. They were not, after all, your conventional couple. He just thought being close as they were and understanding each other as well as they did would have neutralized, to some extent, their he was wrong.
He
didn't
it
turned out that
blame her
for
that; for his error in judgment. He was only sorry because such a meeting might have changed so many things for the bet-
"I'm
truly a beast," the Princess said.
"You
are a beauty." the
Dragon an-
nounced magnanimously.
"You are dear and funny and wise." "1 had only hoped that the Queen, having the talents she has ..." Here he
paused to lend the following words drama. "You see. I wasn't always a dragon. I was born a prince. An evil witch cast a spell on me changing me into this shape when I was quite young. I have
become
bitter.
after all,
It is,
one of the things that can happen in life. But growing up as a dragon, growing up friendless, distrusted,
everyone always
expecting the worst from you,
difficult.
is
know
Since you are an only child and
about loneliness, perhaps you can appreci-
some degree. Children
you may know, and
I
are
can
tell
you. contrary to the old saying, sticks and stones didn't
come
near breaking
bones but the names
I
my
was called did hurt
spent more and more time
in
my
And
I
cave,
sneaking out only when I was sure no one was around. I used to dream of the time when would have my revenge by turning into a prince all
those
"I'm
it
the heart are con-
HEAVY METAL
one
in truth,
I
their relationship, he hadn't no-
ticed before.
cave and were sunning themselves on a
is,
"1 developed a fear of people.
you."
colorful tattoo, which, despite the inti-
was
that this
case. But se-
really a dragon, she thought, for
me.
quite taken with the
parental affection," the right or
is
putting a nice face on what
hypocrisy.
ate this to
was
this
The
midriff. "It didn't tickle in the least
she did
who
cruel, as
"I once asked her what the prince of
monster that had been tattooed on her
Dragon said. right?" They had
most certainly not, the
cretly she berated herself. I'm the
tried not to
blue butterfly in midflight. In an instant the butterfly had disappeared into his
cess sat up very straight to display the
a classic case of insufficient
grass, but not as an escort to the ball."
could, he sighed wistfully.
silver
finned, through the deepest oceans.
tell
external differences. So,
fly
could promise each other eternal love.
Dragon said. "Don't me I'm good enough for a roll in the
them," the Princess said. "I've seen her throw pieces of broken glass into her cauldron and take out real diamonds." "Can she tell the future?" the Dragon wanted to know. Upon hearing that she
her idea of a clever answer."
part fish, part
hedged. "I know
." she
.
—
it?" the
is
pressed his case
marvelous miraculous creatures, part clear to the sky.
"What
The Princess assured him
the other way.
bird,
.
parents are both quite busy these next
few weeks and
"She wouldn't be caught dead on a broomstick," the Princess laughed. "But you should see the assortment of frog toes and lizard eyes and other motley goodies she has for mixing magic potions." "There's nothing motley about lizard eyes," the Dragon observed dryly. "Oh, she can do wonderful things with
sure.
it.
guest. "Well
not,
"Don't ever leave me," he murmured. so they dreamed each other. Their dreams were enchanted. They became
And
their reaction to
her bringing along a dragon as a dinner
"My problems with the Queen were of an entirely different sort," the Princess said. "To begin with, she's a witch." "You mean the kind that rides on broomsticks?" The Dragon's green ears suddenly became very pointy.
tell
green pigmentation. No doubt this was because she had spent so much time above ground as opposed to in the revitalizing darkness of caves. Framed against a magnificent sweep of her, that she lacked
code of do's and was disappointingly conservative.
gree.) in practice their
my
goddamn
wimpy ways and moreover, express the opinion that
manipulative with her
the stake
at
whereas now they were being courted and fussed about to an almost imbecilic de-
She could well imagine
that the King had shortcomings as a father although
he will later call the Princess
witches had been burned
don'ts
to get
The Dragon agreed distinct
will,
fault."
father believes in
of wealth, and the inferiority of
and becoming the envy of
who hated me."
just afraid for you. that's all."
the Princess said. "I wouldn't want
some
boor to make upsetting remarks." "I'm not afraid." The Dragon saw imminent victory. "You're so much stronger than am." "It's not a matter of strength but the triumph of hope. You see, do have great I
I
hope that the queen will break the spell keeps me a dragon. We could be so happy together then." Moved by this speech, which coincided that
with her
own
dearest hopes, the Princess
ignored her misgivings and arranged for the ace.
Dragon to come to dinner at The evening was a disaster.
It
the pal-
started in a civilized 1'ashion with
cocktails and polite, tion.
if
strained, conversa-
The Dragon was eager
himself.
He was
to ingratiate
also nervous.
He drank
The
four martinis in succession.
olives
greenish-gray smoke
made him burp and
shot from his nostrils each time.
He
chat-
tered incessantly and with increasing
tempo on a
variety of subjects calculated
another thing that rankled: the Dragon's inveterate nastiness. After their brief pe-
her past lovers. But his relentless carping
mad. But he spoke coolly and disdainfully. He knew what he had seen. Her own dragon had caused the damage. If she chose not to believe him. that was her af-
on the subject, his disparaging criticisms were hard to take. He berated her for not having scaly skin and being unable to belch flames: for not managing to breathe under water or see in the dark: for being too cowardly to have fetched her own apple out of the ravine; too sexually inhibited to
in
the edible insect
population: the longevity of dragons (six-
how
hundred years) and be attributed
might well
this
to the six-year
incubation
When
enjoy his fiery breath when
it
got
he began to suspect he was los-
She recognized
all this
as simply being
an unfortunate expression of his love for her. Yet
it
tually
ing mouth. After that she half expected
him
to start foaming at the mouth, to sufdown and beat his head against the ground or present some fer a convulsion, to fall
other evidence of having gone fatally
He
fair.
refused to shoulder the responsi-
bility for
her shortcomings— her para-
noia, her lack of
good
burdened her heavily in the knew it would probably go
on for years.
Still,
she could hardly ex-
faith,
her
ill
humor, and so on. He scowled. He spoke through a light, barely moving mouth. His thick iridescent
really hot.
long run. She
period of the dragon embryo.
she didn't believe he was serishe saw that he was, she asked if he was feeling all right. He acsnapped at her with his great gap-
first
When
tenderly
swampland during
concomitant decrease
At ous.
seemed to flee into rancor. Of course, she realized, this was all due to his insecurity. Who. having once been a prince, wouldn't become insecure at one day finding himself to be a dragon? It was only natural. It was. perhaps, also natural that he was jealous of tually
to fascinate his hosts: the decrease in
the dry season and the
of his eye.
riods of intimacy and happiness, he ac-
tail,
which she so ad-
mired, thumped the ground with impatience.
She turned and ran into the woods. The and hanging vines flew past her like phantoms. like mist, not quite real. In a
trees
ing their attention, he switched to a reper-
pect to save him. hardly expect to help
delirium she ran from him, cursing him,
toire of
lewd jokes and then to an embarrassingly inept series of animal imitations. Clearly, he had no tolerance
him change back
calling
for the
combination of martinis and the his oysters on the half shell. For his bird of paradise imita-
etry for her. She was his muse, he told
ace except that she ran out of breath.
wine he guzzled with
her.
what he recited by way of an apology one afternoon when they hadn't been speaking since morning:
When
tion he spread his front legs out wide (to its wings) and knocked over the huge crystal wine decanter. The wine splashed all over the
And
not persevere. riods.
into a prince
she did
good
there were
The Dragon composed
This
if
pe-
lovely po-
is
I
awake
my
new
cess's
gown. Generally
satin
it
to fall over
backwards with
"You've seen him
He can
at his
really be very
worst," the
charming. Be-
me."
sides, he loves
my book,
"In
he's a creep," the
Queen
replied.
The King who
basically had not ex-
pected too much, was nevertheless puzzled by his daughter's choice in a swain.
"Where
world did you unearth
in the
him?" he wanted
to
know. Upon hearing
the story of the golden apple,
Dragon had risked he'd posed, but
how
the
his life, the condition
how
he really loved her,
he said: "To be honest with you.
much
I
don't
care for having a dragon as a son-
in-law.
So
in
my
heart across deserts
you
case you happen
to
be think-
into the sand.
I
solid
won't go back, she
fire
fire
he'd started wasn't particularly
Only about half an acre of dry grass It just smoked badly. Even after the was out, soot smudged the sky for
found him. "I've destroyed the most wonin my life: your love for me. I have no right to it anymore. What do I. most miserable creature in the universe, have to offer you. after all? A life-
derful thing
me back
into a
when
he
finished.
Loving him was deep, deep sea
like
at the
plunging into the
bottom of which a
treasure might lie. Loving him was quenching a lifelong thirst. Oh, she loved him from the molten core of herself clear out to her fingertips. He was ail she had
ever
lost
"If
I
and stood to find again. you will lose my mind," he
lose
I
cried to her in a voice like full
summer
rain,
of the promises of jeweled rainbows.
Yet joy
is
He had singed
glass.
off all her pubic hair
with his breath (quite deliberately, she suspected) so that her sex was suddenly bare and smooth as a peach. "Kinkily
provocative-looking," he observed before he realized how angry she was about it. Subsequently he denied having anything to do with the "accident," which he came to blame on her own dragon tattoo. This was the age of magic and miracles, wasn't it? Well, the tattoo had miraculously, if only for an instant, come to life. He had distinctly seen
it
the
time of living with an outcast? as an outcast?
The
You were
noblest thing
you away. happiness.
My I
1
happen out of the corner
Of
living
right to leave.
ever did was to drive
deepest wish
am
lost,
wholly
is
for
lost.
your I
see
Not even you can save me. The best thing for you to do is go." Naturally she stayed. They did not live that now.
happily ever after nor did they live entirely
unhappy. Their pattern was one of
fights, reconciliations,
fragile, a delicate silver
shadow, shattered as readily as fine
face.
do an about On the other hand. I'll grant you agreement is an agreement and, if you made it. you have to stick to it. I'm behind you all the way on that." There it was: approval and disapproval all rolled up into one. Even if she lived as long as dragons did she would never be unequivocally in the right. But there was
care,
"I'm doomed." he moaned when she
has faded like time
"If your love can't turn
ing in that direction, you can
that an
I
hours.
prince, no one's can," he said
Princes said. "It's unfair to judge him by
for all
went.
that steered
a
such a weirdo.
that.
Emptiness to
became
She smelled smoke and
him burn himself Let him burn the whole forest
to a full stop. Let
The big.
resounding crash. The echo of that crash seemed to go on forever. The Queen took her daughter aside and asked her what the devil she wanted with
real again.
said to herself even as she turned around.
she
simply began to blot it with a napkin. He. however, leaped wildly from his chair, causing
and
down
of dreaming
to find
pre-
all sorts,
full
brim with tears you real.
white tablecloth, as well as on the Prin-
pared for catastrophes of
vines, the path she followed
to a crisp.
eyes
calling herself crazy to
she slowed down, the trees, the
came
represent the bird spreading
him crazy,
have stayed with him as long as she had. She might have raced on clear to the pal-
truce.
and periods of
They grew accustomed
to
it.
Mys-
terious fires were spotted in the forest
from time to time. The townspeople grew accustomed to that. The Dragon remained a Dragon. Though his claim to have been a prince was wishful invention: his tale of the wicked witch and her spell was brazen fabrication.
From the upcoming book, Enchantment (Ballantine Books) due out this month.
HEAVY METAL
83
the bus
COMING: Interview with Supergirl director Jeannot Szwarc
The
return of Alice in Wonderland: the phenomena continues. Gallery: look at Philip Jose Farmer's The Grand Adventure.
A
84
HEAVY METAL
PAULKIRCHNER©
UlaM
HEAVY METAL
85
.
Svnopsis OUR 5T0RV takes place sometime during the last quarter of the last somewhere out west, n or near the small town of hangman's corners ^Under circumstances too .
i
HERP AND
SWEAZ
,
century,
;
'
absurd, &ha5tly and complicated to describe, herpand
SwEAZ,TWO UNDERSIZED &^j£j " fft BEINGS FROM ANOTHERTIME __/ and space -demons, actually ,^~ - were conjured up and then '^" abandoned in uangman's corners., ) Accused of indecent exposure and jailed by a group of bluen05ed bigots, herp and §jt Sweat escaped and embarked ;
.};.
j
pupon an in
event-filled odyssey search of Tex Arcana and,
more
:
particularly, his companion,
the magic and mystical woman in White who, they believe, has the power to return them to wherever it isthat they come prom Meanwhile, the local sheriff, a simple good-hearted soul who feels responsible FOR THE CIRCUMSTANCES AND WELL-BEING OF THE TWO SMALL STRANGERS, HAS RIDDEN OUT INTO^. THE WILDERNESS TO FIND THEM BEFORE THEY COME To -SOME SORT OF HARM ACCOMPANYING '